San Diego Jewish World

Sunday Evening
, June 10. 2007    

Vol. 1, Number 41

 

Israel organizes its response to
UK's proposed academic boycott

JERUSALEM (Press Release) —In the wake of the decision by Britain's University and College Teachers Union (UCU) to boycott Israeli academics, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Education Minister Yuli Tamir convened a large, multi-body forum to discuss the boycott and how best to respond.

"We must fight the boycott on every level and with all the means at our disposal. This is an act of hypocrisy and hatred that must not be allowed to raise its head, even if it comes from marginal bodies," said Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni at a meeting which took place Thursday evening, June 7.

6/10/07 SDJW Report
(click on headline below to jump to the story)

International and National


*Israel organizes its response to UK's proposed academic boycott

*Harel appointed deputy chief of staff of IDF


Regional and Local

*Current S.D. City Council 'less public-spirited' than previous councils, says Abbe Wolfsheimer Stutz

Daily Features
Jews in the News

Jewish Grapevine


For Your Reference
San Diego Jewish Community Calendar

San Diego Jewish Community Directory


Arts and Entertainment

*Cinema in the Crossfire of Jewish-Polish Polemics

*
The satisfaction of mentoring a young, talented musician 

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Anderson Travel
Hadassah
Jewish American Chamber of Commerce
Project Sarah: Flowers Aren't Enough



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"We must convince everyone who shares the values of Israel and the rest of the free world to join this struggle. Whoever supports a boycott of this type should know that there will be a price to pay. We cannot afford not to act; we have an obligation to prevent the spread of this process. Our meeting today is the beginning of a well-designed, coordinated action."

The Minister of Education, Culture and Sport, Yuli Tamir, emphasized the need to show the world that the British boycott is not a legitimate vehicle for protest. "The use of a boycott is inappropriate, and it is important that Israel states this unequivocally," Tamir said. "Our goal is to convince the British public to reject the boycott of Israel."

The meeting, called to discuss possible political and PR responses to the British call for a boycott of Israeli institutions of higher education, medical institutions and labor unions, was attended by political and academic leaders.

In addition to Ministers Livni and Tamir and other senior officials of the Foreign and Education Ministries, the participants included the Chairman of the Histadrut Labor Union; heads of the Israel-Britain Parliamentary Friendship Society, the Israel Medical Association and the International Advisory Board for Academic Freedom; and the presidents of Tel Aviv University, the Technion, and the Interdisciplinary Center-Herzliya. In addition, the Students Union,

 

 

various colleges  and other government ministries were represented.

It was decided to form a task force composed of representatives from all the bodies that took part in the meeting, to be headed by Mr. Raphael Barak, Deputy Director General for Europe at the Foreign Ministry.


Ministers Livni and Tamir charged the task force with implementing concrete recommendations for dealing with the situation, with an emphasis on the Internet, working through such voluntary bodies in Britain as friendship societies, the British Jewish community, churches, labor unions, etc. The task force will report to the ministers regularly.

The preceding article was provided by Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs

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International and National

Harel appointed deputy chief of staff of IDF

JERUSALEM (Press Release) Major General Dan Harel has been named as deputy chief of the general staff by Israel’s Defense Secretary Amir Peretz.

Harel replaces Major General Moshe Kaplinsky who is departing for a study period and will afterwards be appointed to an additional position, according to an announcement made by the Defense Ministry on Friday, June 8.

Currently serving as IDF Military Attache in the U.S.A. , Harel previously held the positions of GOC Southern Command (during the disengagement from Gaza), head of the IDF Operations Branch, Armored Division Commander, Chief Artillery Officer and Military Secretary to the Minister of Defense.

Additonally Colonel Avi Benayahu was named as IDF Spokesperson, replacing Brigadier General Miri Regev. Colonel Benayahu will be promoted to the rank of Brigadier General and will replace Brigadier General Regev within a few months. Brigadier General Regev's next position will be determined in the near future.

Benayahu, 48, married and father of three, has served as the commander and chief editor of Army Radio in the past few years. He Served as advisor to Defense Ministers Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Mordechai, as head of media relations at the IDF Spokesperson’s Office, as a military correspondent and as head of the Military Correspondents Association for several years.

The preceding story was provided by Israel's Ministry of Defense.

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Buena Vista Hadassah


cordially invites you to hear


Rabbi Chaplain Joel D. Newman

based on his experiences in the war zone

"Passover in Iraq"

12:30 p.m., Tuesday, June 19
Vista Library, 700 Eucalyptus Avenue, Vista
Free refreshments
For further information: call Vivian (760) 967-0149  
 

 Features


Jews in the News          
 
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 Like you, we're pleased when members of our community are praiseworthy, and are disappointed when they are blameworthy.
Whether it's good news or bad news, we'll try to keep track of what's being said in general media about our fellow Jews. Our news spotters are Dan Brin in Los Angeles, Donald H. Harrison in San Diego, and you. Wherever you are,  if you see a story of interest, please send a summary and link to us at sdheritage@cox.net.  To
see a source story click on the link within the respective paragraph.
____________________________________________________________________________________________


*The 40th anniversary of the Six Day War drew seven letters in today's San Diego Union-Tribune, four favoring Israel, three favoring the Palestinians. Pro-Israel letters were written by Michael Abrams, Arnold Flick, Patrick Groff and Ted Stern; pro-Palestinian letters came from Elizabeth Mansur, Zaid Shaku and Valerie Young.

