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Film

Peter Bergson : The man who fought to save Europe's Jews

Ahead of a London screening of "Not Idly By -- Peter Bergson, America and the Holocaust" Ned Temko looks back at the man who woke the world up to the horror of the Holocaust

May 5, 2017 10:06
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ByNed Temko, Ned Temko

3 min read

On an unseasonably warm Washington morning in November 1942, Peter Bergson sipped his coffee and leafed through the latest editions of the New York Times and the Washington Post. It was a habit he’d acquired since arriving in America nearly two years earlier, as a 25-year-old Palestinian Zionist on a mission to raise awareness, and money, for the establishment of a Jewish military force to join the Allies’ war against Hitler.

Yet when he spotted a brief news item, tucked away on an inside page of the Post, he knew that mission was over. The headline read: “Two million Jews slain, Rabbi Wise asserts.” The reference was to a news conference the previous evening by Rabbi Stephen Wise, American Jewry’s foremost spokesman and leader. It was the first public confirmation of the Nazi Holocaust. For Bergson, his Jewish army campaign now seemed utterly, obscenely, irrelevant.

Over the next several years, he and a small band of supporters worked tirelessly to publicise the slaughter of the Jews of Europe, determined to bring popular and political pressure on President Franklin D. Roosevelt to save those Jews who were still alive. That this meant confrontation with the Roosevelt Administration was inevitable. Roosevelt’s view was that there could be only one American war aim: to defeat Hitler’s armies.

Yet the main obstacle turned out to lie elsewhere: in the strident, unceasing opposition to Bergson’s rescue campaign from Rabbi Wise, other prominent Jews with access and influence in the White House, and nearly every American Jewish organisation, with the notable exception of a number of Orthodox groups. At a time when such public campaigning, certainly by Jews, was unheard of, the Jewish establishment’s message to the Bergson Group was unequivocal: keep quiet. You’ll undermine our influence. You’ll alienate people. You will fan the flames of antisemitism.