Jewish Involvement in Shaping American Immigration Policy, 1881-1965:
A Historical Review
Kevin MacDonald
Department of Psychology
California State University-Long Beach
Long Beach, CA 90840-0901
Population and Environment, ABSTRACT
This paper discusses Jewish involvement in shaping United States
immigration policy. In addition to a periodic interest in fostering
the immigration of co-religionists as a result of anti-Semitic movements,
Jews have an interest in opposing the establishment of ethnically and
culturally homogeneous societies in which they reside as minorities.
Jews have been at the forefront in supporting movements aimed at altering
the ethnic status quo in the United States in favor of immigration of
non-European peoples. These activities have involved leadership in Congress,
organizing and funding anti-restrictionist groups composed of Jews and
gentiles, and originating intellectual movements opposed to evolutionary
and biological perspectives in the social sciences.
INTRODUCTION
Ethnic conflict is of obvious importance for understanding critical
aspects of American history, and not only for understanding Black/White
ethnic conflict or the fate of Native Americans. Immigration policy
is a paradigmatic example of conflict of interest between ethnic groups
because immigration policy influences the future demographic composition
of the nation. Ethnic groups unable to influence immigration policy
in their own interests will eventually be displaced or reduced in relative
numbers by groups able to accomplish this goal. This paper discusses
ethnic conflict between Jews and gentiles in the area of immigration
policy.
Immigration policy is, however, only one aspect of conflicts of interest
between Jews and gentiles in America. The skirmishes between Jews and
the gentile power structure beginning in the late nineteenth century
always had strong overtones of anti-Semitism. These battles involved
issues of Jewish upward mobility, quotas on Jewish representation in
elite schools beginning in the nineteenth century and peaking in the
1920s and 1930s, the antiCommunist crusades in the post-World War II
era, as well as the very powerful concern with the cultural influences
of the major media extending from Henry Ford's writings in the 1920s
to the Hollywood inquisitions of the McCarthy era and into the contemporary
era.
That anti-Semitism was involved in these issues can be seen from
the fact that historians of Judaism (e.g., Sachar 1992, p. 620ff) feel
compelled to include accounts of these events as important to the history
of Jews in America, by the anti-Semitic pronouncements of many of the
gentile participants, and by the self-conscious understanding of Jewish
participants and observers.
The Jewish involvement in influencing immigration policy in the United
States is especially noteworthy as an aspect of ethnic conflict. Jewish
involvement has had certain unique qualities that have distinguished
Jewish interests from the interests of other groups favoring liberal
immigration policies.
Throughout much of this period, one Jewish interest in liberal immigration
policies stemmed from a desire to provide a sanctuary for Jews fleeing
from anti-Semitic persecutions in Europe and elsewhere.
Anti-Semitic persecutions have been a recurrent phenomenon in the
modern world beginning with the Czarist persecutions in 1881, and continuing
into the post-World War II era in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
As a result, liberal immigration has been a Jewish interest because
"survival often dictated that Jews seek refuge in other lands" (Cohen
1972, p. 341). For a similar reason, Jews have consistently advocated
an internationalist foreign policy for the United States because "an
internationally-minded America was likely to be more sensitive to the
problems of foreign Jewries" (Cohen 1972, p. 342).
However, in addition to a persistent concern that America be a safe
haven for Jews fleeing outbreaks of anti-Semitism in foreign countries,
there is evidence that Jews, much more than any other European-derived
ethnic group in America, have viewed liberal immigration policies as
a mechanism of ensuring that America would be a pluralistic rather than
a unitary, homogeneous society (e.g., Cohen 1972). Pluralism serves
both internal (within-group) and external (between-group) Jewish interests.
Pluralism serves internal Jewish interests because it legitimates
the internal Jewish interest in rationalizing and openly advocating
an interest in Jewish group commitment and non-assimilation, what Howard
Sachar (1992, p. 427) terms its function in "legitimizing the preservation
of a minority culture in the midst of a majority's host society." The
development of an ethnic, political, or religious monoculture implies
that Judaism can survive only by engaging in a sort of semi-crypsis.
As Irving Louis Horowitz (1993, 86) notes regarding the long-term consequences
of Jewish life under Communism, "Jews suffer, their numbers decline,
and emigration becomes a survival solution when the state demands integration
into a national mainstream, a religious universal defined by a state
religion or a near-state religion." Both Neusner (1987) and Ellman (1987)
suggest that the increased sense of ethnic consciousness seen in Jewish
circles recently has been influenced by this general movement within
American society toward the legitimization of minority group ethnocentrism.
More importantly, ethnic and religious pluralism serves external
Jewish interests because Jews become just one of many ethnic groups.
This results in the diffusion of political and cultural influence among
the various ethnic and religious groups, and it becomes difficult or
impossible to develop unified, cohesive groups of gentiles united in
their opposition to Judaism. Historically, major anti-Semitic movements
have tended to erupt in societies that have been, apart from the Jews,
religiously and/or ethnically homogeneous (MacDonald, 1994; 1998). Conversely,
one reason for the relative lack of anti-Semitism in America compared
to Europe was that "Jews did not stand out as a solitary group of [religious]
non-conformists (Higham 1984, p. 156). It follows also that ethnically
and religiously pluralistic societies are more likely to satisfy Jewish
interests than are societies characterized by ethnic and religious homogeneity
among gentiles.
Beginning with Horace Kallen, Jewish intellectuals have been at the
forefront in developing models of the United States as a culturally
and ethnically pluralistic society. Reflecting the utility of cultural
pluralism in serving internal Jewish group interests in maintaining
cultural separatism, Kallen personally combined his ideology of cultural
pluralism with a deep immersion in Jewish history and literature, a
commitment to Zionism, and political activity on behalf of Jews in Eastern
Europe (Sachar 1992, p. 425ff; Frommer 1978).
Kallen (1915; 1924) developed a "polycentric" ideal for American
ethnic relationships. Kallen defined ethnicity as deriving from one's
biological endowment, implying that Jews should be able to remain a
genetically and culturally cohesive group while nevertheless participating
in American democratic institutions. This conception that the United
States should be organized as a set of separate ethnic/cultural groups
was accompanied by an ideology that relationships between groups would
be cooperative and benign: "Kallen lifted his eyes above the strife
that swirled around him to an ideal realm where diversity and harmony
coexist" (Higham 1984, p. 209). Similarly in Germany, the Jewish leader
Moritz Lazarus argued in opposition to the views of the German intellectual
Heinrich Treitschke that the continued separateness of diverse ethnic
groups contributed to the richness of German culture (Schorsch 1972,
p. 63). Lazarus also developed the doctrine of dual loyalty which became
a cornerstone of the Zionist movement.
Kallen wrote his 1915 essay partly in reaction to the ideas of Edward
A. Ross (1914). Ross was a Darwinian sociologist who believed that the
existence of clearly demarcated groups would tend to result in between-group
competition for resources. Higham's comment is interesting because it
shows that Kallen's romantic views of group co-existence were contradicted
by the reality of between-group competition in his own day. Indeed,
it is noteworthy that Kallen was a prominent leader of the American
Jewish Congress (AJ Congress). During the 1920s and 1930s the AJ Congress
championed group economic and political rights for Jews in Eastern Europe
at a time when there was widespread ethnic tensions and persecution
of Jews, and despite the fears of many that such rights would merely
exacerbate current tensions. The AJ Congress demanded that Jews be allowed
proportional political representation as well as the ability to organize
their own communities and preserve an autonomous Jewish national culture.
The treaties with Eastern European countries and Turkey included provisions
that the state provide instruction in minority languages and that Jews
have the right to refuse to attend courts or other public functions
on the Sabbath (Frommer 1978, p. 162). Kallen's idea of cultural pluralism
as a model for America was popularized among gentile intellectuals by
John Dewey (Higham 1984, p. 209), who in turn was promoted by Jewish
intellectuals: "If lapsed Congregationalists like Dewey did not need
immigrants to inspire them to press against the boundaries of even the
most liberal of Protestant sensibilities, Dewey's kind were resoundingly
encouraged in that direction by the Jewish intellectuals they encountered
in urban academic and literary communities" (Hollinger, 1996, p. 24).
Kallen's ideas have been very influential in producing Jewish selfconceptualizations
of their status in America. This influence was apparent as early as
1915 among American Zionists, such as Louis D. Brandeis. Brandeis viewed
America as composed of different nationalities whose free development
would "spiritually enrich the United States and would make it a democracy
par excellence" (Gal 1989, p. 70). These views became "a hallmark of
mainstream American Zionism, secular and religious alike"(Gal 1989,
p. 70). But Kallen's influence extended really to all educated Jews:
Legitimizing the preservation of a minority culture in the midst of
a majority's host society, pluralism functioned as intellectual anchorage
for an educated Jewish second generation, sustained its cohesiveness
and its most tenacious communal endeavors through the rigors of the
Depression and revived anti-semitism, through the shock of Nazism and
the Holocaust, until the emergence of Zionism in the post-World War
II years swept through American Jewry with a climactic redemptionist
fervor of its own. (Sachar 1992, p. 427). Explicit statements linking
immigration policy to a Jewish interest in cultural pluralism can be
found among prominent Jewish social scientists and political activists.