*My one son from a previous connubial holocaust gives up his lucrative law practice to become a ventriloquist…. " goes a line in Woody Allen's new book, Mere Anarchy, providing the lead for Jerry Stahl's book review appearing in today's Los Angeles Times.

*U.S. Rep. Susan Davis (Democrat, California) says Congress under Democratic leadership has made progress on ethics reform, such as restricting travel "junkets," but U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa (Republican, California) disagrees.  He says things haven't changed much at all from the days when his party was running the House.  The story by John Marelius is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.


*The "John and Ken Show" on Los Angeles talk radio called upon its listeners to generate 30,000 calls to the offices of U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (Democrat, California) to protest the "amnesty" provisions of the Immigration Bill.  The resultant surge in calls clogged all of the senator's phone lines.  The story by Julia Preston of the New York Times News Service is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune. .. In other news, the call by Feinstein and others to close the prisoner camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and to move the suspected terrorist inmates to the United States for trial won an important endorsement from former Secretary of State Colin Powell.  The Associated Press story is in today's Los Angeles Times.

*
Saying he was unable to reconstruct from available public records what may have happened two years ago at a fundraiser hosted by embattled Sunroad Enterprises developer Aaron Feldman for San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders, San Diego Union-Tribune reporter Gerry Braun has asked to be invited to tag along to every one of Mayor Sanders future fundraisers.  He promises to pay for all the hors d'ouevres he eats.  His column is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*A San Diego Union-Tribune editorial criticizes a bill to require various changes in how voting machines are used, on the grounds that the requirements are unworkable and may even cause election day delays.  Furthermore, the newspaper criticizes two San Diego Democrats, Rep. Bob Filner and Rep. Susan Davis for supporting the measure.

*New York Mets outfielder Shawn Green is all for team solidarity: he's willing to grow a beard, shave his legs—but he's not certain about shaving his legs again.  He's one of the quotables in Chris Jenkins' behind-the-scenes baseball column in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*Journalist Larry Register has resigned as editorial leader of Al-Hurra television, the U.S-funded, Arab-language television service, after it drew criticism for running an anti-Israel speech by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.  The Associated Press story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*Israel is one of the countries to which the United States is exporting jobs, particularly in the computer industry. Ironically, some America-On-Line operators are actually Israeli. The San Diego-based company, Sky Mobilemedia, has software engineers at work in Croatia, India, and Israel.  The story by David Washburn is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
Israel Defense Forces shot dead one Palestinian terrorist who tried to crash through the border in a truck marked "TV."  Three or four other gunmen escaped after a two-hour battle in which no Israelis were harmed.  The Associated Press story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*Pope Benedict XVI and U.S. President George W. Bush discussed the Israel-Palestine issue during their meeting in Rome, but spokespersons for the two leaders did not reveal the substance of their discussion. Bush presented to the pontiff a walking stick engraved by a homeless man in Texas with the words of the Ten Commandments. A combined wire service story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
With Paris Hilton being permitted to leave jail, only to be required to return again, Sheriff Lee Baca's handling of celebrities is coming under question.  In another instance of what critics call celebrity favoritism, Baca withheld from the media news of Mel Gibson's rant against the Jews during his now notorious arrest for drunken driving.  The Associated Press story by Michael Blood is in today' San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
Chess champion and Russian dissident Garry Kasparov and other protestors were permitted to demonstrate without interference in St. Petersburg, Russia, where President Vladimir Putin was attempting to woo western investors.  Kasparov contends Putin has been turning Russia back into a police state.  The Associated Press story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger says in a column in today's San Diego Union-Tribune that American military failure in Iraq would "immediately weaken societies with significant Muslim populations." 

*
One of the biggest and most emotional fights in the California Legislature is over a bill by Assemblyman Lloyd Levine (Democrat, Sherman Oaks) to require most dogs and cats to be neutered.  He says it will reduce the number of unwanted animals that must be euthanized at shelters. But opponents say it could reduce pet populations, even of needed service dogs.  The Copley News Service story by Michael Gardner is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*Washington Post
columnist David Broder argues that U.S. District Court Judge Reggie Walton got it right when he sentenced I. Lewis 'Scooter' Libby to jail time.  To have let the former chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney off would have sent the message that there is a double standard in justice: one for little people and another for big shots.  The column is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*Grace Paley, activist, feminist, short story writer, mother and grandmother, makes a point of declaring that she is also JewishA profile by Susan Salter Reynolds is in today's Los Angeles Times.

*
The new presidential campaign season, which may find candidates wrapping up their party's nominations early in early primaries then waiting many months before the general election contest, has strategists wondering whether this is a good or bad development. Democrat Simon Rosenberg, president of the NDN advocacy group, thinks it is good.  The commentary by Ronald Brownstein is in today's Los Angeles Times.

*
Henry Samueli, the Broadcom founder who purchased the Ducks from Disney, celebrated his hockey team winning the Stanley Cup.  "Even Disney couldn't have choreographed such a magical season," he said at the celebration. The story by Tony Barboza and David Haldane is in today's Los Angeles Times.

