When the Rabbis Marched on Washington
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When the Rabbis Marched on Washington
“Make way for the rabbis.” It was probably the first time the station master at Washington,D.C.'s Union Station had shouted these words. But the crowd before him was unlike any ever
seen in the nation's capital. Four hundred rabbis converged on Union Station two days before
Yom Kippur, 1943, in a stirring display of unity to rescue Jews from Nazi extermination.
The march was the brainchild of 33-year-old Hillel Kook (b. 1910), a Jerusalem-born nephew of
Abraham Isaac Kook, former chief rabbi of Palestine, who arrived in the United States in 1940.
For reasons known only to him, once here, Kook took the Americanized name Peter Bergson.
Purchasing full-page ads in American newspapers criticizing British limitations on the number
of Jews who could emigrate to Palestine, then under British rule, and pleading for Allied action
to rescue European Jewry, Bergson and his associates known as the Bergson Group - used the
mass media to rouse public interest and influence the Roosevelt administration to intervene
against Hitler. Most provocatively, Bergson called for the formation of an international Jewish
army, which would fight under Allied auspices to liberate European Jewry.
One of Bergson's most spectacular initiatives was the 1943 March of the Rabbis. Despite his
Orthodox background, Bergson himself was not observant, nor were most of his followers. They
understood, however, the powerful visual impact of hundreds of Orthodox rabbis with their
beards, black coats and hats converging on Congress and the White House.
Gaining access to the Orthodox rabbinical leadership was no simple task for the uninitiated. The
elders of the Orthodox community in the 1940s were mostly European-born Talmudic scholars
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who spoke little English and were generally unfamiliar with the political ways of the New
World to which they had emigrated. Few were accustomed to receiving national press coverage.
But Bergson and his associates used their fluent Yiddish and Bergson's family connections to
win the trust of rabbis in the Hasidic and general Orthodox communities.
So it was that on October 6, 1943, more than 400 Orthodox rabbis, accompanied by marshalsfrom the Jewish War Veterans of America, marched solemnly from Union Station to their first
stop, the Capitol. Vice President Henry A. Wallace and a large bipartisan delegation of
Congressional leaders received them. While passersby gawked and newsmen snapped photos,
the rabbis recited the Kaddish; sang the traditional Jewish prayer for the nation's leaders to the
tune of the “Star Spangled Banner”; and solemnly read aloud, in English and Hebrew, their
petition calling for the creation of a special Federal agency to rescue European
Jewry and expand the limited quota on Jewish refugee immigration to the United States. Time
Magazine commented that, on receiving the petition, Vice President Wallace “squirmed through
a diplomatically minimal answer.” The rabbis then marched from the Capitol to the White
House.
On the advice of his aides, FDR, who was scheduled to attend a military ceremony, intentionally
avoided the rabbis by leaving the White. House through a rear exit while they marched silently
in front. When Roosevelt's decision not to encounter the rabbis became known to the press,
reporters interpreted Roosevelt's actions as a snub, adding a dramatic flair that transformed the
protest rally into a full-fledged clash between the rabbis and the administration.
Capitalizing on the publicity from the march, Bergson's friends in Congress introduced a
resolution asking FDR to create an agency that would find ways to provide refuge for those
Jews who still remained in the Nazi grip. At Senate hearings on the resolution, a State
Department official, Breckinridge Long, argued that America had absorbed more than its shareof Jewish refugees. Deeming that Long's statistics were deliberately distorted, Treasury
Secretary Henry Morgenthau drew up a stinging report to the president revealing the State
Department's efforts to make Jewish immigration to the U.S. almost impossible. Within days,
FDR announced the establishment of the War Refugee Board, which during the final year of
the Holocaust was responsible for rescuing thousands of Jews and increasing Jewish
immigration to America.
Bergson's skillful appeal to American public conscience, including the rabbi's march, worked as
nothing previously had to bring about a change in White House policy toward the Holocaust.
Bergson's militancy, Morgenthau's insider access and the rabbis' willingness to take united
political action combined to move FDR to action after three years of his insistence that onlywhen the Allies defeated Hitler could European Jewry be saved.
Source: American Jewish Historical Society.
From: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/march.html