In his review of Kallen's (1956)Cultural Pluralism and the American
Idea appearing in Congress Weekly (published by the AJ Congress), Joseph
L. Blau (1958, p. 15) noted that "Kallen's view is needed to serve the
cause of minority groups and minority cultures in this nation without
a permanent majority" - the implication being that Kallen's ideology
of multi-culturalism opposes the interests of any ethnic group in dominating
America. The well-known author and prominent Zionist Maurice Samuel
(1924, p. 215), writing partly as a negative reaction to the immigration
law of 1924, wrote that "If, then, the struggle between us [i.e., Jews
and gentiles] is ever to be lifted beyond the physical, your democracies
will have to alter their demands for racial, spiritual and cultural
homogeneity with the State. But it would be foolish to regard this as
a possibility, for the tendency of this civilization is in the opposite
direction. There is a steady approach toward the identification of government
with race, instead of with the political State." Samuel deplored the
1924 legislation and in the following quote he develops the view that
the American state as having no ethnic implications:
"We have just witnessed, in America, the repetition, in the peculiar
form adapted to this country, of the evil farce to which the experience
of many centuries has not yet accustomed us. If America had any meaning
at all, it lay in the peculiar attempt to rise above the trend of our
present civilization- the identification of race with State. . . . America
was therefore the New World in this vital respect- that the State was
purely an ideal, and nationality was identical." {6}
[It is unclear whether the following sentence fragment is part of the
quote or not. Apparently a one or two page sequence was scanned twice
here.]
[There is a?] tendency for Jews to be persecuted by a culturally
and/or ethnically homogeneous majority that come to view Jews as a negatively
evaluated outgroup
Similarly, in listing the positive benefits of immigration, Diana
Aviv, director of the Washington Action Office of the Council of Jewish
Federations states that immigration "is about diversity, cultural enrichment
and economic opportunity for the immigrants" (quoted in Forward, March
8, 1996, p. 5). And in summarizing Jewish involvement in the 1996 legislative
battles a newspaper account stated that"Jewish groups failed to kill
a number of provisions that reflect the kind of political expediency
that they regard as a direct attack on American pluralism" (Detroit
Jewish News; May 10, 1996).
It is noteworthy also that there has been a conflict between predominantly
Jewish neo-Conservatives and predominantly gentile paleo-conservatives
over the issue of Third World immigration into the United States. Many
of these neo-conservative intellectuals had previously been radical
leftists, {4} and the split between the neo-conservatives and their
previous allies resulted in an intense internecine feud (Gottfried 1993;
Rothman & Lichter 1982, p. 105). Neo-conservatives Norman Podhoretz
and Richard John Neuhaus reacted very negatively to an article by a
paleo-conservative concerned that such immigration would eventually
lead to the United States being dominated by such immigrants (see Judis
1990, p. 33). Other examples are neo-Conservatives Julian Simon (1990)
and Ben Wattenberg (1991), both of whom advocate very high levels of
immigration from all parts of the world, so that the United States will
become what Wattenberg describes as the world's first "Universal Nation."
Based on recent data, Fetzer (1996) reports that Jews remain far more
favorable to immigration to the United States than any other ethnic
group or religion.
It should be noted as a general point that the effectiveness of Jewish
organizations in influencing American immigration policy has been facilitated
by certain characteristics of American Jewry. As Neuringer (1971, p.
87) notes, Jewish influence on immigration policy was facilitated by
Jewish wealth, education, and social status. Reflecting its general
disproportionate representation in markers of economic success and political
influence, Jewish organizations have been able to have a vastly disproportionate
effect on United States immigration policy because Jews as a group are
highly organized, highly intelligent, and politically astute, and they
were able to command a high level of financial, political, and intellectual
resources in pursuing their political aims. Similarly, Hollinger (1996,
p. 19) notes that Jews were more influential in the decline of a homogeneous
Protestant Christian culture in the United States than Catholics because
of their greater wealth, social standing, and technical skill in the
intellectual arena. In the area of immigration policy, the main Jewish
activist organization influencing immigration policy, the American Jewish
Committee (AJ Committee), was characterized by 7 "strong leadership
[particularly Louis Marshall], internal cohesion, well-funded programs,
sophisticated lobbying techniques, well-chosen non-Jewish allies, and
good timing" (Goldstein 1990, p. 333).
In this regard, the Jewish success in influencing immigration policy
is entirely analogous to their success in influencing the secularization
of American culture. As in the case of immigration policy, the secularization
of American culture is a Jewish interest because Jews have a perceived
interest that America not be a homogeneous Christian culture. "Jewish
civil rights organizations have had an historic role in the postwar
development of American church-state law and policy" (Ivers 1995, p.
2). Unlike the effort to influence immigration, the opposition to a
homogeneous Christian culture was mainly carried out in the courts.
The Jewish effort in this case was well funded and was the focus of
well-organized, highly dedicated Jewish civil service organizations,
including the AJ Committee, the AJ Congress, and the Anti-Defamation
League (ADL). It involved keen legal expertise both in the actual litigation
but also in influencing legal opinion via articles in law journals and
other forums of intellectual debate, including the popular media. It
also involved a highly charismatic and effective leadership, particularly
Leo Pfeffer of the AJ Congress: No other lawyer exercised such complete
intellectual dominance over a chosen area of law for so extensive a
period {5} as an author, scholar, public citizen, and above all, legal
advocate who harnessed his multiple and formidable talents into a single
force capable of satisfying all that an institution needs for a successful
constitutional reform movement. . . . That Pfeffer, through an enviable
combination of skill, determination, and persistence, was able in such
a short period of time to make church-state reform the foremost cause
with which rival organizations associated the AJ Congress illustrates
well the impact that individual lawyers endowed with exceptional skills
can have on the character and life of the organizations for which they
work. . . . As if to confirm the extent to which Pfeffer is associated
with post-Everson [i.e., post-1946] constitutional development, even
the major critics of the Court's church-state jurisprudence during this
period and the modern doctrine of separationism rarely fail to make
reference to Pfeffer as the central force responsible for what they
lament as the lost meaning of the establishment clause. (Ivers 1995,
pp. 222-224). Similarly, Hollinger (1996, p. 4) notes "the transformation
of the ethnoreligious demography of American academic life by Jews"
in the period from the 1930s to the 1960s, as well as the Jewish influence
on trends toward the secularization of American society and in advancing
an ideal of cosmopolitanism (p. 11). The pace of this influence was
very likely influenced by immigration battles of the 1920s. Hollinger
notes that the "old Protestant establishment's influence persisted until
the 1960s 8 in large measure because of the Immigration Act of 1924:
had the massive immigration of Catholics and Jews continued at pre-1924
levels, the course of American history would have been different in
many ways, including, one may reasonably speculate, a more rapid diminution
of Protestant cultural hegemony. Immigration restriction gave that hegemony
a new lease of life" (p. 22). It is reasonable to suppose, therefore,
that the immigration battles from 1881 to 1965 have been of momentous
historical importance in shaping the contours of American culture in
the late twentieth century.
The ultimate success of Jewish attitudes on immigration was also
influenced by intellectual movements that collectively resulted in a
decline of evolutionary and biological thinking in the academic world.
Although playing virtually no role in the restrictionist position in
the Congressional debates on the immigration (which focused mainly on
the fairness of maintaining the ethnic status quo; see below), a component
of the intellectual zeitgeist of the 1920s was the prevalence of evolutionary
theories of race and ethnicity (Singerman 1986), particularly the theories
of Madison Grant. In The Passing of the Great Race, Grant (1921) argued
that the American colonial stock was derived from superior Nordic racial
elements and that immigration of other races would lower the competence
level of the society as a whole as well as threaten democratic and republican
institutions. Grant's ideas were popularized in the media at the time
of the immigration debates (see Divine 1957, pp. 12ff) and often provoked
negative comments in Jewish publications such as The American Hebrew
(e.g., March 21, 1924, pp. 554, 625). 5 The debate over group differences
in IQ was also tied to the immigration issue. C. C. Brigham's study
of intelligence among United States army personnel concluded that Nordics
were superior to Alpine and Mediterranean Europeans, and Brigham (1923,
p. 210) concluded that "(i)mmigration should not only be restrictive
but highly selective." In the Foreword to Brigham's book, Harvard psychologist
Robert M. Yerkes stated that "The author presents not theories but facts.
It behooves us to consider their reliability and meaning, for no one
of us as a citizen can afford to ignore the menace of race deterioration
or the evident relation of immigration to national progress and welfare"
(in Brigham 1923, pp. Vii-viii).
Nevertheless, as Samelson (1975) points out, the drive to restrict
immigration originated long before IQ testing came into existence and
restriction was favored by a variety of groups, including organized
labor, for reasons other than those related to race and IQ, including
especially the fairness of maintaining the ethnic status quo in the
United States. Moreover, although Brigham's IQ testing results did indeed
appear in the statement submitted by the Allied Patriotic Societies
to the House hearings, {6} the role of IQ testing in the immigration
debates has been greatly exaggerated (Snyderman & Herrnstein, 1983).
Indeed, IQ testing was never even mentioned in either the House Majority
Report or the Minority {9} Report, and "there is no mention of intelligence
testing in the Act; test results on immigrants appear only briefly in
the committee hearings and are then largely ignored or criticized, and
they are brought up only once in over 600 pages of congressional floor
debate, where they are subjected to further criticism without rejoinder.
None of the major contemporary figures in testing . . . were called
to testify, nor were their writings inserted into the legislative record"
(Snyderman & Herrnstein 1983, 994).