*
Film producer Jerry Weintraub got to put his feet and hands into the sidewalk cement near Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood.  He was accompanied to the publicity event by Oceans Thirteen cast members George Clooney, Brad Pitt and Matt Damon.  The story is in the Public Eye column of today's San Diego Union-Tribune...Meanwhile, Sheigh Crabtree has a story in the Los Angeles Times telling how Weintraub is grooming Emma Roberts, the niece of Julia Roberts, for stardom as teen detective Nancy Drew.
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_______________________________________________
The Jewish Grapevine
                                                   
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AROUND THE TOWN—Former San Diego Port Commissioner Dr. Robert Penner practices ophthalmology in Coronado and keeps his eye on government affairs by making trips to Washington to lobby Congress for more funds for eye research and improved compensation under Medicare and similar issues. On a recent trip, he attended a committee session in which U.S. Rep. Bob Filner (Democrat, San Diego) was participating.  "Come with me," Filner said to Penner as the committee adjourned.  "We walked down the rotunda and it was completely filled with seats in which the Congress people and the Senators were all sitting. I've been there many times but I had never seen anything like this. It turned out it was the Day of Remembrance (Yom HaShoah). They had six candles up there with six survivors of the Holocaust. The Army band was  there, the Army flag carriers and Joe Lieberman (Independent, Connecticut) gave a speech which was tremendously inspiring: his wife's mother is a survivor.  Sitting in front of me was Congressman (Tom) Lantos (Democrat, California), who was a survivor.  It never happened to me before, and every patriotic bone in my body was vibrating.  It was such a meaningful thing."

San Diegans Rita & Murray Luftig are gathering 33 members of their extended family later this month to celebrate their upcoming 60th anniversary followed one day later  by Rita's 80th birthday.  The grand family reunion will be in nearby Rosarito Beach, Mexico.  The two were introduced by mutual friends at UCLA and were married in 1947.  Rita withdrew for a while to help Murray through law school, but then reenrolled and received her bachelor's degree the same year that he received his law degree. Murray would much later in his career serve as a municipal court judge in San Diego County's South Bay District.  Rita served as chair of the San Diego County Democratic Central Committee and as local chief of staff to then Senate President pro tempore James R. Mills.  Their own grandchildren range in age from 20 to 33, but the youngest at the gathering will be a 2-year-old great niece.

Allan Rappoport,
former district director of U.S. Customs, has been involved since the 1980s with San Diego's efforts to attract and retain the cruise ship industry. Promoting international tourism to San Diego and providing for homeland security are simultaneous goals of the Port of San Diego's Cruise Ship Advisory Committee, on which he serves as the vice chairman. "The key to success is the cooperation of the cruise liners," he said in a recent interview.  "From the beginning I found the cruise lines as interested in security as we were, so when we work together, as is normally the case, there are problems but we are able to resolve the problems.  There is no reason why cruising and security can't be compatible."  Since his retirement in 1990, Rappoport had an international consulting company, and also served for six years as a member of the Retired Seniors Volunteer Patrol (RSVP), helping the Eastern Division of the San Diego Police Department keep watch on traffic and residential neighborhoods. Now, he and his wife, Jane, are looking forward to their 49th wedding anniversary in October, and have been doing a lot of traveling.  

CYBER-REFERRALS—Larry Gorfine found a video of a talented lip-syncher doing a Jib Jap impersonation of President George W. Bush.  There is some shtick in there about Adam and Eve.  Here is the link. ... Hillel Mazansky was enthusiastic about the video clip at left in which Israel's former Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu replies to Britain's proposed academic boycott of Israel with a lesson from World War II British history.  Mazansky was so enthusiastic, in fact, he asked: "Why isn't this guy Israel's PM?"
 

Your specialist in
cruises and tours  
     
 

Upcoming 2007 San Diego  sailings
:

Now-December 29: Carnival: Elation: multiple 4-and 5-day sailings, round trip to Mexico.

Sept 23-Dec 30: Princess Cruises: Dawn Princess: 7-day round trip to Mexico

Sept. 28: Celebrity Cruises: Summit: 14-day Hawaii

Sept. 29: Holland America: Oosterdam, 7-day Mexico.


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Regional and Local

________________________________________________________________________
The Jewish Citizen
              by Donald H. Harrison
____________________________________________________________

Current S.D. City Council 'less public-spirited' than previous councils, says Abbe Wolfsheimer Stutz


SAN DIEGO—Abbe Wolfsheimer Stutz served on the San Diego City Council for two terms, but now as a deputy to City Attorney Michael Aguirre she has a different perspective on the body.  In her view, the City Council today is far less public-spirited, and far more lazy, than the council was back in the years 1985 to 1993.

"I think that I dealt with people who were industrious, who tried to do the right thing and I find today's council members generally, not all of them, are fairly lazy," she told San Diego Jewish World in a recent interview.  "They would rather leave it to the mayor to do the work. They take a lot of time out of the office, a lot of vacations.  We used to have a week in the summer..and two weeks in the holidays and they have vacations, what, at least one third of the year."

Don't they also make more money? she was asked.

"They make more money.  They are more self-interested. They do not have as much public spirit—and this is not everyone. all the time, but in general, the public spirit is not there.  They are not really working, I don't believe, for the people, the citizens, of San Diego." (link to voice recording)

What's it like working for Mike Aguirre?  "I love it," she replied.  "It is always exciting. He is a justice fighter and I like doing that very much.

