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“BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY:” THE LEAGUE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS AGAINST NAZISM AND DOMESTIC FASCISM, 1933-1946 A thesis submitted to Kent State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Arts in History by Scott D. Abrams May, 2012 i Thesis written by Scott D. Abrams B.A., The University of Akron, 2010 M.A., Kent State University, 2012 Approved by _______________________________, Kenneth Bindas, Co-Advisor _______________________________, Richard Steigmann-Hall, Co-Advisor _______________________________, Kenneth Bindas, Chair, Department of History _______________________________, Timothy Moerland, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences ii TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS..................................................................................................iv INTRODUCTION...............................................................................................................1 CHAPTER 1: Building a Nazi Community.......................................................................23 CHAPTER 2: Public Resistance and Clandestine Vigilance.............................................55 CHAPTER 3: Breaking the Bund and Legion...................................................................90 CHAPTER 4: Resistance, Vigilance, and Change: America's War, the League for Human Rights, and the Fall of American Fascism.......................................................................123 BIBLIOGRAPHY............................................................................................................161 iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: This thesis was a product of many long nights, difficult days, and the direct (and indirect) help of many people. I would like to start by thanking the staff and faculty in Kent State University's Department of History. Their assistance from everything bureaucratic to mundane made my stay at Kent State much easier. Without them, I’d still be lost in a sea of paperwork. I would also like to thank the professors whose classes I took or I worked in. I believe that through personal interactions with them and in-class activities I was able to hone my interests, skills, and knowledge well past what I initially had. Among those faculty members, three in particular stood out and made this thesis possible. My committee members, Dr. Richard Steigmann-Gall, Dr. Kenneth Bindas, and Dr. Clarence Wunderlin each contributed to this project by offering me their knowledge, time, advice, and revisions. I am most certainly in debt to them for their intellectual input into this project. My fellow masters and Ph.D. colleagues in the department deserve thanks as well for their moral support and probing questions. I would also like to thank the staff members of Cleveland's Western Reserve Historical Society and Case Western Reserve University's Special Collections department. They each gave me access to indispensable primary sources that otherwise would have this project impossible. Most importantly, my family and loved ones deserve the greatest thanks that I can possibly give. Their constant support, questions, and love brought me through many difficult times and kept my mind focused on the end goal. Their enthusiasm for my project and seeing iv me succeed helped keep my internal drive what it was from the beginning until the end. This entire process has been an enlightening, albeit difficult experience that I will carry with me for the rest of my life. v INTRODUCTION A Brief Prologue By the end of 1945, Cleveland, Ohio's League for Human Rights Against Nazism had fought a long and tiresome campaign against domestic fascism and elements of the German-American Bund. The League led the efforts to counter Nazi propaganda in the area and campaigned for an economic boycott of the Nazis. They printed volumes of informational fliers, lists of businesses that sold German goods, and rallied civilians against Nazi atrocities. For them, the end of the war meant that they could disband and within a few months after June, 1946, the League permanently closed its doors. Before dismantling, however, the League printed a handful of copies detailing a considerable amount of their activities. The report explains the League's rise to local power, the fights it conducted against religiously and politically validated anti-Semitism, and the economic boycott it led in Cleveland. The League's report also hints at a much greater campaign of “carefully-kept files and persistent watchfulness.... [of] hundreds upon hundreds of individuals” and organizations. 1 These were secret, extralegal investigations against local Nazis, German spies, suspicious individuals, the Cleveland branch of the GermanAmerican Bund and William Dudley Pelley's Silver Shirt Legion, and the local German American community, largely gathered by paid informants and agents with coded names 1 Anonymous, Report of the League for Human Rights, 1933-1941 (Cleveland, OH.: League for Human Rights, 1946), 24. 1 2 like P-9, X-5, and 211. Their findings included a black market for German goods, illegal funding programs that sent money to Germany and the Nazi Party, a Hitler Youth-themed education camp, cooperation between German bureaucrats and local officials to send Nazi propagandists into Cleveland schools and Cleveland students to German schools, plans to disrupt local elections, and even a plot to illegally take over Cleveland's most prestigious German American organization. The League furthermore found that Nazi agents and propagandists were indeed active in spreading anti-Semitism throughout northeast Ohio and that the local Bund's membership extended from average citizens to the social, political, and scholarly elite of Cleveland. The key organizations in this thesis, the German-American Bund and League for Human Rights, were products of their time and experiences felt by members over a period of decades. While both of these groups were local entities vying for power, their goals and political leanings were influenced by national forces. Furthermore, they are representative of larger movements, each calling for the nation to move in opposing directions. It should be no surprise then that these two groups fought each other over the role of guiding political philosophies in everyday life and in political power. Most importantly, their conflicts over ideology portrays the problem of democracy's value as America's leading political ideology versus the potential role of fascism offered to the world. The German-American Bund, in both it's national and local attempts to gain real power, represented a threat to democratic principles and left many observers extremely unsettled by their rhetoric and activities. The League for Human Rights saw themselves as Cleveland's leading non-sectarian/Jewish-aligned anti-Nazi boycott organization and 3 the best local solution to the Bund's efforts in Cleveland. Their mission to defend democracy, promote ethnic and religious tolerance, and defeat fascistic regimes took the forms of public informational speeches, rallies, parades, news columns, rumor sections in local newspapers, boycott programs, and clandestine campaigns. The tense, increasingly public relationship between the League and Cleveland Bund reached it's first critical point between 1936 and 1937. This conflict came about when the Bund leaders realized that their initial efforts to reach the American community failed. As a result, they decided to recast the group's image and public message as proAmerican, pro-German culture, and anti-Communist, while deceptively remaining Nazi at their core. Their message changed from militarism and anti-Semitism towards more subtle language that embraced ethnic celebration and national pride. Changing in kind, the League's tactical shift towards vigilance, as defined by historian Christopher Capazolla, was aimed at continuing their campaign against an enemy that tried to make themselves look more American and less Nazi. These new methodologies, vigilance and increased subtlety, came to define their dialogic relationship. In all, this study grapples with several key issues about these organizations and their places in the larger historical narrative on American Nazism and resistance campaigns. First, the growth of American Nazism (particularly the German-American Bund), their initial public message, how they challenged democracy, and federal investigations against them. Additionally, I will present the development of the League for Human Rights, a Cleveland-based non-sectarian resistance organization, and how they confronted domestic fascism. Naturally, discussions of these groups will be 4 preempted by sections that display how both were products of larger national conflicts. Second, I look at the League's and Bund's changing public campaigns in Cleveland and how they each forced the other to change their dialogue and methodology in public settings. Third, I examine various changes in the Bund and League's operations, altercations between their ideological campaigns, and, finally, the results of the League's covert operations against the Bund. Fourth, my analysis looks at the breakdown of formal Nazi organizations into discrete underground cells and how the League's vigilance campaigns embraced renewed public resistance and revised private investigations to keep up with developments. Lastly, my review of these groups, their changing tactics, and their activities serves as a revision of major conclusions made by previous historians, particularly Haskel Lookstein, on the affectivity of non-sectarian anti-Nazi resistance and the inner circle activities of the German-American Bund and other fascist-leaning groups. Outside of this study, no major work on anti-Nazi resistance considers the effects of vigilance campaigns and the inner circle activities of American Nazi organizations as part of the larger narrative of the 1930s.These elements have long been absent from the traditional narrative. They are important because they offer a new contour to the affectivity, tactics, and range of anti-Nazi resistance movements as well present new information on Bund activities. The latter is key because new Bund records have not surfaced nor been present in scholarly literature since the 1970s. Section One: A Methodological and Historiographical Review 5 Before anything meaningful can be said of Jewish and non-sectarian anti-Nazi resistance, one is required to first review the historiographical narrative concerning the German American ethnic experience during and between the World Wars and general political and social pressures during this time. Some of the works that inform my overarching ideas about these periods include Eric Hobsbawm's The Age of Extremes, Robert E. Herzstein's Roosevelt & Hitler, William E. Leuchtenburg's Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932-1940, and Robert S. McElvaine's The Great Depression. 2 These works all excel at covering their specific aims, but also provide strong syntheses on the periods, issues, and information relevant to this study. Strong as these works are, many skim over or give little more than passing thoughts to the experience German Americas had with nation-wide harassment. At first sight this experience may not seem all that relevant to the American Nazi movement; however, many historians have found that rampant national “Germanophobia” and ethnic harassment contributed greatly to galvanizing both American attitudes towards German activities as well as the extremist seedbed from which organized American Nazism arose. Any review of German American harassment, “100% Americanism,” and the nativist experience during the Great War would be incomplete without the works of two key historians, namely Frederick C. Luebke and Carl Wittke. In particular, Carl Wittke's 2 Eric Hobsbawm, The Age of Extremes, (New York: Vintage Books, 1994); Robert E. Herzstein, Roosevelt & Hitler, (New York: Paragon House, 1989); William E. Leuchtenburg, Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932-1940, (New York, Harper & Rowe, 1963); Robert S. McElvaine, The Great Depression (New York, Times Books, 1984). 6 “ethnic disappearance thesis” has been the most widely reproduced and long standing version of the nativist experience. In German-Americans and the World War, Wittke characterized the nativist campaigns as “a violent hysterical concerted movement to eradicate everything German from American civilization.” Nativists were centered in on using all legal, extralegal, and in some cases, illegal methods possible so as to keep Americans of German stock from engaging in or promoting any sort of activity or group that did not fall within “100% Americanism.” He claims that both urban and rural communities were equally involved in anti-German hysteria, thus making the effect a truly universal event. 3 His account unevenly evaluates pro-German activities during and prior to the war and the nativist campaigns against them. He posits that Germans were victims purely because they were German and nothing more. Wittke's idea for the actual “disappearance” of America's Germans is best shown in his later literature. For example, he explains that “the amorphous community which had existed from 1850 to World War I, collapsed and largely disappeared in the fiery furnace of that war” in his 1964 We Who Built America. 4 This school of thought assumes that assimilation was not truly possible. Instead, Wittke contends that individual ethnic communities were defined by their unique cultural indicators and stood outside of assimilated cultural groups. Lastly, German-American ethnic affiliation fell as a result of “halting immigration, suburbanization, and second-generation assimilation [that] 3 Carl Wittke, German-Americans and the World War (Columbus, OH: Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, 1936), 163. 4 Carl Wittke, We Who Built America: The Saga of the Immigrant, (Cleveland: Western Reserve University Press, 1964), 248. 7 weakened the bonds of the German community.” 5 He ultimately concludes that the ethnic community ceased to exist because nativists stripped them of their culture, institutions, and high place in American society. Germans were quickly absorbed into the general American population. Wittke's thesis has been instrumental in scholarly literature to this day and has been widely reproduced or slightly altered by myriad historians that analyze German American history. After Wittke, Frederick Luebke's Bonds of Loyalty: German Americans and World War I stands as one of the most widely respected pieces on German American studies. While they both look at similar evidence, Luebke and Wittke come to opposing conclusions. The first major difference present is Luebke's opening eulogy given to Robert Praeger, the only man ever hung for being German. His chapter on Praeger heralds him as a true American patriot that happened to be a victim of undue, Germanophobic violence. Unlike Wittke, pro-German war-time activities are given fair consideration in this work. Most importantly, Bonds of Loyalty posits the “ethnic survival thesis.” While Wittke contends that Americans of German extraction disappeared from society and were forcefully assimilated through nativism, Luebke claims that the ethnic group ultimately outlived nativism, if only as a shell of it's former self. He claims that this is because German institutions that were shut down during the war returned throughout the 1920s and later. While they eventually resurfaced, German Americans never returned to the prominence they once held. Most German Americans eventually assimilated into general American culture and no longer cared to live by the old ways or 5 Kathleen Neils Conzen, The Paradox of German-American Assimilation, (New York: Yearbook of German-American Studies 16, 1981), 154. 8 be a part of ethnic institutions. This difference with Wittke is important because it shows how a segment of the German American community lived on past nativism. Unfortunately, both Wittke and Luebke fail at connecting how a segment of the community eventually turned to extremist politics, in part as a result of their nativist experience. This omission, however, has been reliably filled by those who have evaluated American fascist activities and the global fascist movement. This study's understanding of fascist movements and fascist ideology largely comes from the literature previously reviewed and those explained later in this chapter. Another key piece, however, is Eric Hobsbawm's The Age of Extremes. His analysis of fascism describes the variety of movements that proliferated throughout Europe and the rest of the world, contending that fascist movements existed in three forms. The first were “old-fashioned authoritarians or conservatives.... [that] had no particular ideological agenda, other than anti-communism and the prejudices traditional to their class.” The second form he discusses describes Juan J. Linz's “organic statism.” He claims that “conservative regimes, not so much defending a traditional order, but deliberately recreating its principles as a way of resisting both Liberal individualism and the challenge of labour and socialism.” 6 This movement type relied on a desire to turn back to a time when social and economic classes existed in harmony with the established power hierarchy. Proponents wished to have society return to a period where each social group played their part in the mechanisms of society and participated via their contributions to the economic welfare of the state. Liberal institutions and representation were considered 6 Eric Hobsbawm, The Age of Extremes: A History of the World, 1914-1991, (New York: Vintage Books, 1996), 113-14. 9 to be less valuable to the individual than what they could offer the state. This type was headed by authoritarian, anti-liberal regimes that all but eliminated or effectively abolished democratic institutions.7 The third form that Hobsbawm discusses are those which relied more heavily on copying the Italian and German models. Rather than being a variant of authoritarianism or anti-communism, this form relied much more on personal charisma, mass mobilization, and the theater of nationalist politics. Furthermore, these kinds of fascists were “the revolutionaries of counter-revolution: in their rhetoric, in their appeal to those who considered themselves victims if society, in their call for a total transformation of society” and could enforce policies that instilled order among chaos. 8 He also claims that this type differed from the other two in that it did not want a return to the past, but rather used traditional values to validate their policies without empowering old leadership hierarchies. Hitler and Mussolini's governments, for example, sought to restrain “detestable” or “unclean” elements in society, like jazz, female emancipation, and newage art, but did not give power to traditional leadership or historically conservative institutions to ensure these or other changes. Lastly, anti-Semitism and racism are not necessary in this form or the other two. 9 Although Hitler's regime has gone down in history as the most violently anti-Semitic movement ever, Mussolini's was not defined by any sort of comparable hatred. Italian Jews did not suffer nearly as badly as their German brethren because Mussolini's regime did not consider them a threat or enemy of the state 7 Hobsbawm, 114. Hobsbawm, 117. 9 Hobsbawm, 118-19. 8 10 or race. In all, this third form of fascism can be summarized as one that relies squarely on charismatic, non-traditional leadership that can use both political theater and mass mobilization to push anti-communist, anti-liberal, counter-revolutionary policies based in traditional values that would ultimately ensure order in a society plagued by mayhem. Sadly, Hobsbawm's examination of global fascism fails to recognize any American fascist groups. His omission is understandable in that he largely discusses fascist regimes that managed to attain power. Nevertheless, one must consider the role of failed fascist groups alongside the successful to show how and why certain societies reject fascism as a legitimate political alternative as well as the problems intrinsic to that specific movement. This study's examination of American fascism, as embodied by the Bund and other pro-fascist groups, thus starts where Hobsbawm and others end. I contend that the German-American Bund, the premier and most successful American Nazi party during it's time, tried to model itself as best they could after the German example (thus fitting them within Hobsbawm's third type). Bund leaders like Fritz Kuhn took the form, function, symbols, and policies of German Nazism to heart and adopted them for themselves. The Bund's projection of these transplanted ideas and fondness for all things Nazi cast them as suspicious, foreign entities that were aligned with anti-democratic forces. Their failure to garner true power in the United States was a result of their own intrinsic, organizational problems, inability to stave off counter-movements (like those discussed at length in this study), public affiliation with and praise of Adolf Hitler and his Reich, as well as politics that most Americans found generally disagreeable. In part, the role of this study is to expand on the ideas synthesized by Hobsbawm as well as fill the 11 hole that he and other historians have left by not considering the Bund as part of the global fascist movement. More specifically, this examination uses public anti-Nazi and boycott discourse to show how the Bund was never able to gain a meaningful foothold in American society and political culture. The literature on the Bund and other fascist movements in the United States starts first with the series of investigations led by the FBI, Dickstein Committee, and House Un-American Activities Committee, and other federal bodies. All of these reports have a section or two devoted exclusively to the historical development of the Bund and/or the growth of American fascist politics. Their collective findings generally conclude that the Bund was involved in unusual activities, but were not necessarily dangerous. Not surprisingly, these investigations also did not link the problems German Americans suffered during the Great War with the rise of fascist groups. While some of the reports contain false information, they are generally useful and are required material for any fair evaluation on American fascism. Other anti-Nazi literature from the period, like John Roy Carlson's Undercover and Robert Strausz-Hupe's Axis America, were more concerned with findings links, real or imaginary, between the Nazi Germany and fascist groups as well as exposing their anti-American slant. Most of these works present either pseudohistorical narratives or were purely intended as propaganda. As such, these works are used selectively and with great discretion throughout this study. 10 While there are some methodological and thematic differences between the texts, more modern literature specific to the Bund and other American Nazi groups largely 10 John Roy Carlson, Undercover (Philadelphia, PA: The Blakiston Company, 1943).; Robert Strausz-Hupe, Axis America (New York: G. P. Putnam's Bros., 1941). 12 agree on the time line of events and interpretation of activities. Works like Leland V. Bell's In Hitler's Shadow, Susan Canedy's America's Nazis, and Sander A. Diamond's The Nazi Movement in the United States, 1924-1941, for example, all conclude that the Bund was a product of the Great Depression, highly interested in copying the German model of political success, and that they ultimately failed due to public and federal scrutiny. Even more recent studies that do not focus exclusively on American fascist groups agree with these conclusions. For instance, Klaus P. Fischer's Hitler & America, Robert A. Rosenbaum's Waking to Danger: Americans and Nazi Germany, 1939-1941, and Michaela Hoenicke Moore's Know Your Enemy: The American Debate on Nazism, 19331945 all draw on Bell, Canedy, and Diamond's works. More recent literature, especially Hoenicke Moore's Know Your Enemy, have expanded these arguments to include international and domestic issues not present in prior literature. Lastly, there are a handful of books that look exclusively at the German American ethnic experience during World War Two. Among them,Timothy J. Holian's The German-Americans and World War II thoroughly chronicles how segments of the German American community turned to fascism and the efforts Nazi Germany went to to radicalize or control them. Holians and similar literature make up the core of secondary material used in this study. 11 The study of “resistance” has grown as an analytical tool in historical literature 11 Robert A. Rosenbaum, Waking to Danger: Americans and Nazi Germany, 1933-1941. (Santa Barabara: Praeger, 2010).; Klaus P. Fischer, Hitler & America, (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011); Sander A. Diamond, The Nazi Movement in the United States 1924-1941, (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1974); Leland A. Bell, In Hitler's Shadow, (Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press, 1973); Susan Canedy, America's Nazis: A Democratic Dilemma, (Menlo Park, CA: Markgraf Publications, 1990); Timothy J. Holian, The German-Americans and World War II: An Ethnic Experience, (New York: Peter Lang, 1996); Michaela Hoenicke Moore, Know Your Enemy: The American Debate on Nazism, 1933-1945, (Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2010). 13 and popular culture when dealing with the Nazi era over the past several decades. Those who resist or otherwise actively oppose the status quo are often given hero-like traits or have herculean efforts attached to them. Generally speaking, most works utilize this format. Moshe Gottlieb's American Anti-Nazi Resistance, 1933-1941, for example, presents how Jewish leaders in New York led one of the nation’s largest national antiNazi boycott campaign. First, two sides are established, one as an aggressor with the other as its natural counterpoint. Literature relevant to this study often make that aggressor figure out to be either Hitler, the Nazi regime, Nazi Germany as a whole, or other key individuals that held considerable power in national and international politics. Germany, however, has not always held the exclusive place as the aggressor. In some cases, American leaders like Fritz Kuhn, leader of the German-American Bund, or other Bund leaders have also been used. These individuals, and ones like them, may not have been directly linked with the Nazi party in Germany nor Hitler, however they were significantly influenced by his ideas and thus share a sort of ideological link. The counterpoint group is varied between ethnic groups, organizations, religious figures, prominent politicians or statesmen, and other leaders stepped who forward, to challenge fascist or anti-Semitic forces. Three of the most well recognized groups that resisted fascism during the 1930s include American Germans, Jews, and non-sectarian allies. 12 Patricia Kollander's "I Must Be a Part of This War": A German American's Fight Against Hitler and Nazism follows the virtually unknown Kurt Frank Korf's actions against key American Nazi figures like Fritz Kuhn by acting as a FBI informant. Having 12 Moshe Gottlieb, “The Anti-Nazi Boycott Movement in the American Jewish Community, 19331941,”(Ph.D. diss., Brandeis University, 1967). 14 escaped Germany in 1937 before he would have been criminalized under the Nuremberg Laws (he had a Jewish grandparent), Korf worked to hunt down war criminals, and was part of the team that authenticated Joseph Goebbels personal diaries. According to Kollander, Korf had, as a German American and as a former citizen of the Reich trying to prove himself in a nation hostile to him and other former citizens, a self-induced imperative to fight Nazism at home and abroad. 13 In a sense, his form of resistance was both for ethnic and national political causes. It can mean that the active party or individual is acting on behalf of their ethnic group, an organization, or for the government. The ways in which one goes about resisting a malefactor also varies considerably. In the end, it is essential that the reader understand that “resistance” is not a one-size-fits-all category, but one determined by a variety of variables. One of the most well received and oft cited historians of Jewish resistance in America is Moshe Gottlieb. His 1967 doctoral dissertation, “The Anti-Nazi Boycott Movement in the American Jewish Community, 1933-1941,” outlines how boycotting, one of the more popular modes of resistance utilized by Jewish and non-sectarian organizations in the United States prior to the war, was a way for them to strike at the heart of German oppression against Jews via economic and public relations avenues. He wrote that “Germany was powerless to retaliate” and that boycotts put pressure on German officials to be less harsh in their treatment of German Jews or those of conquered territories. Sadly, Gottlieb states this pressure only influenced Nazi officials during the early years of the Reich and expired quickly after Hitler's racial policies took priority 13 Patricia Kollander, I Must Be a Part of This War": A German American's Fight Against Hitler and Nazism, (New York: Fordham University Press, 2005), 23. 15 over all other things. Gottlieb additionally claims that boycotts effectively raised public consciousness against Germany and the Hitler regime by exposing how it had both invaded the United States markets with all sorts of items and goods as well as how it ruthlessly treated hundreds of thousands of people. The boycotts were so effective that “On a number of occasions, Hitler himself freely conceded that the boycott was greatly harming Germany's economic interests.... Hitler's reference to 'boycotts pursued for ideological reasons' depicts . . . the real character of the movement that sought to wring concessions out of the monstrous tyrant, and if that were not possible, to destroy him; but, in any event, to resist him, come what may.” 14 Understanding Jewish resistance to Nazism, however, did not stop with Gottlieb. Over the past thirty years, the literature regarding Jewish organizations and the overall national reaction to Nazism has grown. Yehuda Bauer's 1981 study American Jewry and the Holocaust: The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, 1939-1945 addresses two problems: the group's initial reaction to Nazism and how they challenged the Holocaust. Importantly, she points out problems organizations such as the Joint Distribution Committee faced,especially the legal restrictions regarding the rescue of European Jews in Germany and territories under German control. Many Jews were “sold” to rescue organizations in the United States (much as if they were common goods) for a hefty price. Unfortunately, these groups lacked the funds to buy all their brethren out of Nazi oppression. 15 14 Moeshe Gottlieb, “The Anti-Nazi Boycott Movement in the American Jewish Community, 1933-1941.” (Ph.D. Diss., Brandeis University, 1967), 440. 15 Yehuda Bauer, American Jewry and the Holocaust: The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, 1939-1945. (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1981), 458-459. 16 Haskel Lookstein's Were We Our Brother's Keepers?: The Public Response of American Jews to the Holocaust, 1938-1944, argues that American anti-Nazi resistance was largely ineffective. Like other historians concerned with America's Jewish population, Lookstein focuses heavily on the American public perception of events occurring in Hitler's Reich. While not necessarily analyzing resistance organizations, he does show that numerous Jewish and non-sectarian organizations participated in information campaigns and boycotts against Germany and pro-Nazi American businesses. He concludes that “the Allies response [to Nazi atrocities on Jews] seemed minimal and ineffective, while the American Jews public resistance was weak and sporadic. 16 Using Jewish newspapers and public correspondence, his arguments rely on individual national Jewish organizations, such as B'nai B'rith, and how Jewish and American audiences reacted to Nazi persecution of European Jews. Constantly referring to leading Jewish figures as “timid” or “fearful” of reprisal, Lookstein projects these characteristics onto the entire Jewish American community. Furthermore, he ignores Jewish leadership in non-sectarian organizations, such as Cleveland's League for Human Rights, and enigmatic figures like Cleveland's Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver and journalist Leon Wiesenfeld. Although non-sectarian boycotting groups may not have been within the scope of his initial observation, they are essential to include because they represent unified public opposition with German Nazism. Lastly, he fails to take into account how groups like the League could used vigilance tactics to thwart or otherwise disturb Nazi groups such as the Bund. While Lookstein's Were We Our Brother's Keepers provides 16 Haskel Lookstein, Were We Our Brother's Keepers?: The Public Response of American Jews to the Holocaust, 1938-1944. (New York: Hartmore House, 1985), 205. 17 readers with an intriguing history of America's reaction to the Holocaust and other atrocities, his work is checkered with logical holes and numerous unconsidered variables that vastly ultimately misconstrue any American resistance to Nazism. Although only indirectly related to the study of Jewish resistance, Christopher Capozzola's article “The Only Badge Needed is Your Patriotic Fervor: Vigilance, Coercion, and the Law in World War I America” provides a convincing definition and methodological model for organized vigilance. Through four examples, Capozzola shows that a variety of American groups worked outside of the law to keep tabs on potentially seditious elements in society. These groups believed that it was essential for them to engage in illegal or extralegal activities prior to and during the Great War because America could be harmed by foreign spies, sympathizers, or unwelcome support for the enemy. These groups engaged in collecting arms, propaganda distribution and destruction, surveillance, investigations, and other such actions. Their self-appointed obligation, Capozzola suggests, was an overtly patriotic, politically extreme extension of self-defense turned communal defense only achievable during a war time atmosphere. He argues that “vigilantes operated outside the structures of law as articulated by the legislative regime, but they typically aim to establish social order, whether defense of the state, control of crime, or maintenance of racial, class, or gender hierarchies.” 17 It must be stated that Capozzola's framing of vigilantism was often much more violent than its slightly less aggressive cousin, vigilance. Although the two words are often used interchangeably, there is a powerful distinction between the two. Violence, one of the 17 Christopher Capozzola, “The Only Badge Needed is Your Patriotic Fervor: Vigilance, Coercion, and the Law in World War I America.” The Journal of American History. March, 2002, 1357. 18 tactics not utilized by the League for Human Rights, is directly tied to vigilantism and not vigilance. That aside, Capozzola's framework for vigilance movements creates an excellent template for showing how a group like the League could shift from boycotting to extralegal activities. Lastly, there is only one study which actually deals with the League for Human Rights in a meaningful way. Ivan Platt's The League for Human Rights: Cleveland Jewry's Fight Against Naziism, 1933-1946 thesis offers a handful of useful insight. Platt's piece is most valuable at understanding the generalities of the League, Cleveland's political and social atmosphere during the 1930s and 1940s, and details much of their public boycotting against Detroit's Father Coughlin. While these are certainly good things to bring out, his account lacks any serious analysis of the League and what their campaigns against local fascist groups meant. Additionally, Platt's account of the League does not take in consideration any aspects of resistance and makes very little out of their vast network of investigations. His narrative of events covers the League's clandestine investigation campaigns in short form and instead focuses on their public activism. In all, Platt's account of the League is a useful tool for this study in that it offers a platform to build from. 18 Section Two: A Look at Things to Come 18 Ivan Platt, The League for Human Rights: Cleveland Jewry's Fight Against Naziism, 1933-1946. (Cleveland, OH: Cleveland State University, 1977). 19 The following study is the culmination of various methodological and historiographical traditions. The first chapter seeks to establish the national atmosphere that American Nazism and anti-Nazi resistance came out of. The material reviewed places my two major subjects, the Cleveland branch of the German-American Bund and the League for Human Rights, within the maelstrom of American politics and society. I maintain, like other historians have, that the American fascist movement rose out of a small, radical community of Americans inspired by German revitalization under Adolf Hitler's National Socialist regime. Their activities inside the United States were largely orchestrated by a variety of organizations, primarily the German-American Bund. As their activities became more and more public, American Jews and their allies rose up to protest them and Hitler. Although anti-German boycott activities were used mostly for economically injuring Germany, I maintain that they were also part of a much larger ideological fight between pro- and anti-democratic forces. This movement, although moderately successful, was unable to penetrate the secrecy of the Bund and see if they were engaged in potentially illegal activities. The anti-Nazi movement therefore escalated to the federal level, where assorted governmental bodies investigated the Bund and their affiliates. Much to the boycotters dismay, the Bund was never charged with any wrongdoing. This chapter concludes that the inability to charge the Bund on the federal level left anti-Nazi forces frustrated and willing to take matters into their own hands. The second chapter more specifically places the Cleveland Bund and League, within the previously constructed timeline and series of events. I start by showing how 20 the city of Cleveland, Ohio developed one of the first and most robust anti-Nazi movements after Hitler's rise to power. I also show how the local Bund branch was part of the politically extreme wing of the local German American community. After explaining their initial developments, I then move to their general public activities and programs within the northeast Ohio area. In particular, this study highlights the series of informational talks that the Bund and League sponsored as well as German pro-Nazi activities in Cleveland. I contend that these represent their earliest and least confrontational ideologically motivated exchanges. This chapter also examines how the League first turned to investigations, one of the core programs enacted during their short tenure as Cleveland's leading anti-Nazi force. I find that this program was first used during the famed Berlin-Cleveland student exchange program as a way for the League to gain otherwise inaccessible information. This is particularly important because their policy of clandestine operations rapidly accelerated after this event and would come to define their public activism and place in the community. The third chapter looks at how the League attacked pro-Nazi activism by German American organizations, the Bund, and William Dudley Pelley's Silver Shirt Legion. These large and very visible groups were quite convenient targets for the League agents and put under almost immediate scrutiny. As time went on and the exchanges became more and more heated, the local Bund in particular changed their form of communication from overt anti-Semitism and militarism to a softer message, emphasizing pro-American, anti-communism, and subtle pro-Nazi programs. From this point, I further explore the League's investigations and show how they were used to counter the Bund and Silver 21 Shirts effectively. This chapter, besides offering hitherto unknown information on Bund inner-circle activities and Pelley's Silver Shirts, also explores the developing dialogic relationships between the three forces. In all, I examine two specific cases, analyze the League's findings, and evaluate how and why the Silver Shirt Legion and Bund were forced (or not forced in the Legion's case) to change the way they had to engage the Cleveland public. In the first case, I look at the Bund's youth camp at the German Central Farm and their secretive program to teach Cleveland's youth how to be good little Nazis. In the second case, I examine the general activities by the Cleveland branch of Pelley's organization and their use of Christianity, millennialism, and anti-communism in the city. The fourth chapter ends this study with a look at the League for Human Rights as they and the nation entered into World War Two. In short, the war and the death of all formal pro-Nazi organizations in the United States forced the League to reevaluate their use of investigations and overall mission in the Cleveland area. This shift was marked with a renewed public activism campaigns, including the Rumor Roundup section in the Cleveland Plain Dealer as well as their study into Cleveland history and diversity, This is Cleveland. The League's new mission to educate Clevelanders about the war and promote ethnic, racial, and religious equality as well as liberal democratic principles lasted until shortly after the war's end. The League's demise was directly caused by the end of World War Two and other local organizations taking over where the League had excelled. Finally, the last section serves as a comprehensive review of previous materials and chapter conclusions as well as a look at the League's shift from defensive investigations 22 to constructive public campaigning. In summation, this thesis looks to accomplish several key objectives. First, it presents a synthesis of old and new materials, constructing a logical and fair narrative of events relevant to this story. This narrative is simultaneously buttressed and challenged by new findings exclusive to this study. In particular, it challenges the notion that Jewish and non-sectarian anti-Nazi resistance was inherently weak, as proposed by Haskel Lookstein and others. It also adds considerable evidence that shows how the Bund was both an American vessel of Hitler's Reich and actively pursued illegal, or at least highly questionable activities in order to fulfill their goals. Second, this study works to attempt to show the development of the League's dialogic relationship with various pro-Nazi groups as well as the public. These are examined through the examination of newspapers, investigations, public protests, and other channels. Lastly, this work looks to examine the League for Human Rights' shift from a defensive organization which mastered protesting and clandestine investigations to one that embraced a new program which emphasized multi-ethnic inclusion, celebrating diversity, and promoting liberal democratic principles. The total findings in this study serves as a reevaluation and confirmation of information related to anti-Nazi resistance, the Bund, and other American fascist organizations. Moreover, it tracks the life of an organization that mirrored the changes the United States underwent during and before the Second World War. Chapter One: Building the Nazi Community In order to appreciate the League's motivations to attack Nazism, one must first understand the internal and external pressures that created the groundswell movement for a Nazi America and the radical fringe of America's German community embodied by the Bund. First, the German American experience with nativism during the Great War both shocked the community and led many towards rapid assimilation. Prior to this period, German Americans enjoyed one of the most privileged positions of all European ethnic groups living in the United States. They were often characterized as “industrious, thrifty, and honest – all admirable virtues in the American value system.” 1 German culture clubs, fraternities, theater groups, and other ethnic organizations could easily be found in most every area of the country and held considerable power in cities like Cincinnati, Chicago, Milwaukee, Columbus, Cleveland, and New York. The German American community of Cincinnati, Ohio, for example, flourished like few other immigrant communities could imagine. Prior to the Great War, German organizations (vereines) were a hallmark of the city, numbering over 100. Some of these groups included singing societies, trade unions, religious organizations, mutual aid groups, marksmen clubs, theater troupes, cultural organizations, and charitable societies. German language and bilingual newspapers like Der Deutsche Pionier, Neu und Alt, Brauer-Zeitung, and Der Christliche Apologete 1 Frederick Luebke, Germans in the New World, (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1990), 112. 23 24 flourished alongside English newspapers without incident. 2 According to historian Don Heinrich Tolzmann, Cincinnati's German community was an essential part of the city's cultural flavor as well as legislative, executive, and judicial offices. Similarly, German groups, newspapers, and other institutions in Cleveland, Ohio were very successful and integrated into the city. Prior to the Great War, Cleveland's Germans constituted over 40 percent of the population and were a welcomed part of the city atmosphere. In Cleveland und sein Deutschthum (Cleveland and Its Germans), author Jacob Mueller presents a compelling history of the city's Germans. His begins by describing how the city was founded by Moses Cleveland, but quickly shifts towards the contributions and axial importance of the city's German inhabitants. Among his many claims, Mueller contends that German immigrants were “the best element America had recruited up until then and in some senses the best among those who came from across the ocean to the present day.” 3 Other nationalities already present and those that came to Cleveland over time respected German culture in the city and enjoyed their festivals. The annual German Day celebration and other cultural events were well attended by other ethnicities and that German Day in particular was one of the most popular festivals during any given year. 4 Mueller is keen to explain that German Americans across the country could simultaneously embrace their culture while remaining Americans at heart. He claims that “The German who understands that true German identity is not at odds with true 2 Don Heinrich Tolzmann, The Cincinnati Germans After the Great War, (New York: Peter Lang, 1987), 1213. 3 Jacob Mueller, Cleveland und sein Deutschthum, (Cleveland: German-American Biographical Publishing Co., 1898), 38. 4 Mueller, 37-38. 25 Americanism will be mindful of the obligation that the heritage of the past imposes on him, a holy bequest from his forbearers.... If the present generation takes the same role in this cultural work it has taken in the past, then Germans need have no concerns for the future.” 5 Mueller added that the local German element was “united in not permitting themselves to be robbed of their language, of their customs and usages, and they are united in wanting to be good Americans while keeping their German way of life. “ Furthermore, Mueller claims that despite some religious and organizational differences, the Germans were always in solidarity. He said that “the fact that Germans have divided themselves into, here as everywhere else, into a thousand association and little clubs damages nothing,” and he wrote, “it is fortunate that they do not all belong to one and the same party.” 6 Lastly, Mueller suggested that “Today, as 65 or 50 years ago, their [Germans] influence remains crucial in influencing conditions in our city.” 7 This period of national and local acceptance dissipated away war-time fears and questionable German American loyalty. As the Kaiser's armies were mobilizing for war in Germany, rumors spread in the United States that German Americans were trying to destroy democracy for the Kaiser or were otherwise involved in fifth column activities due to widespread pro-German activism. 8 By and large, most Americans were not in support of the United States entering in this new European war and favored neutrality. Historian Frederick Luebke says that the Americans perceived Archduke Ferdinand's assassination and the German militant 5 Mueller, 41. Mueller, 37. 7 Mueller, 37. 8 Francis MacDonnell, Insidious Foes: The Axis Fifth Column and the American Home Front, (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), 22-27. 6 26 response as a sort of “anarchy endemic in that unfortunate part of the world.... Even when the guns of August began to boom five weeks later, most Americans saw no possibility of American involvement.” In fact, Luebke explains that most Americans believed that “President Woodrow Wilson was right... it [the war in Europe] was not our affair.” 9 Many German Americans and their cultural groups loudly cheered for a quick German victory over her enemies. Unfortunately, their actions in support of Germany only served to verify the notion that Americans of German extraction were both unassimilated and uninterested in supporting neutrality, as many groups participated in pro-German public rallies or parades, while others engaged in or funded public information campaigns. It was also common for individuals to purchase German war bonds or contribute to war relief drives at the behest of a group that the belonged to or was in sympathetic support of the Fatherland. These actions showed observers that German Americans were financially and morally supporting the German war effort and more interested in pursuing aggression than neutrality. 10 Another source of perceived treachery were newspapers. Loud support for a quick German victory in the war was present in many German American newspapers, which also ran articles condemning Wilson for assisting the British with goods and political support while offering almost nothing to the Germans. It was common for newspapers to advertise German war bonds, and some prominent national newspapers, like George Viereck's Fatherland, had a section dedicated to giving the Kaiser's official viewpoint of the war and America's place in the 9 Frederick Luebke, Bonds of Loyalty: German Americans and World War I, (DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press, 1974), 83. 10 Timothy J. Holian, The German-Americans and World War II: An Ethnic Experience, (New York: Peter Lang, 1996), 12. 27 growing conflict. Much of the general public and some leading politicians viewed German-language newspapers as little more than propaganda rags purchased by the Central Powers. 11 When it became public knowledge that George Viereck's Fatherland was funded by the German government, little else was necessary to convince already war-weary Americans that the Germans had already invaded their country and that the war was occurring on every street corner. German spying missions and sabotage attempts, which often turned into public spectacles, further aggravated Americans against their German American neighbors. For example, in October 1915, German secret service agent and sabotage ring leader Robert Fay was apprehended by police because his team's attempts to detonate ships in New York Harbor. Federal agents found explosives, a map of the harbor, disguises, and letters linking him to the German secret service in his New Jersey apartment soon after his arrest. Subsequent press coverage on the event linked Fay and his circle with the German Army, the Kaiser, and several pro-German German American groups. 12 On another instance, German agent Heinrich Albert had a suitcase full of documents taken from him by an American agent while he slept on a train. The information was passed on to Secretary of the Treasury William McAdoo and revealed German plans to purchase war supplies and influence popular opinion on the war (particularly by funding pro-German public lectures and purchasing newspapers). While these actions were not necessarily 11 12 MacDonnell, 22-23. “Fay's New Tale of German Plot,” New York Times, Oct. 28, 1915; “State Department May Act, Protest to German Government Likely if Fay's Story is True,” New York Times, Oct. 26, 1915; “Bomb Factory in his Room,” New York Times, Oct. 25,1915; These articles were retrieved via an internet database and did not include the original article page numbers. 28 illegal, it did suggest “improper meddling in American domestic affairs.” 13 In another incident, German Undersecretary Arthur Zimmermann suggested to American ambassador James Gerard that there were “five hundred thousand trained Germans in America who would join the Irish and start a revolution.” Gerard promptly retorted that there were more than enough street lights to hang traitors by. 14 These compounded mistakes and misplaced perceptions resulted in nothing less than a precipitous, nationwide fall in German American social standing, the end of most cultural organizations and newspapers, and a rise in anti-German harassment. For many fearful Americans, the potential threat of German American treachery was real and proven by numerous public events and loud propagandists. Some of the initial antiGerman hysteria was not necessarily violent or especially cruel. New Berlin, Ohio, for instance, changed their name to North Canton as a part of a national impulse to change German-sounding town names into something more American. Other examples of renaming German-sounding things include sauerkraut being called “liberty cabbage,” dachshunds became “wiener dogs,” and many other silly little changes. Many schools changed their curricula to no longer offer German language courses. More seriously, wild accusations of Germans poisoning wells and putting glass in food circulated throughout the country. Many citizen vigilance groups, like the American Protective League, investigated suspicious individuals and could incite mobs to attack those deemed guilty. 15 The most famous occurrence of anti-German violence during this time was the lynching 13 MacDonnell, 17. MacDonnell, 21. 15 MacDonnell, 24-26. 14 29 of Robert Praeger. A resident of Collinsville, Illinois, Praeger was seized from his home on April 4, 1918, and crowd of over 200 convicted him of both being a spy for the Kaiser and for not being loyal enough to the United States, despite having recently filed for American citizenship and attempting to enlist in the Navy. Unable to prove his innocence and loyalty, Praeger was hanged by the mob. His last words were reported to be “All right boys, go ahead and kill me, but wrap me in the flag when you bury me.” 16 Throughout 1914 and 1917, politicians also took up arms against German Americans. President Woodrow Wilson said to Congress in his annual speech on December 15, 1915: There are citizens of the United States, I blush to admit, born under other flags but welcomed under our generous naturalization laws to the full freedom and opportunity of America, who have poured the poison of disloyalty into the very arteries of our national life; who have sought to bring the authority and good name of our Government into contempt, to destroy our industries wherever they thought it effective for their vindictive purposes to strike at them, and to debase our politics to the uses of foreign intrigue.... such creatures of passion, disloyalty, and anarchy must be crushed out. They are not many but they are infinitely malignant, and the hand of our power should close over them at once. They have formed plots to destroy property, they have entered into conspiracies against the neutrality of the Government, they have sought to pry into every confidential transaction of the Government in order to serve interests of their own. 17 Wilson's damning speech pointed directly at the shamed German American community as the source of treachery and anti-Americanism without going so far as to call them out by name. His accusations were based on publicly available knowledge that segments of the German community were acting outside of the nation's interests and the belief that “hyphenated Americans” could not have equal sympathies for separate nations. Wilson 16 17 Luebke, 9-10. MacDonnell, 23. 30 also created the Committee on Public Information (CPI), a organization that hyped antiGerman hysteria. Wilson and CPI director George Creel wielded immense power over public opinion through news releases, informational pamphlets, posters, and cartoons. Creel also enlisted over 75,000 “Four Minute Men” speakers that characterized Germans abroad and in the United States as blood thirsty and assured listeners that the world would be safe for democracy as soon as the German brute was smashed. 18 Increasingly violent and political anti-German harassment forced many German Americans to hide their heritage by changing their names, disavowing their “Germanness,” or otherwise accentuate their American citizenship. Opposite these people, however, were a minority contingency of German Americans that doggedly stuck to their German heritage. This population was the seedbed for the American Nazi movement and would later reignite old fears that Germans in the United States were plotting to destroy democracy at the behest of an evil foreign power. 19 Section Two: Fascism in America Historians have long recognized the 1920s and especially the 1930s as periods when traditionally liberal societies were confronted with true ideological threats from the politically far-right. In The Age of Extremes, Eric Hobsbawm posits that “The danger [to liberal democracy] came exclusively from the Right. And that Right represented not merely a threat to constitutional and representative government, but an ideological threat 18 19 MacDonnell, 23-24. Susan Canedy, America's Nazis (Menlo Park, CA:Markgraf Publications, 1990), 22. 31 to liberal civilization such, as a potentially worldwide movement.” Hobsbawm explains that the international aspect of fascist is important because other groups and charismatic leaders looked to the Italians and Germans for methodological, financial, and political guidance. 20 Other successful fascist regimes, like those in South America and Spain, turned to their European counterparts because they felt as though they could assist them as needed. In many ways, the German-American Bund in the United States followed this global march towards fascism. While the late 1920s and 1930s were indeed a period defined in part by “100 percent Americanism,” it was also one that suffered from a hemorrhaging national economy and a fear that federal power and democracy were failing. By the early 1930s, President Herbert Hoover's policies and various Congressional acts had not improved the situation for most Americans. The myriad failures of the federal government to fix the economic depression called into question the ruling political ideology and the effectivity of the powers behind it. Frustrated, some sought out other legitimate options to democracy. For example, pro-fascist/Nazi groups in the 1930s had posited that American democracy had failed and needed to be replaced by systems that had been proven to work. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, American fascists and Nazis alike pointed to Italy and Germany as examples of how nations could rise up and overcome debt and powerlessness through extreme political measures. If Mussolini and Hitler could do it in their countries, so they thought, then why not in America too? Luckily, President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal was able to address those most seriously affected by the 20 Eric Hobsbawm, The Age of Extremes: A History of the World, 1914-1991, (New York: Vintage Books, 1996), 112. 32 Depression by enacting a wide variety of public programs and economic measures. The programs that he had established helped to ease the overbearing economic and political concerns created by the Great Depression. 21 The New Deal helped many Americans get back to work and feel faith in the strength of the national government. Although it did not solve the financial crisis entirely, Roosevelt's measures reaffirmed that democracy could meet the needs of its citizens. Even as Roosevelt's New Deal worked to address the issues of the Depression, many German immigrants and other disenchanted people still believed that the methods Hitler had implemented in Germany could similarly transform a beleaguered United States. As Fuehrer, Hitler offered the German people restored national strength, a resuscitated economy, a robust military with the newest technology, restored pride, and a return to global power. His administration was responsible for stimulating private industry to assist in remaking the German economy, nearly eliminating unemployment, and, most importantly, restoring the semblance of order to a country in disarray. Much of the world noticed this substantial revival and some felt that National Socialism could indeed fix other troubled nations, including the United States. 22 Some of those who believed that National Socialism could cure America's woes had immigrated to the United States and started a handful of decentralized, yet robust German-centric National Socialist movements. 23 A smaller set of these immigrants went on to make pro-Nazi 21 William E. Leuchtenburg, Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932-1940, (New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1963), 338-339. 22 Klaus P. Fischer, Hitler & America, (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011), 93. 23 Works that inform this section, but that are not explicitly used include: Leland V. Bell's In Hitler's Shadow (1973), Robert A. Rosenbaum's Waking to Danger: Americans and Nazi Germany, 1933-1941 (2010), Michaela Hoenicke Moore's Know Your Enemy: The American Debate on Nazism, 1933-1945 (2010), 33 groups with that very mission in mind. In 1924, the first American National Socialist organization to gain Germany's overt approval was the Detroit-based Teutonia. Historian Sander Diamond explains in his landmark study The Nazi Movement in the United States, 1924-1941 that Teutonia mirrored the Nazi Party in form and subject content. Looking to Hitler for guidance, they advocated German Americans to join their movement and push forward a radically National Socialist agenda. In addition to this, they also financially contributed to German Nazi Party's general fund and passed along Hitler's words in their newspaper. Despite spreading to several other cities, Teutonia was unable to duplicate the Nazi Party's success. Frustrated, in 1932 leader Fritz Gissibl attempted a coup of “Gau-USA,” another Nazi organization with sponsorship in New York City. His failure to do so promptly sent his followers to join Gau-USA and signaled Teutonia's fall. While the group's reign was shortly lived, Teutonia set a precedent for basic structure and behavior. They were quickly replaced by “Gau-USA,” New York's premier Nazi organization and was an official division of the German Nazi Party's Foreign Section, as the nation's leading National Socialist party. Their activities included military-style marches, regular antiSemitic speeches, passing out pro-Nazi literature, and harassing Jews. Just as quickly as they rose however, Gau-USA fell in 1932 because of the same inorganization and inadequate leadership that Teutonia suffered. Although it existed as an official vessel of the NSDAP for only a few months, Gau-USA set an important precedent of German John Hawgood's Tragedy of German America (1940), Frederick C. Luebke's Bonds of Loyalty (1974), Thomas J. Archdeacon's Becoming American: An Ethnic History (1983), LaVern J. Rippley's The German-Americans (1968). 34 support for American Nazi organizations. 24 The movement for German support for American Nazi groups would be aided by Heinz Spanknoebel. In 1933, he went to Germany and met with Rudolf Hess, Hitler's second-in-command, hoping that they would support his group with money and propaganda materials like they had the failed Gau-USA group. Spanknoebel claimed that he would be the “American Fuehrer” for this new group and would be supported by thousands of loyal German American followers. He told Hess that tens of thousands of people were clamoring for a greater Nazi presence in America and a sense of inter-group unity that had not taken place after Hitler's ascendancy as they had expected. With Hess' approval, Spanknoebel created the Bund der Freunde des neuen Deutschland, or Friends of New Germany that was, according to historian Susan Canedy, a “mirror image of Hitler's NSDAP inorganization, administration, and activity, from the leadership principle to the formation of a uniformed continent, the O.D. (Ordungs-Dienst) [the paramilitary wing of the Friends, and later the Bund], the counterpart to Hitler's SA.” 25 Section Three: America Reacts - The Public Anti-Nazi Movement The Friends were very active from their inception in 1933 until 1935. Spanknoebel, unconcerned that a majority of the American public found the Friends' violent militarism and anti-Semitism distasteful, tried to promote his message anyway. 24 Sander A. Diamond, The Nazi Movement in the United States 1924-1941, (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1974), 91-99. 25 Canedy, 49-51. 35 According to historian Donald McKale, the German Nazi Party was highly sensitive to the anti-Nazi press in America stemming from the Friend's misdoings and demanded that they “refrain from any activity until further notice.” 26 Yet Spanknoebel ignored Berlin's orders and continued his programs and violent rhetoric. After repeatedly ignoring them and facing increased American pressure, the Germans eventually decided to end their support of the Friends in 1935. Although their organization quickly fell into disarray, the idea of American Nazism remained. The next group to champion the Nazi movement in America was Fritz Kuhn's German-American Bund in 1936. Under Kuhn, the Bund initially defined itself just as the Friends had. In his 1936 pamphlet “Awake and Act,” Kuhn defined the Bund and their mission in glowing terms: Moreover, it is not a matter of presenting the world with a new organization, under the title of German American Volksbund, but of the fact that the Friends of New Germany have taken a new name we may still better form a protective front against machinations; as American citizens advanced our political interests, defend our native land against lies and slander and to a greater extent do justice to our exalted task of making known the aims and objects of the Third Reich.... The Bund is American in its inception and in its field of endeavor, German in its idealism and character. To it has fallen the great task of spurring the spiritual awakening of the German element. The German-American Volksbund is inspired with the National Socialist world concept..... We must leave nothing undone to gain access to the hearts and minds of our fellow German Americans. We will foster understanding for our homeland, convert our American fellow citizens into true friends of the present-day Germany. 27 For a short time after their inception, the Bund and Kuhn kept up the old ways of the Friend's, however, they too would be put under increased federal investigation and public 26 27 Donald McKale, The Swastika Outside Germany, (Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1977), 71. Federal Bureau of Investigation, “Findings on the German-American Bund,” (Washington, D.C., 1943), 43. 36 scrutiny. The initial American response to Nazism in Germany ranged from nonchalant curiosity to public outrage, largely depended on the religious and political slant of the particular observer. In Waking to Danger: America and Nazi Germany, 1933-1941, historian Robert Rosenbaum explains that the press influenced and reflected contemporary thoughts on the new chancellor. The anti-Communist Catholic Press “tended to view Hitler with cautious optimism.” The weekly Jesuit-leaning America said that “Chancellor Hitler, speaking to the nation over the radio, announced a reasonable and moderate program, declaring that Christianity would be the basis of moral standings.... He concluded by calling upon God for a special blessing.” The Protestant Christian Century expressed some hope that Hitler would be reined in by President Hindenburg and other cabinet members. 28 Many non-religious magazines and newspapers also expressed concern over Hitler. According to Rosenbaum, “influential columnist Walter Lippmann who viewed Hitler as 'the most extreme and the most impatient of all the revisionists [of the Treaty of Versailles],' soon concluded: “The spirit of the German Nazis [has] ended all possibility of a pacific revision of the frontiers.... For not a voice of any consequence will be raised in any democratic country to suggest that the cause of peace can be placed by advancing another human being under the heel of the Nazis.” Journalist Stanley High remarked in Literary Digest that “To-day the question of war is no longer whether, but when.” 29 28 Robert A. Rosenbaum, Waking to Danger: Americans and Nazi Germany, 1933-1941 (Santa Barabara: Praeger, 2010), 4-5. 29 Rosenbaum, 5. 37 Negative public opinion on Hitler's Reich and American fascists grew as popular media began to portray them more and more cautiously. While only a handful of relatively small pro-Nazi groups in America actually had Hitler's stamp of approval, many more claimed that they acted in accordance with his global interests. Many people believed that Hitler's American cronies were plotting to take over the United States and would usurp democratic regimes by any means necessary. Popular media during the 1930s and 1940s tried to inform the public about these threats and, in some cases, played on these widespread fears. For example, Hollywood blockbusters like Nazi Agent (1942), Confessions of a Nazi Spy (1939), They Came to Blow Up America (1943), Espionage Agent (1939), and Secret Enemies (1942) all featured German Americans and/or German spies as shadowy figures bent on destroying America. 30 The majority of these propaganda-filled movies worked hard to instill a sense of fear and immediate danger in viewers. For example, the trailer for Confessions prompts viewers that the movie came from actual federal investigation notes and reflects the true actions of Nazi spies and German-American Bund agents. This “almost incredible story of foreign agents” declares that Hitler's regime established a “brown network spreading hatred and terrorism to mask the treacherous plots of it's leaders” while showing a room full of uniformed men giving the Nazi salute to the American and German flags. 31 Confessions is especially important not only for it's depiction of German Americans as part of an organized Nazi fifth 30 Confessions of a Nazi Spy. Film. Directed by Anatole Litvak. (Burbank: CA: Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. 1939); Nazi Agent. Film. Directed by Jules Dassin. (Culver City, CA: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios. 1942); They Came to Blow Up America. Film. Directed by Edward Ludwig. (New York City, NY: Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., 1943); Espionage Agent. Film. Directed by Lloyd Bacon. (Burbank: CA: Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. 1939); Secret Enemies. Film. Directed by Benjamin Stoloff. (Burbank: CA: Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. 1942). 31 Confessions. 38 column, but because it established the Nazi spy movie genre that persisted for decades after the war. It is also useful in that the movie was a major box office hit and voted Best Film by National Board of Review in 1939. Between scenes, the narrator defines fascism as a sort of globally-minded totalitarianism in action, mind, and political philosophy where worship of the “Aryan superman” and Hitler trump all. Whereas democratic institutions, as handed down to humanity by the Christian God, gave men the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, this new German menace demanded that all march in step, literally and figuratively. Lastly, Nazism was the natural foe and presumptuous usurper of American democracy that would do anything to achieve total political and social hegemony. 32 Advertisements for the movie began with the silhouette of a man speaking in a heavy German accent claiming “I am one of thousands [of Nazi spies] stationed at every part of the United States to steal the secrets of your national defense. There are spies stationed at all of the navy yards in Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Newport News, there are Nazi agents in the airplane and munition factories of Bristol, Buffalo, [and] Seattle, Washington.” 33 Confessions' sensationalist message played to the fears that many held about questionable German American loyalty and brought forth the ideological conflict between National Socialism and democracy. It further played into the growing realization amongst most Americans that Hitler was planning the next global war and that the democratic world needed to stand against him. In particular, the movie depicts several scenes where this war between “Hitler's barbarism” and American democracy are most 32 33 Confessions. Confessions. 39 visible. Early in the movie, Dr. Karl Kassel, a fictitious leader in the German American Bund and head of a spy ring, says before a mostly uniformed crowd in a room filled with American, Nazi, and Bund flags that: German-American patriots, since my arrival from Germany ten years ago I have learned to love the United States. Yes, I love America and I love it all the more because I realize that it's deepest roots are essentially German. In all it's veins we can see flowing the German spirit, the German sense of duty.... Many people in this country say that we of German birth or extraction are only eight million in the United States, but they deliberately falsify. We actually constitute a total of thirty million here. Yes, America is found on German blood and culture. 