Monday, 1 June 2009

Is HISTORY REPEATING ITSELF ?


The Abandonment Of The Jews



 
The Abandonment Of The Jews: America and the Holocaust,, published in 1984, is a book by David S. Wyman, former Josiah DuBois professor of history at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Wyman is currently the chairman of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies.

Wyman's Argument

The Abandonment of the Jews alleges that British and American political leaders during the Holocaust, including President Roosevelt, turned down proposals that could have saved hundreds of thousands of European Jews from death in German concentration camps; for example, by refusing asylum to Jewish refugees and by failing to order the bombing of railway lines leading to Auschwitz.

Wyman examines the documents suggesting that the U.S. and British governments turned down numerous proposals to accept European Jews. The issue was raised at a White House conference on March 27, 1943 of top American and British wartime leaders, including President Roosevelt, U.S. Secretary of State Cordell Hull, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, presidential advisor Harry Hopkins, and the British Ambassador to Washington, Lord Halifax. Hull raised the question of having the Allies offer to accept 60,000 to 70,000 Jews from Bulgaria, a German ally.

Wyman writes that, because of a combination of anti-Semitism and an unwillingness to act on any proposal not of direct strategic value, thousands and possibly million of Jews died who might otherwise have been saved.

Counter-arguments

Wyman's arguments have been challenged by other researchers, most notably by James H. Kitchens III, and by William D. Rubinstein, whose book The Myth of Rescue: Why the Democracies Could Not Have Saved More Jews from the Nazis argues that the Western powers had a creditable record of accepting immigrants and that effective allied action against the Extermination Camps was not possible. The Auschwitz bombing debate remains unresolved.

Examples where Jews were saved from the Axis countries

On the other hand, many historians (e.g. Dr. David Kranzler) note that large number of Jews were saved and argue that even more could have been saved.
  • For example the Bratislava Working Group's ransom negotiation in 1942 was a key factor in stopping the deportation trains from Slovakia for about two years. Protection papers issued by Jewish rescuerGeorge Mantello, working for El Salvador in Switzerland, saved thousands.
  • Protection papers handed out from Switzerland by Jewish rescuer Recha Sternbuch saved large numbers.
  • Rabbi Solomon Schonfeld was able to single handedly rescue thousands for whom he was able to give refuge in England. He also convinced large numbers of UK churchmen and parliamentarians to pass a law to allow Jews to find temporary refuge in parts of the British Empire until the end of the war. Regretfully this important initiative was sabotaged because England was unwilling to include Palestine as a potential refuge, fearful that another Arab revolt would erupt.
  • In the USA persistent pressure on the Roosevelt administration by Hillel Kook and his rescue group led to establishment of the War Refugee Board. One if its actions was support of the Wallenberg mission to Budapest. David Wyman and Rafael Medoff credit Hillel Kook's activism with rescue of over 200,000 - mainly in Hungary, in part because of the Wallenberg mission.
  • Twenty four hours after receipt George Mantello publicized what has now been called the Wetzler-Vrba Report included in the Auschwitz Protocol. This triggered a major grass roots protest in Switzerland, with about 400 glaring headlines protesting against Europe's barbarism and its Dark Age in the twentieth century. Publication of the report also triggered Sunday sermons in Swiss churches expressing deep concern over the fate of Jews and there were various street protests.
  • This led to Churchill, Roosevelt and other world leaders threatening Hungary's ruler Horthy and then to Horthy stopping the transports, which until then took 12,000 Jews to Auschwitz. The lull in deportations enabled the Wallenberg mission and also rescue by many others in Budapest, such as Carl Lutz, Monsignor Angelo Rotta, Giorgio Perlasca, the Spanish legation, the Zionist Youth Underground in Budapest and "put rescue in the air" empowering ordinary citizens to act on behalf of the remnant of Hungary's Jews. There were many other successful rescue initiatives and also many more which some argue could have succeeded if Churchill and Roosevelt had received more public pressure. With ships packed with refugees, such as the St. Louis and refugee ships headed for Palestine were turned back it is difficult to make a case for the thesis that rescue was not possible. (References to books and views on various Web pages, for example David KranzlerHillel KookChaim Michael Dov Weissmandl).
  • Rudolf Kastner succeeded in freeing some 1,700 Hungarian Jews in return for money and gold in 1944.


Analysis

Considering all of these successful but limited efforts to free Jews living under Axis rule, it can be argued that the western allies could have done more to assist in the process, and could have taken seriously the "blood for trucks" proposal made in 1944 by Joel Brand. However it is also true that when Kastner asked his fellow-Jews for financial assistance in 1944, none was sent. The debate on the Allies' degree of culpability has arisen since the 1980s and is naturally of most interest to Jewish historians.

There are noted Holocaust historians who have a different view, and state that rescue was not possible. Professor Yehuda Bauer represents this school of thought.

See also



David S. Wyman 


David S. Wyman (1929- ) is the author of several books on the responses of the United States to Nazi Germany's persecution of and programs to exterminate Jews.

Wyman received his A.B. in history from Boston University and a history Ph.D. from Harvard University. From 1966 until his retirement in 1991, Wyman taught in the History Department at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where he also chaired the Judaic studies program. Professor Wyman holds honorary doctoral degrees from Hebrew Union College and Yeshiva University, both in New York City. He is currently chairman of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies in Washington, D.C.

Deborah Lipstadt characterizes Wyman's book, Paper Walls; America and the Refugee Crisis, as having stood for many years as "one of the most important books," on American immigration policy in the Nazi years. In Paper Walls Wyman discusses the combination of antisemitism, nativistic nationalism, economic crisis and isolationism that made rescue inconceivable. 

In his later work Wyman's position shifted, he came to believe that the attitude of American Jews during the Nazi era was to be faulted, and that the approach of the Bergson Group was the correct one. If American Jews had taken a more forceful approach, government policy could have been changed. 

Major publications

  • Paper Walls: America and the Refugee Crisis, 1938-1941 (University of Massachusetts Press, 1968);
  • The Abandonment Of The Jews: America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 (Pantheon, 1984);
editor of:
  • America and the Holocaust (thirteen volumes of the documents used in The Abandonment of the Jews(Garland, 1990);
  • The World Reacts to the Holocaust (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996).
  • A Race Against Death: Peter Bergson, America, and the Holocaust, with Rafael Medoff (The New Press, 2002)


External links

Brief biography at the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies