On an August morning in 1944, an Army troopship returning from the European theater docked in New York City, its hold filled with an unusual cargo. Nine hundred eighty-two foreigners disembarked, boarded a special overnight train, and were whisked to a vacant Army camp in Oswego, New York -- Fort Ontario -- where they would be sheltered until the end of the war.
"Most of the 982 . . . had endured years of persecution, flight, and camp life; nearly a hundred had survived Dachau or Buchenwald. They came from seventeen different nations . . . Their ages ranged from three weeks to eighty years, but people in their twenties were scarce, as were men of military age. The group was 89 per cent Jewish. Most of the rest were Catholic." (Wyman, p. 268)
On March 24, 1944, responding to appeals from the War Refugee Board (WRB), which he had instituted by executive order two months earlier, President Roosevelt issued a war crimes declaration, in which he condemned the "wholesale systematic murder" of the Jews as one of "the blackest crimes in history," and pledged to find "havens of refuge" for "all victims of oppression." (Wyman, p. 256)
But when the WRB proposed to the President that the United States offer "temporary asylum to all who could escape Hitler," Secretary of War Henry Stimson -- who opposed any compromise of the current immigration laws -- and Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morganthau -- who feared antagonizing Congress and incurring political damage -- would accept only a weakened declaration, which omitted the word "all."
On June 1st, in spite of burgeoning support in the press and among refugee organizations for "free ports," the President finally blessed the establishment of one -- Fort Ontario.
"While the immigration quotas allotted to the occupied countries of Europe were 91 per cent unfilled (a number equivalent to 55,000 in 1944), America had, belatedly, opened its doors to 1000 fugitives from extermination." Journalist I. F. Stone described this pusillanimous gesture as "a kind of token payment to decency, a bargain-counter flourish in humanitarianism." (Wyman, p. 266.)
It also undermined the WRB's original objective -- an American offer of "temporary refuge for all oppressed peoples," which, if carried to fruition, might have encouraged other nations to follow suit. But as Charles Joy of the Unitarian Service Committee pointed out, the smallness of the offer destroyed its value. "If the United States with all its resources can take only one thousand of these people, what can we expect other countries to do?" (Wyman, p. 267)
While many greeted the President's decision with gratitude -- and disappointment that it had been so limited -- others were severely critical. They doubted the refugees would ever go back to Europe, because, in the words of one Colorado man, "What country would want a Jew back?" (They were right; in 1945, a directive by President Truman allowed the Fort Ontario internees to immigrate legally.) They "saw the thousand as the entering wedge for hundreds of thousands more . . . a precedent for breaking down the immigration laws." (Wyman, pp. 267-268)
Such reactions reflected a restrictionist sentiment and latent anti-Semitism embedded in prewar and wartime society -- attitudes which essentially sanctioned a shameful legacy: President Roosevelt's, the Administration's, and Congress's pattern of response to the Holocaust -- which consisted of skepticism, obfuscation, procrastination, rationalization, and paralysis.
These same attitudes legitimized a policy which allowed only 21,000 refugees -- ten per cent of the legal immigration quota -- to enter the United States during the three-and-a-half years it was at war with Germany. (Wyman, p. x) And this was a quota which itself had been sharply curtailed since the 1920's.
From 1880 to 1920, forty million "unfortunates of other countries," including 2.5 million Jews, had sought, in the words of George Washington, "a safe and propitious asylum" in the United States. (Morse, p. 131) But by 1929 -- impelled by a heightened distrust of foreigners, fear of a deluge of cheap workers, the hostility of nativist Americans towards hordes of poor, illiterate Eastern Europeans, and a distaste for the squalid city slums where they settled -- Congress had reduced the annual immigration quota 80 per cent, to 154,000.
Furthermore, immigration by country had been allocated according to the ethnic background of the U. S. population in 1920. Thus, Great Britain and Ireland -- countries which provided relatively few applicants -- received 84,000 slots, while large numbers of potential immigrants from Germany (26,000), Poland (6000), Italy (5500), France (3000), and Rumania (300) were penalized. (Morse, p. 135)
Two other provisions of the immigration laws posed major obstacles for Jews fleeing the Nazis.