A former law professor at Cal Western, she spends considerable time advising and teaching other attorneys in the office.  "I do seminars, for instance—all the continuing education of the bar.  I set those up.  I write memos of law on assorted topics—a lot of writing assignments."

A savvy viewer of government proceedings, she attended an Oct. 10 meeting of the Regional Airport Commission "on the day that the Sunroad presentation was made... I picked my  body up and quickly ran into Mr. Aguirre's office, and then he said, 'get everything lined up, get staff on board and so I did the administrative work finding attorneys for him—that's the kind of thing I do."

Sunroad Enterprises, owned by Aaron Feldman, has a controversial high-rise building near Montgomery Field which the Federal Aviation Administration has said is too high and may pose a hazard to aviation.  Wolfsheimer Stutz and Aguirre immediately launched an investigation into how the city had previously approved the building permit notwithstanding the FAA's opposition. That issue is pending in the courts.  More recently, another Sunroad proposal to build a high rise on Harbor Island near Lindbergh Field has renewed controversy about the company.

Besides mobilizing the city attorney's office for a controversial case, said Wolfsheimer-Stutz, "I do seminars, for instance all the continuing education of the bar; I set those up. I write memos of law on assorted topics... a lot of writing assignments."

Compared to working on the City Council, life at the City Attorney's office is a breeze, she said. "I don't have to deal with any political hassles. I deal only with the law.  I don't deal with people who are recalcitrant in any way because that will go to some other attorney.  It is very calm and serene. Even though Mike is an exciting person to work for, it is 100 percent calmer than serving on the City Council, and the work load is a lot lighter. A big project: I may take work home for the weekend, but on the other hand, it is not 24/7."

Wolfsheimer-Stutz stays active in the Jewish community as well, not as one who attends a lot of meetings, but as a contributor.  The daughter of Col. Irving Salomon, who served as a member of the United States delegation to the United Nations during the administration of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Wolfsheimer-Stutz is working with the Jewish Historical Society of San Diego "trying to put some things together with my father's papers."

Additionally she serves on the national legal committee of the American Jewish Committee, an assignment that typically involves a conference telephone call per month to discuss cases to be argued before the U.S. Supreme Court.

"We do mostly First Amendment cases at this point in time—religion in the public areas, schools, vouchers," she said.  "We are doing a lot of things with respect to the violation of the civil rights of prisoners who are not necessarily given the right to counsel, or the right to confront their accusers and so forth.  The national legal committee of the AJC is fascinating at this point. We are dealing with the kinds of things that the administration has put into place without the approval of Congress."

She said the topics that are discussed in the conference calls change from month to month.  "What happens with the national legal committee is that they send you the material on a particular case as it approaches the Supreme Court and then we are asked to vote on what we want to do with that, and why?  Do we feel that the law of the case before the Supreme Court is correct?  Do we want to abstain from writing an amicus or do we want to write one?"

Wolfsheimer-Stutz said she is the only member of the national committee from San Diego.  She said about 40 people participate in the rounds of conference calls.  "We become acquainted that way.  If we do go to a meeting back in Washington, it might be 'oh, I know you, you're the man who always screams about blah, blah, blah..."

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Arts, Entertainment & Dining


 

Cinema in the Crossfire of Jewish-Polish Polemics


By Laurie Baron

Movies about the Holocaust in Poland invariably ignite the tinder of collective memories of Polish-Jewish relationships during the War. Most Polish Catholics recall the German occupation as an odious regime that enslaved the Polish masses and murdered millions, including targeted executions of Polish intellectual, political, and religious elites. Polish Gentiles claim that they rendered as much assistance to their Jewish neighbors as possible under such conditions.  Some Poles viewed Jews as traitors who colluded with the Soviet occupation regime in Eastern Poland between 1939 and 1941 or collaborated with Germany by obeying the Jewish Councils established to enforce German decrees in the ghettoes.

The majority of Polish Jews, on the other hand, cannot forget the ferocity of prewar Polish anti-Semitism, which emanated from the Catholic Church and nationalistic political parties. While a fraction of their co-religionists found refuge in Polish homes or fought the Germans in Jewish or leftist partisan cadres, many faced indifference to their plight and betrayal by Polish informants who extorted money from Jews in hiding and handed them over to the SS when their funds ran out.  

The pilgrimage to Auschwitz made by the Polish-born Pope John Paul II in 1979 and his efforts to expunge anti-Semitic doctrines from Catholicism augured a new era in Polish-Jewish relations.  So did the emergence of the Solidarity movement out of the shipyard strikes in Gdansk in 1980. As part of its aim of creating a democratic and pluralistic society among Poles, the liberal wing of Solidarity encouraged a revival of Jewish culture and research about Polish Jewish history. 

Polish-Jewish reconciliation quickly became mired in the swamp of deeply rooted animosities. Claude Lanzmann’s documentary Shoah (1985) consisted of interviews of Jewish survivors, German perpetrators, and Polish bystanders.  Though one segment of it was devoted to underground courier Jan Karski who revealed to Allied leaders what he had witnessed in the Warsaw Ghetto and Belzec, other Poles reiterated traditional economic, sexual, and theological stereotypes of Jews even when they condemned Germany’s policy of extermination.  

