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How the Israeli left finally got to see the true face of Joseph Stalin

Even as its own Mordechai Oren was convicted in a Soviet show trial, Israel’s Mapam party continued its support of the USSR

January 7, 2022 09:31
Mordechay Oren מרדכי אורן
5 min read

Seventy years ago this week, Mordechai Oren, an Israeli emissary of the left wing Zionist party, Mapam, mysteriously disappeared in Prague. He was due to go by train to Vienna and then take the next El Al flight to Israel. As the days went by, his friends and family became increasingly worried at the sound of silence. Oren was a true believer in Stalin and the mission of the Soviet Union to throw off the capitalist shackles on the backs of the international working class. After all, without Stalin’s support at the United Nations, the state of Israel would never have come into existence. Following the communist coup d’état, the new Czechoslovakia poured huge quantities of arms into Israel in a bitter war against the Arab states in 1948.

Oren believed that Mapam rather than the official Communist Party was the true representative of Marxism-Leninism in Israel. Stalin’s collected works had been translated into Hebrew, published in Tel Aviv and bound in an admirable red leather.

Oren had attended a trade union conference in communist East Berlin, travelled on to Prague and met a Soviet envoy, with whom he had raised the question of Jewish emigration to Israel from East Germany and the Soviet zone of Austria. He then boarded the night train en route to Vienna and was cawakened at 3am by Czechoslovak border police who demanded specific papers from him — a deception to take Oren off the train and arrest him. Placed in solitary confinement in Prague and cut off from the world, he was transformed into prisoner 2132.
Oren had become a pawn in Stalin’s grand design to decapitate the leadership of Eastern Europe’s communist parties. The template of show trials of communist leaders had already been on display — Dzodze Koci (Tirana May-June 1949); László Rajk (Budapest September 1949); Traicho Kostov (Sofia December 1949).

These trials were followed by that of Rudolf Slánský and his associates in Czechoslovakia — and included Oren. While it was designed to mimic the previous show trials — although ‘Zionists’ had featured during the Rajk trial in Hungary — this one was profoundly different, in that it demonstrated deeply anti-Jewish undertones.