In September 1930, during the depths of the Depression, President Hoover -- invoking an 1882 stipulation which had excluded "any convict, lunatic, idiot, or any other person unable to take care of himself or herself without becoming a public charge" -- announced that consular officers "will before issuing a visa have to pass judgment on whether the applicant may become a public charge (at any time, even long after his arrival), and if the applicant cannot convince the officer that it is not probable, the visa will be refused." Immigration plummeted from 242,000 in 1930 to 36,000 in 1932. (Morse, pp. 132-135)
When Jews were forbidden to take no more than $4000 with them from Germany, many had great difficulty proving they were not excludable under the public charge clause. (Morse, p. 145)
Section 7(c) of the Immigration Act of 1924 required the applicant to furnish a police certificate of good character for the previous five years, a record of military service, two copies of a birth certificate, and two copies of all other available public records. The incredulous notion of a Jew requesting his oppressors to furnish evidence of good behavior is testament to a stultifying bureaucracy divorced from reality.
"Restrictionists persistently asserted that refugees who came into the United States usurped jobs from unemployed workers." (Wyman, p.6) Veterans' organizations -- like the American Legion, which called for a virtual ban on immigration -- were intent on protecting employment for returning servicemen. Congressmen regularly introduced bills to suspend immigration until the end of the war or terminate it when the war was over.
The State Department used its regulatory power to tighten the immigration process even further. Beginning in June 1941, any applicant with a parent, child, spouse, or sibling remaining in Germany, Italy, or Russia had to pass a strict security screening to obtain a visa. The next month it instituted a systematic security review of all applications by special interderpartmental committees. The visa application itself was four feet long and had to be filled out on both sides by a refugee's sponsor, sworn under penalty of perjury, and submitted in six copies. It took nine months for an application to move through the contorted bureaucratic machinery. (Wyman, pp. 125-128)
The chief enforcer of the immigration laws was Assistant Secretary of State Breckenridge Long; his anti-refugee sentiments were no secret. Years earlier he had praised "the efficiency, cleanliness, and morale" (Morse, p. 40) of Mussolini's Fascist state and the insight of Hitler's Mein Kampf regarding the connection between Communism and international Jewry. (Hamerow, p. 278) Yet he vigorously denied he was an anti-Semite or in any way prejudiced against the Jews.
Whether prejudiced or not, Long believed that aliens admitted to the country might prove to be a threat to national security, and that by barring the gates he was warding off an invasion by radicals and foreign agents. With him supervising the Visa Division, there would be no reform in the cumbersome process by which a Jew who had escaped the Nazis hoped to find a home in the United States.
National surveys lent support to the State Department's xenophobia. "In 1938, a year when the Nazis had intensified their persecution of the Jews, four separate polls had indicated that from 71 to 85 per cent of the American public opposed increasing quotas to help refugees . . . Asked in January 1943 whether 'it would be a good idea or a bad idea to let more immigrants come into the country after the war,' 78 per cent thought it would be a bad idea." (Wyman, p. 8)
Both a cause and corollary of restrictionism was anti-Semitism, which reached a peak in this country in 1944. (Wyman, p. 9)
Stoked by such agitators as fundamentalist preacher Gerald L. K. Smith -- who spread anti-Semitic propaganda from his pulpit and the pages of his magazine, "The Cross and the Flag" -- and Radio Priest Charles Coughlin -- who excoriated Jews as both Communists and capitalists, moneylenders and crooks (Rosen, p. 88) -- wartime violence proliferated. Jewish cemeteries were vandalized; synagogues were damaged and defaced with swastikas; anti-Jewish graffiti was scrawled on sidewalks and stores; schoolchildren were attacked and beaten; and anti-Semitic literature was widely distributed. (Wyman, p. 10)
Brazen anti-Semites in Congress joined the assault. "Representative Louis McFadden of Pennsylvania denounced the 'Jew-controlled New Deal.' Senator Robert Reynolds of North Carolina contended that Jews would not have been forced out of Europe if they 'had not impoverished those lands or . . . had not conspired against their governments.' " (Rosen, p. 88) When Congressman John Rankin of Mississippi launched an anti-Semitic tirade against "warmongering international Jewry," Michael Edelstein of New York became so apoplectic while delivering his rebuttal that he collapsed and died of a heart attack in the Capitol lobby. (Rosen, p. 168)
Less blatant was a pernicious anti-Semitism that excluded Jews from social clubs, turned them away from hotels, and limited the number of Jewish students at private and public universities. A series of polls from 1938 to 1946 indicated that over one-half of Americans perceived Jews as greedy and dishonest, and that one-third considered them overly aggressive. Another survey showed that over fifty per cent of the public believed that "Jews had too much power in the United States." (Wyman, pp. 14-15) Three polls -- in August 1940, February 1941, and October 1941 -- placed Jews at the top of a list which included Negroes, Catholics, Germans, and Japanese in response to the question "What nationality, religious, or social groups in this country are a menace to society?" (Hamerow, p. 202)
Thus, it is not surprising that efforts to relieve and rescue the endangered Jewish populations of Europe garnered little momentum in government circles; in spite of a profusion of compassionate rhetoric, most expired in infancy.
Disturbed by Hitler's annexation of Austria in March 1938 -- which subjected its Jewish inhabitants to a savage outbreak of arrest, plunder, deprivation, and deportation -- President Roosevelt invited thirty-three countries collectively to address the issue of political refugees. The conferees, called to order three months later in Evian, France, answered Chairman Myron Taylor's plea to "act and act promptly" by slamming their doors, one after another, against the victims of Nazi aggression.
Australia had no desire to import a racial problem. Britain could find no territory in its expansive empire suitable to large-scale settlement. (To appease the restive Arabs, it had capped total immigration to Palestine at 75,000 in its 1939 White Paper.) Canada, Columbia, Uruguay, and Venezuela wanted agricultural immigrants only. France, home to three million aliens, stressed that it had reached a saturation point. (Morse, p. 212)
The United States, "with its tradition of asylum, its vast land mass, and its unlimited resources," did make a concession. "It agreed, for the first time, to accept its full legal quota of 27,370 immigrants annually from Germany and Austria." (Morse, p. 213)
After the horrors of Kristallnacht, November 10, 1938 -- which witnessed the burning of 200 synagogues, the destruction or looting of 8000 shops, and the arrest of 20,000 Jews -- a delegation of Roman Catholic and Protestant clergymen presented a petition to the White House, calling upon the United States to open its borders to 20,000 German children. The subsequent bill, introduced in Congress by Senator Robert Wagner of New York and Representative Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts, was the first serious attempt in fourteen years to liberalize the immigration laws -- since the refugees admitted would exceed the established quota.
While the Wagner-Rogers Bill had support from clergy, labor leaders, prominent New Dealers in the Administration, and Eleanor Roosevelt, opposition was strong, fueled by nativism, prejudice, and the perception that it was a Jewish bill.
Francis Kinnicutt, representing thirty organizations, testified that "this is just part of a drive to break down the whole quota system," and that "it is not a refugee bill at all because most of those admitted would be of the Jewish race." John Trevor, speaking for 115 patriotic societies of the American Coalition, cited the outcome of a Fortune magazine poll, in which 83 per cent of the respondents had said "no" to the question: Would you vote "yes" or "no" on a bill to open the United States to a large number of European refugees. (Morse, pp. 259-261) Laura Delano, a cousin of the President and wife of the immigration commissioner, said that "twenty thousand charming children would all too soon grow into twenty thousand ugly adults." (Rosen, p. 85)
When the bill was amended so that the 20,000 visas would be counted against, rather than over and above, the German quota, a frustrated Senator Wagner withdrew it.
Nor would the immigration laws be bent to accommodate the 936 Jews condemned to an uncertain fate when their ship, the St. Louis docked in Havana harbor on May 27, 1939. Although they possessed landing certificates sold by the Cuban Director of Immigration, Manuel Benitez, the Cuban President, Laredo Bru -- determined to end the corruption or garner his share of the bribes -- refused to allow all but twenty-eight to disembark. On June 2nd, he ordered the St. Louis out of the harbor, neglecting, of course, to refund the $150 each passenger had paid for his bogus certificate.