34 Kassel continues that all Germans must unite and bring the nation to be like Hitler's Germany. All enemies that try to interfere with this destiny “must perish socially as well as economically because of our determination to destroy our enemies completely and without any consideration whatever!” Most strikingly, Kassel ends his rabble-rousing speech with, “Germans must save America from the chaos that breeds in democracy and racial equality. We Germans must make the United States unser Amerika, our America!” Kassel's audience replied with booming cries of “Seig Heil” and the Nazi salute. 35 This speech and others delivered throughout the film almost perfectly mirrors the look and rhetoric of real Bund rallies held throughout the nation. On another occasion, Kassel proclaimed to a room full of uniformed Bund members that all Germans must refuse to assimilate into their new culture. He declares that the best way to do this and make America free would be to “destroy the chain that ties the whole misery of American politics together,.... the United States Constitution! And we also know that there is a wall in which a breach must be made before America's 34 35 Confessions Confessions 40 problems can be solved and that wall is the Bill of Rights!” Frustrated that anyone would consider destroying the Bill of Rights and Constitution, an angry American Legion attendee counters his message by saying that thousands of Americans fought for those documents and the liberties granted by them. After him, a non-Nazi German American declares that the Bund did not represent all American of German extraction and that those like him would fight for democracy. Unable to counter the two rhetorically, Kassel ends by calling democracy a “fanatic faith” that disputes all arguments. He adds, somewhat ominously that “Force is the only language you understand and we will speak to you in your own language soon enough!” The discourse between these three individuals best symbolizes some of the film's core messages. 36 First, American Nazis were working diligently to destroy democracy and it is the responsibility of good patriotic citizens to resist them. These good citizens were those who had fought against tyranny on the Great War and civilians who agreed with no regard for their ethnic heritage. Second, the Bund would be willing to resort to violence if it meant they reached their political goals of destroying the democratic principles enshrined in the Constitution and Bill of Rights. Lastly, the Bund's seemingly never ending discussions on the greatness of Hitler, the Reich, and their mission to destroy democracy assures viewers that the threat they posed was real, immediate, and everywhere. Tabloid publications and literature with leadlines like “Nazi Propaganda in America,” “ Star Spangled Fascists,” “American Nazis Claim 200,000 Members” and “Nazis Hail George Washington as First Fascist,” detailed treacherous Nazi activities in 36 Confessions. 41 ways similar to those shown in Confessions. 37 In many of them, the writers explained that thousands (and perhaps maybe even millions) of Nazis were hiding among average citizens and were interested solely in a coup over democracy. Their leaders were described as charismatic, often highly theatrical men with the ability to get legions of dedicated ideological soldiers ready to fight for Hitler's cause at a moment's notice. In Axis America: Hitler Plans our Future, Robert Strausz-Hupe explains how Nazi forces inside and outside the country were plotting to take over the government by destroying American institutions. Strausz-Hupe wrote that: The problems of American democracy are being studiously investigated, but it is the first prerequisite of the Nazi-Fascist method that there is no rational solution within the bounds of democracy. Whatever solution is offered is revolutionary.... Hitler is invincible; democracy – no matter what the fortunes of war – is doomed. 38 The Jewish reaction in America to Adolf Hitler and Bund, although immediate and highly active, was split into two separate camps. The argument in the Jewish community largely centered around the ideals of two old and highly influential organizations. Conservative leaders in the American Jewish Committee, for example, held that if Jews spoke out too loudly against German anti-Semitism they would be attacked for their positions as either being un-American or Zionists. Robert Rosenbaum explains that “Highly acculturated but concerned with the Jews' marginal place in society, 37 “Nazi Propaganda in America,” Look Magazine, December 31, 1939, 12-15; “ Star Spangled Fascists,” The Saturday Evening Post , May 27, 1939, 5-7, 70-73; “American Nazis Claim 200,000 Members,” Life Magazine, March 29, 1937, 20-21; “Nazis Hail George Washington as First Fascist,” Life Magazine, March 7, 1938, 17. Others include “When Will Hitler Invade America,” Blitzkrieg Over America,” “Germany Must Perish,” and “Beware! 5th Column in U.S.A.” These articles were retrieved via an internet database and did not include the original article page numbers. 38 Robert Strausz-Hupe, Axis America: Hitler's Plans our Future, (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1941), 258. 42 members of the Committee believed in keeping a low profile.” For them, being Jewish meant that they were part of a spiritual legacy and that suggesting any form of separatism, such as Zionism, would only bring them trouble. 39 Historians that have looked at leaders in the Committee have found that they practiced quiet diplomacy, often influencing those in power who would sympathize with the Jewish plight. 40 The New York-based American Jewish Congress, on the other hand, advocated a much more aggressive campaign where German products would be put under a national boycott. Businesses that failed to cooperate with the ban on German goods would likewise be boycotted. Leaders like Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver and journalist Leon Wiesenfeld believed that Hitler's regime needed to see that the Jews in America would not stand by while their German brethren suffered. The essential idea of boycotting goods was that it was the only real way at attacking Hitler without calling for or enacting a war. Many in the Congress and elsewhere hoped that calmer heads than Hitler would prevail and see that the campaigns against Jews were not politically or economically valuable. One of the strongest anti-Nazi boycott leagues in the nation was Samuel Untermyer's New York-based Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League to Champion Human Rights. Aligned with the American Jewish Congress ideologically, Untermyer and the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League believed that “public opinion as the force, the Boycott 39 40 Rosenbaum, 47. Haskel Lookstein, Were We Our Brother's Keepers?: The Public Response of American Jews to the Holocaust, (New York: Hartmore House, 1985), 60; Other literature that discusses the Committee, some in more limited form, include Yehuda Bauer's American Jewry and the Holocaust, Moeshe Gottlieb's “The Anti-Nazi Boycott Movement in the American Jewish Community, 1933-1941,” and Henry L. Feingold, Bearing Witness: How America and Is Jews Responded to the Holocaust 43 as the weapon, will break the power of Hitlerism.” 41 One of the most significant methods that the Anti-Nazi League used put pressure on large businesses to not sell German goods. Those who refused to cooperate with the boycott effort would be added to a public blacklist and be treated as if they sympathized with Nazism. Most businesses, not interested in hurting their brand, decided to obey Untermyer's request. For example in 1933 the Anti-Nazi League wrote to Sears, Roebuck and Co. in New York and informed them that they were selling German-made items. They quickly replied back that they would stop selling German goods and only sold some merchandise from “contracts which could not be cancelled (sic).” 42 Another method that Untermyer's League preferred to use was by defaming Nazism in their monthly Anti-Nazi Economic Bulletin. The Bulletin regularly posted a section devoted to businesses that sold German goods. Under the headline “Why Do These Firms Continue to Handle German Merchandise?,” the list would detail the names and addresses of people who did not cooperate with the boycott. Readers were prompted to not purchase goods from these companies. Instead, they were pushed to purchase goods from domestic (or at least non-German) businesses which sold the same items. 43 The Anti-Nazi League's Detroit office also relied on limited private investigations into Bund activities. For example, their investigations found that “Children in the German neighborhood were offered lessons in language during the school vacation by Germans known to be pro-Nazis.” They also found that local Nazi activist groups had consulted 41 Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League., “Nazis Against the World: The Counter-Boycott is the Only Defensive Weapon against Hitlerism's World-Threat to Civilization,” (New York: The Davidson Press, 1934), 1. 42 Sears, Roebuck and Co., letter to Anti-Nazi League representative, Oct. 2, 1933. 43 “Why Do These Firms Continue to Handle German Merchandise?” was a reoccurring section in the Bulletin throughout it's run. 44 with professional German speakers to come and speak at their events. Lastly, they found the locations and activities going on in German-American Bund youth camps throughout the nation. 44 Their confidential reports show the first inkling of a larger network of clandestine activities going on throughout the nation. Sadly, the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League and most other boycott organizations suffered from an inability to garner enough strength behind their movements. Their victories were limited to pushing businesses away from selling German goods and raising public consciousness. They held no legal powers and could not go after pro-Nazi activists. In all, the struggles behind the boycotts, informational campaigns, and rallies amounted to little, if any, real political change in Germany concerning the Jews. Although their efforts resulted in minimal gains outside of the United States, they were instrumental in three things. First, the Anti-Nazi League's story reveals that they were part of a larger national trend that believed Nazis in America and in Germany should be put under as much scrutiny as possible. Second, their influential public awareness campaigns helped put greater pressure on American Nazi groups to change their message as well as push the government to investigate pro-Nazi activists. Lastly, for the purposes of this study, the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League is especially important because they were the organization that Rabbi Abba Hillel modeled his Cleveland-based League for Human Rights after. Amid all of this growing public scrutiny, the Bund transitioned their public image and general message throughout the 1930s and 1940s from replicating German National 44 Confidential Report of Activities of the League for Human Rights, undated; The source gives little indication as to when it was produced, however, it seems to have been made during or before 1939. 45 Socialism to “patriotic, 100% American group” that both honored American traditions and protected the nation from communism. According to Kuhn, “so long as there's a swastika [in America], there'll be no hammer and sickle in this country.” 45 Naturally, this message of anti-Communism was little more than a petty attempt to hide their affiliation with Nazism. In reality, national investigations showed the Bund was no different than it had been before their shift towards accentuating anti-communism over their antiSemitism. At their very core, the Bund was still a highly active and secretly Nazi front that advocated for an American form of National Socialism. Their newly adopted policy was to hide their pro-Nazi message more and more from the public, instead only bringing it out at Bund member-only events or in their youth instruction camps. Investigations done by the League for Human Rights in Cleveland found that these camps were purposefully orchestrated by the Bund hierarchy to train young German American children in a manner similar to the Hitler Youth were in Germany. Section Four: The Federal Crackdown on Nazi Activity The first federal response to Bund activity came from the Dickstein Committee, led by Congressmen John McCormack (D-MA) and Samuel Dickstein (D-NY) in 1934. Originally named the Special Committee on Un-American Activities, the Dickstein Committee opposed any and all pro-Nazi activity. Dickstein told reporters that he was determined to investigate all Bund activities and subpoena “as many Bundists as time 45 Canedy, 73. 46 would permit.” 46 The majority of the Committee's investigations consisted of interviews where Bund members and leaders were asked pointed questions by the Committee members. Dickstein in particular took great pleasure in interrogating members, often questioning the witnesses himself. He also took the opportunity to make sensational claims about the Bund and Germany. Among other things, Dickstein claimed that every German seaman was actually a spy for the Reich, “that Germany was smuggling arms into the country, and that the Bund had a membership of over twenty thousand in the New York metropolitan area.” 47 Some fellow Congressmen accused Dickstein of going too far with his prosecutions, saying that he used the trials as a political springboard or that he was violating the witnesses' constitutional rights. 48 Despite all of Dickstein's bombastic denouncements and the Committee's interrogations, their findings largely confirmed what Americans had been hearing from non-federal sources, namely that the Bund and other pro-fascist groups were nearly identical to “the same ruthless efficiency of the military set-up which characterized Hitler's machine in Germany” and that they aimed to create a “new kind of government in the United States, one which should incorporate the principle of Nazi religious bigotry.” Lastly, and most importantly, Dickstein's Special Committee identified the Bund as “ideologically and organizationally tied to Nazi Germany.” 49 Despite all of Dickstein's claims that the Bund was guilty of illegal conduct, the Committee concluded that the German-American Bund nor it's members were guilty of 46 Diamond, 157. Diamond, 162. 48 Diamond, 158. 49 Congress, House, Special Committee on Un-American Activities, Investigation of Un-American Propaganda Activities in the United States, 78th Cong., 1st sess., 1944, H. Rept. 282, 60-61. 47 47 treason or any other crimes. While their activities were morally reprehensible or too militant for some, the Bund had broken no laws. Most of the findings they had made by 1935 were already well known to many observers because the popular press and radio networks had covered the Committee's hearings. 50 Furthermore, the Committee's findings about the Bund had limited lasting impact on official policy towards pro-Nazi organizations, as the report characterized pro-Nazi behavior as something limited to an extreme German minority who lacked the ability to do much more than anger their opponents. This kind of federal dismissal of pro-Nazi activity would be continued throughout until the late 1930s when investigations by various other governmental bodies were able to prove that Bundists and other pro-Nazi activists were guilty of avoiding the Selective Service Act or other laws. After their investigations finished in 1937, the Dickstein Committee closed all operations and left the burden of investigating Nazi groups to others. Future government investigations, like the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) led by Congressman Martin Dies (D-TX), portrayed Nazi groups as bizarre and somewhat disagreeable curiosities found only in a select immigrant group and the militant far-right. In their 1944 summary of all findings, the Dies Committee detailed a relatively thorough history of their findings. For example, their analysis examines the personal and professional lives of major Bund leaders like Fritz Kuhn, August Klapprott, Gerhard Kunze, and Peter Gissibl. 51 HUAC was able to connect each of these individuals with either known German agents or the Nazi government, suggesting that they were 50 51 Diamond, 158. Investigation of Un-American Propaganda Activities in the United States, 62-65. 48 coordinating or funding each other. The HUAC files also detail a large, but incomplete list of over one hundred Bund meeting places and leaders, notably all of those in Ohio, Michigan, Montana, Texas, and most of Pennsylvania. 52 Their list of local Bund leaders, although more thorough than previous investigations, still shows that the HUAC investigation were not able to penetrate the Bund's most basic level of organizational hierarchy. 53 This inability to do so ultimately stymied the Dies Committee's ability to judge the Bund's activities. To their credit, however, HUAC was able to collect and identify information that indicated many organizations and individuals involved in profascist activities. For groups interested in continuously pressuring and investing groups like the Bund, like Cleveland's League for Human Rights, the Dies Committee's efforts were valiant, but did not reach far enough until they started to prosecute members in the late 1930s and early 1940s It is in this context, that federal investigations had failed to adequately deal with fascists in the early and mid-1930s, that we can understand why groups like the League acted so aggressively against their enemies. Despite their findings, the Dies Committee's fight against American Nazism was hurt from the very beginning due to a crucial misunderstanding on the nature of fascism. HUAC's definition of Nazism confused and hindered their ability to properly analyze pro-fascist activity in American and the Bund. The Dies Committee believed that any ideology that posed a threat to the nation, no matter what it was, needed to be repelled. These ideologies and their proponents were thus grouped together into the collective and 52 These were found by cross-comparing the findings in Scott Freeland's They Too Were Americans appendix with the HUAC files. 53 Investigation of Un-American Propaganda Activities in the United States, 67-69. 49 loosely defined term “anti-American.” In particular, the leader of HUAC, Martin Dies considered Nazism and communism as one and the same, differing only in their land of origin. In his autobiography, The Martin Dies Story, Dies said that “the important task [of HUAC], as I saw it, was to convince the American people that Fascism and Communism are fundamentally alike, and that the real issue is between Americanism on one hand, and all alienism on the other....” 54 He claims throughout the book that fascists and communists were the same because they shared revolutionary tactics and a disdain for democracy. His analysis of the two all but ignores the extreme political and ideological differences between the two and reveal that he was utterly ignorant to their very real differences. Dies' misinformed beliefs about fascists are even more apparent in his 1940 book, The Trojan Horse in America. Part conservative political tract and part early anticommunist literature, Dies' Trojan Horse created a much more elaborate, but still error ridden examination of fascism. He argued that Nazi groups tended to follow a set of ten criteria, including “promulgating an anti-democratic or pro-totalitarian system of government,” use of the swastika, celebration of Hitler, and uniformed regiments. 55 Unfortunately, Dies analysis of fascism went no deeper, showing no serious consideration for operation and import of fascism. Furthermore, his overuse of the phrase “Trojan Horse” incorrectly groups the fascists and communists together into one anti-Americanist threat. For Dies, all “Trojan Horses,” or any anti-American political ideology, came from the same sort of totalitarianism, differing only in national origin and leadership. In the 54 55 Martin Dies, Martin Dies' Story, (New York: Bookmailer, 1963), 130. Martin Dies, The Trojan Horse in America, (New York: Dood, Mead, and Company, 1940), 20-21. 50 brief section discussing the Bund and other related American fascist movements, Dies made no attempt to differentiate them from communist groups. Instead, he provided a rather short history of the various organizations and their anti-American activities, all the way hyping their membership numbers and strength well out of proportion. Ultimately, Dies' Trojan Horse and autobiography detail that under his direction the Committee failed to identify fascist movements as serious threats separate from communism, thus compromising their ability to better fight the Bund and their ilk. Dies and the HUAC committee's unwillingness to investigate domestic fascism in a meaningful way was also continued in future federal investigations. FBI investigations led by Attorney General Homer S. Cummings were much more thorough than any other preceding investigation. The FBI reports show that the organization had penetrated the Bund's general membership, special Ordnungsdienst division, and leadership and collected volumes of their most private correspondence. These reports were so thorough that they were able to track local Bund leaders down that neither the Dies Committee or Dickstein Committee could even find after they left the United States. Interestingly, the FBI files and League for Human Rights collection suggest that the FBI communicated with and shared findings with boycott organizations that engaged in clandestine investigation tactics. Despite seemingly overwhelming proof and vast web of informants, Cumming and the FBI also concluded that the Bund posed no real threat to nation. In fact, on January 5, 1938, Cummings released his report on the Bund (with considerable editing and censoring) “which cleared the organization of any federal 51 wrongdoing.” 56 Even later investigations under J. Edgar Hoover's administration found that the Bund were not guilty of anything serious. In early 1941, the leading Special Agent in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania wrote to Hoover with damning evidence that the Bund were engaging in illegal, possibly treasonous, activities. He provided materials that he believed proved the Bund was engaged in illegal activity and suggested prosecuting members that were planning to overthrow to the government. However, Hoover disagreed. 57 In response, Hoover said that “A careful perusal of this material fails to reflect any information indicating the advisability of such action. Such material reflecting the purposes and the aims of the German-American Bund is in the possession of the Bureau and has previously been forwarded to the Department in the course of regular investigation.” 58 Hoover's dismissal of pro-Nazi activity like the aforementioned was par for the course under his administration. Like HUAC and Dies, Hoover's concern that communists, not fascists, had invaded American institutions came to define his career. Those behind government investigations simply held little interest in investigating fascist and National Socialist activities. According to historian Susan Canedy, what remains significant about the Dickstein Committee, HUAC, and the Cummings report is that they set a public expectation that Nazi groups would be investigated by some form of organized body, federal or otherwise. With the government offering only limited interest in fighting American fascism, many people and civilian groups felt as though they had to 56 Canedy, 142. Special Agent in Philadelphia, letter to J. Edgar Hoover, April 21, 1941. 58 J. Edgar Hoover, letter to “Special Agent in Charge,” May 5, 1941. 57 52 step in and do what the government would not. Section Five: Chapter Conclusions Those who made up the Bund and other related Nazi organizations were products of German American discontent with the American political system and their bitter treatment during the Great War. The Great Depression era challenged the notion that democracy was truly as strong as it seemed and gave rise to groups seeking a legitimate alternative to the established system. American Nazis considered Hitler's Germany as the best template for the nation to copy. Since democracy had seemingly failed America, they thought, why not turn to the system that had resurrected Germany? From this, organized American Nazism grew through a continual cycle of ideological radicalization, German sponsorship, and Berlin's urging to tame the message down to something more palpable to the general American public. Their attempts at gaining true power were largely unsuccessful because the majority of the general public disliked their rhetoric, militant activities, anti-Semitism, and their perceived ties to Hitler. Anti-Nazi activism and boycott efforts were a reactive response to a perceived threat. Those who responded to fascist groups did so to protect, among other things, American democracy. In the minds of many Americans, Hitler had command over thousands of devoted followers who held equal disdain for liberal democratic institutions. In reality, the Nazi regime had little to do with the German-American Bund and other pro-Nazi groups, but the American public believed differently. Loud, pro-Nazi preaching 53 from an extremist sect of German Americans was proof enough that the nation was in danger and could be overcome by the militant Nazi masses. Popular movies, literature, newspapers and magazines further sensationalized the activities of the Bund and found most any way (real or imagined) to tie them with Hitler. Movies like Confessions of a Nazi Spy and the myriad articles that displayed fascist treachery declared that true American citizens needed repel the Nazi threat at home for the sake of democratic institutions and the preservation of American liberty. The necessity to wipe out American National Socialism became a priority of many organizations, specifically those who felt most immediately threatened by anti-Semitic forces. Jewish-led groups like the American Jewish Congress and American Jewish Committee fought over how their community needed to fight Hitler's American equivalents. Their attempts to combat them largely manifested as public information campaigns, rallies, and boycott movements. These attempts to control and combat Nazi influence in America, while valiant, had limited success in resisting the Nazi menace. Their inability to thoroughly counter Nazi activities forced the government to act. The first federal investigation led by Samuel Dickstein set the pattern for future government investigations. In the end, the Dickstein Committee found that the GermanAmerican Bund was engaged in suspicious but not necessarily illegal activities. Their findings, though significant in content, did not elicit much governmental action against perceived Nazi fifth column activities until the late 1930s and early 1940s. Crucial leaders like Martin Dies blurred the lines between communism and fascism, falsely believing that they were one and the same. His gaffe allowed contemporary and future 54 federal investigations on pro-Nazi groups to start from a mistaken understanding of Nazi political ideology. Instead, government investigations put a much greater emphasis on finding communist spies and sympathizers in the country and all but ignored fascist groups. As a result, they left the sense that they had insufficiently attended to a very real threat and that the government was truly uninterested in pursuing the issue in a meaningful way. If anything was to be done, new, tougher measures needed to be undertaken by non-federal forces to find out how the Nazi menace was plotting to destroy democratic institutions. It is in this context that we properly view organizations like the League for Human Rights. As observant members of society and already sensitive to proNazi activity, vigilance groups such as the League believed that it was their patriotic duty to fight Nazism in American and prevent the sort of takeover that Germany had suffered. Chapter Two: Public Resistance and Clandestine Vigilance Section One: Cleveland During the Great Depression The 1930s in America was an especially tumultuous time for nearly all segments of society. In Cleveland, Ohio, the six largest city in the United States, the economic breakdown and social strife was especially severe. In the decade prior, however, Cleveland was on the rise, growing in population, industry, and nationally renowned as a city that welcomed new immigrants from Eastern European countries and elsewhere. Between 1920 and 1929, for example, Cleveland's banks grew from $675 million to $958 million. Heavy industries improved substantially, increasing production from nearly 22 million net tons of freight in 1920 to over 35 million in 1929, making Cleveland one of the world's foremost industrial centers at that time. Despite this, wage earners were often under-payed and underappreciated, a theme that historian Lloyd Gartner says remained well into the Great Depression of the 1930s. Gartner further claims that a critical view of Cleveland's industry foreshadowed the national collapse. He cites that local relief bureaus saw an increase in assistance requests by over 50% each year from 1927 to 1929. These organizations were strained to keep up with demand and were unable to help all of those who asked. The demand for Cleveland business and industry fell slightly more and more 55 56 every year after 1927. 1 Once the Depression occurred, however, the city soon fell into a horrible spiral. The 1930 census remarks that in 1930 the city reported 10.4% unemployment, but in 1931 that number skyrocketed to over 25%. 2 Male unemployment during those years were even higher, reaching 14.8% in 1930 and 35.1% in 1931 -”the highest in any major American city.” 3 These official numbers, however, counted those with temporary positions or odd jobs. Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, one of America's most out-spoken Zionists during and after WWII and Cleveland's most well respect Jewish leaders, estimated that the true numbers affected by unemployment was around 60,000 families or 300,000 to 350,000 people in 1932. In dire straits, many turned to the conservative Republican state government for assistance, but sadly, “the amounts granted were so inadequate and the terms so onerous that the unemployed were stirred to to a resentment that many feared (and some hoped, in those days) boded social revolution.” 4 These disenchanted citizens formed the core of local fascist, socialist, and communist movements. These various groups were met with different degrees of success, some never gaining more than a handful of followers and others, like the German-American Bund, with nearly 200 normal members and a separate paramilitary division. Cleveland, while sporting a large amount of fascist or Nazi-leaning groups, also had a sizable 1 Lloyd Gartner, History of the Jews of Cleveland, (Cranbury, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1987), 267, 290. 2 Howard Whipple Green, Population Characteristics by Census Tracts Cleveland, Ohio 1930, (Cleveland, OH: The Plain Dealer Punlishing Company), 42. 3 Gartner, 291. 4 Gartner, 292. 57 communist population. For example, in 1930, concerns over unemployment caused over 3,000 jobless men, excited by communist speakers, to attempt seizing City Hall. 5 These pro-revolutionary groups posed an ideological challenge to democracy and the reigning system due to economic constraints and a real concern that the nation was failing and needed a new path. In Cleveland, fascists and American Nazis were especially active and continuously posed a threat to those who wanted to sustain democratic order. These groups came under substantial public and private scrutiny, especially by the local Jewish community. Known for being a city filled with many ethnicities, the history of Cleveland's Jewish community has been especially vibrant. Their presence in the city goes back to as early as July 1839 when a diaspora of German Jews fled Bavaria for America. Mostly keeping to themselves in their neighborhoods and discriminated by other through a mix of religious bigotry and unofficial “red-lining,” early Cleveland Jews resisted assimilation and stayed in their neighborhoods in Woodland and near the center of the city. As a result, they forged distinctive Jewish-only businesses and social centers. Both a social refuge and religious gathering place, local synagogues became some of the most important aspects of these Jewish areas. In particular, the Ansche Chesed, Tifereth Israel (both founded by German Jews), Anshe Emeth (Polish), and B'nai Jeshurum (Hungarian) temples reflected the various Jewish nationalities and ranging orthodoxy of Jews that came to Cleveland throughout the nineteenth century. Outside of religious life, many 5 Gartner, 290. 58 prominent Jews founded a variety of service organizations such as a local chapter of B'nai B'rith, the Hungarian Benevolent and Service Union, Excelsior, the Oakwood Club, as well as women's and youth clubs. 6 During the early twentieth century, Cleveland Jews began to move out of their relatively small neighborhoods towards the eastern sides of the city. Starting in 1918, for example, the Jews fled the Woodland and other areas in waves. While it is unknown why they left, 80,000 of Cleveland's Jews (or nearly 10% of the city's total population) relocated to East Cleveland, Cleveland Heights, Glenville, Mount Pleasant, and the Kinsman neighborhoods, a trend which continued until well after World War II. 7 While the community was shifting living spaces, they still engaged in traditional social and religious practices, as well as making their presence felt more in city-wide affairs. In particular, Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver engaged in many public and political affairs that fir into his politically liberal view of the world. For example, Silver was one of the leading members of various trade union advocacy groups, humanitarian guilds, orphanages, and other non-sectarian organizations. He was also responsible for repairing the Jew's relationship with local Catholic and Protestant leaders that had long felt the Jews were a pest in their city. Nationally, Silver worked for a variety of groups that advocated world peace, Jewish affairs, inter-religious temperance, birth control, and labor groups. His liberal agenda was often reflected in his sermons. During a series of local labor struggles 6 Judah Rubinstein, Remembering: Cleveland's Jewish Voices (Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 2011), 5-9. 7 Rubinstein, 9-10; Gartner, 268. 59 in 1919 and 1920, Silver delivered sermons like “The Coming Industrial Struggle -The Open vs. the Closed Shop.” He believed that trade unions were a “social utility of beneficence, from the point of view of the highest good of the common wealth, of the people,. Of the community as a whole” and that unions deserved the rights to collective bargaining. Silver was additionally involved in guaranteeing the unemployed received insurance through the Ohio Commission on Unemployment Insurance. 8 While history has largely remembered Rabbi Silver as a reform leader and most prominently as one of the nation's most vocal Zionists and proponents for the creation of the state of Israel, his local endeavors made him the city's most well-known and respected Jew. Section Two: Origins of the League for Human Rights By as early as January 1933, Rabbi Silver was sure that German Jewry was “doomed” while under Adolf Hitler's rule. 9 While on a vacation to Berlin, he witnessed first-hand how the Nazi regime had come to power and positioned itself against German Jews. Silver's concern that German Jews would be attacked quickly became a reality. The Jewish population of Germany and all of Europe would suffer for the next twelve years from some of the greatest horrors known to mankind, moving through religious discrimination, financial loss, property destruction, systematic starvation, and ultimately, liquidation under the Nazi state. Leon Wiesenfeld, one of Rabbi Silver's closest personal 8 9 Gartner, 274-76. Leon Wiesenfeld, Jewish Life in Cleveland. (Cleveland, OH: The Jewish Voice Pictorial, 1976), 20. 60 friends, reported in his memoir Jewish Life in Cleveland that Silver was distraught when he came back home; a man without hope. 10 Wiesenfeld offered to Silver that they work together on making an economic boycott of the Third Reich a possibility. Weisenfeld explained that “Being familiar with the German mentality with regards to money matters, I entertained the the hope that German merchants and manufacturers would, as a result of the boycott, seek to influence Hitler to stop his persecutions of the Jews.” 11 However, Silver was reluctant to agree so quickly. Before he could make up his mind on this big decision, events in Cleveland forced the movement forward without a leader, or a thoroughly supportive group behind it. In April 1933, a small conference intended to discuss the possibility of a local boycott turned into an unexpected mass protest with over 3,000 people in attendance. Capitalizing on this moment Wiesenfeld took to the stage and delivered a powerful speech where, “each time I mentioned the word 'boycott,' the audience rose to its feet, and applauded. This was the best proof that the Jewish masses wanted action, not just speeches in condemnation of the Nazis.” 12 As Wiesenfeld explains, the Cleveland movement to protest Hitler grew even greater when nearly 12,000 people attended a rally that happened the following week. At that rally Wiesenfeld read the official boycott declaration and was met “unanimously and with thunderous applause.” 13 After the rally Wiesenfeld asked Rabbi Silver to join him and other notable Cleveland leaders to conduct 10 Wiesenfeld, 20. Wiesenfeld, 14. 12 Wiesenfeld, 15. 13 Wiesenfeld, 25. 11 61 an economic boycott against the Nazi dictatorship. Silver's resolve, according to Wiesenfeld, quickly solidified and he became the city's champion against anti-Semitism, domestic fascism, and German Nazism. Their union signified the beginning of the League for Human Rights. Although the movement against Hitlerism in Cleveland was alive and well under Silver and Wiesenfeld's leadership, it lacked an organization to back it. The necessity for such a public group did not escape either of them, however, little information outside of Wiesenfeld's memoirs and parts of the League papers discuss the actual creation of the group. The utility of forming the League was three-fold. First, it created a public front to organize like-minded individuals to contribute to their overall mission. Second, sympathizers and members who financially contributed to the group could rest assured that their donations would not be misused. Third, creating an organization legitimized the actions that Silver, Wiesenfeld, and other pro-boycott advocates organized. In a sense, working under a larger banner would show that the effort to recall German goods and reveal the evil of Nazism was not the work of one or two people, but an entire body of people. These numbers eventually became one of the greatest League's assets, and by the time of the late April rallies, Silver, Wiesenfeld, and other local leaders created “The League for Human Rights Against Nazism.” 14 14 While this was their full name, the League often shortened it to just “The League for Human Rights.” They did this in much of their literature, correspondence, and news releases. After 1943, the League all but abandoned the “Against Nazism” part of their name, despite keeping it until their dissolution in 1946. As such, I employ their shortened name, “The League for Human Rights,” more than their original full name throughout this thesis. It is interesting to note that the League used their full name 62 After forming the organization quickly realized that they needed to establish a public front with a private group working behind. Like many other Jewish-led anti-Nazi organizations, the League needed to find a way to both fight their enemies while not looking “too Jewish.” They believed that the League would not be taken seriously enough if their public leadership was entirely or mostly consisted of Jews. Even Rabbi Silver feared that the group would not be able to gain much needed Gentile support if their collective complexion seemed too pro-Jewish. In order to give themselves a greater degree of validity, the League crafted a three-tiered system. First, League by-laws directed that the board members were to elect fellow board members. Members could serve an unlimited amount of two-year terms. At their peak, the League had over sixty board members from various religions, professions, and political persuasion. On the second tier, the board would elect members to the Committee of Fifteen where all major decisions were made. These members usually met a few times a week, but were only mandated to be present once a week. This group was largely responsible for directing the core policies and decisions of the group and their public works. This committee consisted of prominent social workers George A. Bellamy, Alice Garnett, and Russell W. Jelliffe. They even allied with local religious leaders like Bishop Warren Rogers and Reverend Phillip Smead Bird. Lastly, the Committee elected a Director. This person and their secretary were the only full-time paid employees. 15 Although Grace Meyette held this 15 more when corresponding with other Jewish and anti-fascist groups than they did with others. Ivan Platt, The League for Human Rights: Cleveland Jewry's Fight Against Naziism, 1933-1946, (Cleveland, OH: Cleveland State University, 1977), 38. 63 position for the majority of the League's existence and technically had the reins of power to herself, she often ceded her power to Rabbi Silver or collaborated with him on major issues, events, and investigations. Silver, more the philosophical director of the League than anything else, led the group through a mix of personal charisma and religious underpinnings that deeply opposed German Nazism, anti-Semitism, American pro-Nazi activism, and any political ideology which threaten liberal democracy. It is through this context that the League's war against all things pro-Nazi or of the far-right make sense. Section Three: Boycotts, Rallies, and Besting the Fascists One of the most common tactics used by Jewish anti-Nazi groups were public boycotts of German goods and services. Innumerable Jewish heritage groups, veterans associations, womens clubs, and other assorted organizations throughout the nation either complied with or conducted local and national anti-German goods boycotts. 16 The League's boycott effort was a complex, multifaceted endeavor that emphasized economic and social tactics. As stipulated in their mission statement, the League was committed to “a vigorous boycott of all Nazi good and services, Nazi steamship lines, and Nazi films.” 17 The League also promoted Ohio businesses and national corporations that discouraged German goods or had American-made alternatives to German products. 16 Haskel Lookstein, Were We Our Brothers' Keepers?: The Public Response of American Jews to the Holocaust, (New York: Hartmore House, 1985), 76. 17 Anonymous, The League for Human Rights, (unknown publisher: Cleveland, OH, 1946), 1. 64 Businesses selling goods imported from Germany were put on a mass-produced distribution list that prompted readers to not shop at these specified places. Common products that were discouraged included gloves, stockings, leather-goods, cameras, and pharmaceuticals. The League's records show that most businesses cooperated (only a few refused and were thus added to the public blacklist) and German merchandise largely disappeared from markets by 1935, with some items going underground. 18 The League also formed a special boycott board made up of representatives from local businesses to act as links between the two parties. The group assembled monthly, shared individual business reports, and provided the latest news in all things related to the movement. This board and the League worked together to discourage the sale and manufacturing of German goods and those produced by firms connected to German companies in northeast Ohio. Of course, the League's boycott on German goods, although successful in the Cleveland area, was a fight too large for them alone. As such, the League decided to alert federal authorities to the growing danger that businesses selling Nazi goods posed. From 1934 until their end after the war, the League remained in contact with federal authorities. 19 Nazi activity in Cleveland was hardly limited to German-made products. Various pro-Nazi organizations and individuals sponsored German nationals and outwardly proNazi Americans to speak at informational talks in and around Cleveland. The League 18 Various document in the League collection at WRHS show that Cleveland merchants were highly involved in trying to keep out German products. Other show a concerted effort on the parts of local businesses to tell citizens about what products they should or should not buy. 19 Anonymous, 4. 65 reported that “All propaganda was hidden by the assurance that Germany wanted to have friendly relations with the United States through the medium of the Americans of German descent, whose culture and whose labor had helped to build America.” 20 The earliest examples of German nationals being brought in specifically to speak with Cleveland residents include various German ambassadors, consuls, and former Wiemar government officials that openly praised Hitler. Not all German propaganda, however, was meant to inform, some was meant purely to entertain or show off Germany's newly gained prowess. In December, 1934, the Bund and Stadtverband (formally known as the “Federation of German Organizations of Cleveland”) brought in Elly Beinhorn, an aircraft acrobat for a performance and luncheon. 21 More important than German nationals, however, were pro-Nazi Americans that could showcase Nazisms benefits for Americans. For example, the German Round Table, composed of German American leaders and Cleveland's social hierarchy, were responsible for many public talks. On March 7, 1937, the Round Table held a meeting on “Racial Origins” which included no less than twenty uniformed O.D. members, Martin Kessler (leader of the Cleveland Bund branch), Fritz Kuhn, Mayor Burton (he was regularly invited to Bund events by Kessler, with whom he shared a friendly relationship, and was known to attend occasionally), as well as Dr. Norbert Zimmer and Dr. Kapp, known traveling Nazi propagandists. All that is known about the content of the meeting is that they discussed how Jews were inferior to Germanic peoples. The League's investigation papers refer to the Round Table's 20 21 Anonymous, 7. Anonymous, 8. 66 meeting as one of many racial education programs that the Bund funded that year. The Round Table was also responsible for bring aeronautic acrobats Count Hagenburg, Emil Krapf, and Hanna Reitsch (notable for being one of the last people to see Hitler alive and his favorite aviator) to Cleveland to perform that same week. 22 The League's handbook and investigation files note that they were well aware of Nazi movements in Cleveland and actively opposed their propaganda. The most commonly used tactic was bringing in counter-speakers before, after, or during pro-Nazis speeches, rallies, or public meetings. Speakers included American anti-Nazis, Jews that had escaped Germany, and famous Germans that opposed Hitler's Reich. Their messages promoted democracy, listed Hitler's crimes (or potential crimes), and described the Nazi threat in America. For example, in February 1937, the League brought in Dr. Hans Simon and former Wiemar Republic leader Wilhelm Sollman to counter the Round Table's talk on “Racial Origins.” The Cleveland Plain Dealer remarked that Sollman, an “exiled German Socialist Democrat leader, described modern Germany to more than 500 persons in the ball room of Hotel Hollenden.” He branded Hitler as “a shameless liar and the greatest blackguard of modern times” and that the Nazi Party was interested in a war that would envelop Europe. He concluded that “With a man like Hitler in command of the largest army in Europe the world has no choice but eventually to capitulate before Fascism or meet it with a united democratic front. … the only way the world can avoid a 22 Anonymous, 14-16. 67 war before that time is to show to Hitler the patience of democracy.” 23 In April 1938, Rabbi Silver and the League sponsored exiled German writer and radio commentator Johannes Steel of New York to speak at Silver's Temple in support of the League's local boycott and national effort. Speaking to over 1,200, Steel proclaimed that the “Boycott is the only weapon civilization has against Fascist gangsters who rule most of the world today.” Steel was confident that an economic boycott would work that “Mussolini and Japan could be 'destroyed' and Adolf Hitler 'killed' by breaking their economic backbone.” When asked about the German-Cleveland student exchange program, he replied that the German students were “little propagandists and had ought to be thrown out.” 24 One of the most significant visits that the League sponsored was by the famed writer and philosopher Thomas Mann in May of 1938. Speaking to over 3,400 at the Public Music Hall, Mann explained that he recently choose to revoke his Swiss and Czech citizenship in light of recent Fascist movements. Mann “paint[ed] the battle lines drawn up today between forces which he said were bringing a 'dark age' to Europe and the still dormant strength of democratic institutions.” He went on to say: The chief strength, the seduction of the Fascist currents menacing democracy is the charm of novelty.... they make great play with it, brag about their air of youth, their revolutionism, and so calculate to decoy the youth of the world. But it is really a snare and a delusion. Nevertheless, with its blatant propaganda of youthfulness, Fascism has one great publicity trick: It represents democracy as doddering, decrepit, effete, stale and insufferably boring. It calls itself lusty, powerful, bursting with life and the future and notoriously successful..... If democracy is to stand up against it [Fascism], there must be no mistake as to the 23 “Predicts Fall of Hitler's Regime,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, Feb. 15, 1937; These articles were retrieved via an internet database and did not include the original article page numbers. 24 “Urges Boycott to End Fascist Rule,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, April 6, 1938, NPN available. 68 evilness of the new thing which has entered the world. 25 Fascism, according the League, represented a truly evil threat to the free world that made itself out to be many intriguing and possibly enticing things. However, if democracy were to survive, then fascism in all its forms needed to be destroyed. The League's informational campaigns represent their efforts to discredit fascist groups and any other political ideology as a legitimate alternative to democracy. Although it is sometime difficult to discern the actual amount of attendees at events and literature distributed, the League's handbook says that of their 413 special speaking engagements between 1933 and 1941, there were a total of approximately 80,345 attendants. Their public meetings also totaled nearly 70,224 attendees. Lastly, the League handbook says that “we have distributed reprinted literature and our own publications through direct mail and through the cooperation of various organizations. This has amounted to well over 1,230,000.” 26 Although it is not known exactly how the League came to use investigations, they nevertheless embraced them as a key component of their fight against local and national Nazism by as early as May 1936. Investigations that the League conducted were largely done through a series of informants, through direct infiltration of a group, or collective surveillance. The agents would name themselves with letters, numbers, or a mixture of the two (for example, P-9, 211, and C-34). No information reveals their true identity nor to how they came to be given specific missions. It is most likely that agents were told privately what they were to do and who they were to follow since no paper trail of any 25 26 “Mann Will Cast Lot as U.S. Citizen,”Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 2, 1938, NPN available. Anonymous, 30. 69 sort exists that directs an agent to follow a specific person or group. What can be argued, however, is that the League had knowledge or suspicion that individuals were involved with or in sympathy to German Nazism or its American cognate. Nearly one hundred individuals, groups, and locations from around the northeastern Ohio area were placed under surveillance between 1936 and 1945, so targets were chosen with great consideration. Agents used most any means at their disposable to retrieve information. For example, when agent P-9 was charged with learning about the questionable nature of a youth camp at Parma's German Central Farm, he lied his way into the director's office, tricked various camp officials, used a child informant, took pictures of the area, eavesdropped on conversations, and trespassed onto the property to meet with the young man he and the League had contracted to infiltrate the camp. Other common tactics included questioning friends, family, and business connections about the political, social, personal, and religious leanings of particular people. They also wanted to acquire willing informants, shadowed people with multiple agents for extended periods, befriended suspicious individuals to get close to information, and much more. 27 Investigation reports were almost always written the evening after a specific event on a typewriter. Reports included all data relevant to the day's proceeding and preparations. An agent might, for example, mention that they followed a specific person on the train for a series of stops, watched them speak to others in a bar, read certain newspapers or magazines, enter and exit particular shops, or engage in any other sort of 27 It is clear after a thorough review of the League's findings that the League acted as I have described. The League's notes are all a part of the Western Reserve Historical Society's League collection. 70 public behavior. These reports also detailed what was going on in their surroundings or what some people were wearing. On many occasions, they noted the presence of swastikas, uniforms, or other Nazi regalia. While attending Cleveland's GermanAmerican Bund meetings, X-5's inner circle informant revealed that many attendees dressed in uniforms similar to the German SA and those who were a part of the OD paramilitary wing of the Bund. There was also a cadre of individuals dressed in copied American military uniforms that sported a swastika at the top of the cap. 28 Flags as well were equally important. Both P-9 and X-5 often noted if the American flag, Nazi flag, or any others were flying or being otherwise used. Both uniforms and flags are important since they are symbols of personal and political affiliation and can tell much about a person. One can safely assume, for instance, that an American flag with a swastika in the middle means that those who rally around it see themselves (and the nation as they would like it to be) as both quintessentially American and Nazi. Secondly, an individual dressed in German Nazi regalia or American variants thereof were so serious about their personal affiliation with a group and did not fear announcing it to the world via their body. Lastly, individuals outside of the scope of the investigation were typically left nameless, with few base indicators as to who they were. For example, a special report investigating a Cleveland-area bar did not contain the names of normal patrons, only those that were connected to the case. In this situation, well-to-do German Americans, known Nazis, and suspicious individuals were named or described for future reports. Individuals that could 28 Special Report by X-5, Special Archival Collections, Nov. 10, 1937, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio, 1. 71 not be named were either described in detail or linked to vehicle license plates. Naturally, not all investigations revealed that the targets were doing anything wrong or pro-Nazi. For example, agent X-37 was responsible for following and learning about a local Austrian businessman's “attitude toward the Jewish race.” 29 Although it is not stated outright, the Austrian was most likely chosen because of a complaint or previously uncovered information that linked him to groups or persons engaged in proNazi behavior. One informant that X-37 questioned provided the Austrian's city of birth, he was too young to have served in the Austrian or German armies during the Great War, held politically centrist views, and married a local Irish woman. After meeting with several acquaintances and friends familiar with the individual, X-37 concluded that the man was not a threat and his file should be left to rest. 30 In another case, X-37 was involved in investigating a local man suspected of spreading pro-Nazi propaganda. In a risky move, he spoke with the man's wife concerning their trip the year prior to Germany. She explained that they did indeed go, were of German heritage, and very familiar with Jewish harassment, but claimed that American news sources largely inflated matters. She also compared street violence and anti-Jewish harassment to labor and union strikes in the United States, saying that the state would come in and justly squash any form of resistance. After finding out that neither the man nor the wife were engaged with any German organizations and that their feelings about the Jews and Nazi state were nothing too extreme, X-37 concluded that although they may be sympathetic to the Nazi cause, 29 30 Special Report by X-37, April 27, 1936, 1. Special Report by X-37, April 27, 1936, 1-2. 72 they were not spreading propaganda or were especially pro-Nazi. The report added that their file should be closed, but the individuals kept on a list of suspicious individuals. 31 In all, the League's investigations were a tactic chosen for two key reasons. First, they understood that formal pro-Nazi organizations and activists represented the most present and pressing danger. They believed that these groups were grappling for power, attempting to usurp democratic institutions by illegal ways. They believed this very real threat was not being attended to sufficiently by federal agents. Thus, the League took it upon themselves to act in the ways that the government was not. Second, the shift towards using private investigations against Nazi-related groups was first introduced in small form during the Berlin-Cleveland student exchange program and grew from there. They moved towards this methodology because it offered them a chance to see what was going on in the background of events. It is especially important to note that in cases where information was at a minimum or entirely unavailable through normal channels, the League resorted to using more and more investigations. It was simply the best option available to them to continue their fight against Nazism and the enemies of democracy. Lastly, it is notable that the League had been investigating other groups prior to the Berlin-Cleveland student exchange. From March to April 1934, the League began by investigating the Tucker School of Expression, a performing arts school promoting William Pelley's “Liberation Movement,” a strange mix of anti-Semitism, anticommunism, and theosophy. This shortly lived and minimalist program, while technically 31 Special Report by X-37, 1936, 1-2. 73 the first use of clandestine investigations, is given minimal thought in this section because it is not germane to either Nazi propaganda in Cleveland nor public boycotts. Again, it is only worth mentioning because it signals that the League began using investigations not long after they started boycotting local Nazis and fascists. Section Four: The Berlin-Cleveland Student Exchange From their inception on, pro-Nazi propaganda coming from Germany was one of the League's most important targets. They considered Nazi literature, American or foreign, as an ideological threat to liberal democracy that could potentially lead the disaffected masses towards fascism. The situation that best represents the League's desire to thwart the Nazi threat and their first use of clandestine investigations was the BerlinCleveland student exchange held in 1937 and 1938. The majority of their investigations occurred during spring 1937 and looked at how the incoming students were used as propaganda agents for the Reich, but differed both in use and function from their Bund camp operations. Where the League truly stood out was in how they coordinated one of Cleveland's largest anti-Nazi rallies and educational campaigns to date. Indeed, the student exchange case, more than any other, shows how the League's secret investigations took a backseat to their public works. Beginning in May 1937 and continuing until the end June 1938, over one hundred German students came to live in the Cleveland area and learn in some of the local 74 schools. Dubbed the “Berlin-Cleveland student exchange” by the Cleveland Plain Dealer, the program was directed between the Berlin Board of Education, members of various Cleveland school boards, and a few prominent representatives of the local German American community. Under the auspices of friendly cultural exchange, the German students were to spend six weeks each at any of the Cleveland schools that agreed to accept them. Once the German students returned home, one hundred Cleveland students were to attend German high schools. 32 In general, the Berlin-Cleveland student exchange program was a unique plan, one without precedent in the United States. While exchanges with other countries were certainly done before, no other American city was complicit with a proposed trade with Nazi Germany before, or after, Cleveland. For Germany, sending “professional students” out to other countries to learn as “national representatives” was commonplace and an official part of the German education system. Students who enrolled in this program competed for eligibility and were selected on an individual basis. Nazi student exchange programs spanned the globe, going as far as the U.S. and Brazil, and as close as France, Poland, and Italy. 33 Naturally, this program elicited a great deal of local attention. Some Clevelanders were in complete support while others posed that it could poison young minds with National Socialist propaganda. Those that publicly supported the program often cited that it was either a unique learning opportunity for the students or that it was simply 32 33 “Brickner Hits at Pupil Swap With Germany,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, Feb. 26, 1937, NPN available. Various unnamed and undated League documents call the German students “professional students” and that they traveled from nation to nation to nation spreading pro-Nazi propaganda. It is assumed that they made these materials during the protest period. 75 misunderstood my opponents. One supporter who wrote to the Cleveland Plain Dealer said that she supported the program because “there is nothing more educating than travel.... They [the students] are only young once, and they will love their own country after that much better.” Interestingly, she made sure to mention that, despite being of German extraction, she did not belong to any German American organization. 34 Others that supported the exchange cited that opponents should reserve all criticism and let the students judge their German peers. 35 One members of the American Legion said that the United States was the most anti-Nazi country in the world and likely to convert the young Germans. He further stated that critics should have more faith in the students who go to Germany because they “have been taught religious and race tolerance from birth” and would not be shaken by six weeks in Germany. 36 Lastly, Harry Blackburn, Vice President of the Rocky River Board of Education, believed that “our high school boys and girls are sufficiently mature and sensible enough to distinguish between the things they will see and hear that are of cultural value, and what the Hitler regime may stage for their consumption during the visit in Germany.” 37 Not surprisingly, Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, a leader in the League, was one of the most powerful opponents to the student exchange. On May 2, 1937, Silver addressed his congregation about his concerns over the upcoming arrival of German students. He began 34 Letter to the Editor, “Chance of a Lifetime,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, March 7, 1937, NPN available. Letter to the Editor, “Let Pupils Judge Nazis,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, March 7, 1937, NPN available. 36 Letter to the Editor, “Veteran Favors Plan,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, March 7, 1937,NPN available. 37 Letter to the Editor, “School Board Member's View,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, March 7, 1937, NPN available. 35 76 by blasting the program by saying, “we are dealing here not at all with an innocent enterprise of a well-intentioned government bent upon international good will. We are dealing with a very shrewd piece of propaganda on the part of a very unscrupulous government which in its own land has trampled underfoot those very ideals of tolerance and good will, freedom of thought and free education which their student emissaries presumably are to acquaint themselves with in Cleveland and in free America.” 38 German propaganda minister Joseph Goebbles, he claimed, was personally behind sending the “coached, trained” students over. Silver went even further and said that the exchange was connected to Hitler's plan to brainwash the world's youth. Silver said “In Mein Kampf, Hitler writes: 'It will be the task of the Nationalist State to see to it that an adequate education is given to youth in order to provide for a generation prepared for the final and greatest decisions on this earth. The nation which will take this road first will be the victorious one'.” For Rabbi Silver, anyone who supported the plan was either gravely misinformed of the danger it posed or in full support of Hitler's plan to sway American youth in his direction. Silver continually attacked supporters as being as “naïve as the Nazis would like them to be.” 39 Lastly, and most importantly, Silver announced that he and the League for Human Rights would stage the Jewish Welfare Fund Drive when the German students arrived. The fund would support German Jews that had been 38 Judah Rubinstein, ed. Sally Wertheim and Alan Bennett, Remembering Cleveland's Jewish Voice, (Kent, OH, Kent State University Press, 2011), 224. 39 Rubinstein, 226-27. 77 prosecuted. 40 He believed that it was necessary to protest what the students stood for as a part of Hiler's international mission and to give support to German Jews under Nazism's iron fist. The Berlin-Cleveland student exchange also generated a strong national response. In New York City, Samuel Untermyer's Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League sent a signed letter of protest to Cleveland Mayor Harold Burton. The letter urged Burton to dismiss the German students upon arrival because they were “agents of the Nazi government's system of international propaganda.” Furthermore, the letter claimed with authority that the students and their ten adult leaders were trained by the German propaganda bureau and were instructed to speak about the virtues of Nazism whenever they could. Burton replied that he could not do such even if he wanted to because he did not have the power to dismiss students.41 The Christian Century declared the program “a 'good will' venture which promises to do more harm than good.” Although the author believed that the people directing things from Cleveland were acting on good intentions, they declared that the Nazi government was manipulating these children and “all sorts of social occasions into opportunities for singing the Horst Wessel song and testifying to the glories of der Fuehrer.” In all, the author concluded, the exchange would leave Clevelanders with a poor taste for Hitlerism and would make future renditions of the plan a sure failure. 42 Time magazine proclaimed that the event would be the only occasion where the 40 Rubinstein, 228. “Protests Pupils' Visit,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 15, 1937, NPN available. 42 “Controversy in Cleveland,” The Christian Century, Vol 54, 1937, 637. 41 78 German students would have to experience true democracy. The article furthermore described the German students first few days visiting classes, being unable to identify Benjamin Franklin, and walking around some of Cleveland's local shops and movie theaters. Lastly, the article indicated a level of public unwillingness to accept the students. It told how Lakewood High School student Marygold McCauley wrote to Time that “All who welcome the German students unfortunately do not understand the grave significance of this issue.” 43 Indeed, the German-led program even prompted a small international response. Reportedly, famed British Laborite Baron Dudley Leigh Aman, better known as Lord Marley, said that “every German exchange student is a Nazi propagandist.” 44 The League's reaction very much mirrored Silver's and, in some ways, surpassed him in intensity. Their initial attempts to derail the plan started in early February after the Hamburg-American Steamship Line announced the plan. Although the League later found that the Bund and German Consul were funding this program, the HamburgAmerican Steamship Line was the public face of the matter. After proposing the plan to a dozen Cleveland school officials, the League was tipped by an insider that there were talks of a student exchange. Furious that such a thing could even be considered, the League wrote to the superintendents about what they believed the plan really meant. In a letter to Superintendent Charles H. Lake, the League said that “[we are] very apprehensive of a situation that may be created by the Nazi students in the classroom of 43 44 “Cleveland Visit, Time, Vol. 29, Issue 20, May 17, 1937, NPN available. “Cleveland Visit.” 79 the Cleveland schools.” They added that “We are seriously offended by the actions taken by the Cleveland School Board as we feel that this action is a direct violation of all of the education principles of the Cleveland schools.” They ended by writing that if the plan were to go forward, the schools needed to meet a set of demands, including prohibiting students from wearing swastikas or their uniforms, promoting Nazism in the classroom, singing the Horst Wessel Lied, giving the Nazi salute at any time, or otherwise push antiAmerican ideas. 45 By repeatedly and emphatically denouncing the plan, the League pushed many local administrators to be reluctant to accept the plan. In all, less than half of the schools that originally accepted followed through to the final stage. Those that did faced another round of the League's resistance. After their partial success at getting some of the school's out of the first phase of the plan, the League developed a subgroup to plan a large rally, similar to those that they did when they were first founded. This group was headed by Rabbi Silver and Director Grace Meyette. Realizing that they could not fully prevent the program, Silver and Meyette planned to actively protest the program while the students were in Cleveland. They believed that doing so would make it less likely for any future exchanges to occur. They conducted a nation-wide search for speakers to come to Cleveland on May 10, 1937 to denounce the plan and talk about the state of education in Germany. Before the League was able to find any speakers for the May 10 event, they felt that they needed to continue to assault the exchange program. Between February and May 1937, the League had 45 League for Human Rights Against Nazism, letter to Charles H. Lake, Feb. 12 1937. 80 several very prominent speakers come and talk about the ills of Nazism, including exiled Wiemar Germany leader Wilhelm Sollman, Johannes Steele, Walter Schoenstadt, and Erika Mann. While the League sponsored them, Meyette and Silver worked to find leaders in education to come to the city. In a letter to Dr. Paul Douglas of Chicago University, Silver asked him to be the lead speaker. He explained that the program was “aimed at reaching young people, teachers, and the public” and his speech should be “built around the prostitution of education in Germany under the Nazi regime.” 46Douglas gladly accepted and said he would quickly prepare his speech. 47 Director Grace Meyette contacted A. L. Winir of the American Civil Liberties Union looking for help and potential leads. She wrote to them, “We would like to have for a speaker a 'Pure Aryan' and he should be an educator, if possible.” Her letter was met with a quick reply , suggesting that the League contact, among many others, Dr. Peter Odegard of Ohio State University and Dr. Henry Prat Fairchild of New York University. The letter from the ACLU expressed a clear sense that these individuals would be good candidates because they were all leaders in their fields and against fascism. Meyette then sent out at least eight telegrams to those suggested by the ACLU representative. While most were unable to attend due to prior engagements, Odegard and Fairchild accepted. 48 Meyette also distributed an informational informational propaganda flier that called on Cleveland's youth to stand up against what the German students stood for. The 46 Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, letter to Paul Douglas, May 5, 1937. Paul Douglas, telegram to Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, May 7, 1937. 48 The following is a compilation of letters and telegrams sent between Grace Meyette and several educational professionals concerning their attendance to the May 10 anti-student exchange rally. 47 81 anonymous flier read that: ....students of all ages are asked to demonstrate for the American ideals of free education, of the expulsion of teachers and professors from their posts by the Brown Shirt tyranny, and the humiliation and degradation of tens of thousands of innocent school children because of their race and religion.... The youth of Cleveland rises in protest against this unconscionable piece of effrontery. The appeal to youth cannot be employed as a camouflage for the motive of the Nazi regime, which is to destroy every vestige of human freedom, and is in direct contrast to all principles of democracy. 49 The flier ended by calling the city's youth to “not accept your democracy placidly. Fight for its continued existence.” 50 The League's May 10 rally was a huge hit, with over 3,000 people packing the Cleveland Music Hall and its overflow outside the building. The Cleveland Plain Dealer featured the event on its front page the next day and an article detailing how Rabbi Silver, one of the keynote speakers, believed that the students deserved a “cool reception.” He was “amazed that so few Cleveland citizens, so few school teachers see behind this seemingly innocent student exchange that they have not seized this opportunity to unmask this miserable dictatorship and drive home to honest citizens the meaning of machination of [the Nazi] regime. We should have done well to have laid a little less stress on reasonableness and being charming hosts to welcome the emissaries of dictatorship.” 51Dr. Paul Douglas' speech emphasized that the exchange in Cleveland varied from those he had led between the United States and other democratic countries and called the plan “a two-way export of Nazi ideas, not an exchange,” because Germany 49 League for Human Rights flier, unnamed, undated. Assumed before May 10, 1937. Ibid. 51 “3,000 Protest Nazi Methods of Education,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 11, 1937, NPN available. 50 82 only allowed pro-Nazi students to leave the country and did not allow liberal ideas into the Reich. The other speakers professed similar points and were likewise well received. 52 The League's handbook remembers the event in a similar way, but lays blame on Mayor Burton and the Cleveland Plain Dealer for being so passive, even accepting, of the program. 53 Obviously irritated by the fact they could not stop the program that year, the League changed its strategy to examine those involved in the program. As early as November 1937, League put agent X-5 was set on the case. His first action on November 3, 1937 consisted of a personal interview he had with one of the program chaperons and leaders, Mrs. Gerstenberger. X-5 found that she was quite pessimistic that the Berlin-Cleveland plan would continue into 1938 because the public outrage against it was so palpable. She also explained that nine other countries were interested in working with Berlin on a similar program and that Cleveland would likely be passed up. 54 On November 8, 1937, X-5 visited a local PTA meeting where students (five boys and two girls) had just returned to Cleveland from Germany five days earlier. He found that all of the students spoke highly of the program and their experiences in Germany, but that they also experienced some uncomfortable or curious irregularities. In particular, one of the male students remarked that German books were censored and, on occasions, burned. The students felt out of place at times as locals would stare at them curiously. In all, X-5 found that the student's characterization about the trip amounted to 52 Ibid. Anonymous, 13. 54 Special Report by X-5, Nov. 3, 1937, 1. 53 83 nothing unusual or particularly pro-Nazi. 55 While the League agents were investigating the student exchange program, they were also accelerating their program challenging the local chapter of the GermanAmerican Bund. While those investigations were almost entirely separate from BerlinCleveland affairs, League agents found connections between the Bund and student exchange program. First, while looking into the private histories of Bund members, the League found that one of the local Bund's most prominent members was also the executive manager of the Hamburg-American Line. Interestingly, this individual was also the same person who first proposed the student exchange and acted as a middle-man between the Cleveland and Berlin school boards. League records indicate that they were aware of this connection by as early as February 1937. League agents also found that local Bund members both housed and monetarily supported students throughout their stay. One undated document claims that at least half of the homes that housed German students and sent students abroad were active Bund members or those that openly sympathized with them. 56 In all, the record shows that local Bund members and their leadership supported the student exchange program. It is clear that the two actively worked together, but the League records do not address why they chose to not make this discovery public. 55 56 Special Report by X-5, Nov. 8, 1937, 1-2. The following was compiled from several League for Human Rights records that talk about the local Bund organization and individual members. For privacy reasons outlined by the Western Reserve Historical Society's collection on the League, I cannot name this individual nor is he important enough to get a pseudonym. 84 League investigations and public activism against the student exchange program went silent from November, 1937 until March 4, 1938. In preparation for the second trip to Germany, X-5 visited the exchange program's main office located in the HamburgAmerican Steam Ship Line building in Cleveland. X-5 spoke with the clerk under the auspices that his “son” was interested in going and that his family was curious about the program. She replied that it was a great chance for a student to experience something life changing, that the press and those influencing the press were wrong about the program, and that a trip was already planned for spring 1938. After giving him an application for eligibility, X-5 asked if he could speak with a parent or student who went on the trip the previous year. The clerk promptly gave him a name and address of someone whose child went in 1937. Upon visiting the child's mother, X-5 found that she was very much for the program. The mother told X-5 that her child had a great experience and that the press had “misquoted” her in an interview about the student exchange in 1937. She also believed the reporters were spreading lies because they wanted “to poison the minds of the young against their homeland.” 57 The League, for whatever reason, stopped pursuing the program after these interviews. The 1937 and 1938 trips to Germany were widely condemned by the press and League as obvious propaganda and clear attempt to nazify Cleveland's youth. In reality, the trip seems to have had little, if any, “nazifying” effect on the students. After they got back, some students remarked that the German people were kind to them and that they 57 Special Report by X-5, March 4, 1938, 1-2. 85 did not feel as though they were being indoctrinated into the National Socialist fold. In fact, the only complaint that they had upon return to the United States was that there was no ice water and the sauerbraten were too sour. 58 In all, little is known about the actual content of what the students were subjected to in Germany. What is known is that they lived in Berlin for a period of six weeks in German “foster” homes and visited Munich, Hamburg, and Heidelberg. Some students felt that the impression they left with Germans was “dubious.” Students reported that the German people stared at them while they walked through the streets, seemingly bewildered by “the boys' flashy collegiate clothes.” One student laughed off the matter, claiming Clevelanders would laugh at them for wearing such clothes. The students also seemed quite impressed with how clean many German cities were, how the people enjoyed bath houses, and how intensively they worked on their gardens. The chief chaperone of the trip, Mrs. H. J. Gerstenberger, claimed that students did not converse about politics and that all observations went undiscussed. Upon their return, many of the students wore or carried with them various souvenirs including “a complete Bavarian costume from shorts to wool socks,” deer antlers, and many smaller items. 59 The League records indicate that they believed the students were not converted, but they still held considerable reservation about the program as a whole. After a weak showing of less than fifty students for the 1938 exchange, the Cleveland public school systems ended the program, effectively ending the 58 59 “45 Pupils Return, Praise Germany” Cleveland Plain Dealer, August 14, 1937, NPN available. “56 Pupils Home from Berlin Visit,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, November 2, 1937, NPN available; “45 Pupils Return, Praise Germany,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, August 14, 1937, NPN available. 86 exchange of students between America and Germany. Section Five: Conclusions The League's crusade against Nazism in Cleveland was a product of evolution. Before the League for Human Rights Against Nazism was founded by Rabbi Silver or Leon Wiesenfeld, the Cleveland public was already calling for public action against Hitler's Germany and his American supporters. The founders of the League responded by creating their own version of dual Jewish and non-sectarian anti-Nazi resistance group. This differed from previous incarnations like Samuel Untermyer's Anti-Nazi Leagues in New York City and Detroit in that the Cleveland League adopted the tactics and organizational styles used by both liberal and conservative Jewish organization. For example, the League had adopted a more conservative stance on membership by trying to add Gentiles to their ranks so as to not look “too Jewish.” Simultaneously, the League was also directed in a more liberal style, namely by the Committee of Fifteen of whom most were Jews. This Jewish-led, yet Gentile-supported group also used conservative and liberal methods of protest. In particular, the League's allocation of conservative tactics are mostly evident in how they pressured figures through informal channels and by investigations. This is most evident in how the League asserted pressure on school officials during the student exchange program's initial talks. Generally speaking, however, the League preferred to use liberal protest tactics against their enemies. This 87 choice is most apparent in their investigations. While not used as much early on, this option would be used more frequently and with greater intensity after the BerlinCleveland student exchange. The League's preferred choice of attack at this time were loud, public pro-democracy and anti-Nazi informational campaigns. These are most evident in their on-going boycotts and informational rallies. What makes the student exchange program significant is that it was the first major affair where the League used both of their styles of resistance, namely information campaigns and secret investigations. While there was a greater emphasis on the public information campaigns and rallies about the student exchange, the League's selective use of investigations aided their final conclusions on the program and their evaluation of their own success. An undated document simply titled “German Student Exchange” revealed that the League felt their campaign was successful in two regards. First, they believed that they were able to convince most of the Cleveland school boards to abandon the proposed program. Since the program was still authorized by others, this was “only a partial success.” Second, they considered the May 10 rally and preceding anti-Nazi talks much more effective due to the great attendance numbers and that the program fell apart the following year. 60 Interestingly, none of the information found during their investigations was used in any way. This is understandable because the League was engaging multiple opponents at once and if they had revealed anything they knew, they might have hurt their future efforts. In any case, the League's investigations into the 60 “German Student Exchange,” undated, 1. 88 student exchange program were limited in scope as well as findings. Nonetheless, this was the first event where the League used investigations in a serious, meaningful way. The League public boycotts, protests, and information campaigns also had a role outside of gaining information on enemies or preventing their spread. In particular, their efforts rallied the local Jewish community together in a way which had not been seen before. Cleveland's Jews, led by Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver and the League, now had a united political and philosophical front from which they could strike out at Hitler and his American copy-cats. American Jews in the 1930s and 1940s were well aware that their European brethren were suffering under Hitler's oppressive regime. This common issue and the fear that American Gentiles would reciprocate this sort of violent anti-Semitism or at the very least sympathetically side with Germany created a common cause for Jews around the nation. The response in Cleveland and elsewhere were boycott and protest efforts on German goods and domestic groups which supported Hitler's policies. The external threat personified through Hitler and his destructive regime ultimately inspired the American Jewish response to resist by any means necessary. In all, the League's choice of tactics varied based on two specific elements. First, more generic pro-Nazi activity, like the selling of Nazi goods or pro-German speakers, was attacked publicly because it could garner support for the League and their mission. This simultaneously boosted their position in the city as the leading anti-Nazi group and countered any pro-Nazi message from proliferating. The informational rallies, boycotts, and other public programs show that the League was interested in getting the community 89 behind them and not letting the Bund or any other threat succeed. Second, the League initially used secret investigations as a sort of backup plan, enacted to gain extra information against their enemies when little else could be done or conventional modes of resistance were exhausted. This use of investigations would continue on well into the late 1930s and until as late as 1946. The veracity and scope of these campaigns, however, would soon become much more aggressive and focused on infiltrating the inner rings of local and regional fascist groups. Chapter Three: Breaking the Bund and Legion Section One: Nazism in America in 1930s and How it Changed The fight against Nazism in America first manifested as public boycotts against German anti-Semitism. Organizations like Rabbi Silver's League for Human Rights and Samuel Untermyers's Anti-Nazi League spearheaded this effort by calling for the public to boycott Nazi goods, rallying against pro-Nazi activists speaking throughout the nation, fighting the Bund and organized American fascism, and raising public awareness to German propaganda. Their campaigns, while not always successful, did present a strong resistance effort. Although it is presently unknown if any other organization used investigations as part of their arsenal of resistance, it is clear that the League for Human Rights in Cleveland regarded clandestine operations as integral to the platform, necessary parts to their much larger program. While public knowledge of these clandestine activities were limited to a very select few, most Americans were aware of on-going events in Germany as they were reported in the press. While conscious of the Nazi menace, observers in the press were unsure what to make of Germany's new regime from 1933 to 1936. Some hoped that Hitler would bring unity to Germany, although many Americans remained cautious about the actual prospects to it. In February 1933, the Chicago Tribune remarked that it appreciated the “just aspiration for the restoration of Germany's greatness as a world power,” and suggested that “American's opinion shares the Fascist hostility to communism and must 90 91 sympathize with any sane determination of the German spirit.” Along the same line, the Atlanta Constitution wrote that “if Hitler can, even though [he] resorts to ruthless methods, bring the same stability as Mussolini has to Italy, world affairs generally will be benefited.” 1 Other observers expressed a much more pessimistic view of German Nazism based on the regime's attack on German Jews combined with its announced forced conscription, rearmament programs, and its ignorance of the tenets of the Versailles Treaty. The San Francisco Chronicle wrote “Herr Hitler, by his insane attack on Jews, has come dangerously close to alienating American sympathy.” In similar spirit, the Denver Post wrote that “The anti-Jewish campaign of Hitler and his Nazis is a demonstration of their madness,” while the St. Louis Post linked Hitler's persecution of the Jew, “belongs to the fanaticism of the Dark Ages.” 2 Although many Americans held anti-Semitic feelings, the sacking of Jewish businesses and similar attacks aroused a feeling that Hitler had gone too far in his racism. By the middle of the 1930s, it became clear that another European war inspired by Nazi aggression might soon break out. Many newspapers of the day reflected the concern that Americans held over Hitler and the Nazi war machine, in particularly after the annexation of Austria in 1938. While some voices posited that the annexation was either inevitable or even desirable, they quickly reversed their position after it became clear that the act was an aggressive one. After Kristalnacht, the Atlanta Constitution exclaimed that the democracies of the world need to put an end to “Hitler's barbarism,” but believed that 1 Robert A. Rosenbaum, Waking to Danger: Americans and Nazi Germany, 1933-1941, (Praeger, Santa Barbara, CA, 2010), 154. 2 Rosenbaum, 155. 92 America [had] no place in intervening in a European concern. 3 This paradoxical assertion most eloquently described the American view of that time – German Nazism was a beast of the worst sort that needed to be dealt with, but it must be tamed in Europe by neighboring democratic regimes. America, simply put, needed to stay out and fix its own problems. Considering the rising fear of Nazism, it is not surprising that Americans challenged those Americans who proudly waved the Nazi flag. These individuals, convinced that Nazism would deliver the United States from the Great Depression as Hitler had done with Germany, adjusted their public image and dialogic relationship with the American public in an attempt to be more successful politically. In particular, the German-American Bund, America's premier Nazi organization, shifted their appearance throughout the mid and late 1930s to a more palatable message in an effort to appease to an already suspicious American public and push anti-fascist criticism away from them. As early as 1923, fascist groups had a presence in Cleveland in a variety of small organizations. Most fascist groups, like the Friends of New Germany, Silver Shirt Legion, and Kyffhauser Bund, never had more than one hundred members at their peak in the mid-1930s. By spring 1934, however, the German American, pro-Nazi element in Cleveland, Ohio, was organized primarily under the local branch of the GermanAmerican Bund (then the “League of Friends of New Germany), numbered over three hundred, and were led by the charismatic “Regional Fuehrer” Martin E. Kessler. He claimed, like national Bund Leader Fritz Kuhn, that they were simply another American 3 Rosenbaum, 156. 93 institution comprised of patriotic German Americans who opposed communism. On December 15, 1937 the Bund held a public meeting where an large number of new and potential members (reportedly over three hundred) asked Kessler what the Bund stood for. First, Kessler responded that they were “primarily an American organization.... [whose] membership was composed in great part of people of German blood who were in sympathy with the present form of the German Government.” Hitler, whom they denied following, was not a dictator in any sense, but rather an elected official with “100%” support from true Germans and won his election with a greater majority that Roosevelt. Hyperbole aside, Kessler said the Bund was not against “any class or race,” and that they respected the American form of government, namely democracy. Furthermore, although the Jews were their typical targets, Kessler said that the organization felt no antagonism towards the Jews, except those in power. He proclaimed that the only thing they wanted was a more equal discussion and representation in the American government between “true Americans,” Christians, and the Jews that held political and financial power. He said that the Jews were only a target in that they represented a disproportionate number of people in positions of American power and would feel the same about any other creed or race that did the same. 4 This sort of contradiction, that the Bund was not anti-Semitic but only hated the massive amount of Jews in power, was par for the course for the Bund. Ideally, their true public mission was to squash the menace of American and foreign Communism, as it represented the greatest threat to freedom. Lastly, he targeted those who spoke out against the Bund and petitions for their disintegration as violating the 4 Special Report by X-5, Special Archival Collections, December 15, 1937, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio, 1-3. 94 constitutional protection of free speech. The Bund was, Kessler proclaimed, a part of the American political debate that was made possible by the constitution which allows a person speak without fear of persecution. In sum, Kessler created a public facade for the Bund as “merely trying to awaken the German American and his American friends to the dangers of Communism and oppression by certain classes” onto the American people. 5 Despite initial success in countering the growing Nazi influence in Cleveland, in 1937 the League noticed a change in how the Bund operated. The Nazi movement in the city had changed their focus from using German nationals, pro-Nazi Americans, and antiSemitism to spread propaganda to using more subtle tactics. After years of public demonstrations, relentless boycotting, and picket line campaigns outside of the Bund meeting hall, Kessler, Kuhn, and the Bund realized that they were drawing too much negative attention. In order to change this, the Cleveland Bund initiated a series of programs to redefine their public message. For example, pro-Nazi German American organizations and the Bund brought fewer German officials or citizens to speak to Americans and toned down their anti-Semitic message. 6 They invited national leader Fritz Kuhn to come and speak on various occasions. In 1937 alone he came to speak in northeast Ohio at least four documented times and at least three for private meetings with Kessler, the Cleveland Bund, or the O.D. leadership from Bund headquarters in New York City. In 1938 he came for at least four official meetings and two unofficial engagements. League agent X-5's November 17, 1937, report outlined the meeting's 5 Special Report by X-5, Special Archival Collections, December 15, 1937, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio, 1-3. 6 Anonymous, The League for Human Rights, (unknown publisher: Cleveland, OH, 1946), 23. 95 proceedings and Kuhn's visit. 7 After first noting that the speech sounded “scripted for positive newspaper feedback/reporting,” and that he “spoke particularly about the fine citizenship of German Americans,” X-5 explained that he spoke with Kuhn privately where he bemoaned the “position that the German Government was putting him [Kuhn] in, as the original instructions for the organization [Bund] were to the effect they were to be very anti-Semitic but the German Government has since asked them to soft pedal this angle as they were finding the Jewish boycott in this country very disastrous” to their public image. 8 Kuhn's candid admission to X-5 shows that the Bund and German government felt endangered by the economic boycott and understood to some degree that their anti-Semitic message was failing to gain converts. This tactical change reveals three key things. First, by 1937 the German-American Bund understood that it was not wise to sound overly anti-Semitic or sponsor speakers that used racial or religiously insensitive language. Rather, they had to change their tone to celebrate German American's contribution to the United States and show how they were defenders of the Constitution and not a threat to it. Any kind of outwardly pro-Nazi language would compromise their “American” veneer. Kuhn's admission to X-5 about the orders from Germany show that not only did the Bund have a vested interest in changing their message, but so did the homeland. Second, the change in tone was entirely superficial. The Bund's mission had remained unchanged from the beginning: to install a Nazi government in the United States. According to X-5's notes, Kuhn and Kessler both 7 The League agents used names such as X-5, P-9, and others to protect themselves and the anonymity of their sources. These individuals are never revealed by name in any documents and were most likely only known by the League's investigation board. It is suggested in several texts that some worked in a private investigation firm, but it is not clear if this is true for all the agents. 8 Special Report by X-5, Nov. 17, 1937, 1-3. 96 publicized the Bund as a group that celebrated both parts of their German and American heritage. In private, however, X-5 saw that both remained anti-Semitic and highly concerned with gaining footholds in German American circles and American political institutions for the purpose of legitimizing American-styled Nazism. Lastly, the Bund was more adaptive to changing their tactics than other German American groups. The German Round Table, Stadtverband, and other groups that indulged in bringing German nationals and pro-Nazi propagandists continued this failing methodology well after the Bund had realized it was no longer useful. What these smaller groups like the Stadtverband and Round Table lacked was the Bund's membership size and notoriety as the leading Nazi front. Since the Bund was so much larger, and thus a much more noticeable target, they were the forced over time to change the way they engaged the public. Smaller groups with less impact, membership size, and limited national connections to pro-Nazi channels could, before World War Two, still get away with some pro-fascist activism. Section Two: Going Undercover at the Bund Camp By the mid-1930s the German-American Bund was trying to revamp their public image. Initially they had defined themselves as true American Nazis (albeit less extreme than the Friends of the New Germany were), however this had failed them. In order to redefine their image while still remaining true to the Nazi template, they adopted a new 97 way of communicating with American through a series of public programs. One of many new programs that they instituted were youth camps modeled after those already in operation in Germany. In his study In Hitler's Shadow, historian Leland Bell found that leaders in the Bund used camps such as these to create a sort of miniature Nazi Germany for attending children. The camps taught attendees “the courage and strength to fight for their racial existence.” Lessons emphasized the superiority of Aryan lineage and the decadence of Jewish influences in the world. Stories and lectures celebrated German war heroes, taught children how to read, write, and speak the German language, presented white-washed Nazi-accepted history, and the current state of the Nazi movement in America and Germany. Their primary goal was “the inculcation of National Socialism into German Americans. The camps were to be centers of National Socialist politics, breathing and propagating the spirit of the Third Reich.” 9 In all, there were twenty-five large Bund camps in Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and elsewhere with an innumerable amount of smaller camps. 10 Historian Martin Miller's Wunderlich's Salute argues that Camp Siegfried at Yaphank, Long Island was the largest and most successful Bund camp of its kind. Here they crafted programs and presentations to the “Young Siegfrieds” that turned them towards Nazism. Common elements included German language education, the use of the Nazi flag in daily activities, anti-Semitic lectures, military-style drills, meetings with local and national Bund leaders, singing German folk or military songs, and nightly bonfires where children would hear about the bravery of 9 Leland A. Bell, In Hitler's Shadow, (Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press, 1973), 28. Susan Canedy, America's Nazis (Menlo Park, CA: Markgraf Publications, 1990), 97. 10 98 German soldiers or children in the past. 11 In early August 1937, the Cleveland branch of the German-American Bund opened their own camp in Parma, Ohio at the German Central Farm. This camp, while dwarfed in size by Camp Siegfried and many others, did promote the same sort of message and programs that others did and even included staff members from Camp Siegfried as counselors, educators, and program managers. News coverage and investigations on Bund activity at the German Central Farm prior to the camp starting up reveals that Kessler and his followers considered the area as their own. In the April 15, 1937 edition of the Bund's official national newspaper, Deutscher Weckruf und Beobachter, celebrated the Cleveland Bund's rebuilding of many of the Farm's facilities. On March 1, 1937, Kessler's group had instituted an American branch of the German Labor Service and began building new facilities for future use. Members unable to do physical labor were urged to donate $10 to the cause. Reportedly, the project was personally led by Kessler. 12 League records also indicate that Kuhn and Kessler spoke at German Central Farm council meetings, Farmsponsored engagements, the annual German Day celebration, and used the grounds for their personal use regularly. In November, 1937 the League found that the Cleveland OD branch shot a propaganda film at the Farm where members paraded around the grounds on horseback and waved swastikas through the air. 13 In May, 1937, the Berlin rifle team had a shooting accuracy competition with Bund members at the German Central Farm via 11 Martin Miller, Wunderlich's Salute, (Smithtown, NY: Malamud-Rose Publishers, 1983), 173. Deutscher Werkruf und Beobachter, April 15, 1937, 4, NPN available. 13 The material used here comes from a variety of League investigation records scattered throughout their collection and mostly left unmarked. All relevant dates are indicated in the text. 12 99 cable. 14 Additionally, on July 25th, 1937 the Cleveland Plain Dealer made mention of a Nazi youth camp in New York and Kessler's visit to their facilities. The article described: drills 'with sticks and wooden guns' of 15,000 German-American youths at the Long Island camp. It said the same course was provided at the German Centrale (sic), which is on York Road, Parma. Kessler scoffed at the idea of the youths being taught 'German military tactics, including the goosestep.' He said the Parma camp had not yet been opened to children but would be Aug. 7. 15 Kessler went on to laugh at the rumors that his group was making a militarized youth camp at the German Central Farm, claiming that even adult members would have had difficulty marching. 16 On August 10, 1937 agent P-9 contacted the director of the youth camp at the German Central Farm under the auspices that he had a nephew who might benefit from their program. For the cost of seventy cents, a child or teenager could enjoy a day with other children at the German Central Farm. According to the director, daily activities generally consisted of things typical for an outdoor camp: small games, group exercises, running, jumping, gymnastics, etc. Feigning interest, P-9 asked if he could see the grounds. Upon observation he noticed a U.S. flag flying with another unidentifiable one laying on the ground. P-9 also saw children and their youth leaders (estimated around sixteen to eighteen years old) wearing the same tan uniforms. Although initially unmentioned by the director, wearing tan uniforms sold exclusively by select local companies were required for all children participants and staff. The director, nearly done with the tour of the grounds asked if the “interested nephew” could read or speak German. 14 “Wins From Germany in Telegraphic Shoot,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 24, 1937, NPN available. “Raps Story Bund is Military Body,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, July 25, 193, NPN available7. 16 Ibid. 15 100 P-9 replied that the child could not, but the director seemed undeterred by this, saying that it was “fine” and he would learn in time as that was what all good ethnically German children should do and that they had programs in place that could teach him quickly. Promising to return, P-9 left the facility and promptly returned with the boy informant and his “mother” (another League agent). 17 Upon his return, P-9 sent the boy and his “mother” to go meet with the director and his instructors to talk about the camp while P-9 met a young group leader and asked him about the program and a bit about himself. The young man replied that he was indeed a youth leader assigned to the boys section and that he had been transferred to the German Central Farm camp location by “the Society” from his former location at a camp in Long Island, New York that was the largest of it's kind. 18 Pressing for more information, P-9 was able to confirm that children engaged in military style marches, drills, and more indicative of programs like that at the camp the boy had formerly worked at. It was likely that P-9 was either unaware of or unable to think of the name of the camp the boy was referring to as he did not directly mention it in his report. Whatever the case, P-9 was sure of one thing: the camp was connected to the national GermanAmerican Bund's plan to train German American youth to be loyal to their cause. Camps such as Siegfried were the pet projects of the German-American Bund's youth education program that stressed military training in the German tradition, German language programs, anti-Semitic lectures, nightly campfires with tales of German heroics in the 17 Special Report by P-9, Special Archival Collections, August 15, 1937, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio, 1-2. 18 Special Report by P-9, August 15, 1937, 2-3. 101 Great War and other conflicts, and more, making it an Americanized copy of the Hitler Youth camps operating in Germany. It is significant that this young man admitted his connection, and therefore personal affiliation with the German-American Bund as it showed a direct link between the German Central Farm camp's program and the Bund's local program to Nazify Cleveland's German American youth. Lastly, it is unknown what was said in the private meeting between the boy, the other agent, and the director's staff. The notes and report left by P-9 do not indicate any peculiarities nor obvious Nazi activity, so it was likely uneventful. For the next week, the boy informant successfully infiltrated the camp. Armed with a little book for taking down names, notes, and relevant information, he was able to record daily events and various peculiarities that he needed to report back to P-9. The boy informant, for example, documented the children he met during his time at the camp, as well as the teen leaders. The leaders were almost all males, but did include a few of the female youth leadership. On many occasions, P-9 and the boy recorded vehicle license plates which would be included in the nightly investigation summary reports along with the vehicle owner's name and address. How they got the details of who owned these vehicles and their addresses is not clear, however, several individual investigation files unrelated to the German Central Farm case hint that investigators had access to private vehicle records. These names and addresses were logged into a top secret spread sheet of individuals thought to be active in Nazi circles, and several of the people were later investigated by the League for their activities. 