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Trying to be even-handed about Roosevelt and Jews

For decades, it has been one of the most politically charged questions in U.S. history: What did Franklin D. Roosevelt do — or, more to the point, not do — in response to the Holocaust?

The issue has spawned a large literary response, with books often bearing polemical titles such as "The Abandonment of the Jews" or "Saving the Jews." But in a new volume from Harvard University Press, two historians aim to set the matter straight with what they call both a neutral assessment of Roosevelt’s broader record on Jewish issues and a corrective to the popular view of it, which they say has become overly scathing.

In "FDR and the Jews," Richard Breitman and Allan J. Lichtman, professors at American University, contend that Roosevelt hardly did everything he could. They maintain, however, that his overall record — several hundred thousand Jews saved, some of them thanks to little-known initiatives — exceeds that of any subsequent president in responding to genocide in the midst of fierce domestic political opposition.

"The consensus among the public is that Roosevelt really failed," Breitman said in a recent interview. "In fact, he had fairly limited options."

Such statements, backed up by footnotes to hundreds of primary documents (some cited here for the first time), are unlikely to satisfy Roosevelt’s fiercest critics. Even before the book’s March 19 release, the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, a research organization in Washington, has circulated a detailed rebuttal, as well as a rival book, "FDR and the Holocaust: A Breach of Faith," zeroing in on what it characterized as Roosevelt’s personal desire to limit Jewish immigration to the United States.

Some leading Holocaust historians welcome "FDR and the Jews," however, for remaining dispassionate in a debate too often marked by anger and accusation.

"Ad hominem attacks don’t help uncover the historical truth, and this book really avoids that," said Deborah Lipstadt, a professor at Emory University and a consultant on the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum’s permanent exhibition about the U.S. response to the Holocaust. "If people read it and don’t ascribe to the authors an agenda, it could be very important."

"FDR and the Jews" offers no dramatic revelations of the sort Breitman provided in 2009, when he and two other colleagues drew headlines with evidence, discovered in the papers of a former refugee commissioner for the League of Nations, that Roosevelt had personally pushed for a 1938 plan to relocate millions of threatened European Jews to sparsely populated areas of Latin America and Africa. But it does, the authors say, provide important new detail and context to that episode, as well as others that have long loomed large in the popular imagination.

They pointed in particular to the fate of the 937 German Jewish refugees on the ocean liner St. Louis, who were turned away from Cuba in May 1939 and sent back to other European countries, where 254 of them died after war broke out. The episode, made famous in the 1974 novel "Voyage of the Damned" and a subsequent film, has come to seem emblematic of U.S. callousness.

There is simply no evidence, Breitman and Lichtman say, to support accounts that the U.S. Coast Guard was ordered to prevent the refugees from coming ashore in Florida. What’s more, they were turned away from Cuba, the authors argue, as part of a backlash against a previous influx of some 5,000 refugees to that country, who might have been admitted under the terms of a previously unknown deal between Roosevelt and Cuban leader Fulgencio Batista, who got reduced tariffs for his nation’s sugar in return.

The book notes that the St. Louis affair unfolded against a backdrop of intense isolationist and anti-immigrant sentiment in the United States while Roosevelt was preparing to press Congress to allow the sale of weapons to nations victimized by German aggression.

"Imagine if Roosevelt had let in 937 passengers but had limited success easing the Neutrality Act," Lichtman said. "He would be far more negatively judged by history than he is now."

The authors offer a similar calculus for one of the most contentious issues they discuss: the Allied refusal to bomb Auschwitz. The idea that the Allies could and should have bombed the crematories or the rail lines leading to them came to wide public attention with a 1978 article in Commentary by David Wyman, who reprised it in a best-selling book "The Abandonment of the Jews," which became the basis for the 1994 PBS documentary "America and the Holocaust: Deceit and Indifference."

Many people, the authors say, believe that Roosevelt refused to bomb the camp (an option, historians note, that became feasible only in May 1944, after 90 percent of Jewish victims of the Holocaust were already dead). But the book contends that there is no evidence that any such proposal came to him, although a number of Jewish leaders did meet with lower-level officials to plead for bombing. And while the authors call the objections raised by those officials "specious," they maintain (echoing others) that bombing would not have significantly impeded the killing.

"You’ve got two symbols" — the St. Louis and the nonbombing of Auschwitz — "taken as the bookends of American indifference and worse," Breitman said, "but both symbols are off."

By contrast, the book points to the War Refugee Board, established by Roosevelt in 1944, which they say might have helped save about 200,000 Jews — a number that, if even 50 percent accurate, they write, "compares well" with the number that might have been saved by bombing Auschwitz.

Such claims are not convincing to Rafael Medoff, the founding director of the Wyman Institute, which is dedicated to furthering the research of Wyman, a former professor at University of Massachusetts Amherst who is not directly involved in its day-to-day activities. In "A Breach of Faith," Medoff argues that Jewish immigration levels in the 1930s were largely below established quotas because of Roosevelt’s animus, not as a result of anti-immigrant and anti-Semitic sentiment in Congress and the State Department.

Roosevelt’s vision for America was "based on the idea of having only a small number of Jews," Medoff said in an interview.

Breitman and Lichtman’s book, he added, is just an effort "to rescue Roosevelt’s image from the overwhelming evidence that he did not want to rescue the Jews."

Breitman and Lichtman scoffed at the charge, noting that their book was certainly not always flattering to Roosevelt. In it they depict him as missing many opportunities to aid Jews and generally refusing to speak specifically in public about Hitler’s Jewish victims, lest he be accused of fighting a "Jewish war."

"This is not an effort to write a pro-Roosevelt book," Breitman said. "It’s merely pro-Roosevelt in comparison to some things that are out there."

In the end, however, their verdict is favorable, crediting Roosevelt’s policies with helping to save hundreds of thousands of Jews, as well as preventing a German conquest of Egypt that would have doomed any future Jewish state.

"Without FDR’s policies and leadership," they write, "there may well have been no Jewish communities left in Palestine, no Jewish state, no Israel."

Lichtman pointed out that contemporary disagreements about Israel loom behind the Roosevelt debate today. Last year, the book notes, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel cited America’s refusal to bomb Auschwitz as providing potential justification for a pre-emptive strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Henry L. Feingold, the author of "The Politics of Rescue: The Roosevelt Administration and the Holocaust, 1938-1945," bemoaned the rise of "accusatory" history that elevates retrospective "what ifs" over historical context. Roosevelt, he said, had one overriding concern: to win the war.

"The survivors said, ‘You didn’t do enough to save us,’ and who could deny it?" Feingold said. "But do you write history as it should have been or as it was?"

© 2013 The New York Times Company

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