by Dr. Rafael Medoff
The insult to Netanyahu brings back Jewish leaders fighting for Jewish lives who were to be treated shabbily by the White House.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is not the first Jewish leader to
endure severe insults from the White House. The rabbinical leaders who
marched in Washington in 1943, to plead for the rescue of Europe's Jews,
were the targets of similar hostility, expressed by another president.
Now
compare that to what happened when many of the nation's most prominent
rabbis marched to the White House in 1943, three days before Yom
Kippur.
The rabbis were
greeted on the steps of the Capitol by leading Members of Congress. Then
they marched to the Lincoln Memorial, where they recited prayers for
American soldiers fighting overseas and for the Jews being slaughtered
by the Nazis. From there they went to the White House, where they hoped a
small delegation would be permitted to present President Roosevelt with
a petition urging steps to rescue Europe's Jews.
As
protests go, the march had been remarkably quiet, dignified, and
respectful. There were no picket signs, no shouting of slogans, no
criticism of the president. It was, essentially, a plea for mercy. The
problem was that the rabbis represented a cause that President Roosevelt
preferred to ignore. They were a source of political discomfort.
So too
with the rabbis. Several days after the march, Nahum Goldmann,
co-chairman of the World Jewish Congress, met with Samuel Rosenman,
FDR's closest Jewish adviser and speechwriter. Rosenman was one of those
who regarded the marching rabbis as an embarrassment and had urged the
president to avoid them.
It is unclear what exactly Roosevelt said.
But several other documents confirm that he made remarks in the spirit
that Rosenman reported.
Briefing David Ben-Gurion
and other members of the Jewish Agency Executive in Jerusalem the
following year, Goldmann repeated what Rosenman told him about Roosevelt
"speaking like Hitler," according to the minutes of the meeting.
Goldmann added that Rosenman was "crushed" by FDR's remark.
President
Barack Obama has said on many occasions that he is a great admirer of
President Roosevelt and tries to emulate him. Indeed, at the time of his
first inauguration, Time published a cover image of Mr. Obama
in a famous FDR pose, complete with his trademark cigarette holder. One
can only hope that the latest vitriol aimed at Israel's prime minister
does not indicate that President Obama is following in Roosevelt's
footsteps in that area, as well.
Dr. Rafael Medoff is director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, www.WymanInstitute.org)
Source: http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/16362#.VMed7S6zchR
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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