Flush with $500,000 in pledges and cash from American Jews, Lawrence Berenson, former president of the Cuban Chamber of Commerce in the United States, was dispatched to Cuba to negotiate with President Bru. When Bru upped his price to $650,000, and then to $1,000,000 -- to cover bribes and food and lodging for the refugees -- Berenson balked, claiming he needed more time to raise the money. By the time Jewish sponsors deposited $500,000 in a Havana bank, the deal had collapsed.
Cast adrift in the Caribbean, for four days the St. Louis awaited its destination -- hovering within sight of the lights of Miami and shadowed by a Coast Guard cutter charged with preventing any desperate passenger from jumping overboard and swimming ashore. While the American press lamented that "the cruise of the St. Louis cries to high heaven of man's inhumanity to man," none suggested that the United States "come to the aid of these men, women, and children floating across the Atlantic toward certain doom." (Morse, p. 283) One editorial writer warned that one exception to the law would set a dangerous precedent and surely "be followed by other shiploads." (Rosen, p. 99)
On June 6, the St. Louis set her course for a return to Europe -- and toward a more favorable denouement than might have been expected. In Paris and London, Jewish representatives worked around the clock to find safe havens for the abandoned 908. England agreed to take in 288, who were spared Hitler's wrath. The remaining 620 were scattered throughout France, Belgium, and Holland, of whom it is estimated 392 survived the Holocaust. (Rosen, p. 103)
The St. Louis, of course, was just the tip of the iceberg. The number of potential refugees grew exponentially during the war years -- but there was simply no place for them to go.
In March 1943, Jewish leaders requested the assistance of British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden (then in the U. S.) and Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles in removing from Bulgaria 70,000 Jews who were threatened with extermination. Eden rejected the plan outright, stating that, "the whole problem of the Jews in Europe is very difficult, and we should move very cautiously about offering to take all the Jews out of a country like Bulgaria. If we do that, then the Jews of the world will be wanting us to make similar offers in Poland and Germany." (Wyman, p. 98)
"The whole problem" was where to put the Jews if they were rescued. For the British, their release would put tremendous pressure on their White Paper policy of limited immigration into Palestine. Others countries had resoundingly shut their doors between 1933 and 1941, when Jews could have left Europe.
Echoing British anxieties, Cavendish W. Cannon in the State Department gave this reason for not supporting the relocation of 300,000 Romanian Jews to Syria and Palestine: ". . . such a plan was likely to bring new pressure for an asylum in the western hemisphere . . . and open the question of similar treatment for Jews in Hungary and, by extension, all countries where there has been intense persecution." (Wyman, p. 99)
Such was the tone of the joint British-American Bermuda Conference held in April 1943; it had been initiated by Great Britain, where publicity about the Holocaust was more widespread and cries for action more forceful than in the United States. (Wyman, p. 104)
"Breckenridge Long saw to it that the business of the Conference would be circumscribed. He sent his friend and ardent opponent of immigration, Robert Borden Reams, to act as secretary to the U. S. delegation. Jewish organizations were not allowed to send advocates." (Rosen, p. 270) Long's memorandum to the delegates instructed them not to overemphasize the Jewish nature of the refugee problem, not to pledge any funds, not to propose changes in the U. S. or British immigration laws, and not to make any commitment regarding trans-Atlantic shipping space for refugees. (Wyman, p. 113)
A suggestion that the Allies approach Germany and the Axis satellites for the release of Jews was rejected as "impossible and outside the scope of the Conference." Sending food to the starving victims of the Nazis received no support. On British insistence, their Palestine policy was not discussed. (Wyman, pp. 114-115)
After two weeks of deliberations, the delegations delivered an innocuous joint report to their governments. It recommended the use of neutral shipping to transport refugees, the consideration of Cyrenaica and Madagascar as havens, and the reactivation of the Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees -- an organization which, since its inception before the war, had proved to be as useless as a Cuban landing certificate.
The Conference's sole accomplishment was the authorized transfer of 21,000 refugees (of whom 5000 were Jewish) from Spain to North Africa.