It is also very easy to over-emphasize the importance of theories
of Nordic superiority as an ingredient of popular and Congressional
restrictionist sentiment. As Singerman (1986, 118-119) points out, "racial
anti-Semitism" was employed by only "a handful of writers;" and "the
Jewish 'problem' . . . was a minor preoccupation even among such widely-published
authors as Madison Grant or T. Lothrop Stoddard and none of the individuals
examined [in Singerman's review] could be regarded as professional Jew-baiters
or fulltime propagandists against Jews, domestic or foreign." As indicated
below, arguments related to Nordic superiority, including supposed Nordic
intellectual superiority, played remarkably little role in Congressional
debates over immigration in the 1920s, the common argument of the restrictionists
being that immigration policy should reflect equally the interests of
all ethnic groups currently in the country.
Nevertheless, it is probable that the decline in evolutionary/biological
theories of race and ethnicity facilitated the sea change in immigration
policy brought about by the 1965 law. As Higham (1984) notes, by the
time of the final victory in 1965 which removed national origins and
racial ancestry from immigration policy and opened up immigration to
all human groups, the Boasian perspective of cultural determinism and
anti-biologism had become standard academic wisdom. The result was that
"it became intellectually fashionable to discount the very existence
of persistent ethnic differences. The whole reaction deprived popular
race feelings of a powerful ideological weapon" (Higham 1984, pp. 58-59).
Jewish intellectuals were prominently involved in the movement to
eradicate the racialist ideas of Grant and others (Degler 1991, p. 200).
Indeed, even during the earlier debates leading up to the immigration
bills of 1921 and 1924, restrictionists perceived themselves to be under
attack from Jewish intellectuals. In 1918, Prescott F. Hall, secretary
of the Immigration Restriction League, wrote to Grant that "What I wanted
. . . was the names of a few anthropologists of note who have declared
in favor of the inequality of the races. . . . I am up against the Jews
all the time in the equality argument and thought perhaps you might
be able offhand to name a few (besides Osborn) whom I could quote in
support" (in Samelson 1975, p. 467)
{10} Grant also believed that Jews were engaged in a campaign to
discredit racial research. In the Introduction to the 1921 edition of
Passing of the Great Race, Grant complained that "(I)t is well-nigh
impossible to publish in the American newspapers any reflection upon
certain religions or races which are hysterically sensitive even when
not mentioned by name. The underlying idea seems to be that if publication
can be suppressed the facts themselves will ultimately disappear. Abroad,
conditions are fully as bad, and we have the authority of one of the
most eminent anthropologists in France that the collection of anthropological
measurements and data among French recruits at the outbreak of the Great
War was prevented by Jewish influence, which aimed to suppress any suggestion
of racial differentiation in France." Particularly important was the
work of Columbia University anthropologist Franz Boas and his followers.
"Boas' influence upon American social scientists in matters of race
can hardly be exaggerated" (Degler 1991, p. 61). He engaged in a "life-long
assault on the idea that race was a primary source of the differences
to be found in the mental or social capabilities of human groups. He
accomplished his mission largely through his ceaseless, almost relentless
articulation of the concept of culture" (p. 61). "Boas, almost single-handedly,
developed in America the concept of culture, which, like a powerful
solvent, would in time expunge race from the literature of social science"
(p. 71).
Throughout this explication of Boas's conception of culture and his
opposition to a racial interpretation of human behavior, the central
point has been that Boas did not arrive at the position from a disinterested,
scientific inquiry into a vexed if controversial question. Instead,
his idea derived from an ideological commitment that began in his early
life and academic experiences in Europe and continued in America to
shape his professional outlook. . . . there is no doubt that he had
a deep interest in collecting evidence and designing arguments that
would rebut or refute an ideological outlook - racism - which he considered
restrictive upon individuals and undesirable for society. . . . there
is a persistent interest in pressing his social values upon the profession
and the public. (Degler 1991, pp. 82-83) There is evidence that Boas
strongly identified as a Jew and viewed his research as having important
implications in the political arena and particularly in the area of
immigration policy. Boas was born in Prussia to a "Jewish-liberal" family
in which the revolutionary ideals of 1848 remained influential (Stocking
1968, p. 149). Boas developed a "left-liberal posture which . . . is
at once scientific and political" (Stocking 1968, p. 149) and was intensely
concerned with antiSemitism from an early period in his life (White
1966, p. 16). Moreover, Boas was deeply alienated from and hostile toward
gentile culture, particularly the cultural ideal of the Prussian aristocracy
(Degler 1991, p. 200; Stocking 111968, p. 150). For example, when Margaret
Mead was looking for a way to persuade Boas to let her pursue her research
in the South Sea islands, "she hit upon a sure way of getting him to
change his mind: 'I knew there was one thing that mattered more to Boas
than the direction taken by anthropological research. This was that
he should behave like a liberal, democratic, modern man, not like a
Prussian autocrat.' The ploy worked because she had indeed uncovered
the heart of his personal values" (Degler 1991, p. 73).
Boas was greatly motivated by the immigration issue as it occurred
early in the century. Carl Degler (1991, p. 74) notes that Boas' professional
correspondence "reveals that an important motive behind his famous headmeasuring
project in 1910 was his strong personal interest in keeping America
diverse in population." The study, whose conclusions were placed into
the Congressional Record by Representative Emanuel Celler during the
debate on immigration restriction (Cong. Rec., April 8, 1924, pp. 59155916),
concluded that the environmental differences consequent to immigration
caused differences in head shape. (At the time, head shape as determined
by the "cephalic index" was the main measurement used by scientists
involved in racial differences research.) Boas argued that his research
showed that all foreign groups living in favorable social circumstances
had become assimilated to America in the sense that their physical measurements
converged on the American type. Although he was considerably more circumspect
regarding his conclusions in the body of his report (see also Stocking
1968, p. 178), Boas (1911, p. 5) stated in his Introduction that "all
fear of an unfavorable influence of South European immigration upon
the body of our people should be dismissed." As a further indication
of Boas' ideological commitment to the immigration issue, Degler makes
the following comment regarding one of Boas' environmentalist explanations
for mental differences between immigrant and native children: "Why Boas
chose to advance such an ad hoc interpretation is hard to understand
until one recognizes his desire to explain in a favorable way the apparent
mental backwardness of the immigrant children" (p. 75)
Boas and his students were intensely concerned with pushing an ideological
agenda within the american anthropological profession (Degler 1991;
Freeman 1991; Torrey 1992). In this regard it is interesting that Boas
and his associates had a much more highly developed sense of group identity,
a commitment to a common viewpoint, and an agenda to dominate the institutional
structure of anthropology than did their opponents (Stocking 1968, pp.
279-280). The defeat of the Darwinians "had not happened without considerable
exhortation of 'every mother's son' standing for the 'Right.' Nor had
it been accomplished without some rather strong pressure applied both
to staunch friends and to the 'weaker brethren' - often by the sheer
force of Boas' personality" (Stocking 1968, 286). By 1915 the 12 Boasians
controlled the American Anthropological Association and held a two-thirds
majority on the Executive Board (Stocking 1968, 285). By 1926 every
major department of anthropology in the United States was headed by
a student of Boas, the majority of whom were Jewish. According to White
(1966, p. 26), Boas' most influential students were Ruth Benedict, Alexander
Goldenweiser, Melville Herskovits, Alfred Kroeber, Robert Lowie, Margaret
Mead, Paul Radin, Edward Sapir, and Leslie Spier
All of this "small, compact group of scholars . . . gathered about
their leader" (White 1966, p. 26) were Jews with the exception of Kroeber,
Benedict and Mead. Indeed, Herskovits (1953, p. 91), whose hagiography
of Boas qualifies as one of the most worshipful in intellectual history,
noted that "(T)he four decades of the tenure of [Boas'] professorship
at Columbia gave a continuity to his teaching that permitted him to
develop students who eventually made up the greater part of the significant
professional core of American anthropologists, and who came to man and
direct most of the major departments of anthropology in the United States.
In their turn, they trained the students who . . . have continued the
tradition in which their teachers were trained." By the mid-1930s the
Boasian view of the cultural determination of human behavior had a strong
influence on social scientists generally (Stocking 1968, p. 300).
The ideology of racial equality was an important weapon on behalf
of opening immigration up to all human groups. For example, in a 1951
statement to Congress, the AJ Congress stated that "The findings of
science must force even the most prejudiced among us to accept, as unqualifiedly
as we do the law of gravity, that intelligence, morality and character,
bear no relationship whatever to geography or place of birth." {7} The
statement went on to cite some of Boas' popular writings on the subject
as well as the writings of Boas' protege Ashley Montagu, perhaps the
most visible opponent of the concept of race during this period. Montagu,
whose original name was Israel Ehrenberg, theorized that humans are
innately cooperative (but not innately aggressive) and there is a universal
brotherhood among humans (see Shipman 1994, p. 159ff). And in 1952 another
Boas' protege, Margaret Mead, testified before the President's Commission
on Immigration and Naturalization (PCIN) (1953, p. 92) that "all human
beings from all groups of people have the same potentialities. . . .
Our best anthropological evidence today suggests that the people of
every group have about the same distribution of potentialities." Another
witness stated that the executive board of the American Anthropological
Association had unanimously endorsed the proposition that "(A)ll scientific
evidence indicates that all peoples are inherently capable of acquiring
or adapting to our civilization" (PCIN 1953, p. 93). By 1965 Senator
Jacob Javits (Cong. Rec., 111, 1965, p. 24469) confidently announced
to the Senate during the debate on the immigration bill that "(B)oth
the dictates of our consciences as well as the precepts of sociologists
tell us that immigration, as {13} it exists in the national origins
quota system, is wrong, and without any basis in reason or fact for
we know better than to say that one man is better than another because
of the color of his skin." The intellectual revolution and its translation
into public policy had been completed.