19 19 The following is a compilation of several Special Reports by P-9 that relate to the events of the German 102 The boy informant's detailed notes on his peers and events that took place at the camp suggest that some boys were truly enthusiastic about the program, Adolf Hitler, Martin Kessler, and Fritz Kuhn. Many of them expressed a clear desire to go to Germany and serve under Hitler. Others were just there to have fun and thought nothing of the Nazi state nor Hitler. On August 15, 1937, the boy informant told P-9 that some of the other boys present: ....spoke to him of Hitler, and seemed to think he was a great man and his actions against the Jews was justified. Several of them said they thought Germany would be a much better place to live in if all the Jews were driven out of the country. They said the damned Jews were robbers, in Germany, as well as here. Said that their mothers were robbed by the Jews most every time they made purchases of them, used much profanity in talking about them. 20 Others believed Hitler “was making Germany a far better place to live there than it was here. They said the training they got here, in the Ugan, or German Boy Scouts, fitting them for the German army, and they could go back home and fight any time they wanted to.” 21 Several boys were especially proud of their father's roles as German soldiers in the previous war, one remarking that his father served as a part of a railroad artillery team, while another claimed that his father fought on front line as an infantry man. Nightly events around the large bonfire included German folk songs like “Augerstein [it should be noted that the boy informant did not understand German, so there is the chance that the title is incorrect], the German Stein song,” the German Boy Scouts songs, and the Horst Wessel Lied. Stories were often told in German and included tales about heroic boys or young men that took part in the German side of the Great War and other parts of Central Farm and case files about specific people later investigated by the League for Human Rights. Events occurred between August 10-15, 1937. 20 Special Report by P-9, August 15, 1937, 1. 21 Special Report by P-9, August 15, 1937, 1-2. 103 German history. The boy informant told P-9 that there were no occasions where stories celebrated Americans or the democratic way of life. Of particular interest to the League was flag use in the camp and during activities. According to flag historian Byron McCandless, flags are a symbolic representation of a state, idea, or movement. By flying a flag or otherwise displaying it, one is showing that they are connected with the political entity or belief that the flag embodies. 22 In this case, the use of Nazi flags and those related to the Hitler Youth or German Boy Scouts shows that those who were in control of the Bund camp were loyal to those institutions which the flag represented and wanted to impress that into the children there. During the day both P-9 and the boy informant observed that the US flag flew at the grounds. As previously mentioned, the unidentified flag noted during P-9's initial visit remained a mystery for a few days. By August 12, 1937, it was identified as one that saw reoccurring use. Although the boy informant could not identify it by name, P-9 had him draw it in his black notebook. According to the August 14 report, the flag the boy drew was the “Ugans or German Boy Scout flag.” 23 Interestingly, the American flag often flew even with the German Youth flag, but occasionally was replaced by others that the boy could not identify. Both were ceremoniously taken down at the end of the day and put back up the following morning with much pageantry. The boy reported to P-9 that during the morning and evening flag ceremonies, they would sing German songs and give the Nazi salute to them both. The boy reported that during morning drills and miniature parades they would use the Nazi flag alone or with others from the Hitler Youth. The child and P-9 were keen 22 23 Byron McCandless, Flags of the World, (Washington D.C.: The National Geographic Society, 1917), 1. Special Report by P-9, August 14, 1937, 2. 104 to note that not once had they used the American flag in such a way for the entire time he had been present there. Some boys were reported to be respectful of the American flag while others called it “that rag” and other things the boy and P-9 felt were too inappropriate to put into print. The Nazi flag was also the subject of a debate between two older women that P-9 happened to overhear. One woman, he reported, was adamant that the Nazi flag should be larger than the US flag. 24 Her feelings aside, the fact that a Nazi flag flew and was regularly used at the German Central Farm by the Bund's youth program speaks volumes about their affiliation with Nazism. The League's investigation into the Bund camp at the German Central Farm was not intended to bring the camp down, to alert the Bund, or harm the German Central Farm organization. It was, at its core, a fact-finding mission to confirm that a Hitler Youth-styled camp was active. The aforementioned reports revealed that the Cleveland branch German-American Bund and other local German American organizations that financially contributed to the camp were aware and supportive of the content. The children that the boy informant met were clearly a part of a program that emphasized proNazi education in the Bund's tradition. These same tactics were used in camps all across the nation in Bund youth camps, including at the German Central Farm in Parma, Ohio. The Cleveland Bund's efforts to Nazify these youths are equally apparent in that they used staff members from Camp Siegfried, emphasized military-style drills, regularly used the Nazi flag in activities while downplaying the US flag (except for maintaining a good 24 The following is a compilation of several Special Reports by P-9 that relate to the events of the German Central Farm and case files about specific people later investigated by the League for Human Rights. Events occurred between August 10-15, 1937. 105 public image), gave lectures on the supremacy of Germans as well as the inferiority of the Jews, sang Nazi songs, spoke highly of youths and military men that served in the previous war, and much more. Interestingly, the boy informant found that the director never spoke of Hitler nor his regime directly and that only some of the instructors and youth leaders did. Chatter about the Nazi regime was mostly hidden behind purposely veiled language and amongst the boys in their free time. Had the leadership directly praised the Nazi regime and Hitler, it could have raised greater concern amongst the community and have brought greater scrutiny on them. The public use of Nazi symbols and uniforms for the children may have been a bit much for some, but generally more tolerable. Overall, the camp's use of pro-Nazi symbols, language, and lessons show that it was an indoctrination program run by the Bund aimed at swaying American youth to domestic fascism. Interestingly, the file for the camp ends after P-9 and the child informant's case and it is not included in any post-1937 Bund youth camp materials. Although it cannot be said for certain when the camp closed it's doors, an April 5, 1938, article in the Cleveland Plain Dealer said that, amid a federal investigation into national Bund activities, the national headquarters for the German-American Bund denied that any of their camps were anywhere in Ohio. 25 Section Three: Fighting the Far-Right: The League Fights Pelley's Silver Shirt Legion 25 “Bund Denies Nazi Link,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, April 5, 1938, NPN available. 106 As shown above and in past chapters, the League was highly active in combating German Nazism and American pro-Nazi activists in Cleveland and northeast Ohio. Their campaigns, however, were not simply limited to forms of National Socialism. Indeed, the League considered all far-right political ideologies to be bred from the same wellspring of ignorance and racism no matter where it originated from or who led the movement. As such, William Pelley's Silver Shirt Legion of America was one of these groups and was actively pursued by the League's agents. Unfortunately, few studies have looked adequately into Pelley's order, with the major exception being historian Scott Beekman's 2005 study William Dudley Pelley: A Life in Right Wing Extremism and the Occult. Like other contemporary fascist organizations, Pelley's Legion followed a strange mixture of anti-Semitism, authoritarianism, anti-communism, paramilitary activities, and its own religion, the “Liberation Movement.” Founded in 1933 in North Carolina, the Silver Legion was especially strong in the western United States and cities that were hit especially hard by the Depression, like Cleveland, Ohio. A short story and script writer by trade, Pelley's shift towards fascism was inspired by Depression era concerns. In particular, he believed that three elements most threatened the United States and that only he and his Silver Shirts could fix the country. First, Pelley believed that he Great Depression had caused a “massive economic dislocation.” 26 Pelley felt that the gap between the very poor and the super-rich needed to be fixed, suggesting that if/when he had the authority, individual incomes would be capped at $100,000. Second, Pelley felt 26 Scott Beekman, William Dudley Pelley: A Life in Right-Wing Extremism and the Occult, (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2005), xi. 107 that the two-party system was fundamentally corrupt and that there needed to be a third party competitor. Undoubtedly, this third party would be his Silver Shirts, or at least some other fascist ally of theirs. Lastly, the Legion's political and religious agenda was defined by a violent hatred for Jews. Pelley believed that the Jews were a foul race of moronic liars and schemers, behind every calamity of man. Paradoxically, these same “disease” Jews were also smart enough to manipulate the global economic order in their own favor. 27 That oversight withstanding, Pelley's Silver Legion believed adamantly that their mission, like Hitler's and the Bund, was to revitalize the nation through authoritarian, anti-democratic control. It is through this lens that Pelley's Silver Legion, and the League's resistance to them, is best understood. While it is essential to understand the political motivations and contemporary concerns that created Pelley's movement, it is equally important to understand the religious element behind the Silver Shirt Legion. A somewhat complicated mixture of spiritualism, theosophy, Christianity, and pyramidism, Pelley's “Liberation Movement” posited that the world needed to be rid of Jewish and communist corruption. Believers held that the nation was about to enter a new phase with Pelley and his Legion leading the way. Through their misguided, politically motivated millennialism, many of Pelley's followers were able to infiltrate and convert anti-Semitic and metaphysical circles towards Pelley's message. It is important to note that Pelley was not always the religious type, having had little personal connection with Christianity or the occult prior to a life changing event in 1928. In his book Seven Minutes in Eternity, Pelley described how one 27 Beekman, xii. 108 night his spirit entered into a blue fog during some nighttime distress. He claimed that after entering the fog, angels revealed various secrets of the world to him, including the racial hierarchy of man and his new superhuman powers of perception. Feeling as though he had been rejuvenated from years of anxiety and frustration, Pelley took on a much more determined, political, and anti-Semitic persona. 28 Pelley's account altered his personal life and those who followed him. Throughout the next few years, Pelley wrote various political and spiritual tracts, building an army of followers behind him. On January 31, 1933, the day that Hitler seized power in Germany, Pelley created his Silver Shirt Legion. Using his many books as the foundational texts to the Silver Shirts and Liberation Movement, Pelley was convinced that he could reshape America in a manner similar to Hitler. One of Pelley's most significant religious and political tenets was that the Jews were the enemies of God and all good Christians throughout time. The Jews, Pelley claimed, had a long history of manipulating global events and destroying good Gentiles. For example, he perpetuated the age-old belief that Jesus of Nazareth was not a Jew, but those who executed him were. According to him, Jesus actually hated the Jews for violating God's laws and that he chased them out of the Temple with a whip. Jesus, according to Pelley, “looked Gentile, thought Gentile, acted Gentile, came from a Gentile province, talked Gentile, died with Gentile courage for a principle, and withal was the world's outstanding anti-Semite at the time.” Jesus' execution, his “real” history, and over 175,000 other instances in the Bible were also altered by the Jews. Jewish control and 28 Beekman, 53-54.; William Dudley Pelley, Seven Minutes in Eternity (New York: Robert Collier Inc., 1929). 109 treachery, however, continued well into the present. Pelley believed that the Jews controlled the global banking system and had managed to dupe all democracies and republics, including the United States, into becoming their “personal Jewtopia.” Communism, too, was riddled with Jews, claiming that the political philosophy was something the Jews had practiced in ancient Egypt under Moses, “the Stalin of his day.” Dudley also claimed that major communist leaders like Karl Marx, Leon Trotsky, Vladimir Lenin, and Frederick Engels were also Jews. The Soviet Union, homeland for Jewish Bolshevism, was the continuation of the Jewish tradition to keep the Gentile down and destroy all Gentile governments. 29 Pelley's anti-Semitic works and praises for Hitler's government were frequent throughout the Legion's relatively short existence. New Legion members, for example, were instructed in how Pelley's Christian Commonwealth would combat global Jewry and their control over the American financial system. Per Pelley's order, all new members were required to read and understand the arguments in The Hidden Empire and The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, two of the most well-known anti-Semitic books, and two of Pelley's own work. Imitating Hitler's Jewish ghettos, many of his books, like Forty-Five Questions Most Frequently Asked About the Jews and the Answers, One Million Silver Shirts by 1939, and No More Hunger: The Compact Plan of the Christian Commonwealth argued that if (and when) Pelley's Commonwealth came to be, the Jews would all be corralled in to one major Jewish-only city per state called “Beth Havens.” Commonwealth leaders from Pelley's Secretary of Jewry would then provide security 29 Beekman, 88-89. 110 within the ghettos. Any Jews who tried to escape or did not restrict themselves to the Beth Havens would risk execution. 30 In all, Pelley's Silver Legion was clearly interested in reshaping the political and religious landscape of the United States. If they expected to do so, then they first needed to take command on the grassroots level and influence the public. In many major cities in the American mideast and west Pelley's supporters came together and formed independent branches of the Silver Shirt Legion. One of these chapters, and one of the recurring groups in this study, was the Cleveland branch of the Silver Legion. The League's notes on the Silver Shirts are split into three branches, the first part focusing on the national organization, the second on their presence in Cleveland, and the last solely about the Cleveland leader, Mary T. East. 31 First, their characterization of the Legion as a national entity is best reflected in the collection's summary dossier on the group filled with information gathered from 1934 to the early 1940s. The League notes say that the group was “an American surface adaptation of the Nazi stormtroopers. However, they were not intended to, and never were used for violence as the stormtroopers.” 32 The League instead felt that the presence of uniformed “guards” was merely intended to give Pelley the appearance of being important enough to have his own 30 Beekman, 85-86; William Dudley Pelley, The Hidden Empire, (Asheville, NC: Pelley Publishers, n.d.); Sergeie Nilus, Protocols of the Elders of Zion, (New York: New Christian Crusade Church, 1930); William Dudley Pelley, Forty-Five Questions Most Frequently Asked About the Jews and the Answers, (Asheville, N.C.: Pelley Publishers, 1939); William Dudley Pelley, One Million Silver Shirts by 1939,(Asheville, N.C.: Pelley Publishers, 1938); William Dudley Pelley, No More Hunger: The Compact Plan of the Christian Commonwealth (Asheville, N.C.: Pelley Publishers, 1935). 31 Due to privacy concerns and my contractual obligations with Western Reserve Historical Society, I cannot disclose “Mary T. East's” real name. For the duration of this thesis, I will refer to her by this pseudonym. All information presented about her is true and has been verified by the League notes. 32 Summary of Silvershirts, Special Archival Collections, undated but assumed 1944, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio, 1. 111 hired protection and personal army. Instead of using the Legion as a paramilitary force, the League found that: A preference for the Silvershirts could be found among the Bundists who didn't think it smart to come out openly with a Hitler controlled organization in the United States. Pelley's Silvershirts served him as an exhibition for controlling a real organization, around which he could spread his sphere of influence. Influence, in order to become in the proper moment the American 'Leader.' Certainly, he is the most brilliant and most successful of America's little Hitler's – not a stooge but an American imitator. 33 Interestingly, the League notes reveal that other, more action-based groups like the Bund and Ku Klux Klan were not interested in merging with the Silver Shirts because they were perceived as “a propaganda group only.” The second branch of the League's records describe the activities the Legion conducted in Cleveland formally and informally throughout the 1930s and early 1940s. The notes explain that the group had two wings that functioned separately, one more militant and a second that almost exclusively engaged in the esoteric side of Pelley's message. The militant side was led by former White Russian submarine officer and ardent anti-Semite, Asimov Malikov. 34 Having fled Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution, Malikov made his way to the United States and eventually came to Cleveland for work. After attending several Silver Legion meetings, where he displayed strong leadership skills and anti-Semitic feelings, Malikov was entrusted with recruiting new members, some of whom were also former Czarist officers. After some time, he was promoted to an unofficial position of leadership that allowed him to exercise much greater power over 33 34 Ibid. 1. “Asimov Malikov,” like Mary T. East, is a pseudonym for a person whose name I cannot disclose. All facts attributed to him are truthful and accurately represent his role in the Cleveland Legion. 112 Silver Legion activities. 35 The League investigation notes explain that Malikov and the other Russians pushing the militant side were important because: It is most likely that the White Russians and former Czarist officers such as Malikov [and other] gained leadership in the Silvershirts because of their natural anti-Communistic attitude and because of a certain glamor and education as Continental noblemen. In addition they were military experts and all.... good engineers. The Silvershirts in this respect were quite internationalistic and dictatorial in structure without giving any lip service to Democracy. 36 Aside from the having military and leadership skills, Malikov was one of the leaders in the one hundred person strong “Galilean” unit of the Cleveland Silver Shirt Legion. 37 This group was “a special loyal group, similar to the O.D. [Ordnungsdienst] In the Bund.” This group was responsible for dispersing Pelley's and other fascistic literature, raising money for Pelley's political campaigns and the Silver Shirts, and running anti-Semitic campaigns around the city. For example, Malikov and the other Galileans printed materials that claimed the Jews were responsible for poisoning foods with “health-building vitamins.” On another occasion, Malikov conducted a series of “Buy Gentile” campaigns, telling Clevelanders to avoid Jewish products and stores. Interestingly, this militant branch of the Legion, despite being relatively active, was scolded by the national branch of the Silver Shirts because “Cleveland is the slowest and 35 The following was compiled from the various League special investigation files on Malikov done from 1940 to 1944. 36 Silvershirts in Cleveland, Special Archival Collections, undated but assumed 1944, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio, 1. 37 Interestingly, their use of the name “Galilean” predates Pelley's magazine called The Galilean. It is likely that they picked up this term from Pelley's commentaries on his coming Christian Commonwealth and decided to use it for themselves. The name itself remains significant because the Cleveland unit is the only one known to use this name to describe their more militant members. 113 least successful city in the whole nation.” 38 While it is not clear if the Cleveland Silver Legion and Galileans were truly the worst performing branch nationally, what remains important is that the League actively investigated the groups, leaders, and membership for slightly over a decade. The League, aware of the Silver Shirt Legion from their inception to their demise in 1941 and fragmented individual activities through 1944, considered the Legion to be a real threat and pro-fascist network that needed to be investigated. Specific investigations against the League and high ranking members went on from 1934 to 1945. The first series of investigation in April 1934, found that the members and potential members were meeting at the Tucker School of Expression under the guise of spreading Christianity and enriching minds. Prior to this, the more esoteric branch of the Cleveland Legion met at member's homes and had no more than twenty people attending at a time. By meeting and recruiting at the Tucker School, the Legion could utilize the large Christian constituency already there. On April 17, 1934, one of the League's female agents, 404, met with the leadership of the womens religious subgroup of the Legion at the Tucker School of Expression. She met with Mary T. East, the local Legion leader and reportedly a personal friend of Pelley, and asked her what the Legion stood for. East response reflected the group’s public persona. She claimed that “the Silver Legion [is an] organization for 100% Americans only” and that it's mission was to preserve “the United States Constitution, the American Flag (sic), the principles for which Washington and our fore fathers fought for, and for the teachings of Christ.” 38 Silvershirts in Cleveland, Special Archival Collections, undated but assumed 1944, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio, 2. 114 Furthermore, East claimed that she and Pelley knew the nation would soon be engulfed in a “very grave crisis and that the thinking class of people should be awakened to the existing conditions.” She said that the communists and the Jews were menacing our country and that they were trying to undermine the foundation on which our country was built. East lectured investigator 404 that the Jews would ruin America if given the chance and that only Pelley's enlightened group could save the country from the coming communist revolution. 39 In late April, 1934, agent 404 was invited to attend a public meeting at a member's home by leader Mary T. East. The meeting started with a heartfelt welcome, a prayer, general announcements, and introducing those in attendance. After the pleasantries, the women were joined by a special speaker who explained that she was privy to special information about future events. The speaker discussed how within a few months a communist revolution would overtake the country and that members of the Silver Shirts needed to stock up on food and other necessities. 40 Although 404 was allowed to hear this special speech and the rest of the meeting, she was not allowed to join. Agent 404 concluded that “it is very obvious that this organization is suspicious of anyone seeking information or trying to become a member.” Furthermore, 404 said that “it would seem that the Silver Legion is just now organizing in Cleveland to the extent of being able to formulate plans for activity.” 41 East's rather unusual stance on contemporary politics and the group's religious and political services further buttresses the fact that the 39 Special Report by 404, April 17, 1934, 1-2. Special Report by 404, April 24, 1934, 1-2. 41 Special Report by 404, April 24, 1934, 3. 40 115 Cleveland division of the Silver Shirt Legion, which she led and served as “Chaplain” for, was cut from a cloth similar to that of the Bund. During 1934 and the years that the Legion formally existed East was a character of moderate importance, investigations of her and other Legion leaders increased greatly during and after the 1942 breakdown of the Legion's national organization. While the League collection does not contain notes on the Legion from April 1934 until mid-1936, the League did keep surveillance over their members, leadership, and general activities. In 1936, League agent C-34 was invited to attend a Silver Shirt Legion informational meeting in Cleveland being held by Pelley. The event took place on April 1, 1936 and was attended by some of Cleveland's most prestigious fascists. In particular, Bund leader Martin Kessler and the members of his O.D. came as special guests to Pelley's informational gathering. Agent C-34 reported that Pelley's lecture to the audience mostly concerned how the Jews were controlling the United States and the national banking system and how this special information was given to him by angelic beings. Pelley even claimed that in a mere three months the nation's Jews would rise up, assume control over the country, and create a dictatorship. This Jewish authoritarian government, Pelley believed, would rule with an iron fist and do what they could to crush any Christian movement against them. By 1953, however, the Jews controlling the United States would be usurped by the Christians and run for their lives. 42 Pelley's account of future events and special information divined to him are characteristic of claims he made in his many books and in other public speeches. 42 Special Report by C-34, April 1, 1936, 1-2. 116 After Pelley's speech, investigator C-34 was given a chance to meet with Bund leader Martin Kessler and speak with him about Pelley's talk and organization. Interested in C-34, Kessler invited the agent to meet with him and some friends on April 6, 1936 at a prominent Cleveland general practitioner’s office to discuss Pelley, the local Silver Shirts, and the Bund. Kessler told C-34 and those in attendance “that the Nazi party in Cleveland was behind Pelley 100%. He said that... the Naziis (sic) had a meeting... here in Cleveland and that all German Naziis present at their meeting cheered when told of the plans of Pelley.” 43 This connection between the local Bund and Legion was unusual because the national organizations did not try to intermingle members or collaborate in any way. In Cleveland, however, these two organizations worked together and shared members. League records detail that many members either belonged to both groups or had attended their meetings in a symbolic show of sympathy. In 1940, amid growing public and federal scrutiny, there were even talks of the two Cleveland groups joining into one united fascist front. 44 In the end, no such union took place and both groups suffered from contemporary pressures. In April 1938, C-34 was again invited to a Legion informational meetings about what they stood for and Pelley's message. Like other weekly meetings that the Legion held, this occasion revolved around the Jews and their control over the American government, press, banks, and more. More than just pushing their political agenda, the Legion speaker claimed that only the Silver Shirts knew the true history of how the Great 43 44 Special Report by C-34, April 6, 1936, 1-2. The following was compiled from various League sources related to the German-American Bund and Silver Shirt Legion. 117 Depression occurred. According to the Legion, the Depression occurred because influential politicians funneled American money to Jewish judges (Associate Justice Felix Frankfurter, in particular) and moguls. These middlemen then sent the money to European Jews, who also profited from the Great War, the global banking system, and rich corporations. The speaker also claimed that President Roosevelt was “the greatest tool of the Jews” and “the first Communist President.” The speaker ended by claiming that “we are against the Jews because of the cunning and conniving ways he uses in obtaining his wealth.” 45 In all, the findings against the Legion and their members do not sway far from the example that Pelley had set for them. The Cleveland branch spread the same sort of bile that Pelley mass-produced and provided him with a stage to personally speak from. While it is essential to discuss what the Cleveland Legion did and believed, it is equally important to understand that the League actively combated other anti-Semitic organizations throughout the early and mid-1930s. Section Four: Conclusions Pro-Nazi and far-right activism in the 1930s, as this and past chapters have argued, was a response to the Great Depression and a belief that democracy had failed and needed to be replaced by something else. Authoritarian governments in Germany, the Soviet Union, and Italy, so it had seemed by the early and mid-1930s, had proved that force and order dictated from a charismatic leader could resurrect a dying nation. Of the 45 Special Report by C-34 April 8, 1938, 1-3. 118 innumerable amount of Americans that were concerned that the United States might fall during the Great Depression, only a small percentage would advocate the United States going fully towards fascism or communism. The simultaneous rise of communism and fascism in the United States shows that the search for a viable alternative to liberal democracy (and capitalism) was indeed alive and well in the 1930s. 46 Of those revolution-bent groups, only a handful tried to create copy-cat fascist movements of their own. American fascist copy-cats, best embodied by the German-American Bund and Silver Shirt Legion, each desired to replicate fascist victories in the United States. The movements behind these groups each posited similar ideas. First, rabid anti-Semitism served as a political, social, and sometimes religious statement of purpose. Both the Bund and Legion believed that the on-going economic blight was caused by the Jews and they were a continuing pariah for the world. Second, by bringing authoritarianism to America, as Hitler did to Germany, the nation could be saved by them. Realistic or not, those loyal to the Bund and Legion believed that they could overcome democracy and reform the country. In total, these organizations shared two of the most important requirements for of Nazi ideology at their cores, namely far-right conservatism and anti-Semitism. Lastly, these movements attempted to engage the public in a way that they thought would give them more support and members. The Legion in Cleveland, for example, took advantage of Christian circles at the Tucker School of Expression and former-military members already aligned against communists. While small by national standards, the Cleveland Legion boasted well over 200 registered members and even 46 Richard H. Pells, Radical Visions and American Dreams (New York: Harper & Row, 1973), 67-69. 