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New film spotlights US antisemitism which prevented rescue of Jews from Nazi
atrocities
By Isabel Vincent
Published Sep. 13, 2024, 11:08 a.m. ET
New
York filmmaker Hilan Warshaw had no intention of beginning his documentary on
Henry Morgenthau with darkness.
But after the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks in
Israel last year, he felt he needed to make a statement about antisemitism — the
same hate which dogged his subject, the former secretary of the Treasury during
the Second World War.
“Honorable Mr. Morgenthau,” which premieres at the Quad
Cinema Sept.13, plunges the viewer into several uncomfortable minutes of
darkness, punctuated by angry snippets of audio from protesters screaming
epithets like “Zionists need to die” — a refrain Warshaw heard often during
pro-Palestinian protests in New York City earlier this year.
“When I started
making this film, I was determined not to put anything modern-day into it,”
Warshaw said in an interview with The Post.
Morgenthau had a hard time
swaying Roosevelt to take action to save Jews before and during the Second World
War.
Bettmann Archive
“I wanted to tell the historical story as
immersively as possible, without making contemporary parallels. But after
October 7, I found the subject of my film facing me in the world we live in.”
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In his Upper
West Side neighborhood, posters of Israeli hostages, some of babies and
toddlers, were defaced with swastikas or torn down, he said.
“Anyone who’s
intellectually honest has to ask: What on earth is behind the ferocity of these
protests,” said Warshaw, an Emmy Award-winning writer and director whose
previous films include “Wagner’s Jews,” which chronicles the Jewish supporters
and fans of controversial German opera composer Richard Wagner.
“Antisemitism, the tradition of scapegoating and hating the Jewish people … has
been deep-seated in Western society and beyond for more than 2,000 years,”
Warshaw said. “And it hasn’t gone anywhere.”
Henry Morgenthau Jr., secretary
of the Treasury, at the microphone for CBS Radio in Washington, DC, in 1945.
CBS via Getty Images
Poster showing Henry Morgenthau in film "Honorable Mr.
Morgenthau."
“Honorable Mr. Morgenthau” examines the antisemitism of
high-ranking members of the US government that prevented the saving of Jewish
refugees.
Antisemitism pervaded the upper echelons of the wartime government
of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, where Morgenthau, a longtime friend of the
president’s, grew increasingly frustrated at his inability to save Europe’s Jews
from Nazi concentration camps.
The film begins with the heartbreaking letters
sent to Morgenthau from distant relatives in Germany, begging him to bring them
to America. Morgenthau’s father, a real estate developer and ambassador to the
Ottoman Empire during the First World War, was born in Germany, and immigrated
with his family to New York City in 1866.
He created a dynasty, and while
Morgenthau Sr. was well known as a leader of Reform Judaism in the city, the
second generation of the Morgenthau clan was hardly made up of practicing Jews.
If anything, they were fiercely American, a storied family of intellectuals and
public servants who liked to spend most of their time on a farm in upstate New
York near the Roosevelts’ country estate.
The Morgenthaus celebrated
Christmas every year at their Dutchess County retreat, and Morgenthau confessed
that he had never been to a Passover seder until after he left government employ
at the end of the Second World War.
Children behind barbed wire at Auschwitz
at the end of the Second World War in 1945.
Working with the World Jewish
Congress and other relief agencies, Henry Morgenthau set up the War Refugee
Board and was able to save 200,000 Jews from being shipped to Nazi death camps,
such as Auschwitz, from which these child prisoners were liberated in 1945.
Antisemitism and a fear of letting in too many refugees prevented federal
bureaucrats and policymakers from helping Jews in the Third Reich, who were
targeted by the Nazis.
Corbis via Getty Images
“Being Jewish was something
that was never discussed in front of children,” says his son Henry Morgenthau
III in the film. “It was kind of a birth defect.”
As a child, when Henry
Morgenthau III was asked by a little girl in Central Park what his religion was,
he asked his mother, who said that if anyone asked him again, he should just
reply that “you’re an American.”
Henry Morgenthau III, an author and
producer, died in 2018. His younger brother, Robert, was Manhattan’s longtime
district attorney, who died a year later. Their younger sister, Joan Morgenthau,
a doctor, died in 2012.
Henry Morgenthau, born in 1891, was the
quintessential American country gentleman and bureaucrat, who was fiercely loyal
to Roosevelt. He attended Phillips Exeter Academy and the Dwight School before
going on to study agriculture and architecture at Cornell University.
Emmy-winning filmmaker Hilan Warshaw said he decided to begin his film on Henry
Morgenthau in darkness to emphasize the resurgence of antisemitism after the
Oct. 7 attacks in Israel last year.
Courtesy of Hilan Warshaw
Although he
never earned an academic diploma, he helped Roosevelt design the New Deal, and
prepared the US economy for war as secretary of the Treasury, the
second-highest-ranking cabinet seat.
But when it came to rescuing Jews, his
efforts were stymied. Assistant Secretary of State Breckinridge Long, who
oversaw the agency’s Visa Division, prioritized US national security over
humanitarian aid, and was also a known antisemite.
A popular propaganda film,
“Confessions of a Nazi Spy,” fed into the wartime hysteria that helping refugees
would allow spies to penetrate the US.
“There were many obstacles to rescue,”
said Warshaw. “The State Department was filled with antisemites and popular
opinion was opposed to letting in refugees.
“The sad fact is that Roosevelt
didn’t take action to save more Jews because he didn’t believe in doing so. He
once boasted to Morgenthau that he was personally responsible for Harvard’s
instituting a quota on Jewish students.”
US Secretary of the Treasury Henry
Morgenthau with his assistant Henrietta Klotz, who was known as his “watchdog.”
She urged her boss to work to bring Jewish refugees to the US during the war.
Emaciated people in a concentration camp
Starved prisoners freed from a
concentration camp in Ebensee, Austria, on May 7, 1945.
In 1942, when secret
cables indicated the Nazis were killing more than 6,000 Jews a day in Poland,
Morgenthau began working with the World Jewish Congress and other relief groups
to help rescue Jews in Europe.
In 1944, he persuaded Roosevelt to create the
War Refugee Board, which sponsored Swedish businessman Raoul Wallenberg’s
mission to Hungary to help Jews leave the country. More than 200,000 Jews were
saved.
Despite his efforts, Morgenthau was treated with contempt by his
government colleagues, especially after Roosevelt’s death in April 1945.
Roosevelt’s successor, President Harry Truman, refused to send any of
Roosevelt’s advisers — a group that included Morgenthau and aides whom Truman
called “the Jew boys” — to the Potsdam Conference where the US, Great Britain
and the Soviet Union hammered out the future of Germany.
For his part,
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill referred to Morgenthau as “Shylock.”
Despite the opposition, Morgenthau pushed forward even after he left government.
He plunged into relief work for Jewish nonprofits with the help of his longtime
secretary, Henrietta Klotz, a Jew and one of the heroes of the film, who was
unrelenting in her mission to save refugees.
“When push came to shove, he was
confronted with horrible knowledge, not only about the Nazis but about his own
government,” said Warshaw of the subject of his film.
“Unlike virtually
anyone else in his circle, he defied the advice of his family, the orders of the
president, and … put everything on the line to fight for what was right.”
In
his later life, Morgenthau donated his energies to Jewish philanthropic efforts
and was a financial adviser to Israel. He died of heart failure in 1967.
“Honorable Mr. Morgenthau” premieres at Quad Cinema on September 13 and
continues through September 19. Filmmaker Hilan Warshaw will answer questions
after the screening on September 14 and 15.
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