JEWISH ANTI-RESTRICTIONIST POLITICAL ACTIVITY
Jewish Anti-Restrictionist Activity up to 1924
While Jewish involvement in altering the intellectual discussion
of race and ethnicity appears to have had long term repercussions on
United States immigration policy, Jewish political involvement was ultimately
of much greater significance. Jewish opinion is not monolithic. Nevertheless,
although there have been dissenters, Jews have been "the single most
persistent pressure group favoring a liberal immigration policy" in
the United States in the entire immigration debate beginning in 1881
(Neuringer 1971, p. Ii). In undertaking to sway immigration policy in
a liberal direction, Jewish spokesmen and organizations demonstrated
a degree of energy unsurpassed by any other interested pressure group.
Immigration had constituted a prime object of concern for practically
every major Jewish defense and community relations organization. Over
the years, their spokesmen had assiduously attended congressional hearings,
and the Jewish effort was of the utmost importance in establishing and
financing such non-sectarian groups as the National Liberal immigration
League and the Citizens Committee for Displaced Persons
As recounted by Nathan C. Belth (1979, p. 173) in his history of
the AntiDefamation League of B'nai B'rith (ADL), "In Congress, through
all the years when the immigration battles were being fought, the names
of Jewish legislators were in the forefront of the liberal forces: from
Adolph Sabath to Samuel Dickstein and Emanuel Celler in the House and
from Herbert H. Lehman to Jacob Javits in the Senate. Each in his time
was a leader of the Anti-Defamation League and of major organizations
concerned with democratic development." The Jewish congressmen who are
most closely identified with anti-restrictionist efforts in Congress
have therefore also been leaders of the group most closely identified
with Jewish ethnic political activism and self-defense.
Throughout the entire period of almost 100 years prior to achieving
success with the immigration law of 1965, Jewish groups opportunistically
made alliances with other groups whose interests temporarily converged
with Jewish interests (e.g., a constantly changing set of ethnic groups,
religious groups, pro-Communists, anti-Communists, the foreign policy
interests of various presidents, the political need for president's
to curry favor with groups influential in populous states in order to
win 14 national elections, etc.). Particularly noteworthy was the support
of a liberal immigration policy from industrial interests wanting cheap
labor, at least in the period prior to the 1924 temporary triumph of
restrictionism. Within this constantly shifting set of alliances, Jewish
organizations persistently pursued their goals of maximizing the number
of Jewish immigrants and opening up the United States to immigration
from all of the peoples of the world. As indicated in the following,
the historical record supports the proposition that making the United
States into a multicultural society has been a major goal of organized
Jewry beginning in the nineteenth century.
The ultimate Jewish victory on immigration is remarkable because
it was waged in different arenas against a potentially very powerful
set of opponents. Beginning in the late nineteenth century, leadership
of the restrictionists was provided by Eastern patricians such as Senator
Henry Cabot Lodge. However, the main political basis of restrictionism
from 1910 to 1952 (in addition to the relatively ineffectual labor union
interests) derived from "the common people of the South and West" (Higham
1984, p. 49) and their representatives in Congress. Fundamentally, the
clashes between Jews and gentiles in the period between 1900 and 1965
were a conflict between Jews and this geographically centered group.
"Jews, as a result of their intellectual energy and economic resources,
constituted an advance guard of the new peoples who had no feeling for
the traditions of rural America." (Higham 1984, pp. 168-169)
Although often concerned that Jewish immigration would fan the flames
of anti-Semitism in america, Jewish leaders fought a long and largely
successful delaying action against restrictions on immigration during
the period from 1891-1924, particularly as they affected the ability
of Jews to immigrate. These efforts continued despite the fact that
by 1905, there was "a polarity between Jewish and general American opinion
on immigration" (Neuringer 1971, p. 83). In particular, while other
religious groups such as Catholics and ethnic groups such as the Irish
remained divided and ambivalent on their attitudes toward immigration
and were poorly organized and ineffective in influencing immigration
policy, and while labor unions opposed immigration in their attempt
to diminish the supply of cheap labor, Jewish groups engaged in an intensive
and sustained effort against attempts to restrict immigration.
As recounted by Cohen (1972, p. 40ff), the AJ Committee's efforts
in opposition to immigration restriction in the early twentieth century
constitute a remarkable example of the ability of Jewish organizations
to influence public policy. Of all the groups affected by the immigration
legislation of 1907, Jews had the least to gain in terms of numbers
of possible immigrants, but they played by far the largest role in shaping
the legislation (Cohen 1972, p. 41). In the subsequent period leading
up to the 15 relatively ineffective restrictionist legislation of 1917,
when restrictionists again mounted an effort in congress, "only the
Jewish segment was aroused" (Cohen 1972, p. 49).
Nevertheless, because of the fear of anti-Semitism, efforts were
made to prevent the perception of Jewish involvement in anti-restrictionist
campaigns. In 1906, Jewish anti-restrictionist political operatives
were instructed to lobby Congress without mentioning their affiliation
with the AJ Committee because of "the danger that the Jews may be accused
of being organized for a political purpose" (comments of Herbert Friedenwald,
AJ Committee secretary; in Goldstein 1990, p. 125). Beginning in the
late nineteenth century, anti-restrictionist arguments developed by
Jews were typically couched in terms of universalist humanitarian ideals,
and as part of this universalizing effort, gentiles from old line Protestant
families were recruited to act as window dressing for their efforts
and Jewish groups such as the AJ Committee funded pro-immigration groups
composed of non-Jews (Neuringer 1971, p. 92)
As was the case in later pro-immigration efforts, much of the activity
was behind-the-scenes personal interventions with politicians in order
to minimize public perception of the Jewish role and provoke activities
of the opposition. Opposing politicians, such as Henry Cabot Lodge,
and organizations like the Immigration Restriction League were kept
under close scrutiny and pressured by lobbyists. Lobbyists in Washington
also kept a daily scorecard of voting tendencies as immigration bills
wended their way through Congress and engaged in intense and successful
efforts to convince Presidents Taft and Wilson to veto restrictive immigration
legislation. Catholic prelates were recruited to protest the effects
of restrictionist legislation on immigration from Italy and Hungary.
When restrictionist arguments appeared in the media, the AJ Committee
made sophisticated replies, based on scholarly data and typically couched
in universalist terms as benefiting the whole society (e.g., Neuringer
1971, p. 44).
Articles favorable to immigration were published in national magazines
and letters to the editor were published in newspapers. And efforts
were made to minimize the negative perceptions of immigration by attempting
to distribute Jewish immigrants around the country and by getting Jewish
aliens off public support. Legal proceedings were filed to prevent the
deportation of Jewish aliens. And eventually the Committee organized
mass protest meetings.
Indeed, writing in 1914, the sociologist Edward A. Ross had a clear
sense that liberal immigration policy was exclusively a Jewish issue.
Ross provides the following quote from prominent author and Zionist
pioneer Israel Zangwill as clearly articulating the idea that America
is an ideal place to achieve Jewish interests:
"America has ample room for all the six millions of the Pale [i.e.,
the Pale of Settlement, home to most of Russia's Jews]; any one of her
fifty states could absorb them. And next to being in a {16} country
of their own, there could be no better fate for them than to be together
in a land of civil and religious liberty, of whose Constitution Christianity
forms no part and where their collective votes would practically guarantee
them against future persecution." (Israel Zangwill, in Ross 1914, p.
144)
"Jews therefore have a powerful interest in immigration policy: Hence
the endeavor of the Jews to control the immigration policy of the United
States.
Although theirs is but a seventh of our net immigration, they led the
fight on the Immigration Commission's bill. The power of the million
Jews in the Metropolis lined up the Congressional delegation from New
York in solid opposition to the literacy test. The systematic campaign
in newspapers and magazines to break down all arguments for restriction
and to calm nativist fears is waged by and for one race. Hebrew money
is behind the National Liberal Immigration League and its numerous publications.
From the paper before the commercial body or the scientific association
to the heavy treatise produced with the aid of the Baron de Hirsch Fund,
the literature that proves the blessings of immigration to all classes
in America emanates from subtle Hebrew brains." (Ross 1914, pp. 144-145)
Ross (1914, p. 150) also reported that immigration officials had
"become very sore over the incessant fire of false accusations to which
they are subjected by the Jewish press and societies. United states
senators complain that during the close of the struggle over the immigration
bill they were overwhelmed with a torrent of crooked statistics and
misrepresentations of Hebrews fighting the literacy test." It is also
noteworthy that Zangwill's views on immigration were highly salient
to restrictionists in the debates over the 1924 immigration law (see
below). In an address reprinted in The American Hebrew (Oct. 19, 1923,
p. 582), Zangwill noted that "There is only one way to World Peace,
and that is the absolute abolition of passports, visas, frontiers, custom
houses, and all other devices that make of the population of our planet
not a co-operating civilization but a mutual irritation society." It
is noteworthy that, despite elaborate and deceptive attempts to present
the pro-immigration movement as broad-based, Jewish activists were well
aware of the lack of enthusiasm of other groups.