119 more unregistered sympathizers. Many of the members they gained were through these traditional channels as well as through Pelley's own writing. The German-American Bund, on the other hand, had a different experience with the public. Initially, they were much more willing to publicly pronounce their pro-Nazi stance. Through a mix of rallies, member drives, talks, and sponsorship of Nazi speakers, the Bund had solidified themselves as America's Nazi vanguard. This choice, however, also caused them to suffer later on. Increased federal and private scrutiny, mixed with poor public reception to Americans flying swastikas, made the Bund see that they had to tone down their language and refocus their efforts on being anti-communist, more pro-American, and use less violent anti-Semitic language. The best sum total of these changes manifested in the Bund youth camp at the German Central Farm just outside of Cleveland in Parma, Ohio. At this secluded location, the Cleveland division of the Bund pushed their traditional message on children in private and seemed to have swayed some young minds towards their their way. Comparing these two groups and how they operated is important because it shows how public perception of various American fascist movements caused them to engage the community differently. By comparing the mid-1930s tactics used by the Bund and Legion, one can see that the Bund was forced to alter their message to become proAmerican and less outwardly pro-Nazi. This image remodeling was complicated by the fact that they still wore Nazi-like uniforms and displayed the swastika at their meeting places and events. While they indeed adopted some policies that sought to fix this image dilemma, the Bund did not alter the substance of their political and philosophical views 120 of the world. If anything, their message and the tactics they used to deliver that message were forced to change by outside pressure. The Legion, on the other hand, did not wave the Nazi flag nor praise Hitler's government like the Bund did. Instead, Pelley's organization fronted a strange mixture of esoteric Christianity, far-right political activism (not to be confused with fascism or National Socialism), anti-communism, and “100% Americanism.” This sort of concoction, while still reserved for only a small section of the American public, did not have the same stigma attached to them that the Bund and other swastika-waving groups did. In substance, however, the League investigation notes show that the Legion still represented an energized, anti-democratic force that truly foresaw themselves as the inheritors of a new America where the Jews and communists were gone and the national economic order was restored under Pelley's flag. This non-Nazi image and their relative secrecy served them well in Cleveland and most likely throughout the rest of the nation. The organization did not do large public events or speeches like the Bund or League did. Rather, they recruited from places where they already had individuals in influential places and kept their message to themselves. In all, this group was still targeted successfully infiltrated because of their message; however, they did not feel the same sort of pressure that more aesthetically pro-Nazi groups suffered. In all, the League's findings about the Cleveland branches of the GermanAmerican Bund and William Pelley's Silver Shirt Legion were significant in content. They found, amongst other things, that the Bund had constructed a youth camp at the German Central Farm in Parma, Ohio similar to those found in Germany, that they were 121 teaching children pro-Nazism and anti-Semitism, and more. The League also found that the Cleveland Legion taught members that the Jews and communists were plotting to take over the nation and that only they could use Christ's power to bring order and authoritarian justice to America. Despite all of these findings and the League's dogged efforts, they were unable to bear any fruit from their works. In no way did the League nor any member or investigator bring their findings to the authorities or the public in an attempt to sink far-right activism. The League records do not reveal if they neglected to alert the proper authorities or public for any particular reason. It is quite likely that they did not make anyone outside of their select group aware of things so they could continue their actions and not force their targets to go underground. The individuals targeted by the League seemed to have been unaware that the group was pursuing them, however, by the mid to late-1930s it was abundantly clear that the federal government was. What makes the League's anti-Nazi investigations important was not their immediate gains, but rather what their resistance symbolized. The League's efforts against domestic fascists was a part of a larger national sentiment against pro-Nazi organizations and far-right ideologies. The League's investigations and early public campaigns were but a single part of a larger resistance effort going on by organizations like Samuel Untermyer's Non-Sectarian AntiNazi League in New York City and other cities nationwide. Furthermore, the League’s form of resistance brought together the local Jewish and sympathetic gentile communities under one united banner. This same sort of anti-Nazi resistance took form in period literature and movies discussed in previous chapters. In effect, the League's efforts and the information borne from them proved the 122 true allegiance, activities, and tactics used by the Legion and Bund in a time when they both tried to mask themselves with patriotism, anti-communism, and appropriation of religious tropes. Investigations and public pressure placed against these groups, in time, forced them to alter their public image and message so that they could better appeal to the public. The League's local campaigns, however, created something of a backlash in the up-coming years. The League's activities caused these two groups and their members to go even further underground, at best hindering their public activism and membership drives. In time, the League would realize that by racketing up the pressure on the Bund and Legion, they had made it nearly impossible for League agents to join the groups or get close to the leaders. In order to continue their operations, the League was forced to adopt new strategies. In particular, the League was forced to use personal contacts well established with the Nazi underground and reclusive Bund as well as ask the public for any rumor they might have heard. These two new tactical choices, each effective in their own ways, are the subject of the next chapter. Chapter Four: Resistance, Vigilance, and Change: America's War, the League for Human Rights, and the Fall of American Fascism Section One: Resistance Before and After 1940 American's entry into World War Two created a ripple effect throughout both the League for Human Rights and the United States. Not only did it signal a new phase in American foreign policy, but it also brought the nation together to fight fascism and the militant far-right wherever it threatened democracy. While resistance organizations like the Cleveland League for Human Rights and the New York Anti-Nazi League had been calling for American interventionism in Europe (and in the Pacific to an extent), the war itself forced these groups to rethink their message. The League in particular was plagued with an unsure future. In order to remain relevant, the League was forced to change the ways in which they interacted with Clevelanders and northeast Ohioans. Before this time, however, domestic fascist groups and their leaders came under greater federal and public scrutiny. The breakdown of American Nazism in the late 1930s and early 1940s was the last time that the League could aggressively investigate their enemies as they had in years previous. The war on American fascism prior to 1939 was a limited conflict, amounting to fevered public rallies, lackadaisical federal investigations, and private vigilance activities. Conflicts, like those led by the Cleveland League for Human Rights, were aimed at the 123 124 largest and most visible pro-Nazi targets. In particular, past chapters in this study have pained to show that the League was engaged in an on-going conflict with public and semi-private pro-Nazi activism. Their ideological enemies and subsequent investigation targets were all local branches of national groups that were within their immediate reach. This study has been particularly concerned with the League's campaigns against the local German-American Bund led by district leader Martin E. Kessler as well as branch divisions of William Dudley Pelley's Silver Shirt Legion. While it is important to highlight the League's investigations and findings and connect them within the larger national context, it is equally necessary to understand what made them believe it was their responsibility to do these things in the first place. As I have argued, the League pursued this aggressive, hard-line tactic because they believed that government investigations and public actions against Nazism in the early and mid-1930s were not doing enough to attend to the domestic fascist problem. The League's activities and records show that they believed that it was incumbent upon them to make up where others, the government in particular, were seemingly deficient. More broadly, the national fight against domestic fascism took it's most serious turn in the late 1930s and was defined by government investigations through the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). Formed in 1938, Dies' Committee made the argument that conspiratorial elements in the nation, communist and fascist alike, were plotting any of a series of coups to take over the United States. This fear of a hostile takeover was widespread, if over-emphasized, and concluded that it was the government's responsibility to watch any suspicious group with the means or ways to take over the 125 government. Doing so would prevent a similar revolution that had occurred in Germany, Italy, and elsewhere from happening in America. More to the point, the Dies Committee began a long series of hearings in 1938, primarily against communists and suspected communist sympathizers. Dies' hearings allowed for speakers to give long, often unsupported claims that groups, ranging from the Boy Scouts, various Roman Catholic groups, and many prominent members of Hollywood's elite, were involved with supporting communist causes. The trials were considered so ridiculous at their time that Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes joked that the HUAC might raid Shirley Temple's nursery and convict her dolls of being involved in some kind of communist plot. Although fascists did make their way to stand before Dies and the other committee members, their testimony and evidence weighted against them was not substantial and showed a lack of interest in pursuing American Nazis. 1 As a result, the HUAC did not prosecute the Bund, Pelley's Silver Shirts, or any other far-right group with any wrong doing. The 1940s, however, would prove to be the end of the Bund and other American fascist organizations. By early 1940, the Bund's struggles to remain important would only mount higher and higher as the organization, nationally and in Cleveland, were failing to remain relevant or popular amongst far-right activists. By this time, the national organization could hardly keep itself afloat in an America very different from which it found itself in the early 1930s due to a series of organization, leadership-based, and public problems. The Bund's attempts in the mid-1930s to transition their public image to something much 1 William Leuchtenburg, Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932-1940 (New York, NY: Harper & Row Publishers, 1963), 280-281. 126 less vocally Nazi had failed. In the past, the initial Nazi movement in the United States was, as this study has labored to show, a product of a desperate search for a economically plausible alternative to democracy and German American dissatisfaction with their treatment during the previous war. At first, these seedlings grew well in portions of the United States most affected by the Great Depression and anti-German hysteria of World War One, but in time a rejuvenated economy (greatly assisted by the buildup for the war), restored sense of order, and the ever-growing specter of a new war with Germany rallied the nation against Hitler's American counterparts. 2 Public and federal attacks against proNazi groups through movies, literature, and public speeches decried them as traitors, warmongers, and unpatriotic. Popular discontent with Nazism, as reviewed in the first chapter of this thesis, doomed any sort of American variant from becoming too popular in the late 1930s and 1940s. The German-American Bund, once the Nazi vanguard in America that sported tens thousands of members nationwide and paraded around in many American streets, started to fall apart at the seams from 1939 to 1941. In 1939, federal investigators under the Dies Committee committed themselves to finding any way they could either cripple or fundamentally destroy any pro-Nazi organization. In March and April, the New York Grand Jury charged Kuhn with stealing $14,548 from the Bund's corporation. Claiming that he was being railroaded, Kuhn pleaded that he was not guilty and paid his $5,000 bail. Kuhn did not help his position as public enemy number one when both he and the Weckruf (the Bund's newspaper) ridiculed the courts for charging him. As a result, 2 Sander A. Diamond, The Nazi Movement in the United States, 1924-1941 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1974), 350-353. 127 District Attorney Thomas Dewey, claiming that Kuhn may have been planning to leave the city's jurisdiction, raised his bail to $50,000. 3 On November 9, 1939, Kuhn's legal battle against the state of New York began. Kuhn first claimed that he could not have committed larceny because he was allowed full privileges over Bund funds. As leader, the Bund's by-laws gave him the right to spend the organization's money. The prosecution, however, went to great lengths to show that Kuhn had in fact violated his rights as leader, lied about depositing money in 1938, and had even been in an affair with a married woman. In time, it became evident to all, even the attending Bund members and supporters, that Kuhn had exercised his power inappropriately. Another serious charge, though not a legal one, that Kuhn fought was that the Bund was a fifth column organization acting on behalf of the German government. During his testimony, Kuhn loudly claimed that the Bund was not connected to the Nazis at all and that it was actually an American group working for peace. Overall, Kuhn's testimony revealed only a handful of unknowns about the Bund and their operations. 4 Kuhn's defense successfully eliminated five of the original twelve charges, showing that he had misused $1,217 of the Bund's money. After quick deliberation, the jury found him guilty of larceny and forgery. On December 5, 1939, Kuhn was sent to Sing Sing to serve two and a half to five years in prison. After losing their key figure and without anyone else ready to take his position to take his place, the Bund was greatly weakened. 5 3 Leland V. Bell, In Hitler's Shadow (Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press, 1973), 93-95. Diamond, 332-333. 5 Leland V. Bell, In Hitler's Shadow (Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press, 1973), 93-95. 4 128 Second, the Bund nationwide was under siege from all sides. After Kuhn was sent to jail, individual city-based cells fell under increased public scrutiny and federal investigations. For example, on July 9, 1942, the Cleveland Plain Dealer reported that “federal agents launched a coast-to-coast drive.... to put the German-American Bund 'out of business'.” 6 This attack on the group was aimed at fifty-four of the highest ranking members. Twenty-six Bund leaders were charged with conspiracy to evade the Selective Service Act, conspiracy to counsel Bund members to resist service in the military, and conspiracy to conceal Bund membership on alien registration papers. Three other were only charged only with the first charge of evading the Selective Service. The other twenty-five indicted were national and regional leaders and subject to denaturalization. United States Attorney Mathias F. Correa was reported to say that although the Bund was defunct after the start of the war, various splinter organizations around New York and the rest of the nation were trying to replace the Bund. These groups, he claimed, would also be subject to federal investigations. The article called the program “simply another phase of the department's intensified campaign against actual; or potential saboteurs of the American war effort.” Many of those charged came from New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Minnesota, Indiana, Washington, California, and Ohio. One of the most important Bund leaders targeted and captured by the FBI was Wilhelm Kunze, who was found in Mexico. 7 In Cleveland, FBI agents arrested local Bund notable Josef Belohlavek. Charged with conspiracy to violate the Alien Registration Act of 1940 and 6 FBI Seizes 54 Highest Officers of Nazi Bund” Cleveland Plain Dealer, July 9, 1942; These articles were retrieved via an internet database and did not include the original article page numbers. 7 FBI Seizes 54 Highest Officers of Nazi Bund 129 the Selective Service Act, Belohlavek was also a Cleveland inner-circle Bund member that had, at one time, been a proud Nazi. 8 The war against American fascism had, by the eve of America's entry into World War Two, concluded with the fall of the Bund and other formal Nazi channels. In Cleveland, however, the local Bund's slow, inward collapse happened as a result of an inner-circle information leak in 1937 to the Cleveland Press that forced leader Martin Kessler to flee to Germany and their subsequent failures after that. Starting in November 1937, an inner-circle member of the Bund chapter started to work with League agent X-5 as a paid informant. On December 14, 1937, the mole was present at a fiveperson meeting held during a private party sponsored by a Bund member. The mole reported to investigator X-5 that evening that Kessler had developed an elaborate plan to win the Bund a more influential place in Cleveland's elite and takeover the most well respected German American organization in the northeast Ohio area, the German Central Farm. League agent X-5 reported in his notes that: He [Kessler] went on to explain that to counteract this feeling [of local irrelevance] they must take control of the Zentrale [German Central Farm in Parma, Ohio]. He went on to explain that most of the delegates in the Zentrale [for the German Round Table] being from social organizations did not take much interest in its meetings, and often did not put in an appearance. The delegates from the Bund, however did take an interest in its activities and always showed up to its meetings and he, therefore, suggested that the Bund show no hard feelings in public over the lack of cooperation extended to the Zentrale, with the result that at the next general election the Bund could turn all of its delegates out and control the election, thereby electing Kessler president of the Zentrale and at least four other men favorable to the Bund as directors, which would result in the Bund then having control over the farm. He stated that this was necessary if they wanted to 8 FBI Here Arrests West Sider Wanted on Bund Indictment, Cleveland Plain Dealer, July 9, 1942, NPN available. 130 continue their activities at the farm next summer. 9 On December 28, 1937, the Cleveland Press printed a large expose' on Kessler revealing, among other things, that he had citizenship in four countries including the United States, was a sergeant in the Romanian army during the Great War, influential in getting the German Central Farm to fly the Nazi flag, and plotting to take over the presidency of the Farm. 10 Kessler, vigilant that the informant must have been in his inner circle, started an investigation of his own. After a short period, Kessler and the other inner-circle members found by process of elimination that one of the top leaders within the group was actually a mole planted and paid by the League. The mole was subsequently forced to resign his position and “disappear.” As a result, the Cleveland Bund retreated almost completely from the public eye and gave the League no other option but to halt investigations for several months. 11 By May, 1938, newly assigned agent 211 heard at a public Bund meeting that Kessler would soon be leaving for Germany. 12 His flight to the Nazi homeland makes sense, as many other Nazi leaders throughout the nation tried to flee federal prosecution by heading to Germany. Attending members had heard rumors that Kessler was poised to be a Nazi bureaucrat or possibly a military contractor. Shortly before leaving, Kessler told his group that he would be leaving the Bund to a loyal member from Toledo, Ohio, Edmund Wax, and that he would take all the local records with him as Fritz Kuhn had 9 Special Report by X-5, December 14, 1937, 1-2. Records Show Martin Kessler, Nazi Chief Here, is Man With 4 Countries, The Cleveland Press, December 28, 1937, NPN available. 11 The following is evident via several unnamed League documents related to the mole, Martin Kessler, and agent X-5. 12 Special Report by #211, May 22, 1938, 1. 10 131 told him to do. Lastly, Kessler mentioned that his trip would not have been necessary if he had not been betrayed by “those who acted like friends to his face, and knifed him in the back.” 13 This curious reference to League agent X-5's mole shows that Kessler's organization was too weak to thwart the League's attacks. On June 8, 1938, Kessler sailed to Hamburg from New York on the S.S. Hansa. 14 Over the next few years, the group struggled under Wax's leadership. On August 22, 1939, for example, the Cleveland Plain Dealer exposed that Wax had illegally received money from a German government representative in Cleveland. He believed that the information was leaked via an ex-member that may have been a secret service informant. 15 On yet another occasion, the Cleveland Press found that the local Bund and Silver Shirt Legion organizations actively cooperated together. The two were found to be distributing each other’s anti-Semitic literature. Furthermore, rumor had it that Wax had transferred Bund money to the Legion as a form of tribute. 16 Various League documents also found that the general Bund membership was falling due to negative press, Kuhn's conviction of misspending Bund money, Kessler's untimely exit, and Wax's inability to fix on-going problems. 17 Although it is not known when the Cleveland Bund formally collapsed in on itself, League records and newspaper articles indicate that it happened 13 Special Report by #211, June 4, 1938, 1. Special Report by #211, June 6, 1938, 1. 15 “Denies Rumor He Took Nazi Money,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, August 22, 1939, NPN available; In reality, the leak was caused by the initial League mole. 16 William Miller, “Shows Bund and Silver Shirts in Co-operation,” Cleveland Press, assumed 1940-1941; This undated clipping was found in a collection set where other articles from the Cleveland Press were present. All clippings present were between 1933 and 1944. This one is assumed to be from 1940 to 1941 based on information found in the article itself. Since this collection has yet to be digitized and there are no physical versions left of this long defunct newspaper, it is very difficult to know it's exact publishing date. 17 Conclusions reached via various League documents which comment on the declining size of the local Bund's membership. All records come from the private Bund files from agent X-5 and #211. 14 132 sometime between January and May of 1940. Edmund Wax, Kessler's replacement “Bund Fuhrer,” also fled to Germany in May 1940. 18 Sadly, no known records indicate where Edmund Wax went or whatever became of him. Martin Kessler, once a fiery, bombastic figure that rallied crowds with his Bund rhetoric, returned to Cleveland in May 1940 as a defeated, deflated man. While the Cleveland Press could say little about why he was forced to return to the United States, Kessler claimed that it was to retain his American citizenship and at the suggestion of the American consul in Berlin. Local rumor, however, claimed that Kessler's wife had insulted several German officials at a party when she bemoaned that Germany did not have the luxuries that she was accustomed to in America 19. This faux pas, while seemingly minor, contributed to the Kessler's flight out of Germany and back to an America that no longer tolerated pro-Nazi rhetoric as it had in the mid-1930s. In an interview with Cleveland Press writer William Miller, Kessler acknowledge that the Bund in Cleveland was dead. Kessler furthermore confirmed that “Both sides [pro-Nazis and anti-Nazis] are against me. My old friends hate me.” Miller noted that Kessler's “manner is nervous, his demeanor that of a man sure of nothing.” 20 Kessler's record as a Bund leader haunted him for years to come. When the Cleveland Press revealed on March 11, 1944 that Kessler was working at Apex Electric Company in Cleveland as an engineer. It was quickly revealed that he was not working on war projects, but that he was 18 Eugene Segal, “Cleveland Bund Leaders Repentant,” Cleveland Press, undated; The article featured here came from a clippings collection at Cleveland State University. The article was bundled with several others related to the Cleveland Bund, but was not dated. It is nearly impossible to track the date of this article because there are no physical or digital collections of the Cleveland Press newspaper. 19 “Kessler Refuses Comment on Germany, Says 'Let me Alone', Cleveland Press, May 20, 1940, NPN available. 20 “Kessler Refuses Comment on Germany, Says 'Let me Alone' 133 responsible for commercial work on postwar utilities like irons, washing machines, and other household amenities. 21 By March 16, 1944, Kessler, the “onetime fuehrer of the Cleveland German-American Bund,” was fired from Apex Electric Company after company executives learned about his past as a Bund leader. Those who hired him claimed that Kessler had been vouched for by other local engineers and several businesses and that he had passed the basic background check. 22 After losing his job, it is not clear what became of Martin Kessler. In the end, the Cleveland Bund and the national German American Bund organizations could not withstand the changes brought in during the early 1940s. Local and national forces created an atmosphere where domestic fascism and pro-Nazi affiliation would not be accepted. These organizations were unable to change this new wave of national anti-Nazi/fascism or change the way they engaged the community like they had before. From 1936 to 1939, the German American Bund softened their image and tone successfully, but 1940 and 1941 spelled doom for them. Formal Nazism and support for American fascism fell apart as the nation came closer and closer to war with Germany. The atmosphere that had previously allowed for Nazism to exist had faded by this time, in part due to increased federal scrutiny that actually went after fascist groups in a meaningful way. One might imagine that a truly dogged federal crackdown earlier on might have curtailed the early successes that American fascists had; however, contemporary concerns were more aimed at thwarting domestic communism. This 21 “Kessler, Ex-Bund Chief Here, Now Working in War Plant,” The Cleveland Press, March 11, 1944, NPN available; “Real One Time Bundist Not Doing War Work,” Cleveland Press, March 13, 1944, NPN available. 22 Former Fuehrer of Cleveland Bund Loses Job at Apex,” Cleveland Press, March 16, 1944, NPN available. 134 dismissive effect gave American fascists nearly a decade to act throughout the nation with near impunity to the law. After it became abundantly clear that domestic fascists, most prominently Fritz Kuhn and the German-American Bund, had violated a variety of laws and were acting as though they were Hitler's American disciples, the government was able to bring many to justice and the American people could thoroughly reject their message. Even those who had not violated any laws, like Martin Kessler, faced public ridicule for his pro-Nazi activism during the 1930s. In all, the early 1940s showed that American fascism was a failed experiment. Section Two: “Less Defensive and More Constructive:” The Rumor Roundup and the League's New Resistance The early 1940s left the League for Human Rights' mission to defeat local fascism in a rather unusual position. First, the League had to deal with the problem of having no obvious, swastika-waving, Hitler-praising enemies. From their inception in 1933 until the collapse of the Bund and other groups in the early 1940s, the League had the luxury of knowing who their opponents were simply by what they wore or how they acted. The Bund, Legion, and many other pro-fascist groups made no secret of their allegiance or sympathy for Hitler and his regime. After these groups fell, however, the League was left with only limited ways to discern their opponents from truly patriotic citizens. Indeed, ex-members of these groups were mixed into the general population, indiscernible from other, non-Nazi-leaning citizens. Second, after the somewhat successful public information speaking campaigns, on-going economic boycott of German goods, and the 135 protest against the Berlin-Cleveland student exchange program, the League's public antifascist activism had started to wane. Their devotion to private investigations overtook the dedication they had previously had to their public works. As a result, public speeches, except those rarely given by leaders like Rev. Phillip Bird Smead, Grace Mayette, and Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, were fewer and fewer throughout the late 1930s. As a result, the League drifted out of the public eye. As America began to bring itself together to fight fascism in Europe, the League had something of a short respite period where they reevaluated their community and organizational mission statement against fascism. Indeed, America's entry into the war made anti-Nazism and anti-fascism official government policy. The war, in effect, was the ultimate form of resistance, thus eliminating the need for groups like the League for Human Rights to conduct hard-line investigations. In this time between the initial outbreak of the war and late 1942, the League decided to alter their overall structure from defensive resistance to constructive public works. This adjustment also adopted a new stance towards defending democracy and the values of liberal democracies such as racial tolerance, pluralism, and equal rights. 23 This move is evident by their increased reliance on public activism and defense of liberal democratic principles. In a 1943 letter, the League explained their new mission as such: The purpose, to fight all kinds of Naziism in this country, has not changed. 23 Although they never produced any working definition for their group, it is evident through their actions that the League thought that discrimination of any sort (anti-Semitism was certainly the most personal form to many of the League's Jews) was the first step towards organized tyranny. Nazism, according to the League, was the product of a society that no longer held pluralistic ideals, personal freedom, or tolerance paramount to all other things. While their view adopted something of a black-or-white version of politics, it is most likely that they used hyperbolic language during the war to show a sense of urgency. 136 However, the emphasis and the means has been changed. We have become less defensive and more constructive. 24 This simple declaration concerning their new mission statement changed the League's direction until they closed all operations after the end of the Second World War. Their new direction encouraged the active promotion of democratic ideals, dissemination of information regarding the war effort, popular anti-fascism, and promoting ethnic diversity. League investigations of local fascist groups and leaders suffered greatly after the fallout of formal Nazi organizations and America's entry into World War Two. Whereas most of the rank and file of formerly active groups like the Silver Shirt Legion and German-American Bund were able to slip into the rest of northeast Ohio's population, a handful of prominent individuals could not. Furthermore, since the League was unable to penetrate small operating cells or gain any other moles like they had before, they were left to simple surveillance efforts and creating compilation sheets full of past and present pro-fascist activism For example, Legion leaders Asimov Malikov and Mary T. East both had teams that followed them throughout northeast Ohio and on trips to neighboring states. Their collective finding revealed little that was not already known about them. 25 Between 1944 and 1945, League investigations were generally less detailed on contemporary activities of individuals and more concerned with collectivizing a total history of what certain people had done. By 1945, League investigation targets were few and far between. Besides Malikov 24 Ivan Platt, The League for Human Rights: Cleveland Jewry's Fight Against Naziism, 1933-1946 (Cleveland, OH: Cleveland State University, 1977), 79. 25 Material referred to comes from several case files related to “Mary T. East” and “Asimov Malikov.” As in the previous chapter, these two names are pseudonyms for two real individuals involved in Legion activities. Due to contractual obligations, their real names could not be used. 137 and East, only a handful of local and even fewer national figures were being continuously investigated. One such minor national figure was Joe McWilliams, a leader within the Nationalist Party, a vehement anti-Semite, and commonly known as “Mr. McNazi.” 26 Records indicate that League agent #115 started tracking McWilliams as early as January 1945, however, the majority of records concerning him come from McWilliams three month long stay in Cleveland from May to July 1945. Throughout most of late May, McWilliams was living at a large Cleveland hotel where he frequently ate with friends and known businessmen, mostly executives representing regional and national industrial firms. Agent 115 and others often observed these exchanges from a distance but were not able to overhear much of the conversations. League agents suspected that the conversations were attempts from the Nationalist Party and the American Nationalist Committee to gain support, financial and otherwise, from large corporations. In order to discover if this was his true intent, agents 155, CWF, and an unnamed Jewish female who was flirtatious with McWilliams conducted a small operation. On May 30, 1945, the female investigator asked him if he would go on a date the next day. Unbeknownst to him, the pair would be followed by agent CMF from a distance. As this was going on, 155 would break into McWilliams room and search his belongings. While the date involved little more than a dinner and casual conversation at a nearby restaurant, 115 found books on communism, religion, Jews, and management guides amid his clothes and other belongings. 27 Investigations during June and July 1945 also proved fruitful for League agents. 26 27 “Mr. McNazi,” Time, September 23, 1940, NPN available. Material covered comes from the investigation notes of League agent #115 between May 28-31, 1945. 138 Telephone records taken in the beginning of June 1945 suggested to the investigators that McWilliams was in regular conversation with business officials that he had previously eaten dinner with. While it is unknown exactly how the League obtained the phone numbers that he called, it is clear that McWilliams was in regular contact with at least thirty manufacturers in Akron, Youngstown, Cleveland, and Kent, Ohio. Agents G.S., #3, FBD, and 115 tracked McWilliams as he went from company to company throughout northeast Ohio and as far as Chicago, Illinois. On June 8, 1945, McWilliams somehow realized he was being watched and fled Cleveland in a single night. By early July, the League found him hiding in Chicago in a small flat still trying to solicit aid from manufacturers. Unable to actively keep him under watch, the League resigned their efforts against McWilliams and left all of their information to the FBI stationed in Cleveland. 28 The Joe McWilliams case was the League's last attempt at private investigations. In a way, it is also symbolic of the League's overall legacy concerning investigations. Like others, it involved an array of investigators watching, reporting, following, tricking, and even conducting searches on targets. Their findings about McWilliams and other clearly showed that those they followed were engaging in activities to either support American fascism or earn power for themselves. Despite this, the League lacked the teeth to persecute them in any meaningful way. As in the McWilliams case, the other enemies the League faced (the Legion and German-American Bund most of all) were forced out of the public light and into hiding. From here, the League had no choice but to leave the war on fascism and far-right ideology to the federal 28 Material comes from various reports left by agents 15, G.S., #3, and FBD. All are dated between June 1 and July 19, 1945. 139 government. As a result, the League was left without a crucial part of their mission and resigned to contemplate their role in Cleveland and northeast Ohio. It was only after the League was forced to give up their investigations that they came to realize they had to reestablish themselves as Cleveland's loudest public voice against fascism in America and abroad. As previously discussed, the League's efforts to inform Cleveland about the dangers of fascism had been one of their defining characteristics in their early years. Public activism against German Nazism and domestic fascist groups had worked well for much of the early and mid-1930s, but the late 1930s and early 1940s were a different matter. Their speeches during this time were less in number and did not involve as many “big names” as they had before. Notable exceptions, like exiled Czech leader Eduard Benes' and New York City Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia sponsored appearance in 1939, occurred, but by and large the League's public life suffered from their lack of presence. In order for the League to reach a larger audience, they contacted the Cleveland Plain Dealer and asked if they could have a section devoted to informing Clevelanders about the war, domestic issues, international happenings, and to answer whatever rumors concerned citizens may have heard. 29 Between October 1942 and March 1943, the League had a section of the Cleveland Plain Dealer devoted to them and their efforts to inform the nation to the dangers of fascism. This new section aptly named the “Rumor Roundup” 29 While it is unknown what the Cleveland Plain Dealer received from this temporary arrangement, it is likely they gave the piece such prominence due to the war-time atmosphere. One might also imagine that the newspaper was interested in boosting their sales by promoting the League's rumor section and urging readers to inform themselves on the developments going on in America, Europe, and the Pacific theater that other articles did not cover. Whatever the reason, it is clear that the Cleveland Plain Dealer and the League shared a similar interest in informing Clevelanders about the war, domestic, and international issues. 140 asked Clevelanders to write in or call the League with any rumors or questions they had regarding the war effort, contemporary political or social issues, or fascist activity in the nation. This section, while only a part of the Cleveland Plain Dealer for six months, covered a great deal of issues and actively engaged Clevelanders in a conversation with the League about the nation and local concerns. Newspapers, according to myriad historians like Carl Wittke and Don H. Tolzmann, are a methodologically useful tool that can be used to find the pulse of a people during a particular span of time. 30 Articles, editorials, advice sections, and letters to the editors often reflect contemporary concerns and give voice to the people or community that newspaper represents. In this particular case, a look at the Rumor Roundup section from the Cleveland Plain Dealer circa 1942 and 1943 depicts the concerns that average Clevelanders had about the war as well as what the League for Human Rights felt they needed to tell their fellow citizens. The first issue of the Rumor Roundup appeared in the Cleveland Plain Dealer on October 3, 1942. In it, the League called on citizens to report circulating rumors because they “can make the difference between victory or defeat in this war with the Axis powers of aggression.” Rumors, the article claimed, were one of the Nazi's greatest weapons because they divided public opinion, disrupted truth, and could injure war production. The League explained that it was part of a good citizen's duty to report these rumors to them. In return, the League and Cleveland Plain Dealer would reply to the most pressing letters they received with full factual answers and the writer's signature. In many cases, this required the League to 30 Carl Wittke, The German Language Press In America (Lexington, KY: University of Kentucky Press, 1957); Don H. Tolzmann, German American Literature (Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1977). 141 reach out to the military and government and social organizations for the truth. The article ended with an example rumor that battleships were not being armed with guns. In fact, it was production policy that warships be outfitted with guns after they left their ports. 