Let us not forget those Soviet Jews
who were persecuted during Stalin’s rule. We will post information about the
Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee from Wikipedia and other links.
The Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee
(JAC, Russian: Еврейский антифашистский комитет Yevreysky antifashistsky komitet, ЕАК) was initiated
by the Jewish Bund leaders Henryk Erlich and Victor Alter. Upon their arrests
the Committee was reformed on Joseph
Stalin's order in Kuibyshev in April 1942 with the official support of the
Soviet authorities. It was designed to influence international public opinion
and organize political and material support for the Soviet fight against Nazi
Germany, particularly from the West. In 1952, as part of the persecution of
Jews in the latter part of Stalin's rule (for example, the "Doctors' plot"), most prominent members of
the JAC were arrested on trumped-up spying charges, tortured, and executed by firing
squad after a secret mock trial. They were officially rehabilitated in 1988.
Activities
Solomon Mikhoels, the popular actor and
director of the Moscow State Jewish Theater, was
appointed the JAC chairman. The JAC's newspaper in Yiddish
language was called Einigkeit (אייניקייט "Unity", Cyrillic:
Эйникейт).
The JAC broadcast pro-Soviet propaganda
to foreign audiences, assuring them of the absence of anti-Semitism
in the USSR.
In 1943, Mikhoels and Itzik Feffer, the first official representatives of
the Soviet Jewry allowed to visit the West,
embarked on a seven-month tour to the USA, Mexico,
Canada and Britain
to drum up their support. In the US, they were welcomed by a National Reception
Committee chaired by Albert Einstein and by B.Z. Goldberg, Sholem
Aleichem's son-in-law, and American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee. The largest pro-Soviet rally ever in the United
States was held on July 8 at the Polo
Grounds, where 50,000 people listened to Mikhoels, Fefer, Fiorello La Guardia, Sholem Asch,
and Chairman of World Jewish Congress Rabbi Stephen Wise.
Among others, they met Chaim Weizmann, Charlie
Chaplin, Marc Chagall, Paul
Robeson and Lion Feuchtwanger.
In addition to the funds for the
Russian war effort – US$16 million raised in the US, $15 million in England, $1
million in Mexico, $750,000 in the British Mandate of Palestine – other
help was also contributed: machinery, medical equipment, medicine, ambulances,
clothes. On July 16, 1943, Pravda reported: "Mikhoels and Feffer received a
message from Chicago that a special conference of the Joint initiated a
campaign to finance a thousand ambulances for the needs of the Red Army."
The visit also evoked the American public to the necessity of entering the
European war.
Persecution
Towards the end and immediately after
the war, the JAC became involved in documenting the
Holocaust. This ran contrary to the official Soviet policy to present it as
atrocities against all Soviet citizens, not acknowledging the specific genocide of the
Jews.
Some of the committee members were
vocal supporters of the State of Israel, established in 1948, something that Stalin supported
very briefly. Their international contacts especially to the USA at the
outset of the Cold
War, would eventually make them vulnerable to charges that they had become politically incorrect.
The contacts with American Jewish
organizations resulted in the plan to publish the Black Book simultaneously in the US and
the Soviet Union, documenting the Holocaust and participation of Jews in the resistance movement. The Black Book was indeed
published in New York City in 1946, but no Russian edition
appeared. The typeface galleys
were broken up in 1948, when the political situation of Soviet Jewry
deteriorated.
In January 1948, Mikhoels was killed
in Minsk by the Soviet secret police agents who
staged the murder as a car accident. The members of the Jewish Anti-Fascist
Committee were arrested. They were charged with disloyalty, bourgeois nationalism, cosmopolitanism, and
planning to set up a Jewish republic in Crimea to serve US
interests.
In January 1949, the Soviet mass media
launched massive propaganda campaign against "rootless cosmopolitans", unmistakably
aimed at Jews. Markish observed at the time: "Hitler wanted to destroy us
physically, Stalin wants to do it spiritually." On 12 August 1952, at
least thirteen prominent Yiddish writers were executed in the event known as
the "Night of the Murdered Poets"
("Ночь казненных поэтов").
Clockwise from top left: Peretz Markish, Itsik
Feffer, Leyb Kvitko, Dovid Hofshteyn and Dovid Bergelson
|
List of
notable JAC members
The size of JAC fluctuated with time.
According to Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (200 Years
Together), it grew to have about 70 members.
- Solomon Mikhoels (Chairman), the actor-director of the Moscow State Jewish Theater
- Solomon Lozovsky (Secretary), a former Soviet vice-minister of Foreign Affairs and the head of the Soviet Information Bureau
- Shakne Epshtein (Secretary and editor of the Eynikeyt newspaper)
- Itzik Feffer, a poet
- Ilya Ehrenburg, a writer
- Solomon Bregman, a deputy minister of State Control
- Aaron Katz, a General of the Stalin Military Academy
- Boris Shimeliovich, the Chief Surgeon of the Red Army and director of Botkin Hospital
- Joseph Yuzefovich, a historian
- Leib Kvitko, a poet
- Peretz Markish, a poet
- Isaak Nusinov, a linguist and literature critic
- David Bergelson, a writer
- David Hofstein, a poet
- Benjamin Zuskin, an actor
- Ilya Vatenberg, an editor
- Shlomo Shleifer, Chief Rabbi of Moscow
- Emilia Teumin, an editor
- Leon Talmy, a journalist, translator
- Khayke Vatenberg-Ostrowskaya, a translator
- Lina Stern, a scientist
- Israel Fisanovich, submarine commander, Hero of the Soviet Union
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