But respite for the Jews had not been, after all, the objective of the diplomacy at Bermuda. Rather it had been to alleviate the growing pressure for a rescue effort. (Wyman, p. 122) Richard Law, head of the British delegation, confirmed this years later when he said, "It was a conflict of self-justification, a facade for inaction. We said the results of the Conference were confidential, but in fact there were no results that I can recall." (Morse, p. 63)
There was, however, one indirect result. On May 12, 1943, three days after the adjournment of the Bermuda Conference, Samuel Zygielbojm -- a member of the Polish National Council, who had pleaded tirelessly to the Allied governments to come to the aid of the men and women he had left behind when he had escaped from the Warsaw ghetto -- committed suicide.
In his farewell note, he wrote: "I cannot live while the remnants of the Jewish people of Poland, of whom I am a representative of, are perishing . . . By my death I wish to make my final protest against the passivity with which the world is looking on and permitting the extermination of the Jewish people." (Morse, pp. 63-64)
Several months later, the State Department employed its well-honed delaying tactics to sabotage another potential rescue effort -- the exposure of which led to a stunning reprimand from the Administration and a diminishment of its authority.
On February 12, 1943, New York Times correspondent, C. L. Sulzberger, reported from London that the Romanian government was willing to release 70,000 Jews who had survived deportation to Transnistria (60,000 had perished) "to any refuge selected by the Allies," preferably Palestine -- for a price of $600,000. (Morse, p. 72) Responding to inquiries about the offer, the State Department summarily dismissed it, asserting that, "This story is without foundation." (Wyman p. 83)
In April, Gerhard Riegner of the World Jewish Congress, informed U. S. Ambassador Leland Harrison in Switzerland that funds were available to expedite this rescue and to feed and clothe 30,000 children hiding in France and to facilitate their removal to Spain. The funds would not fall into enemy hands because they would remain in a blocked account in Switzerland until the war was over.
For the next eleven weeks State Department officials stonewalled the proposal, waving red flags that it was "too vaguely phrased" to merit a decision, that it was merely a scheme to transfer money for ransom purposes, and that it might encourage other organizations to send relief funds to enemy territory. (Wyman, pp. 179-180)
It was late June before Robert Borden Reams met with the Treasury Department division charged with issuing the licenses required to transfer funds overseas. Reams argued the funds should not be transferred because the plan was unworkable. Later, though, he revealed the State Department's real objection: the plan might actually succeed. Reams considered it unrealistic to encourage large-scale rescue because only 30,000 openings remained under the British White Paper quota for Palestine and he "did not know of any other area to which the Jews could be evacuated." (Wyman, p. 180)
The Treasury was not convinced, and on July 16 agreed to issue the license.
Even after President Roosevelt's approval, Long and his colleagues delayed the license seven more weeks, this time alleging that the Riegner plan would provide the enemy with foreign exchange.
Four months months later Ambassador Harrison had still not issued the license, claiming again in contradiction of the Treasury that it needed British clearance, which had yet to be forthcoming.
On December 15, the British Foreign Office revealed in a statement their objection to the Riegner plan -- and the underlying fear that shaped their own and the State Department's response to the Holocaust. (Wyman, p.182)
"The Foreign Office are concerned with the difficulties of disposing of any considerable number of Jews should they be rescued from enemy occupied territory . . . They foresee that it is likely to prove almost if not quite impossible to deal with anything like the number of 70,000 refugees whose rescue is envisaged by the Riegner plan." (Wyman, p. 182)
Finally, on December 23, 1943, eight months after Riegner's first description of relief possibilities in Romania and France, bowing to directives from Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau and his hard-nosed assistant, John Pehle, Long sent the license, authorizing an initial $25,000. But by then the plan was irrelevant and outdated; too much time had been wasted in a vacuous Cabinet war of words.
This deplorable episode did have two heartening outcomes. Secretary Morgenthau, now convinced that rescue operations needed to be removed from Long and the State Department, commissioned Pehle and Assistant Counsel Josiah DuBois to prepare a memorandum on State Department obstructionism. This "Report to the Secretary on the Acquiescence of this Government in the Murder of the Jews" was submitted to President Roosevelt on January 16, 1944.