Poland lodged an official protest with the French government charging that the film accused Poles of “complicity in Nazi genocide.”  When the movie was broadcast on Polish television and screened in theatres, it sparked an even greater uproar.  Heated exchanges over the Polish response to the Holocaust ratcheted up the tensions. The founding of a Carmelite Convent at Auschwitz in 1984 led to a fight between American Jewish protestors and local Polish workers at the site five years later. The Primate of Poland, Cardinal Josef Glemp, retorted with an anti-Semitic homily that poured new salt into the old wounds of Jewish-Polish antagonisms.  
 
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A Herald in Zion....
   
      Notes from Mevasseret Zion 
                                           
Dorothea Shefer-Vanson

The satisfaction of mentoring a young, talented musician 

MEVASSERET ZION, Israel—Ilona Domnich first entered my world more than ten years ago, when she was about fourteen years old. She had immigrated to Israel from Russia with her mother and grandmother not long before, and was attending the prestigious Jerusalem Music Academy High School. For lack of means, however, she had been unable to buy the required textbooks and had been told not to return until she had obtained them.

Somehow this information came to the ears of B'nai B'rith’s English-speaking Albert Einstein Lodge in Jerusalem, of which both my late parents were members. The Lodge committee saw fit to extend some financial aid to the young girl, who quickly won the hearts of its members. The financial assistance continued for several years and without a doubt contributed to Ilona’s success.

Ilona combines immense musical talent—both as a pianist and as a singer—with great personal charm. After finishing high school she went on to complete graduate studies at the Rubin Academy of Music, also in Jerusalem. She undertook the onerous task of a double degree, in both piano and voice, studying with some of Israel’s leading teachers. In addition to the assistance from B'nai B'rith, Ilona also won scholarships from the America Israel Fund.
Ilona Domnich*
 
From time to time, with the assistance of the Lodge, Ilona gave concerts, displaying her talents and achievements. It was always extremely gratifying for the members to see the progress of their young protégée, and over the years her audiences grew ever larger.

After completing her studies in Jerusalem Ilona moved to London, where she was awarded a place at the Royal Academy of Music to undertake further voice studies. Having successfully completed her M.A., she is currently working in London and building her operatic career.

It is gratifying to know that Ilona’s talent has been enabled to blossom through the foresight and kindness of patrons in Israel and England.

*Photo credit: Jerusalem Music Centre

The foregoing article was reprinted from the
AJR Journal (Association of Jewish Refugees) in England.
 
                                                      
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Story Continuations

Jews and Poles...

Amidst these recriminations and the election of Poland’s first postwar democratic government, Andrzej Wajda filmed Korczak (1990). Wajda had a long career as Poland’s “national director” whose movies often chronicled the resistance and repression of Poles during World War Two.  Three of Wajda’s previous films had featured Jews as leading characters, but some film historians accused him of confirming traditional Polish stereotypes of Jews as passive victims or greedy capitalists in movies.  Others felt that Wajda used his films as a tool to promote mutual understanding between Jews and Poles since both were victims of the German occupation.           

By choosing Korczak as a protagonist, Wajda “sought to reconcile Poles and Jews by demonstrating their compatibility in one character.” Moreover, Wajda intended Korczak to be a good-will gesture towards Polish Jewry.  Korczak, whose real name was Henryk Goldszmit, remains one of the rare wartime figures revered by Polish Gentiles and Jews alike.  To the former, he spoke and wrote in Polish, achieved international fame as an educator, and enjoyed a national following for his prewar radio show The Old Doctor.  To the latter, he had contemplated immigrating to Palestine, sheltered 200 Jewish orphans in the Warsaw Ghetto, and sacrificed his life by remaining with them instead of going into hiding.       

When Korczak premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 1990, it received a standing ovation from the audience, but a cold shoulder from several French reviewers. The latter castigated Wajda for minimizing Korczak’s Jewishness, exculpating the Poles of anti-Semitism, perpetuating Polish stereotypes of Jews, and sugarcoating the deportation of Korczak’s orphans by ending the movie with their train car decoupling, allowing them to disembark into a heavenly mist.  Never one to stifle his opinion about Polish anti-Semitism, Claude Lanzmann created a “scandal” at the screening of Korczak by walking out after its presentation and declaring, “You do not know how evil this is!”   

Viewing the movie 15 years later, I found it remarkably realistic in its black and white documentary-look that seamlessly segues several times into newsreel footage originally shot by German camera crews.  When Korzcak leaves the orphanage, he walks through overcrowded streets into dilapidated buildings populated by the dying, the dead, and the starving.  Wajda probes Korczak’s bifurcated Polish-Jewish identity, his incessant efforts to provide a normal existence for his orphans, the extremes of privilege and poverty in the ghetto, and the stoic march of Korczak and his wards to the deportation transport.  


The prologue reveals that Korczak possessed multiple allegiances. In his role as the “Old Doctor,” he advised his radio audience about compassionate childrearing. Korczak humbly confesses, “Me, I love children. This is not a sacrifice; the need is mine.”  Upon completion of his broadcast, Korczak learns that his program has been cancelled because it has become too controversial to permit a Jew to have his own show.  Korczak wonders if he had misled people by not using his Jewish name.  In a subsequent scene, two orphans debate whether Korczak is the world’s greatest Jew or the world’s greatest Pole. 


