MOSTLY RE-PUBLISHED MATTERS CONCERNING ISRAEL AND THE USA. EDITORIALS ARE OF OUR OWN MAKING.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
WHERE ARE AMERICA'S JEWS TODAY?
Outstanding piece of Jewish history and factually true. My father [now dead] grew up on the Lower East Side of Manhattan [Avenue B and 5th Street] with many tough Jews who were gangsters. Bugsy Siegal was very well known as one of those very tough Jews. May those Jews who supported the cause for both Jewish-Americans and Israel rest in peace. God bless them. They were true American and Jewish heroes. Fighting for freedom is American as apple pie. Rich
>
> There are few excuses for the behavior of Jewish
> gangsters in the 1920s and
> 1930s The best known Jewish gangsters - Meyer
> Lansky, Bugsy Siegel,
> LongyZwillman, Moe Dalitz - were involved in the
> numbers rackets, illegal
> drug dealing, prostitution, gambling and loan
> sharking. They were not nice
> men.
>
> During the rise of American Nazism in the 1930s
> and when Israel was being
> founded between 1945 and 1948, however, they
> proved staunch defenders of the
> Jewish people.
>
> The roots of Jewish gangsterism lay in the
> ethnic neighborhoods of the Lower
> East Side; Brownsville,// //Brooklyn//; Maxwell
> Street in Chicago; and Boyle
> Heights in Los Angeles. Like other newly arrived
> groups in American history,
> a few Jews who considered themselves blocked
> from respectable professions
> used crime as a means to "make good"
> economically. The market for vice
> flourished during Prohibition and Jews joined
> with others to exploit the
> artificial market created by the legal bans on
> alcohol, gambling, paid sex
> and narcotics.
>
> Few of these men were religiously observant.
> They rarely attended services,
> although they did support congregations
> financially. They did not keep
> kosher or send their children to day schools.
> However, at crucial moments
> they protected other Jews, in America and around
> the world.
>
> The 1930s were a period of rampant anti-Semitism
> in America, particularly in
> the Midwest. Father Charles Coughlin, the Radio
> Priest in Detroit,
> and William Pelley of Minneapolis, among others,
> openly called for Jews to
> be driven from positions of responsibility, if
> not from the country itself.
>
> Organized Brown Shirts in New York and Silver
> Shirts in Minneapolis outraged
> and terrorized American Jewry. While the older
> and more respectable Jewish
> organizations pondered a response that would not
> alienate non-Jewish
> supporters, others - including a few rabbis
> -asked the gangsters to break up
> American Nazi rallies.
>
> Historian Robert Rockaway writing in the journal
> of the American Jewish
> Historical Society, notes that German-American
> Bund rallies in the New York
> City area posed a dilemma for mainstream Jewish
> leaders. They wanted the
> rallies stopped, but had no legal grounds on
> which to do so. New York State
> Judge Nathan Perlman personally contacted Meyer
> Lansky to ask him to disrupt
> the Bund rallies, with the proviso that Lansky's
> henchmen stop short of
> killing any Bundists. Enthusiastic for the
> assignment, if disappointed by
> the restraints, Lansky accepted all of Perlman's
> terms except one: he would
> take no money for the work. Lansky later
> observed, "I was a Jew and felt
> for those Jews in Europe who were suffering.
> They were my brothers."
>
> For months, Lansky's workmen effectively broke
> up one Nazi rally after
> another. As Rockaway notes, "Nazi arms, legs and
> ribs were broken and skulls
> were cracked, but no one died."
>
> Lansky recalled breaking up a Brown Shirt rally
> in the Yorkville section of
> Manhattan: "The stage was decorated with a
> swastika and a picture of Hitler.
> The speakers started ranting. There were only
> fifteen of us, but we went
> into action. We threw some of them out the
> windows. . . . Most of the Nazis
> panicked and ran out. We chased them and beat
> them up... We wanted to show
> them that Jews would not always sit back and
> accept insults."
>
> In Minneapolis, William Dudley Pelley organized
> a Silver Shirt Legion to
> "rescue" America from an imaginary
> Jewish-Communist conspiracy. In Pelle's
> own words, just as "Mussolini and his Black
> Shirts saved Italy and as Hitler
> and his Brown Shirts saved Germany," he would
> save America from Jewish
> communists. Minneapolis gambling czar David
> Berman confronted Pelley's
> Silver Shirts on behalf of the Minneapolis
> Jewish community.
>
> Berman learned that Silver Shirts were mounting
> a rally at Lodge. When the
> Nazi leader called for all the "Jew bastards" in
> the city to be expelled, or
> worse, Berman and his associates burst in to the
> room and started cracking
> heads. After ten minutes, they had emptied the
> hall. His suit covered in
> blood, Berman took the microphone and announced,
> "This is a warning. Anybody
> who says anything against Jews gets the same
> treatment. Only next time it
> will be worse." After Berman broke up two more
> rallies, there were no more
> public Silver Shirt meetings in Minneapolis.
>
> Jewish gangsters also helped establish Israel
> after the war. One famous
> example is a meeting between Bugsy Siegel and
> Reuven Dafne, a Haganah
> emissary, in 1945. Dafne was seeking funds and
> guns to help liberate
> Palestine from British rule. A mutual friend
> arranged for the two men to
> meet.
>
> "You mean to tell me Jews are fighting?" Siegel
> asked "You mean fighting as
> in killing?" Dafne answered in the affirmative.
>
> Siegel replied, "I'm with you."
>
> For weeks, Dafne received suitcases filled with
> $5 and $10 bills -- $50,000
> in all -- from Siegel.
>
> No one should paint gangsters as heroes. They
> committed acts of great evil.
> But historian Rockaway has presented a textured
> version of Jewish gangster
> history in a book ironically titled, "But They
> Were Good to their Mothers."
>
> Some have observed that, despite their
> disreputable behavior, they could be
> good to their people, too. A little interesting
> Jewish history.
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