"In nine pages, it detailed the procrastination, misrepresentation, suppression of the facts, deliberate interference with rescue efforts, and antisemitism of State Department officials, especially Breckenridge Long. It set out in detail the obstruction of the French and Romanian licenses, the cover-up of the obstruction, and Long's concealment of a State Department cable that ordered the suppression of information about the Holocaust." (Rosen, p. 344)
Among the misrepresentations was Long's statement to the President and subsequent testimony before Congress that the United States had admitted 580,000 refugees between 1933 and 1943. When challenged on those numbers by the American Jewish Committee, he made a clarification: 580,000 visas had been issued, but only 210,000 refugees had actually entered the country. (Rosen, 292)
The Report concluded with the mandate: "The matter of rescuing the Jews from extermination is a trust too great to remain in the hands of men who are indifferent, callous, and perhaps hostile." (Morse, p. 92)
Six days later, on January 22, 1944, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9417, establishing the War Refugee Board and instructing it "to take all measures within its power to rescue victims of enemy oppression in imminent danger of death." (Morse, p. 97) The President allocated $1,000,000 from his Emergency Fund; $20 million was donated by private organizations, of which $15 million came from the Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. John Pehle was named Director. (Wyman, pp. 213-214)
Although at first it seemed that the WRB might become a potent rescue machine, it was hampered from the outset by several factors. The Russians would not participate. The British were obstructive. The War Department had a standing order to reject any and all rescue operations. The State Department's deep-seated prejudices were evidenced in a remark made by one official to a friend of DuBois: "That Jew Morgenthau and his Jewish assistants like DuBois (who was Protestant) are trying to take over the place." (Rosen, p. 349)
One early WRB success can be attributed to the efforts of Ira Hirschmann, a former New York department store executive assigned to the U. S. Embassy in Ankara, Turkey. Hirschmann persuaded Turkish and British officials to make travel documents available in three weeks rather than sixteen to Jews en route from Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary to Palestine. He found antiquated ships to ferry refugees across the Black Sea to Istanbul. Working through the Bulgarian Minister to Turkey, he convinced the Bulgarian government to rescind its anti-Jewish discrimination laws. He arranged a personal meeting with the Romanian Minister to Turkey, Alexandre Cretzianu, warned him of America's determination to punish war criminals, and secured the release of 48,000 Jews imprisoned in Transnistrian concentration camps -- which lay squarely in the path of Hitler's retreating army. (Morse, pp. 317-319)
Under the aegis of WRB representative Quaker Roswell McClelland, Switzerland became the focal point for a series of benevolent operations. McClelland shipped large quantities of medical and sanitary supplies to France. He found guides to lead one thousand men, women, and children over the Pyrenees from France to Spain. He relayed funds to reliable underground groups in Slovakia, Italy, and Germany to aid the escape of Jews and other potential Nazi victims. (Morse, pp. 331-332)
The WRB played a key role in probably the most heroic saving of Jewish lives during the war.
By 1944, Hungary was sheltering 760,000 Jewish natives and refugees -- who had been spared the gas chambers by the lenient regency of Admiral Miklos von Horthy. But in March, Hitler, infuriated by Hungarian prevarication, intervened, forced the appointment of a more militant government, and, two months later, initiated mass deportations. Harassed by the WRB and the International Red Cross, cajoled by Pope Pius XII and King Gustav V of Sweden, Horthy garnered enough courage to resist the Nazis and order a halt to the death trains. Two hundred thirty thousand Jews remained alive in Budapest, destitute and facing impending doom.
A Swedish architect and businessman, Raoul Wallenberg approached the WRB representative in Stockholm, Ivor Olsen, and volunteered to go to Hungary. At Olsen's suggestion, the Swedish government appointed Wallenberg attache to its Budapest legation. The WRB placed $100,000 at his disposal.