Rather than denying the extent of Polish anti-Semitism, Wajda presents several instances of it.  Korczak’s firing by the radio station establishes that anti-Jewish discrimination existed among Poles before the Germany invasion. Though some Polish critics wondered why Wajda included this incident, others recognized it as a protest against anti-Semitic elements within the Solidarity movement.  Before the outbreak of the war, Korczak escorts his orphans to the river for a swim.  Former students rebuke him for promoting harmonious relations between Jews and Poles and tell him that Poles have beaten them and smashed their windows. Korczak hoped resistance to German rule would unite Poles and Jews, but despaired that this would never happen.

Though Wajda shows instances of Polish sympathy for the Jews, he offsets these with vignettes about Polish abandonment or hatred of Jews.  Korczak’s Polish colleague Maryna Falska shelters a Jewish girl of “suitable appearance” and urges her long-time associate to go into hiding.  While Wajda does not cite every anti-Semitic incident recorded in Korczak’s diary, what he does include is more damning than Spielberg’s sparse references to Polish anti-Semitism in Schindler’s List.


Wajda’s portrayal of the ghetto’s Jewish Council and black marketers incensed some critics who charged that such characterizations confirmed Polish stereotypes of Jews collaborating with Germany or profiting from the suffering of their co-religionists. If directors should be more concerned about political correctness than historical accuracy, these criticisms might have merit, but anyone familiar with the history of the ghettos will not be shocked to see Jewish Councils following German orders and Jewish gangsters amassing wealth through smuggling. 

Wajda exhibits a genuine understanding of the terrible alternatives faced by Jewish leaders.  Korczak approaches Adam Czerniakow, the Chairman of Warsaw’s Jewish Council, to procure rations for his orphans.  Czerniakow summarizes the predicament the Jewish Council faced:  "The choice is not between good and evil, but of the lesser evil. ...I am fully aware of the fact that the majority have little chance of seeing the end of the war. I know the poor and the deported will die first. We will try to save as many as we can. Save the elite, save the children.”  Korczak denounces this strategy as a betrayal of Jewish solidarity, but accepts the food the Council donates.  He later witnesses the Germans beat Czerniakow when he refuses to sign the first deportation order. The real Korczak eulogized Czerniakow for fulfilling “his task of protecting the dignity of the Jews.”
     
Korczak had no compunctions about consorting with disreputable elements in the ghetto if he can raise money from them.  In the movie, he visits a notorious nightclub where Jewish racketeers congregated.  A boy from the orphanage censures Korczak later that evening for mingling with the “dregs” of Jewish society.  Korczak obstinately replies, “I will see the Devil himself to save my children.  I have no dignity. I have 200 children.” Wajda’s image of ghetto nightlife is not a malicious fabrication, but is based on passages from Korczak's diary.  
 
French critic Daniéle Heymann denounced the movie’s final scene for glossing over the wretched fate that awaited Korczak’s minions:  “And the doors swing open –a coda to a sleepy, disgusting dream on the edge of revisionism – and we see how the how the little victims, energetic and joyful, merge in slow-motion from the train of death.  Treblinka as the salvation of murdered Jewish children.  No!” 

Korczak biographer Betty Jean Lifton has suggested that Wajda had revived a Polish legend that the “Old Doctor” and his children were spared when “the carriage with the transport became miraculously unlinked from the train” to preserve their vision of Korczak as “indestructible.”  She felt that the charges leveled against the movie subverted Wajda’s intention for making it:  “Instead of stirring up Polish-Jewish antagonisms, we should rather be thankful for the sincere sympathy with which Wajda attempts to recreate this modern Jewish hero who died -like he lived – for his children.”

Indeed, the final scene follows an unforgettable shot of Korczak and his orphans waving a banner with a Star of David on one side and the emblem of his fictional hero King Matt on the other as they walk to the Umschlagplatz.  The ponderous beat of a dirge intensifies the impact of what has been perceived as a “mute protest” against Nazi genocide.  Indeed, it is one of the few scenes in the movie that has any background music.  The closing caption informing viewers that Korczak and his children were gassed at Treblinka destroys the illusion of a happy ending, as does the return of the dirge as the background music played over the closing credits. 
     
Korczak deserved more acclaim and exposure than it initially received.  It became the casualty of Jewish-Polish polemics, Claude Lanzmann’s vendetta against it, and the timing of its Cannes premier which coincided with a rash of Jewish grave desecrations in Carpentras.  Ironically, the movie received positive receptions in Germany and Israel, prompting the latter to mandate that it be shown as part of the country’s school curriculum.  The controversy surrounding the movie subsided by the late Nineties when the American and French Academies of Motion Pictures recognized Wajda’s cinematic career.  Nominating Wajda for the lifetime achievement Oscar, Steven Spielberg called Korczak “one of the most important European pictures about the Holocaust.”