During the fight over restrictionist legislation at the end of the
Taft administration, Herbert Friedenwald, AJ Committee secretary, wrote
that it was "very difficult to get any people except the Jews stirred
up in this fight" (in Goldstein 1990, p. 203). The AJ Committee also
contributed heavily to staging anti-restrictionist rallies in major
American cities, but allowed other ethnic groups to take credit for
the events, and it organized groups of nonJews from the West to influence
President Taft to veto restrictionist legislation (Goldstein 1990, pp.
216, 227). Later, during the Wilson Administration, Louis {17} Marshall
stated that "We are practically the only ones who are fighting [the
literacy test] while a "great proportion" [of the people] is "indifferent
to what is done" (in Goldstein 1990, p. 249).
The forces of immigration restriction were temporarily successful
with the immigration laws of 1921 and 1924 which passed despite the
intense opposition of Jewish groups. Divine (1957, p. 8) notes that
"Arrayed against [the restrictionist forces] in 1921 were only the spokesmen
for the southeastern European immigrants, mainly Jewish leaders, whose
protests were drowned out by the general cry for restriction." Similarly
during the 1924 congressional hearings on immigration, "the most prominent
group of witnesses against the bill were representatives of southeastern
European immigrants, particularly Jewish leaders" (Divine 1957, 16).
Neuringer (1971, p. 164) notes that Jewish opposition to the 1921
and 1924 legislation was motivated less by a desire for higher levels
of Jewish immigration than by opposition to the implicit theory that
America should be dominated by individuals with northern and western
European ancestry.
The Jewish interest was thus to oppose the ethnic interests of the
peoples of northwestern Europe in maintaining an ethnic status quo or
increasing their percentage of the population. However, even prior to
this period Jewish organizations were adamantly opposed to any restrictions
on immigration based on race or ethnicity, indicating that they had
a very different view of the ideal racial/ethnic composition of the
United States than did the nonJewish European-derived peoples.
Thus in 1882 the Jewish press was unanimous in its condemnation of
the Chinese Exclusion Act (Neuringer 1971, p. 23) even though this act
had no direct bearing on Jewish immigration. In the early twentieth
century the AJ Committee at times actively fought against any bill that
restricted immigration to white persons or non-Asians, and only refrained
from active opposition if it judged that AJ Committee support would
threaten the immigration of Jews (Cohen 1972, p. 47; Goldstein 1990,
p. 250). In 1920 the Central Conference of American Rabbis passed a
resolution urging that "the Nation . . . keep the gates of our beloved
Republic open . . . to the oppressed and distressed of all mankind in
conformity with its historic role as a haven of refuge for all men and
women who pledge allegiance to its laws" (in the American Hebrew, Oct.
1, 1920, p. 594). The American Hebrew (Feb. 17, 1922; p. 373), a publication
founded in 1867, that represented the German-Jewish establishment of
the period, reiterated its long-standing policy that it "has always
stood for the admission of worthy immigrants of all classes, irrespective
of nationality." And in his testimony in the 1924 hearings before the
House Committee on immigration and Naturalization, the AJ Committee's
Louis Marshall stated that the bill echoed the sentiments of the Ku
Klux Klan and characterized it as being inspired by the racialist theories
of Houston Stewart Chamberlain. At a time when the population of the
United States was over {18} 100, 000, 000, Marshall stated that "we
have room in this country for ten times the population we have" (p.
309), and advocated admission of all of the peoples of the world without
quota limit, excluding only those who "were mentally, morally and physically
unfit, who are enemies of organized government, and who are apt to become
public charges;" {8} similarly Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, representing the
AJ Congress and a variety of other Jewish organizations, asserted "the
right of every man outside of America to be considered fairly and equitably
and without discrimination." {9} By prescribing that immigration be
restricted to 3% of the foreign born as of the 1890 census, the 1924
law prescribed an ethnic status quo approximating the 1920 census. The
House Majority Report emphasized the idea that prior to the legislation,
immigration was highly biased in favor of Eastern and Southern Europeans
and that this imbalance had been continued by the 1921 legislation in
which quotas were based on the numbers of foreign born as of the 1910
census. The expressed intention was that the interests of other groups
to pursue their ethnic interests by expanding their percentage of the
population should be balanced against the ethnic interests of the majority
in retaining their ethnic representation in the population.
The 1921 law gave 46% of quota immigration to Southern and Eastern
Europe even though these areas constituted only 11.7% of the United
States population as of the 1920 census. The 1924 law prescribed that
these areas would get 15.3% of the quota slots - a figure that was actually
higher than their present representation in the population. "The use
of the 1890 census is not discriminatory. It is used in an effort to
preserve as nearly as possible, the racial status quo of the United
States. It is hoped to guarantee as best we can at this late date, racial
homogeneity in the United States. The use of a later census would discriminate
against those who founded the Nation and perpetuated its institutions."
(House Rep. 350, 1924, p. 16). After 3 years, quotas were derived from
a national origins formula based on 1920 census data for the entire
population, not only the foreign born. While there is no doubt that
this legislation represented a victory for the northwestern European
peoples of the United States, there was no attempt to reverse the trends
in the ethnic composition of the country but rather to preserve the
ethnic status quo.
While motivated by a desire to preserve an ethnic status quo, these
laws may also have been motivated partly by anti-Semitism, since during
this period opposition to immigration was perceived as mainly a Jewish
issue (see above). This certainly appears to have been the perception
of Jewish observers: for example, prominent Jewish writer Maurice Samuel
(1924), writing in the immediate aftermath of the 1924 legislation,
wrote that "it is chiefly against the Jew that anti-immigration laws
are passed here in America as in England and Germany (p. 217), " and
such perceptions continue among 19 historians of the period (e.g., Hertzberg
1989, 239). This perception was not restricted to Jews. In remarks before
the Senate, the anti-restrictionist Senator Reed of Missouri noted that
"Attacks have likewise been made upon the Jewish people who have crowded
to our shores. The spirit of intolerance has been especially active
as to them" (Cong. Rec. Feb. 19, 1921; p. 3463), and during World War
II Secretary of War Robert Stimson stated that it was opposition to
unrestricted immigration of Jews that resulted in the restrictive legislation
of 1924 (Breitman & Kraut, 1987, p. 87). Moreover, the House Immigration
Committee Majority Report (House Report #109, Dec. 6, 1920) stated that
"by far the largest percentage of immigrants (are) peoples of Jewish
extraction, " (p. 4), and it implied that the majority of the expected
new immigrants would be Polish Jews. The report "confirmed the published
statement of a commissioner of the Hebrew Sheltering and Aid Society
of America made after his personal investigation in Poland, to the effect
that 'If there were in existence a ship that could hold 3,000,000 human
beings, the 3,000,000 Jews of Poland would board it to escape to America'"
(p. 6)
The Majority Report also included a report by Wilbur S. Carr, head
of the United States Consular Service, that stated that the Polish Jews
were "abnormally twisted because of (a) reaction from war strain; (b)
the shock of revolutionary disorders; (c) the dullness and stultification
resulting from past years of oppression and abuse. . . ; Eighty-five
to ninety percent lack any conception of patriotic or national spirit.
And the majority of this percentage are unable to acquire it" (p. 9;
see also Breitman and Kraut [1987, 12] for a discussion of Carr's anti-Semitism).
Consular reports warned that "many Bolshevik sympathizers are in Poland"
(p. 11). Similarly in the Senate, Senator McKellar cited the report
that if there were a ship large enough, 3,000,000 Poles would immigrate.
He also stated that "the Joint Distribution Committee, an American committee
doing relief work among the Hebrews in Poland, distributes more than
$1,000,000 per month of American money in that country alone. It is
also shown that $100,000,000 a year is a conservative estimate of money
sent to Poland from America through the mails, through the banks, and
through the relief societies. This golden stream pouring into Poland
from America makes practically every Pole wildly desirous of going to
the country from which such marvelous wealth comes." (Cong. Rec., Feb.
19, 1921, p. 3456)
As a further indication of the salience of Polish-Jewish immigration
issues, the letter on alien visas submitted by the State Department
in 1921 to Albert Johnson, Chairman of the Committee on Migration and
Naturalization, devoted over four times as much space to the situation
in Poland as it did to any other country. The report emphasized the
activities of the Polish-Jewish newspaper Der Emigrant in promoting
emigration to the United States of Polish Jews, the activities of the
Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Society and wealthy private citizens
from the United States in facilitating immigration by {20} providing
money and performing the paperwork. (There was indeed a large network
of agents in Eastern Europe who, in violation of United States law,
"did their best to drum up business by enticing as many emigrants as
possible" [Nadell 1984, 56].) The report also noted the poor condition
of the prospective immigrants: "At the present time it is only too obvious
that they must be subnormal, and their normal state is of very low standard.
Six years of war and confusion and famine and pestilence have racked
their bodies and twisted their mentality. The elders have deteriorated
to a marked degree. Minors have grown into adult years with the entire
period lost in their rightful development and too frequently with the
acquisition of perverted ideas which have flooded Europe since 1914
[presumably a reference to radical political ideas that were common
in this group; see below]" (Cong. Rec., April 20, 1921, p. 498).
The report also stated that articles in the Warsaw press had reported
that "propaganda favoring unrestricted immigration" is being planned,
including celebrations in New York aimed at showing the contributions
of immigrants to the development of the United States. The reports for
Belgium (who see migrants originated in Poland and Czechoslovakia) and
Romania also highlighted the importance of Jews as prospective immigrants.
In response, Representative Isaac Siegel stated that the report was"edited
and doctored by certain officials" and commented that the report did
not mention countries with larger numbers of immigrants than Poland.
(For example, there was no mention of Italy in the report.) Without
explicitly saying so ("I leave it to every man in the House to make
his own deductions and his own inferences therefrom" (Cong. Rec., April
20, 1921, p. 504)), the implication was that the focus on Poland was
prompted by anti-Semitism.
The House Majority report (signed by 15 of its 17 members with only
Reps. Dickstein and Sabath not signing) also emphasized the Jewish role
in defining the intellectual battle in terms of Nordic superiority and
"American ideals" rather than in the terms of an ethnic status quo actually
favored by the committee: The cry of discrimination is, the committee
believes, manufactured and built up by special representatives of racial
groups, aided by aliens actually living abroad. Members of the committee
have taken notice of a report in the Jewish Tribune (New York) February
8, 1924, of a farewell dinner to Mr. Israel Zangwill which says: Mr.
Zangwill spoke chiefly on the immigration question, declaring that if
Jews persisted in a strenuous opposition to the restricted immigration
there would be no restriction. "If you create enough fuss against this
Nordic nonsense, " he said, "you will defeat this legislation. You must
make a fight against this bill; tell them they are {21} destroying American
ideals. Most fortifications are of cardboard, and if you press against
them, they give way." The Committee does not feel that the restriction
aimed to be accomplished in this bill is directed at the Jews, for they
can come within the quotas from any country in which they were born.
The Committee has not dwelt on the desirability of a "Nordic" or any
other particular type of immigrant, but has held steadfastly to the
purpose of securing a heavy restriction, with the quota so divided that
the countries from which the most came in the two decades ahead of the
World War might be slowed down in order that the United States might
restore its population balance. The continued charge that the Committee
has built up a "Nordic" race and devoted its hearing to that end is
part of a deliberately manufactured assault for as a matter of fact
the committee has done nothing of the kind (House Rep. 350, 1924, p.
16)
Indeed, one is struck in reading the 1924 Congressional debate by
the rarity with which the issue of Nordic racial superiority is raised
by those in favor of the legislation, while virtually all of the anti-restrictionists
raised this issue. {10} After a particularly colorful comment in opposition
to the theory of Nordic racial superiority, restrictionist leader Albert
Johnson remarked that "I would like very much to say on behalf of the
committee that through the strenuous times of the hearings this committee
undertook not to discuss the Nordic proposition or racial matters" (Cong.
Rec., April 8, 1924; p. 5911).
Earlier, during the hearings on the bill, Johnson remarked in response
to the comments of Rabbi Stephen S. Wise representing the AJ Congress
that "I dislike to be placed continually in the attitude of assuming
that there is a race prejudice, when the one thing I have tried to do
for 11 years is to free myself from race prejudice, if I had it at all."
{11} Several restrictionists explicitly denounced the theory of Nordic
superiority, including Senators Bruce (p. 5955) and Jones (p. 6614)
and Representatives Bacon (p5902), Byrnes (p. 5653), Johnson (p. 5648),
McLoed (p. 5675-6), McReynolds (p. 5855), Michener (p5909), Miller (p.
5883), Newton (p. 6240); Rosenbloom (p. 5851), Vaile (p. 5922), Vincent
(p. 6266), White, (p. 5898), and Wilson (p. 5671; all references to
Cong. Rec., April 1924).
Indeed, it is noteworthy that there are indications in the Congressional
debate that representatives from the far West were concerned about the
competence and competitive threat presented by Japanese immigrants,
and their rhetoric suggested they viewed the Japanese as racially equal
or superior, not inferior. For example, Senator Jones stated that "we
admit that [the Japanese] are as able as we are, that they are as progressive
as we are, that they are as honest as we are, that they are as brainy
as we are, and that they are equal in all that goes to make a great
people and nation" (Cong. Rec., April 18, 1924, p6614); Representative
MacLafferty emphasized Japanese domination of certain agricultural markets
22(Cong. Rec. April 5, 1924, p. 5681), and Representative Lea noted
their ability to supplant "their American competitor" (Cong. Rec. April
5, 1924, p. 5697). Representative Miller described the Japanese as "a
relentless and unconquerable competitor of our people wherever he places
himself" (Cong. Rec. April 8, 1924, p. 5884); See also comments of Representatives
Gilbert (Cong. Rec. April 12, 1924, p6261) Raker (Cong. Rec. April 8,
1924, p. 5892} and Free (Cong. Rec. April 8, 1924, p. 5924Ff).
Moreover, while the issue of Jewish/gentile resource competition
was not raised during the Congressional debates, quotas on Jewish admissions
to Ivy League universities were a highly salient issue among Jews during
this period. The quota issue was highly publicized in the Jewish media
and the focus of activities of Jewish self-defense organizations such
as the ADL (see, e.g., the ADL statement published in The American Hebrew,
Sept. 29, 1922, p. 536). Jewish/gentile resource competition may therefore
have been on the minds of some legislators. Indeed, President A. Lawrence
Lowell of Harvard was the national vice-president of the Immigration
Restriction League as well as a proponent of quotas on Jewish admission
to Harvard (Symott 1986, 238), suggesting that resource competition
with an intellectually superior Jewish group was an issue for at least
some prominent restrictionists.
It is probable that anti-Jewish animosity related to resource competition
issues were widespread.
Higham (1984, 141) writes of "the urgent pressure which the Jews,
as an exceptionally ambitious immigrant people, put upon some of the
more crowded rungs of the social ladder" (Higham 1984, 141).
Beginning in the nineteenth century there were fairly high levels
of covert and overt anti-Semitism in patrician circles resulting from
the very rapid upward mobility of Jews and their competitive drive.
In the period prior to World War I, the reaction of the gentile power
structure was to construct social registers and emphasize genealogy
as mechanisms of exclusion- "criteria that could not be met my money
alone" (Higham 1984, 104ff, 127). During this period Edward A. Ross
(1914, 164) described gentile resentment for "being obliged to engage
in a humiliating and undignified scramble in order to keep his trade
or his clients against the Jewish invader" - suggesting a rather broad-based
concern with Jewish economic competition. Attempts at exclusion in a
wide range of areas were increased in the 1920s and reached their peak
during the difficult economic situation of the Great Depression (Higham
1984, 131ff).
However, in the 1924 debates the only Congressional comments suggesting
a concern with Jewish/gentile resource competition (as well as a concern
that the interests of Jewish intellectuals are not the same as their
gentile counterparts) that I have been able to find are the following
from Representative Wefald: {23} "I for one am not afraid of the radical
ideas that some might bring with them. Ideas you cannot keep out anyway,
but the leadership of our intellectual life in many of its phases has
come into the hands of these clever newcomers who have no sympathy with
our old-time American ideals nor with those of northern Europe, who
detect our weaknesses and pander to them and get wealthy through the
disservices they render us. Our whole system of amusements has been
taken over by men who came here on the crest of the south and east European
immigration. They produce our horrible film stories, they compose and
dish out to us our jazz music, they write many of the books we read,
and edit our magazines and newspapers." (Cong. Rec., April 12, 1924,
p. 6272)
The immigration debate also occurred amid discussion in the Jewish
media of Thorsten Veblen's famous essay "The Intellectual Pre-eminence
of Jews in Modern Europe" (serialized in The American Hebrew beginning
September 10, 1920). In an editorial of July 13, 1923 (p. 177), The
American Hebrew noted that Jews were disproportionately represented
among the gifted in Louis Terman's study of gifted children and commented
that "this fact must give rise to bitter, though futile, reflection
among the so-called Nordics." The editorial also noted that Jews were
over represented among scholarship winners in competitions sponsored
by the state of New York. The editorial pointedly noted that "perhaps
the Nordics are too proud to try for these honors. In any event the
list of names just announced by the State Department of Education at
Albany as winners of these coveted scholarships is not in the least
Nordic; it reads like a confirmation roster at a Temple." There is indeed
evidence that Jews, like East Asians, have higher IQ's than Caucasians
(Lynn, 1987; MacDonald, 1994; Rushton, 1995).
The most common argument made by those favoring the legislation,
and the one reflected in the majority report, is the argument that in
the interests of fairness to all ethnic groups, the quotas should reflect
the relative ethnic composition of the entire country. Restrictionists
noted that the census of 1890 was chosen because the percentages of
the foreign born of different ethnic groups in that year approximated
the general ethnic composition of the entire country in 1920. Senator
Reed of Pennsylvania and Representative Rogers of Massachusetts proposed
to achieve the same result by directly basing the quotas on the national
origins of all people in the country as of the 1920 census, and this
was eventually incorporated into the law. Representative Rogers argued
that "Gentlemen, you cannot dissent from this principle because it is
fair. It does not discriminate for anybody and it does not discriminate
against anybody" (Cong. Rec. April 8, 1924; p. 5847). Senator Reed noted,
"The purpose, I think, of most of us in changing the quota basis is
to cease from discriminating against the native born here and against
the group of our citizens who come from northern and western Europe.
I think the 24 present system discriminates in favor of southeastern
Europe (Cong. Rec., April. 16, 1924; p. 6457) (i.e., because 46% of
the quotas under the 1921 went to Eastern and Southern Europe when they
constituted less than 12% of the population).