Wallenberg battled valiantly over the next three months -- buying apartment buildings in Budapest, applying Swedish exterritoriality to them, housing Jews there, and issuing protective Swedish passports. In October the Nazis deposed Horthy and replaced him with Ferenc Szalasi; Szalasi's anti-Semitic Arrow Party unleashed a new wave of terror against the Jews, slaughtering thousands. The Nazis, in desperate need of slave labor but now short of rolling stock, ordered 40,000 to march through bone-chilling rains to the Austrian border; eight thousand died. (Morse, p. 367)
Wallenberg carried food and supplies to the victims. By various pretexts, he rescued a thousand from the march. Receiving word of a mass arrest, "he would arrive at the railroad station, waving official documents and barking orders in Swedish and Hungarian," and manage to get several hundred prisoners released, once with German guns leveled at him. On another occasion he followed a train to a border station, jumped aboard, and bluffed German guards into freeing those deportees who carried any papers at all. He confronted the S. S. commander of Budapest at the gates of the Jewish ghetto, threatened him with postwar punishment, and most certainly influenced his decision to withdraw. (Morse, pp. 368-369)
When the Russians finally captured the city in February 1945, about 120,000 Jews remained alive.
Wallenberg may have fared worse. On January 17th, he left the Jewish relief office in Budapest and headed for Russian headquarters 137 miles away, apparently to request aid for the besieged Jewish community. Suspected of espionage by the Russians, he was never seen or heard from again. (Morse, p. 370)
The Jews of Budapest named a street for Raoul Wallenberg, and paid him this tribute: "We witnessed the redemption of prisoners and the relief of suffering when Mr. Wallenberg came among the persecuted to help. In a superhuman effort, not yielding to fatigue and exposing himself to all sorts of dangers, he brought home children who had been dragged away and he liberated aged parents. We saw him give food to the starving and medicine to the ailing . . . He was a righteous man. God bless him." (Morse, p. 374)
Despite these noteworthy accomplishments, in his seminal work on the subject, The Abandonment of the Jews, David Wyman contends that the American government did not respond decisively to the plight of European Jewry.
In the forefront was President Roosevelt, whose actions were limited. He met with Jewish leaders in December 1942 when overseas cables confirmed Hitler's extermination program, but afterward refused requests to discuss the matter. He declined to challenge the State Department's arbitrary curtailment of refugee immigration. Pressed to establish the War Refugee Board by a Congressional Rescue Resolution and the threat of a scandal involving State Department obstructionism, he took almost no interest in it and failed to fund it adequately. By agreeing to only one free port, he demonstrated that little was expected of any country. (Wyman, p. 312)
Callousness prevailed in the State Department, where its officials embraced nativism. They effectively closed the United States as an asylum by tightening immigration procedures and influenced Latin American countries to do the same. (Wyman, p. 313)
The War Department determined early on that rescue was not part of its mission. "To the American military, Europe's Jews represented an extraneous problem and an unwanted burden." (Wyman, p. 307)
"Except for a weak and insignificant resolution condemning mass murder, Congress took no official action concerning the Holocaust." Restrictionism, especially opposition to the entry of Jews, was strong on Capitol Hill. (Wyman, p. 316)
Governmental apathy can be traced to the indifference of much of the American public. Christian churches were almost inert in the face of the Holocaust and nearly silent too. No major denomination spoke out on the issue, nor did liberals and intellectuals, who might have been expected to be righteously vocal. (Wyman, pp. 317, 320)
In their defense, it must be acknowledged that information about the systematic murder of millions of Jews was not readily available, because the mass media treated it like minor news. Most newspapers and major news magazines printed very little about the Holocaust. Radio coverage was equally sparse. During the war, American filmmakers released a number of films on refugees and Nazi atrocities, but none that dealt with the Holocaust. (Wyman, pp. 321-322)
Wyman identifies a series of steps that might have been taken -- and conceivably saved lives -- if the United States had been committed to a more vigorous response.
The War Refugee Board should have been created in 1942 -- with adequate funding and much broader powers.
The U. S. Government should have urged Germany and the Axis satellites to release Jews -- signaling, if nothing else, that this was one of its goals.
It should have put pressure on neutral countries near the Axis -- Spain, Portugal, Turkey, Switzerland, and Sweden -- to accept Jewish refugees.
It should have established a number of "free ports" in addition to Fort Ontario -- thereby setting an example for Latin America, Canada, the British Dominions, and Palestine.
It should have made ships available to transport Jews from neutral countries to outside havens.
