Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Three Generations Of Service

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Three Generations Of Service

    THREE GENERATIONS OF SERVICE
    Adam Dickter

    The Jewish Week
    Nov 17 2009

    Robert M. Morgenthau on Sunday tours the exhibit on the lives of
    himself, his father and grandfather at the Museum of Jewish Heritage
    - A Living Memorial To The Holocaust in Battery Park City. Photos
    courtesy of the Museum of Jewish Heritage-A Living Memorial To The
    Holocaust

    It seems rare, even somewhat awkward for a museum to feature an exhibit
    such as "The Morgenthaus: A Legacy of Service" that, in large part,
    tells the story of its founding chairman.

    "This is a unique occurrence, " conceded David Marwell, director of the
    Museum of Jewish Heritage-A Living Memorial To The Holocaust. "But the
    family is unique. There is something special in the Morgenthau DNA."

    For Marwell and his staff, a look at three generations of Morgenthau
    men who gave back to their family's adopted nation offered an
    opportunity to weave together several important narratives.

    "We had always wanted to do an exhibit on the Armenian genocide and
    on Roosevelt and the Holocaust," says Marwell. "This was a chance to
    do both at the same time."

    Henry Morgenthau, Sr. was appointed U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman
    Empire by President Woodrow Wilson and is credited with calling
    attention to the Armenian persecution. Thirty years later his son,
    Henry Morgenthau Jr., would play a similar role on behalf of Jews
    as a close confidante of Franklin Delano Roosevelt who served as his
    secretary of the Treasury during World War II. Robert Morgenthau is
    a war hero, former federal prosecutor, 1962 gubernatorial candidate
    and one of the longest-serving district attorneys in American history.

    Marwell says the exhibit was not intended to coincide with Robert
    Morgenthau's departure from office, but had been planned before he
    announced he would not seek a 10th term.

    Among the artifacts in the exhibit are telegrams from Henry Sr. about
    the Armenian plight, Henry Jr.'s report on "The Acquiescence of
    This Government in the Murder of Jews," a tea set used by Elinor
    Fatman Morgenthau to entertain Eleanor Roosevelt, Robert's navy cap,
    medals and DA phone logs and a note from Henry Jr. that was passed
    to FDR during a meeting explaining that he was "a little shicker,"
    Yiddish for drunk, after lunch at a friend's home.

    The president's response on the same note calls on him to leave the
    room "in due time" if he needs to vomit.

    That exchange, says Karen S. Franklin, one of the exhibit curators,
    challenges the perception that the Treasury secretary submerged his
    Jewish heritage.

    "Not only did he freely use that Yiddish expression," she says,
    "but the president knew exactly what he was talking about."
Working...
X