As an example illustrating the fundamental argument asserting a legitimate
ethnic interest in maintaining an ethnic status quo without claiming
racial superiority, consider the following statement from Representative
William N. Vaile of Colorado, one of the most prominent restrictionists:
Let me emphasize here that the restrictionists of Congress do not
claim that the "Nordic" race, or even the Anglo-Saxon race, is the best
race in the world. Let us concede, in all fairness that the Czech is
a more sturdy laborer, with a very low percentage of crime and insanity,
that the Jew is the best businessman in the world, and that the Italian
has a spiritual grasp and an artistic sense which have greatly enriched
the world and which have, indeed, enriched us, a spiritual exaltation
and an artistic creative sense which the Nordic rarely attains. Nordics
need not be vain about their own qualifications. It well behooves them
to be humble. What we do claim is that the northern European, and particularly
Anglo-Saxons made this country. Oh, yes; the others helped. But that
is the full statement of the case. They came to this country because
it was already made as an Anglo-Saxon commonwealth. They added to it,
they often enriched, but they did not make it, and they have not yet
greatly changed it. We are determined that they shall not. It is a good
country. It suits us. And what we assert is that we are not going to
surrender it to somebody else or allow other people, no matter what
their merits, to make it something different. If there is any changing
to be done, we will do it ourselves (Cong. Rec. April 8, 1924; p. 5922)
The debate in the House also illustrated the highly salient role
of Jewish legislators in combating restrictionism. Representative Robison
singled out Representative Sabath as the leader of anti-restrictionist
efforts, and, without mentioning any other opponent of restriction,
he also focused on Reps. Jacobstein, Celler, and Perlman as being opposed
to any restrictions on immigration (Cong. Rec. April 5, 1924, p. 5666).
Representative Blanton, complaining of the difficulty of getting restrictionist
legislation through Congress, noted "When at least 65 per cent of the
sentiment of this House, in my judgment, is in favor of the exclusion
of all foreigners for five years, why do we not put that into law? Has
Brother Sabath such a tremendous influence over us that he holds us
down on this proposition?" (Cong. Rec. April 5, 1924, p. 5685). Representative
Sabath responded that "There may be something to that." In addition,
the following comments of Representative Leavitt clearly indicate the
salience of Jewish congressmen to their opponents during the debate:
{25} The instinct for national and race preservation is not one to be
condemned, as has been intimated here. No one should be better able
to understand the desire of Americans to keep America American than
the gentleman from Illinois [Mr. Sabath], who is leading the attack
on this measure, or the gentlemen from New York, Mr. Dickstein, Mr.
Jacobstein, Mr. Celler, and Mr. Perlman. They are of the one great historic
people who have maintained the identity of their race throughout the
centuries because they believe sincerely that they are a chosen people,
with certain ideals to maintain, and knowing that the loss of racial
identity means a change of ideals. That fact should make it easy for
them and the majority of the most active opponents of this measure in
the spoken debate to recognize and sympathize with our viewpoint, which
is not so extreme as that of their own race, but only demands that the
admixture of other peoples shall be only of such kind and proportions
and in such quantities as will not alter racial characteristics more
rapidly than there can be assimilation as to ideas of government as
well as of blood. (Cong. Rec., April 12, 1924; pp. 6265-6266) The view
that Jews had a strong tendency to oppose genetic assimilation with
surrounding groups occurred among other observers as well and was a
component of contemporary anti-Semitism(see Singerman 1986, pp. 110-111).
Jewish avoidance of exogamy certainly had a basis in reality (MacDonald
1994, Ch. 2-4). Indeed, it is noteworthy that there was powerful opposition
to intermarriage even among the more liberal segments of early twentieth-century
American Judaism and certainly among the less liberal segments represented
by the great majority of Orthodox immigrants from Eastern Europe who
had come to constitute the great majority of American Jewry. For example,
the prominent nineteenth-century Reform leader David Einhorn was a lifelong
opponent of mixed marriages and refused to officiate at such ceremonies,
even when pressed to do so (Meyer 1988, 247). Einhorn was also a staunch
opponent of conversion of gentiles to Judaism because of the effects
on the "racial purity" of Judaism (Levenson 1989, 331). Similarly, the
influential Reform intellectual Kaufman Kohler was also an ardent opponent
of mixed marriage. In a view that is highly compatible with Horace Kallen's
multi-culturalism, Kohler concluded that Israel must remain separate
and avoid intermarriage until it leads mankind to an era of universal
peace and brotherhood among the races (Kohler 1918, 445-446).
The negative attitude toward intermarriage was confirmed by survey
results. A 1912 survey indicated that only seven of 100 Reform rabbis
had officiated at a mixed marriage, and a 1909 resolution of the Central
Council of American Rabbis declared that "mixed marriages are contrary
to the tradition of the Jewish religion and should be discouraged by
the American Rabbinate" (Meyer 1988, 290). Gentile perceptions of Jewish
attitudes on intermarriage therefore had a strong basis in reality.
{26}
The Involvement of Jewish Immigrants in Radical Politics
The Congressional debates of 1924 reflected a highly charged context
in which Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe were widely perceived
to not only avoid intermarriage but also to retain a separatist culture
and to be disproportionately involved in radical political movements.
The perception of radicalism among Jewish immigrants was common in Jewish
as well as gentile publications. The American Hebrew editorialized that
"we must not forget the immigrants from Russia and Austria will be coming
from countries infested with Bolshevism, and it will require more than
a superficial effort to make good citizens out of them" (in Neuringer
1971, p. 165). The fact that Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe were
viewed as "infected with Bolshevism . . . unpatriotic, alien, unassimilable"
resulted in a wave of anti-Semitism in the 1920s and contributed to
the restrictive immigration legislation of the period (Neuringer 1971,
p. 165). In Sorin's (1985, 46) study of immigrant Jewish radical activists,
over half had been involved in radical politics in Europe before emigrating,
and for those immigrating after 1900, the percentage rose to 69%. Jewish
publications warned of the possibilities of anti-Semitism resulting
from the leftism of Jewish immigrants, and the official Jewish community
engaged in "a near-desperation . . . effort to portray the Jew as one
hundred per cent American" by, e.g., organizing patriotic pageants on
national holidays and by attempting to get the immigrants to learn English
(Neuringer, 1971, p. 167).
Similarly, in England, the immigration of Eastern European Jews into
England after 1880 had a transformative effect on the political attitudes
of British Jewry in the direction of socialism, trade-unionism, and
Zionism, often combined with religious orthodoxy and devotion to a highly
separatist traditional lifestyle (Alderman, 1983; p. 47ff). The more
established Jewish organizations fought hard to combat the well-founded
image of Jewish immigrants as Zionist, religiously orthodox political
radicals who refused to be conscripted into the armed forces during
World War I in order to fight the enemies of the officially anti-Semitic
Czarist government (Alderman, 1992, p. 237Ff).
The Jewish Old Left, including the unions, the leftist press, and
the leftist fraternal orders (which were often associated with a synagogue),
was a part of the wider Jewish community, and Jewish members typically
retained a strong Jewish ethnic identity (Howe 1976; Liebman 1979; Buhle
1980). This phenomenon occurred within the entire spectrum of leftist
organizations, including organizations such as the Communist Party and
the Socialist Party whose membership also included gentiles(Liebman,
1979, p. 267ff; Buhle 1980).
Werner Cohn (1958, p. 621) describes the general milieu of the immigrant
Jewish community in the period from 1886-1920 as "one big radical debating
society": 27 By 1886 the Jewish community in New York had become conspicuous
for its support of the third-party (United Labor) candidacy of Henry
George, the theoretician of the Single Tax.
From then Jewish districts in New York and elsewhere were famous
for their radical voting habits. The Lower East Side repeatedly picked
as its congressman Meyer London, the only New York Socialist ever to
be elected to Congress. And many Socialists went to the State Assembly
in Albany from Jewish districts. In the 1917 mayoralty campaign in New
York City, the Socialist and anti-war candidacy of Morris Hillquit was
supported by the most authoritative voices of the Jewish Lower East
Side: The United Hebrew Trades, the International Ladies' Garment Workers'
Union, and most importantly, the very popular Yiddish Daily Forward.
This was the period in which extreme radicals - like Alexander Berkman
and Emma Goldman - were giants in the Jewish community, and when almost
all the Jewish giants - among them Abraham Cahan, Morris Hillquit, and
the young Morris R. Cohen - were radicals. Even Samuel Gompers, when
speaking before Jewish audiences, felt it necessary to use radical phrases.
In addition, The Freiheit, which was an unofficial organ of the Communist
Party from the 1920s to the 1950s "stood at the center of Yiddish proletarian
institutions and subculture . . . [which offered] identity, meaning,
friendship, and understanding" (Liebman, 1979, pp. 349-350). The newspaper
lost considerable support in the Jewish community in 1929 when it took
the Communist party position in opposition to Zionism, and by the 1950s
it essentially had to choose between satisfying its Jewish soul or its
status as a Communist organ. It chose the former, and by the late 1960s
it was justifying not returning the Israeli occupied territories in
opposition to the line of the American Communist Party.
The relationship of Jews and the American Communist Party (CPUSA)
is particularly interesting because a concern with Communist subversion
under the direction of the Soviet Union was a feature of the immigration
debates of the 1920s and because a substantial proportion of the CPUSA
were foreign born. {12} Beginning in the 1920s Jews whose backgrounds
derived from Eastern Europe played a very prominent and disproportionate
role in the CPUSA (Klehr, 1978, p. 37ff). Merely citing percentages
of Jewish leaders probably does not adequately indicate the extent of
Jewish influence in the CPUSA, since active efforts were made to recruit
gentiles as a sort of "window dressing" to conceal the extent of Jewish
influence in the movement (Klehr, 1978, p. 40; Rothman & Lichter, 1982,
p. 99).