31 This rumor, the League claimed, was crafted to discourage Americans and make them feel as if their military was ill-prepared for war. The articled ended with the League giving the public something of a mission to accomplish: When you hear a rumor...., telephone or write to the League for Human Rights. The league will investigate it. The Plain Dealer will print the rumor and the fact. And you will be doing your part to keep American and it's allies united so that victory – however hard – will be ours. 32 Many of the rumors that the League received did not end up getting published mainly because the writer either neglected to sign their name or their letter was not germane to larger national or local issues. Some of these unanswered letters included complaints that neighbors (often named) were using shortwave radios, that teenagers were skipping school to steal items from local stores, and that some Clevelanders were worshiping in assembly halls. 33 In all, much more serious issues like national security, the war effort, domestic policy, underground fascist activity, and race issues were often featured in the Rumor Roundup section. For example, when asked if men drafted into the army got to choose if they went overseas or not and if enlisted men were forced to go, the League contacted the local army recruiting office. The leading officer stationed there was quoted as saying “when Uncle Sam decides to send anyone across, over he goes, whether 31 “Heard any Rumors? Let Us Set You Right,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, October 3, 1942, NPN available. Ibid. 33 Sources came from a small collective of letters sent to the League as part of the Rumor Roundup campaign. 32 142 he is a drafted man or has enlisted.” 34 In another issue, a concerned writer commented that veterans of foreign wars were not seeing increased pensions to meet the rising cost of living. The League replied that, in fact, pensions increased from $30 to $40 a month after a June 10, 1942 Congressional act allocated more money for veterans. 35 Above all other concerns, Rumor Roundup readers contacted the League about information relevant to the on-going war effort, the condition of soldiers, and their families. In December 1942, a worried citizen asked if it were true that Germany had seized all but a few provinces of the Soviet Union. The League responded that the Cleveland Regional Office of War Information informed them that the Germans were being swept out of Stalingrad and pushed further westward. Furthermore, American journalists stationed in Moscow writing about the war were proof enough that the Germans had not taken the capital. In the same week, another Clevelander passed on the rumor that Navy casualties were so high that no figures were being released to the public. The article answered that the local Office of War Information issued a public statement saying that from December 7, 1941 to November 15, 1942, 17,252 soldiers were killed, missing, or wounded. In February 1943, another reader informed the League that some believed that soldier families were not receiving federal money to support children. In fact, the League reported that mothers received $50 of government money to support the family, plus an additional $28 for the first child, $12 for the second, and $10 for each after that. 36 34 “Fact Finders Dissect Axis-Helping Rumors in First Roundup Here,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, October 11, 1942, NPN available. 35 “Rumor Roundup,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, December 27, 1942, NPN available. 36 “Week's Rumor Roundup,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, February 7, 1943, NPN available. 143 Other Clevelanders were concerned that war-time production and the lend-lease deal with Great Britain and the Soviet Union were denying Americans of certain luxury goods. Leather, gas, and rubber, for example, were the subject of many questions answered in the Rumor Roundup. On December 6, 1942, one rumor mentioned in the article said that all of the nation's oil was being sent over to the Soviet Union in order to appease Stalin. The League responded that despite the US sending a large amount of oil to the Soviet Union, America still had plenty. Another writer asked if leather rationing and the lend-lease deal with the Allies would mean that shoes would no longer be sold after January 1, 1943. This rumor was summarily declared false, but was based on an exaggerated truth. In reality, the national Office of War Information advised shoe tanners to set aside certain types of shoe soles and leather in order to off-set lend-lease purchases. For most of the year, tanners were required to set aside fifteen percent of their sole and leather quantities; however during December 1942 tanners were required to keep twenty percent open for government purchase. 37 Another rumor had it that match production would end in March 1943, but the League reassured readers otherwise. Matches and match rationing, in fact, were in limited quantity because they being sent over to members of the armed forces and producers were conserving materials for producing other items. 38 War-time material concerns and rationing preoccupied the American mind because it was one of the elements of the war that affected their everyday lives. Finally, many readers were preoccupied with contemporary issues of race. In November, 1942, one rumor said that the Marines Corp did not accept African Americans 37 38 “ Rumor Roundup,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, December 6, 1942, NPN available. “Rumor Roundup,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, December, 27, 1942, NPN available. 144 as military specialists. After asking the Cleveland Office of War Information, the League reported correctly that the Marines had previously announced plan to recruit five hundred more African Americans to serve as occupational specialists. These new recruits would become clerks, truck drivers, accountants, mechanics, radio operators, machinists, and fill an array of other necessary positions. 39 Numerous unpublished letters delivered to the League passed rumors about the role of Jews in the military. One, for example, claimed that prominent Jews could buy their way out of the military while another said that Jews all across the nation were exempt from serving because of the potential for prosecution if they were captured by the Germans. Another raised concern that Japanese American soldiers would turn on their fellow servicemen and defect to the Imperial Japanese or Germans. Many of these letters went unpublished because the writers did not sign their names or leave return addresses, thus failing to meet part of the League's most base requirements for submitted material. 40 While it is impossible to know exactly how the League would have answered these concerns, it is most likely that they would have consulted a local branch of a government office or social group to find out the appropriate information. In review, the League's use of the Rumor Roundup had two primary aims. First, it was a part of their renewed effort to reach out to Clevelanders in a way that supported America and the Allies during the war. By doing so, they acted as a conduit for democracy and patriotism that simultaneously highlighted the League as one of 39 40 “Week's Rumor Roundup,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, November 8, 1942, NPN available. Letters referred to appear throughout the League for Human Rights collection housed at the Western Reserve Historical Society in Cleveland, Ohio. 145 Cleveland's experts on war-time rumors and public information. Second, the League used their new position and medium to disseminate truthful information about subjects that concerned Clevelanders and themselves. By doing this, they controlled, at least to a certain degree, what sort of information flowed around Cleveland. This is important because it allowed the League to exert a level of power within the city and keep citizens dedicated to the American cause through fighting morale-weakening rumors. Section Three: “This is Cleveland:” The End of the League's Mission Starting as early as February 1941 and extending all the way until its demise in 1946, the League became more and more interested in pulling together the community behind them. This effort to bring Cleveland's various ethnicities and religious groups together was concerned with building their influence in the city just as much as it was in support of liberal democratic principles. In late February 1941, the League for Human Rights received a letter from a released prisoner of war from the Alsace-Lorraine region of France. Why this letter was specifically sent to the League for Human Rights and not some other larger resistance organization is not clear. In any case, the letter depicted the systematic annihilation of French Africans by German soldiers in the occupied portions of France. The article said that: ….[the Germans] said the Negroes had hidden behind corpses or horses after the capitulation and had used machine guns against the Germans. The Germans boasted that they didn't waste any bullets against 'these beasts'. Each Negro was forced to help dig the mass grave; then a pick was hammered into their brains and 146 they were thrown into the grave. Many probably did not die because they were buried. Others were beaten to death with shovels and the handles of guns. Those who were not killed are prosecuted in a camp in East Prussia, all kinds of diseases have occurred. The food is pitiful and nobody can survive for very long. We have the impression that the Germans intend to annihilate the Africans completely, and many a man told me, 'In case you should be freed, tell the world how we were treated'. 41 It is important to note that the contents of the letter were only ever printed in the Cleveland Call and Post, a prominent African-American newspaper in the city. It is conceivable that the League released this letter to Cleveland's African American community via the Cleveland Call and Post because they believed that they could elicit a great deal of outrage from these assaults on French Africans. The fact that this story was not printed in any other newspapers suggests a possible disinterest on the side of Cleveland's predominantly white newspapers. It is a curious omission mainly because the account recreates a German atrocity in the most disturbing imagery, especially in an age where it was incredibly popular for newspapers to carry tales of German and Japanese war-time horrors on or behind the front. The article's use of extremely violent imagery was aimed at evoking an emotional response by readers. One might imagine that enraged readers would put their support behind national anti-Nazi resistance or support the League's activities. Whatever the case, it is clear that the League was using this incident and others like it to expand their influence to the local African American community. More than African-Americans, the League also tried to reach out to other faiths, particularly to Cleveland's Protestants. For example, in the May 2, 1943, edition of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, the League sponsored a large advertisement which called for 41 “White War Prisoner Writes of German Brutality; Tells of Annihilation of Blacks,” Cleveland Call and Post, March 1, 1941, NPN available. 147 Christians to unite in “a Day of Compassion – in which all Christian people are invited to join in intercession for the Jewish people of Europe who are victims of racial and religious persecution.” 42 The advertisement suggested in the text that Christians had a moral responsibility to help other Americans no matter what religion they adhered to or race they were, elevating the ideas that free worship and racial tolerance were part of the American way. The advertisement came to Clevelanders bundled with a Day of Compassion prayer approved by the local Federal Council of Churches. It asked Christians to pray “Almighty God,.... we plead before Thee the cause of the Jewish people, maligned and harassed, condemned to exile, and slaughtered by the thousands. Hear the prayers that rise to Thee from their extremity, and raise up advocates who shall secure for them justice, tranquility, and the common rights of man.” 43 In an article praising the League's sponsorship and the advertisement, Cleveland Plain Dealer church editor Walton Rankin said “this piece of advertising is a work of genuine patriotism [on] the part of the League for Human Rights of Cleveland and exemplifies the high principles for which the league has consistently stood in this community.” 44 The League's desire to unite sympathetic Protestants and others was part of their campaign of uniting elements of Cleveland's diverse population. While it is important to highlight the activities of the League as a collective body, it is also key to look at how influential individuals working within the League helped operate other groups in the Cleveland area. By acting as proponents of the League's 42 Walton Rankin, “Day of Compassion Soldiers' Example Tolerance Pledged,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 2, 1943, NPN available. 43 Ibid. 44 Ibid. 148 values outside of their immediate group, influential League members were able to extend their personal influence and that of the group. For example, League president Grace Meyette worked with the Cleveland Resettlement Committee to help Japanese-Americans find homes in northeast Ohio after they were moved from “relocation centers.” 45 After the events at Pearl Harbor in December 1941, the federal government believed that Japanese Americans would be disloyal to the United States. This suspicion of nonpatriotism forced 120,000 Japanese Americans to vacate their homes and move into military-controlled camps throughout the nation. 46 Between sixteen and seventeen thousand West Coast Japanese Americans were forcibly relocated to the Cleveland area and were kept there under strict security order. Meyette's repeated consternation of this injustice to the Cleveland Resettlement Committee from 1942 until January 1945 resulted in her earning a leadership position with them. After the government discontinued interning Japanese Americans in January 1945, Meyette was crucial in helping recently released families find homes and jobs by connecting them with local social, community, and educational services. While it is unknown how many of the former internees stayed in northeast Ohio after this period, Meyette's activism on behalf of the League signaled their devotion to fair treatment under the law and interest in racial equality. 47 More prominently, Grace Meyette worked alongside Cleveland's National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). During her tenure as the League's NAACP representative, she served as the first vice-president and chairman of 45 Platt, 87. Wendy Ng, Japanese-American Interment in World War II: a history and reference guide (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002), 12. 47 Cleveland Resettlement Committee for Japanese Americans, January 5, 1945; Letter from Grace Meyette to F W. Ross, January 19, 1945. 46 149 the Education Committee. Considering their new interest in intercultural and interracial issues, the local NAACP was quite possibly the best partner the League could have chosen to work with. Out of the many incidents that the NAACP and League representatives cooperated on, most were minor incidents often involving name calling or base accusations of racial discrimination. In January 1945, however, the local NAACP and League were involved in a case where a group of Jewish students from Glenville High School claimed that boys from East High School and Central High School assaulted them following a basketball game. Behaving cooperatively, the League and NAACP investigated the matter, believing that ethnic discrimination motivated the incident. League Director Grace Mayette found that the Jewish boys were “severely beaten,” called “dirty Jews” and “Pollacks,” and that the windows of a nearby synagogue were broken during the fight. 48 Interestingly, neither the students nor the school officials believed that organized anti-Semitism was behind the incident. School officials concluded that it was a small matter and most likely resulted from intense athletic rivalries. 49 The League and Education Committee of the NAACP believed that the true cause of the fight was “a lack of racial understanding and intercultural appreciation” among the students at the school. Both organizations concluded that growing racial segregation in the city and the Cleveland Board of Education's failed administrative practices were the true source of the problem. Compounding this issue was that certain schools were overwhelmingly represented by certain racial groups. Central High School, for example, 48 49 Grace Mayette to the Executive Board of the League for Human Rights, January 11, 1945. Grace Mayette to Judge U. Hertz, January 27, 1945. 150 was said to have only two white students whereas there were nearly one thousand African American students. Cleveland's junior high schools, on the other hand, were known to be well integrated. After a series of investigations and talks with the leadership of many of Cleveland's high schools, the League and NAACP found that discriminatory high school placement practices contributed to a lack of racial understanding and tolerance among students, directly harmed the development of a superior education, and most importantly, hurt the instillation of liberal democratic practices. 50 Racial and ethnic discrimination, therefore, was an enemy of liberal democratic principles and, by extension, the League. This concern over racial conflict, exclusion, and the erosion of democratic principles were prominent players in the League's final major publication on Cleveland's history and ethnic groups, This is Cleveland. 51 By their own definition, democracy and its preservation were paramount to all other things. Whereas the League used to see antiNazism as their primary form of protest, by 1944 they came to see the defense of democracy as their most important mission. This progression followed a surge of prodemocratic sentiment coming from all corners of the nation as it became clear that the war had vastly improved America's economic standing, elevated the nation to being one of the top powers in the world, and proved that fascism (once deemed a legitimate alternative to democracy) in all its forms would soon be dead. At first an irregularly published set of magazines, This is Cleveland was later organized in 1946 into a single study. Prominent throughout the book is Cleveland's history as a multi-ethnic city (with chapters dedicated to specific groups including 50 51 Education Committee of the Cleveland NAACP to Charles H. Lake, February 8, 1945. Anonymous, This is Cleveland (unknown publisher, 1946). 151 Italians, African Americans, Eastern Europeans, Jews, and “others”) and discussions on various national histories, anti-Semitism, fascism, and democracy. In many ways, This is Cleveland was the League's version of recent history, detailing not only their actions and that of the nations, but also their hopes for the soon-approaching future. The study's secondary use was in promoting democracy through celebrating diversity and individual rights as well as disparaging fascism in all it's forms. The League's study additionally dealt with larger geopolitical issues like the spread of communism into territories formerly ruled by Nazism or fascism. In their efforts to detail the various groups throughout the Cleveland area, the book shows how the League recognized that their mission to rid northeast Ohio of fascism, and further advocate it's dismissal from the nation, was nearing it's end and the world would soon be dealing with the spread of communism instead. The book starts by establishing Cleveland's history as “one of the country's most liberal cities” because of its natural inclination towards equality, liberty, racial tolerance, and justice. 52 From there, the book sharply turns toward America's German population, equating them and their patriotism with other good, pro-democratic nationalities in Cleveland and elsewhere. It deduces that the German inclination towards fascism and violent order was not something hereditary or cultural, but rather bred from unique circumstances in German history. As such, patriotic German Americans are painted in a sympathetic tone, including those who were tricked or “slipped into Nazi control.” The German Central Farm (the location of a Bund youth camp and other activities) and other 52 Anonymous, 4-7. 152 German language groups, for example, are cleared of all guilt for affiliating with “German agents” and Americans that pledged loyalty to Hitler's Germany. 53 German Americans, the League concludes, were not all Nazis, so they did not deserve to be lumped in with those who truly were. This differentiation between patriotic Americans of German stock and those who praised Hitler is stark throughout the book. Furthermore, this shift shows a clear change from how Americans treated German Americans during and after the Great War to how the League thought of them after World War Two. Instead of being an enemy collective, determined by ethnicity before anything else, German Americans were to be treated according to their personal political and patriotic activism. In the section on Italians, This is Cleveland takes a significant turn from the previous chapter on German fascism. Rather than looking back extensively on the Mussolini regime or talking of local Italian American resistance to fascism in Cleveland, this chapter examines the potential that Italy might turn to communism and how Italians and local Italian Americans grapple with that issue. The book extols that the Italian Republic be allowed to pick its own government free from outside influence, American, British, and Soviet alike. This sense of Wilsonian self-determinism was buttressed by the League's call for American troops and influence to leave Italy and instead allow a new, post-Mussolini government to develop as the Italian people wanted it. Despite calling for the people to choose their new government, the League disparaged any thought of communism saying “we [the United States] will oppose the salesmen of Communism here [in Italy] because they violate the principles of Democracy in the name of their 53 Ibid, 9-13. 153 Marxian principles of Historical Materialism.” 54 In reality, the United States created a virtual single-party system by disallowing opposition to the Catholic-leaning Christian Democrats. This anti-communist stance that the League adopted additionally mirrored American foreign policy and nation building hopes in the early Cold War period. 55 The section on Jews in Cleveland most tellingly reveals the League's position on the development of democracy after the fall of Nazism. This section on Jews starts by likening anti-Semitism to a disease that “festers” and “threatens the free development of our Democracy” because it destroys the moral base and very freedom from which democracy comes from. 56 Interestingly, the League claims that anti-Semitism was originally found in Eastern Europe and only imported when Eastern European immigrants settled in the United States in the late 1800s. In Cleveland, for example, Jews were generally accepted, allowed to live and work equally along Gentiles, and not restricted to live only in certain neighborhoods. In other nations where anti-Semitism ran rampant, however, personal liberty was limited and fascism reigned. 57 While not completely true, the larger point the League wished to project was that any form of discrimination is but the first indicator of a failing democracy. 58 The process of destroying democracy through discrimination against Jews was “modernized” through Hitler, but also a part of American history too. The book says that American Jews were 54 Ibid., 27-29. Eric Hobsbawm, The Age of Extremes: A History of the World, 1914-1991 (New York: Vintage Books, 1996), 238-39. 56 Anonymous, 37. 57 Ibid. 40. 58 Lloyd Gartner's History of the Jews of Cleveland details a long history of anti-Semitism in Cleveland that started well before Eastern Europeans arrived. The League's mistake on this issue, either intentional or not, is meant to help their claim that the introduction of anti-Semitism or any other form of discrimination erodes the moral base of a democracy. 55 154 blamed by various sections of the populace for all sorts of perceived ills in society ranging from communism to the New Deal and capitalism to the Republican Party. The word “Jew” even came to be redefined as: ….the anathema, the cabalistic Mumbo Jumbo that exorcises fierce emotions of hate. The word Jew relieves the anti-Semite of the troublesome task of finding and correcting individual and organized wrongs. Because the word magically stirs irrational antagonism which destroys judgment, neither plain facts nor the principles of equality and liberty, nor appeal to fairness are able to counteract this terrible superstition against Jews. Though this attitude is the absolute antithesis of Americanism, it is imposed in the name of Americanism; though it is thoroughly irreconcilable with Christianity, it is promoted by some priests and ministers. 59 While the League recognized that anti-Semitism, and discrimination on-the-whole, was a serious problem, they also believed that it could be solved. Education programs and learned tolerance could correct the prevailing thought that Jews or “others” were somehow inferior. Intercultural instruction would, in theory, help fix anti-Semitism and ultimately aid in creating a more perfect democracy. 60 Laws, too, could rectify certain wrongs committed by society on discriminated people. In the chapter concerning African Americans, for instance, the League concluded that discrimination could be ameliorated by laws that enforced equal liberties, availability of resources, an end to segregation in schools, workplaces, and living spaces, and more. 61 In all, these points are important because they show yet another part of the League's renewed effort to influence Cleveland's various ethnic communities and promote their ideas of post-WWII Americanism and democracy. Furthermore, their analysis and conclusions on period 59 Ibid, 45. Anonymous, 45-47. 61 Ibid, 59-61. 60 155 societal problems resemble much of what civil rights historians like Mary Dudziak call part of America's growing Cold War realization on the enormity of racial and ethnic discrimination. 62 While the League's activism may have initially indicated that they were going to continue working well into the Cold War as a civil rights activist group or as part of Cleveland's Jewish community, the League for Human Rights died a silent death in mid1946, not long after the final production of This is Cleveland. While there are no direct indications as to why the League members decided to fold the 13 year old organization, it is likely that they suffered from one severe post-war malady. First, the League's primary mission to protest local fascist groups and German Nazism was a dead cause after the fall of Hitler's Reich. Whereas in the 1930s and the first few years of the 1940s many Americans were concerned with the specter of fascism all around the world challenging democracy, the post-war era, on the other hand, was defined by the fear that communism would envelope the world. Their inability to restyle themselves in a meaningful way in the new post-war world led to their inevitable collapse. The League's interest in thwarting fascism overshadowed their handful of anti-communist statements and, in part, led to the irrelevancy after the war. Little else is known on why the League, formerly Cleveland's leading anti-Nazi group turned civil rights advocate, failed to adjust to the changing national and international atmosphere. While it is not entirely clear what happened to all of the foundational members of the organization after their dissolution, Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, the League's former 62 Mary Dudziak, Cold War Civil Rights: Race and the Image of American Democracy (Princeton, NY: Princeton University Press, 2000), 11-15. 156 philosophical and religious guide, established himself as one of the nation's leading Zionists and pro-Israel activists. Though he had long been an advocate for the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine, the 1940s offered Silver his greatest chance to alter global political order. Starting in early 1943, Silver was appointed by President Roosevelt to lead the American Zionist Emergency Council, an organization known as one of the leading proponents for the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine. 63 Throughout Roosevelt's and Truman's terms in office, Silver worked with over 400 affiliated groups and branches of the Council. Soon thereafter in August 1943, Silver was handed the stage at the American Jewish Conference where he announced that the United States and American Jews would lead the world in making a “Jewish commonwealth.” 64 On October 2, 1947, among a few other leading Jews from around the world, Silver spoke to the delegates of the United Nations urging that they create a homeland for the Jews. He argued that statehood was the greatest thing they could achieve and that Arab and international opposition was an orchestrated effort to strain the will of the international community. 65 His heartfelt plea that the world's Jews be given a home in Palestine was not met without resistance from Americans, Europeans, and others alike, but in little time it was clear that the nation he had always wanted would be made. Despite his short time in the national and international limelight, Silver made something of a strong impression on Washington's elite. In particular, President Truman and Rabbi 63 Leon I. Feuer, Abba Hillel Silver: A Personal Memoir (publisher unknown), 117. Milton Plesur, Jewish Life in Twentieth Century America (Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1982), 110. 65 Bruce J. Evensen, “The Limites of Presidential Leadership: Truman at War with Zionistsm the Press, Public Opinion and His Own State Department over Palestine,” Presidential Studies Quarterly 23 (1993), 272. 64 157 Silver often sparred over the issue of Jewish statehood. 66 In one case, rumor had it that Silver pounded on President Truman's desk while meeting with him about America's support for a Jewish state in the Middle East. True or not, Rabbi Silver left his mark in Washington, the floor of the United Nations, and most prominently, in Cleveland, Ohio. Silver lived the rest of his day as one of the nation's most notable and well respected Jews. His mission to battle domestic fascism and later to create a Jewish homeland ruled much of his life and remains two of his greatest contributions to modern American history. Section Four: The League's Legacy: Final Conclusions An analysis of Cleveland's League for Human Rights activities reveals many things and leaves others open to question. First, their efforts to thwart local-level fascist movements were instrumental and their methods of doing so spanned the proverbial gamut. So large was the span of the League's activities over their short 13 year lifespan, it is almost necessary to view the group as two entities separated by what they advocated during certain periods of time. In its first incarnation between 1933 and 1941, the League was focused on loud, public anti-Nazi campaigns and private investigations. The League's activism during this time followed the general feeling in the United States which opposed Hitler's advances in Europe and his ideological followers in the United 66 Evensen, 276. 158 States. Like Samuel Untermyer's Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League in New York City and numerous other like-minded groups scattered throughout the nation, the Cleveland League actively fought domestic fascists. Through 1941 to 1946, however, the League took on another shape and mission by advocating greater civil rights and equality for all and informing Clevelanders about the war effort. This shift in tactics and mission was necessitated by America's entry into the war. By bringing war to Hitler's Germany, antiNazism became federal policy and a way for citizens to show their patriotism to the nation. By the war's end, however, anti-fascism became a moot point. The burgeoning Cold War and threat of communism replaced the fear of fascism. As a result, the League and other such groups that were unable to adapt to the new atmosphere lost their place in society and faded away. Considering all of their actions, the League's efforts against fascism in Cleveland and northeast Ohio constitute a paradoxical mixture of very strong, almost reactionary, resistance and peaceful boycotting and public awareness campaigns. As previously stated, this was an example of a most unusual mixture of Jewish protest organization methods, namely those used by conservative and liberal Jews in New York City anti-Nazi groups. 67 This differentiation also coincides with the major shift the League underwent after the nation entered World War Two. One of the other background questions that this thesis attempts to grapple with concerns the notion of success. Indeed, the League's campaigns gathered a great deal of information about individuals, organizations, and foreign entanglements in Cleveland's public and political scenes. Their findings, when amassed, 67 Haskel Lookstein, Were We Our Brother's Keepers?: The Public Response of American Jews to the Holocaust (New York: Hartmore House, 1985), 60. 159 reveal that the League was deeply interested in combating local fascist and pro-Nazi activity and that those they fought were indeed involved in pro-Nazism. That being said, the League never revealed anything they found. What makes the League's investigative efforts to repel local fascist groups and leaders important; however, was not what they broadcast to Cleveland or the world. Rather, it was in what their program and resistance symbolized for the local Jewish community and Gentile sympathizers. The League, as a unified front of these two forces, symbolized Cleveland's early resistance to fascism. Moreover, they were a part of a much larger national resistance effort by concerned Americans against forces which seemingly challenged democracy and civil order. The League's pro-democracy, anti-Nazi campaigns and clandestine operations present one of the strongest narratives for how non-sectarian anti-Nazi activity was much stronger than previously theorized by other historians. The key failure in past literature, particularly those like Lookstein's which ignore the value of private investigations, is that they focused primarily on public boycotts and other programs and completely ignore or otherwise diminish the significance of clandestine resistance. One can plainly see the League's public boycott were almost carbon copies of other national boycott groups like Samuel Untermyer's Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League. They each engaged in similar operations with the same cause in mind: to defeat domestic fascism and boycott German Nazism in America. Where the League differs from these groups was in how they expanded upon their mission by adding a thirteen-year long program of clandestine vigilance and covert investigations. League records indicate that there were other groups like the League that ran clandestine anti-Nazi operations and that they were somehow in 160 contact with them, but neither these groups nor their secretive activities have been a part of the American anti-Nazi resistance narrative. To this date, no other literature covers any non-sectarian anti-Nazi resistance groups that operated like the League for Human Rights in Cleveland did, but their record hints that others most certainly did. This introduction of clandestine operations to the standing narrative would benefit historians in two key ways. First, a more open analysis of organizations that used clandestine investigations during the 1930s and 1940s recharacterizes the essence of anti-Nazi resistance during that period. Instead of being weak or ineffective, the suggestion that anti-Nazi groups operated with secret spy and intelligence networks bent on infiltrating and/or injuring domestic fascists paints a much more multifaceted picture of such organizations. Secondly, this addition to the grand narrative on American anti-Nazi resistance efforts would reveal a side of the story reserved only to a handful of individuals. While there is certainly a level of flair behind these stories, they also offer keen insights into resistance studies, the functions of fascist organizations, Nazi Germany's interest in and involvement with American fascist groups, and much more. In all, the League for Human Rights' story serves as the opening for a new chapter in how Americans challenged the Nazi menace in the United States and reopens an often overlooked angle into resistance studies. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Anonymous. Report of the League for Human Rights, 1933-1941. 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