The controversy surrounding Wajda’s Korczak did not end Polish efforts to improve relations with Jews after the fall of communism.  In accordance with Pope John Paul II’s denunciations of anti-Semitism and the Holocaust, the Bishops of Poland issued a pastoral letter in 1991 beseeching Jews to forgive Polish indifference towards, or complicity in, Germany’s wartime slaughter of Jews.  In 1997 the Jewish Historical Institute reported in 1997 that the textbooks commonly used in the nation’s classrooms either omitted, minimized, or distorted the role of Jews in Polish history.  In 2000 Poland signed the Stockholm Declaration obligating Polish public schools to teach about the Holocaust.

In the same year, the publication of Jan Gross’ book Neighbors challenged the presumption that Poles never instigated violence against Jews during the German occupation of their country. As might be expected, the Jedwabne revelation elicited a mixed reaction from Polish leaders and citizens. In the midst of the Jedwabne controversy, Poles hailed Roman Polanski’s decision to film The Pianist in Poland as an opportunity to revive the Polish movie industry which had been in a slump since the fall of the Soviet Union. 

Several factors fostered the expectation that the picture would enjoy international success: the popular fascination with Polanski’s notoriety, his taut directorial style, the influx of funding from British, French, and German studios which co-produced the picture, the multinational appeal of a film cast with international stars, and, above all, the compelling tale of a gifted classical musician who perseveres to play his instrument once again.  Moreover, Polanski’s survival as a boy hiding from the Germans in occupied Poland after being separated from his mother, who died at Auschwitz, and his father, who was incarcerated at Mauthausen, gave him excellent credentials to cinematically recreate Jewish life within and outside theWarsaw ghetto.  
       
The Pianist borrows liberally from familiar images from Nazi newsreel footage, wartime photographs of the Warsaw Ghetto, and previous documentaries and feature films. The DVD version of the film features a stunning sequence of crosscuts between actual movies and photographs of the Warsaw Ghetto and Polanski’s recreations of these scenes.  His shots of Jews carrying their belongings in suitcases or on carts, nude corpses strewn on the pavement, the bricking of the ghetto wall, German cameramen filming Jews herded into the ghetto, and Jews crossing the bridge connecting the two parts of the ghetto lend historical authenticity to Polanski’s representation of the ghetto

Polanski devotes many scenes to the deteriorating conditions in the Warsaw Ghetto and the varied Jewish responses to Nazi policies. The idyllic footage of prewar Warsaw precedes the bombardment of the city while Szpilman performs at a Polish radio station until an artillery shell explodes and topples him off his stool.  
After German troops march into the city, Szpilman earns his living playing piano in a café frequented by Jewish black-marketers and prostitutes who seem inured to the starving and dying Jews littering the streets outside the establishment.  Two of the profiteers request that Szpilman halt his performance to enable them to hear whether the sound of their gold coins clinking on the marble tabletop sounds right.  In his autobiography, Szpilman tersely observed, “I lost two illusions here: my beliefs in our general solidarity and in the musicality of the Jews.”       


Polanski combed Szpilman’s memoir for graphic incidents to visualize the ubiquitous danger and deprivation Jews confronted in the ghetto.  Audiences may have seen the Nazi newsreel of a Jewish boy frisked by German guards for concealed food that tumbles into a mound around his feet.  Polanski subjects them to witnessing a young smuggler caught by his feet and beaten so brutally by his captors on the Aryan side of the wall that he is dead by the time Szpilman pulls him over to the Jewish side.  Another haunting scene shows a character nicknamed the “grabber” trying to snatch a can of soup from a woman.  When it spills on the ground, he voraciously licks the liquid off the pavement.  The Szpilmans witness the Gestapo push an elderly man in a wheelchair over his balcony and execute the Jews who gather around his corpse.                       

Amid the anguish, panic, or resignation of Jews awaiting deportation at the Umschlagplatz, Polanski interjects his childhood memories into the story.  Determined to stay with his family, Szpilman is unexpectedly yanked out of line by a Jewish policeman who prevents him from joining them. In the memoir, Szpilman darts away as quickly as he can.  In Polanski’s case, he asked a Polish guard if he could fetch some food for the journey.  The guard warned him not to run, but to walk slowly so he wouldn’t attract attention.  Polanski retains Szpilman’s rescue by a Jewish policeman, but adds the advice from the Polish guard about not running.  Szpilman sobs as he walks through a boulevard covered with cadavers, furniture, suitcases, and falling feathers from ripped-open comforters and pillows.

True to Szpilman’s memoir, Polanski portrays Polish Gentiles as both friends and foes.  About to enter a restaurant with a Polish woman he is courting, Szpilman stops when he reads a sign barring Jews from dining there. Following the deportation of most of the Jews from the ghetto, a Polish couple from the underground arranges for Szpilman to hide in a vacant apartment in the Aryan sector of Warsaw.  When he accidentally knocks dishes off a cupboard shelf, the Polish woman in the adjacent apartment alerts her neighbors to the presence of the Jew fleeing the building. The Polish woman he had courted earlier in the film and her new husband locate another hiding place for Szpilman.  The Pole assigned to bring food to Szpilman absconds with the money he raised to aid the famed musician and fails to feed him frequently enough to stave off severe malnutrition.  Consequently, Szpilman contracts a severe case of jaundice and is nursed back to health by the Polish couple. 

