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  • Metro Views: Honoring the Morgenthaus

    Jerusalem Post
    nov 28 2009


    Metro Views: Honoring the Morgenthaus
    By MARILYN HENRY


    'I find that so long as you render service - no matter where and how -
    all men speak the same tongue, and hearts beat the same." So said
    Henry Morgenthau Sr. in 1916, his third year as US ambassador to the
    Ottoman Empire.

    In a brief time as President Woodrow Wilson's envoy, he had indeed
    rendered service, providing succor and sounding alarms that firmly
    established his place in Jewish history and made him a hero to
    Armenians.

    Deeply affected by the dire poverty of the Jews in Palestine,
    Morgenthau in 1914 cabled his friend Jacob Schiff in New York:
    "Palestinian Jews facing terrible crisis belligerent countries
    stopping their assistance serious destruction threatens thriving
    colonies fifty thousand dollars needed."

    It was no small amount in those days, but Schiff quickly raised the
    funds for a relief project that evolved into the Joint Distribution
    Committee.

    The next year, fearful of the fate of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire,
    he cabled Washington, reporting that "from harrowing reports of eye
    witnesses it appears that a campaign of race extermination is in
    progress." To this day, Henry Morgenthau Sr. is revered by Armenians
    for alerting the world to the Armenian genocide.

    These cables are among the documents, memorabilia, photographs and
    films in a new exhibit "The Morgenthaus: A Legacy of Service" at the
    Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York. The exhibit, which opened this
    month in lower Manhattan and runs through 2010, covers the public and
    communal service of three generations of Morgenthaus: Henry Sr., Henry
    Jr. and Robert.

    Henry Jr. was president Franklin D. Roosevelt's Treasury secretary
    during the Depression, and helped prepare the economy for World War
    II.

    He still held that post in January 1944 - the Jew on the president's
    cabinet at the most frightening moment in modern Jewish history - when
    his office took a remarkable step. It challenged the US State
    Department for failing to rescue European Jews. His staff wrote a
    report "on the acquiescence of this government in the murder of Jews."
    Morgenthau edited the title, calling it a "personal report to the
    president," but he did not mince words with Roosevelt, whom he had
    first met as a neighbor in upstate New York.

    "One of the greatest crimes in history, the slaughter of the Jewish
    people in Europe, is continuing unabated," he wrote. He assailed the
    "utter failure of certain officials in our State Department ¦ to take
    any effective action to prevent the extermination of the Jews in
    German-controlled Europe."

    Only days after receiving the report, Roosevelt signed Executive Order
    9417, creating the War Refugee Board. Many argue that the board, which
    saved some 200,000 European Jews, did too little too late. But
    Roosevelt's tarnished record during the Holocaust and that of his
    administration only enhance, rather than diminish, the significance of
    the actions taken by Morgenthau, who later was an energetic
    fund-raiser for Jewish and Israeli causes. (The moshav Tal Shahar was
    founded in 1948 and named after him; "Morgenthau" translates from the
    German to "morning dew.")

    "What I want is intelligence and courage - courage first and
    intelligence second," Henry Jr. once said. He had them. His son Robert
    has been the Manhattan district attorney for more than a generation.
    (The fictional Adam Schiff, the original district attorney on the
    television program Law & Order, was reportedly modeled on Morgenthau.)
    His office has been famous not only for its cases, but for the
    attorneys and judges who cut their lawyerly teeth there. Most
    recently, that attention focused on the newest Supreme Court justice,
    Sonia Sotomayor, who joined Morgenthau's staff in 1979, when she was
    25.

    A handwritten note from Sotomayor is on exhibit: "Bob - Few can say
    they have a friend and mentor like you. I was blessed the day we met.
    Thank you for all your support. Sonia" Now 90, the district attorney
    is retiring after some 35 years as the city's prosecutor. With his
    retirement, this "Morgenthau century" of prominent public service [by
    the family] will end.

    HENRY SR. WAS born in 1856 in Mannheim, Germany; his family came to
    New York a decade later. He had a career in law and real estate before
    he was tapped by Wilson. "I had to wait until I was 55 to earn enough
    money to afford to go into public service," Henry Sr. told his
    grandson. "You don't have that excuse." Robert got the message. In
    addition to his very public role as district attorney, Robert has been
    actively involved in charitable and civic institutions, such as the
    Police Athletic League, whose activities include day care, summer
    camp, employment and sports programs for New York City's children and
    youth.

    He also is chairman of the Museum of Jewish Heritage, whose
    exhibitions are notable, in part, for the wide-ranging and
    thought-provoking public and educational programming that accompanies
    them.

    Morgenthau's relationship to the museum seems coincidental to the
    exhibit; the family's century of public service merits it. And despite
    an exhibit that features its chairman's family, the museum does not
    blindly glorify or whitewash the Morgenthaus' history. For instance,
    in its summary of Henry Sr.'s 1919 official "commission to Poland" to
    investigate reports of atrocities against Jews, the exhibit
    acknowledges that Morgenthau "minimized blame" due the Polish
    government for the mistreatment of Jews, for which he was strongly
    criticized. Yet he was profoundly moved by what he witnessed in
    Poland. "This was the first time I ever completely realized what the
    collective grief of a persecuted people was like," he said.

    "The Morgenthaus: A Legacy of Service" is intended not only as a look
    back at one family's three generations of public service, but to
    promote it as well.

    The exhibit (which has material online at www.mjhnyc.org/morgenthaus)
    urges people to become involved with such causes such as food banks,
    genocide intervention and Jewish service corps. As he walked through
    the exhibition with reporters earlier this month, pausing at artifacts
    and photos, Robert Morgenthau said: "I hope it will encourage people
    to be involved with public service."

    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satel lite?cid=1259243025483&pagename=JPost%2FJPArti cle%2FShowFull
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