Holocaust scholars urge recognition of overlooked American Jewish group.
By ETGAR LEFKOVITS
More than 100 Holocaust scholars and mainstream Jewish leaders from the Reform to the Orthodox movements have signed a petition urging the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum to include acknowledgment of the Bergson Group in its main exhibit.
The petition was organized by the Washington, DC-based David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust studies. It follows a recent statement by Nobel Prize laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel urging the Museum to add the Bergson Group to its exhibits.
The Bergson Group was also known as the Emergency Committee to Save the Jewish People of Europe. It was led by Hillel Kook, who worked under the pseudonym of Peter Bergson. The group raised public awareness of the Holocaust and campaigned for US rescue action to save the Jews of Europe.
The organization was viewed by mainstream American Jewish leaders during World War II as being too forthright in its criticism of the Roosevelt administration's blatant failure to rescue Jewish refugees. In recent years most Jewish leaders have come to recognize the group's crucial contribution to the infamously belated rescue effort.
The petition, which urges the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum to include the Bergson Group in its permanent exhibit "for the sake of historical accuracy," was sent to museum chairman Fred S. Zeidman.
The signatories on the petition include Seymour D. Reich, president of the Israel Policy Forum and a past chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations; Prof. David S. Wyman, University of Massachusetts at Amherst emeritus historian and author of the acclaimed The Abandonment of the Jews; former New York mayor Edward I. Koch; David Ellenson, president of Reform Jewry; Rabbi Dr. David Golinkin, president of Conservative Judaism's Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies; Dr. Norman Lamm, chancellor of Orthodox Judaism's Yeshiva University; prominent Holocaust scholars and former defense minister Moshe Arens.
The organization, which was viewed as a black sheep by the leaders of wartime American Jewry, actively campaigned to save the doomed Jews of Europe through theatrical pageants, lobbying on Capitol Hill, placing more than 200 newspaper advertisements and organizing a march in Washington by 400 rabbis, which, the Wyman Institute said, was the only rally for rescue held in the nation's capitol during the Holocaust.
The Bergson Group is credited with helping to persuade president Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1944 to establish the War Refugee Board, which ultimately saved 200,000 Jewish lives, including future US Congressman Tom Lantos, the current chairman of the House Foreign Relations Committee.
Earlier this year, a New York theater performance, The Accomplices by the former New York Times reporter Bernard Weinraub, offered a stunning critique of the performance of American Jewish leadership and the Times during the war in the face of the efforts of the small Bergson Group.
Neither the US Holocaust Museum nor Jerusalem's Yad Vashem mention the Bergson Group in their exhibits, said Dr. Rafael Medoff, director of the Wyman Institute.