It should have transferred larger sums of money to Europe -- which could have been used to finance escape systems, to assist Jews in hiding, to supply food and medicine, and to strengthen Jewish undergrounds.
It should have disseminated more publicity about the extermination of the Jews throughout Europe -- threatening the Nazis with punishment for their crimes, influencing others to aid the victims, and warning the victims of their fate.
Finally, Wyman contends that bombing of the Auschwitz killing installations and deportation railroads was feasible and should have been undertaken by the military. (Wyman, pp. 331-335)
All these suggestions were rebuffed. Instead, government officials developed four main rationalizations for inaction.
The most frequent excuse, the lack of shipping was a fraud. When the Allies needed ships for non-military projects -- like moving 1400 non-Jewish Polish refugees from India to the West Coast or 2000 Spanish Loyalists to Mexico or 250,000 Axis prisoners overseas -- they located them. But ships were never available to transport Jews -- because there was no country willing to take them. (Wyman, pp. 335-336)
The argument that the Axis planted enemy agents among refugees was flawed. As a possibility, it could easily be addressed through security screening. Army intelligence found not one suspicious person when it vetted the 982 refugees who arrived at Fort Ontario. (Wyman, pp. 336-337)
A third rationalization asserted that helping Jews would improperly single out one group for assistance among the many suffering from Nazi brutality, substantiate accusations that the war was being fought for the Jews, and, perversely, fan the flames of an already seething anti-Semitism. Only the Jews, however, were facing total extinction. The real problem, again, was finding a place for those fortunate enough to be saved. (Wyman, p. 337)
The fourth claim -- that rescue operations would detract from the military effort and prolong the war -- was also disingenuous. None of the proposals was extensive or involved enough to do either. In fact, resources were diverted from time to time to meet humanitarian needs. In 1944 the British used troop ships to transport 36,000 Yugoslav refugees from Southern Italy to Egypt. Between August 1942 and August 1943, they moved 40,000 Poles from Iran -- where they had been sent by the Russians after deportation to Siberia -- to camps in Africa and the Middle East. The Allies also provided sanctuary in those same camps to 25,000 Greeks fleeing the Nazis. (Wyman, pp. 337-339)
Even Wyman acknowledges that a concerted relief and rescue program could not have saved anywhere near a million victims. Peter Novick, author of The Holocaust in American Life, puts the number at 2%, or 120,000, and concedes that, tragically, "the perception that the overall impact of American efforts would be marginal probably served to inhibit action." That the "practical possibilities for substantial rescue" are slight does not, however, relieve one of his moral responsibilities. (Hamerow, p. 392)
After all, this was a republic founded on the principles of individual liberty, universal justice, equal opportunity, and spiritual compassion. For almost two hundred years it had been a safe haven for the downtrodden and oppressed of other countries. It had entered the war to preserve its humanitarian ideals and to defend them against the evils and brutality of a totalitarianism intent on world domination. Was it not morally bound to do all within its power to prevent the consummation of the greatest atrocity in history -- the institutionalized slaughter of an entire nation?
But there was another reason to act. Because this genocide was not just a crime against the Jews; it was a crime which, ultimately, contemplated no limits. There were no more than 3 million Jews left in Europe when the Russians overran the concentration camps in Poland in 1945. Yet they found enough Zyklon B crystals to kill 20 million people -- 10 million non-Germanic people in the next two years. In a world where none but Aryans were qualified to live, "it stood to reason that everyone else would be exterminated." (Dimont, p. 389) Since this Holocaust was but a prelude to an even greater conflagration, saving the Jews meant saving the future of the human race.
REFERENCES
Dimont, Max I. Jews, God and History. New York: The New American Library,1962.
Hamerow, Theodore. Why We Watched: Europe, America, and the Holocaust. New York: W. W. Norton, 2008.
Morse, Arthur D. While Six Million Died: A Chronicle of American Apathy. New York: Random House, 1967.
Rosen, Robert. Saving the Jews: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Holocaust. New York: Thunder's Mouth Press, 2006.
Wyman, David S. The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust: 1941-1945. New York: Pantheon Books, 1984.
Monday, July 12, 2010
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