Polanski refuses to romanticize either the Jewish or Polish resistance to the Germans.  By angling the camera down upon the action at street level and shooting through the curtains and windows of Szpilman’s hiding places, he reduces Szpilman and the audience to passive spectators of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943 and the Polish Revolt of 1944.  This visual distancing diminishes these armed struggles of the heroic stature posterity has conferred upon them.  In comparison Jon Avnet’s Uprising (2001) glorifies Jewish resisters with close-up, straight-on, or low angle camera shots as they plan and mount their rebellion.

When the German troops crush the Polish Revolt, Szpilman is at the epicenter of their assault.  Suddenly, he must dodge the blasts from flamethrowers, bazookas, or machine guns that seem to divine his location although they are fired at Polish resisters. Staying one step ahead of spectacular explosions creates a segment that looks and feels more like an action movie.  Polanski changes the tone of The Pianist by tracking Szpilman’s perilous close calls into the cavernous ruins of the ghetto.  Polanski replicated this barren landscape by razing an abandoned Soviet army base in the former East Germany.

The upbeat ending of The Pianist undercuts the gloomy mood pervading the rest of the movie. When Szpilman clumsily tries to open a can of pickles, the container falls from of his hands and rolls to the feet of an on-looking Wehrmacht Captain.  In a curt exchange, the German officer whose name was Wilm Hosenfeld learns that the scraggly scavenger had been a pianist before the war.  He asks him to play something on a piano in the next room.  Szpilman plays a Chopin nocturne.  His bony fingers stiffly strike the keys at first, but as they regain dexterity, the music flows expressively with the camera alternating between close-ups of Szpilman’s hands and the transfigured faces of the two men.  Instead of arresting him, the Captain brings him bread and jam.  Retreating with his troops, the Captain makes one final gesture of kindness by giving Szpilman his coat.

Wearing a Wehrmacht coat, Szpilman narrowly escapes execution by Russian soldiers who at first mistake him for a German soldier. Interned by the Russians, Hosenfeld tries to contact Szpilman to vouch for his act of mercy. The closing scene juxtaposes Szpilman’s resumption of his musical career with a postscript that Hosenfeld died in Soviet captivity.  The movie avoids stereotyping either Jews or Poles.  Indeed, when stopped by Russian soldiers, Szpilman identifies himself as a Pole in both the memoir and the film.

Most American reviews of The Pianist applauded its cinematography, detachment, even-handedness, and fine performances.  Nevertheless, echoes of the Polish-Jewish animosities reawakened by the Jedwabne controversy could be heard in the negative reviews the film received. 

Although appreciative of the film’s visual representation of the “brutality and inhumanity inside the ghetto,” novelist Thane Rosenbaum labeled the film “a valentine to Polanski’s Poland.”  He contended that the gratitude Polanski and Szpilman felt towards their Polish rescuers prompted both men to regard Poles “only as freedom fighters” rather than as “complicit or indifferent to the fate of their Jewish neighbors.”  Thus, they were oblivious to the “anti-Semitic attitudes that the vast majority of Poles had toward Jews. 

Another critic accused Polanski of “blowtorching” the acrimonious history of Polish Jewish relations.  Omer Bartov has surmised that the popularity of the film in Poland was due to its surfeit of “good Poles” who helped Szpilman and to his lack of any Jewish affiliation beyond that of ancestry.   


In response to Rosenbaum’s review, Robert Strybel praised the film as a “must- see” for Polish Americans because it reflected Szpilman’s dispassionate account of survival in wartime Warsaw and bore “the hallmarks of the Polish school of cinematography, in which Polanski got his start.”  He recognized that Polanski’s film featured Jewish and Polish characters running gamut of enduring, exploiting, or resisting German oppression. 

Andrew Greeley wondered why Rosenbaum deemed it necessary to falsify Szpilman’s story in order to tar all Polish Catholics for betraying their Jewish fellow citizens.  Greeley admitted that “no one can pretend there was massive support for Jews in Poland at that time” but asserted that this should not obscure the memory of the few Poles who bravely shielded Jews from the Germans.  The National Polish American-Jewish American Council sent a letter to The Wall Street Journal where Rosenbaum’s article had been published.  Its co-signatories Martin Bresler and John Pikarski found Rosenbaum’s generalizations “offensive and misleading” since they ignored the range of Polish responses to the extermination of the Jews and the ruthlessness of German rule in Poland where 3 million Gentiles also perished and the punishment for hiding a Jew was execution of captured rescuers and their immediate families.           

In the absence of systematic research about the attitudes of American Jews towards Poles, Zvi Gitelman has speculated that most “regard Poles as incorrigibly anti-Semitic” because they have heard survivors bitterly recall the intensity of Polish interwar anti-Semitism and wartime complacency towards, or complicity in, the German hunt for Jews.  In light of the flare-up of tensions between the two groups occasioned by the  Rosenbaum review, one can only reiterate Gitelman’s conclusion that “as much remains to be done on the Jewish side as on the Polish side” to foster reconciliation between the two groups.         

The foregoing is an  abridged version of Baron's article from Rethinking Poles and Jews: Troubled
Past, Brighter Future
edited by Robert Cherry and Annamaria Orla-Bukowska and released last week
by Rowman and Littlefield.  Baron, a professor of history at San Diego State University, is the author
of 
Projecting the Holocaust into the Present, which examines how cinema has treated the Shoah.

                                                  
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