Klehr (1978, p. 40) estimates that from 1921 to 1961, Jews constituted
33.5% of the Central Committee members and the representation of Jews
was often above 40% (Klehr, 1978, p. 46). In the 1920s a majority of
the members of the Socialist Party were immigrants and that an "overwhelming"
(Glazer 1961, 38, 40) percentage of the CPUSA consisted of recent immigrants,
a substantial percentage {28} of whom were Jews. In Philadelphia in
the 1930's, fully 72.2% of the CP members were the children of Jewish
immigrants who came to the United States in the late nineteenth and
early twentieth century (Lyons 1982, 71). As late as 1929, 90% of the
members of the Communist Party in Philadelphia were foreign born and
in June of 1933 the national organization of the CPUSA was still 70%
foreign born (Lyons 1982, 72-73). Jews were the only native-born ethnic
group from which the party was able to recruit. Glazer (1969; p. 129)
states that at least half of the CPUSA membership of around 50,000 were
jews into the 1950s and that there was a very high rate of turnover,
so that perhaps 10 times that number of individuals were involved in
the Party and there were "an equal or larger number who were Socialists
of one kind or another." Writing of the 1920's, Buhle (1980, p. 89)
notes that "most of those favorable to the party and the Freiheit simply
did not join - no more than a few thousand out of a following of a hundred
times that large." There was also great concern within the Jewish community
that the over representation of Jews within the CPUSA would lead to
anti-Semitism from the 1920s through the Cold War period: "The fight
against the stereotype of Communist-Jew became a virtual obsession with
Jewish leaders and opinion makers throughout America" (Liebman 1979,
p. 515), and indeed, the association of Jews with the CPUSA was a focus
of anti-Semitic literature (e.g., Henry Ford's [1920] International
Jew; John Beaty's [1951] The Iron Curtain Over America). As a result,
the AJ Committee engaged in intensive efforts to change opinion within
the Jewish community by showing that Jewish interests were more compatible
with advocating American democracy than Soviet Communism (e.g., emphasizing
Soviet anti-Semitism and Soviet support of nations opposed to Israel
in the period after World War II) (Cohen, 1972, p. 347Ff).
Jewish Anti-Restrictionist Activity, 1924-1945
The saliency of Jewish involvement in United States immigration policy
continued after the 1924 legislation. Particularly objectionable to
Jewish groups was the national origins quota system. For example, a
writer for the Jewish Tribune stated in 1927, "we . . . regard all measures
for regulating immigration according to nationality as illogical, unjust,
and un-American" (in Neuringer, 1971, p. 205).
During the 1930s the most outspoken critic of further restrictions
on immigration (motivated now mainly by the Great Depression) was Representative
Samuel Dickstein, and Dickstein's assumption of the chairmanship of
the House Immigration Committee in 1931 marked the end of the ability
of restrictionists to enact further reductions in quotas (Divine, 1957,
pp. 79-88). Jewish groups were the primary opponents of restriction
and the primary supporters of liberalized regulations during the 1930s
{29} while their opponents emphasized the economic consequences of immigration
during a period of high unemployment (Divine, 1957, pp. 85-88). Between
1933 and 1938, Representative Dickstein introduced a number of bills
aimed at increasing the number of refugees from Nazi Germany and supported
mainly by Jewish organizations, but the restrictionists prevailed (Divine,
1957, p. 93).
During the 1930s, concerns about the radicalism and unassimilability
of Jewish immigrants as well as the possibility of Nazi subversion were
the main factors influencing the opposition to changing the immigration
laws (Breitman & Kraut, 1987). Moreover, "(c)harges that the Jews in
America were more loyal to their tribe than to their country abounded
in the United States in the 1930s" (Breitman &Kraut, 1987, p. 87). There
was a clear perception among all parties that the public opposed any
changes in immigration policy and that the public was particularly opposed
to Jewish immigration. The 1939 hearings on the proposed legislation
to admit 20,000 German refugee children therefore minimized the Jewish
interest in the legislation. The bill referred to people "of every race
and creed suffering from conditions which compel them to seek refuge
in other lands". {13} The bill did not mention that Jews would be the
main beneficiaries of the legislation, and witnesses in favor of the
bill emphasized that only approximately 60% of the children would be
Jewish. The only person identifying himself as "a member of the Jewish
race" who testified in favor of the bill was "one-fourth Catholic and
three-quarters Jewish" with Protestant and Catholic nieces and nephews,
and from the South which was a bastion of anti-immigration sentiment.
{14} On the other hand, opponents of the bill threatened to publicize
the very large percentage of Jews already being admitted under the quota
system - presumably an indication of the powerful force of a "virulent
and pervasive" anti-Semitism among the American public (Breitman & Kraut,
1987, p. 80).
Opponents noted that the immigration permitted by the bill "would
be for the most part of the Jewish race," and a witness testified "that
the Jewish people will profit most by this legislation goes without
saying" (in Divine, 1957, p. 100). The restrictionists argued in economic
terms, e.g., by frequently citing President Roosevelt's statement in
his second inaugural speech "one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-clad,
ill-nourished" and citing large numbers of needy children already in
the United States. However, the main restrictionist concern was that
the bill was yet another in a long history of attempts by anti-restrictionists
to develop precedents that would eventually undermine the 1924 law.
For example, Francis Kinnecutt, President of the Allied Patriotic Societies,
emphasized that the 1924 law had been based on the idea of proportional
representation based on the ethnic composition of the country. The legislation
would be a precedent "for similar unscientific and favored-nation legislation
in response to {30} the pressure of foreign nationalistic or racial
groups, rather than in accordance with the needs and desires of the
American people." {15} Wilbur S. Carr and other State Department officials
were important in minimizing the entry of Jewish refugees from Germany
during the 1930s. Undersecretary of State William Phillips was an ardent
anti-Semite with considerable influence on immigration policy between
1933-1936 (Breitman &Kraut, 1987, p. 36). Throughout the period until
the end of World War II attempts to foster Jewish immigration, even
in the context of knowledge that the Nazis were persecuting Jews, were
largely unsuccessful because of an unyielding Congress and the activities
of bureaucrats, especially those in the state Department. Public discussion
in periodicals such as The Nation (Nov. 19, 1938), and The New Republic
(Nov. 23, 1938) charged that the restrictionism was motivated by anti-Semitism,
while opponents of admitting large numbers of Jews argued that admission
would result in an increase in anti-Semitism. Henry Pratt Fairchild
(1939, p. 344), who was a restrictionist and was highly critical of
the Jews (see Fairchild, 1947), emphasized the "powerful current of
anti-foreignism and anti-Semitism that is running close to the surface
of the American public mind, ready to burst out into violent eruption
on relatively slight provocation." Public opinion remained steadfast
against increasing the quotas for European refugees: a 1939 poll in
Fortune (April, 1939) magazine showed that 83% answered "no" to the
following question: "If you were a member of Congress would you vote
yes or no on a bill to open the doors of the United States to a larger
number of European refugees than now admitted under our immigration
quotas?" Less than 9% replied "yes" and the remainder had no opinion
Jewish Anti-Restrictionist Activity, 1946-1952
Although Jewish interests were defeated by the 1924 legislation,
"the discriminatory character of the Reed-Johnson Act continued to rankle
all sectors of American Jewish opinion" (Neuringer, 1971, 196). During
this period, an article by Will Maslow (1950) in Congress Weekly reiterated
the belief that the restrictive immigration laws intentionally targeted
Jews: "Only one type of law, immigration legislation which relates to
aliens outside the country, is not subject to constitutional guarantees,
and even here hostility toward Jewish immigration has had to be disguised
in an elaborate quota scheme in which eligibility was based on place
of birth rather than religion." The Jewish concern to alter the ethnic
balance of the United States is apparent in the debates over immigration
legislation during the post World War II era. In 1948 the AJ Committee
submitted a statement to the Senate subcommittee which simultaneously
denied the importance of the material interests of the United States
as well as affirmed its commitment to immigration of all races: {31}
Americanism is not to be measured by conformity to law, or zeal for
education, or literacy, or any of these qualities in which immigrants
may excel the native-born. Americanism is the spirit behind the welcome
that America has traditionally extended to people of all races, all
religions, all nationalities (in Cohen 1972, p. 369).
In 1945 Representative Emanuel Celler introduced a bill ending Chinese
exclusion by establishing token quotas for Chinese, and in 1948 the
AJ Committee condemned racial quotas on Asians (Divine, 1957, p. 155).
On the other hand, Jewish groups had an attitude of indifference or
even hostility toward immigration of non-Jews from Europe (including
Southern Europe) in the post-World War II era (Neuringer, 1971, pp.
356, 367-369, 383). Thus Jewish spokesmen did not testify at all during
the first set of hearings on emergency legislation which allowed immigration
of a limited number of German, Italian, Greek, and Dutch immigrants,
escapees from Communism, and a small number of Poles, Orientals, and
Arabs. When Jewish spokesmen eventually testified (partly because a
small number of the escapees from Communism were Jews), they took the
opportunity to once again focus on their condemnation of the national
origins provisions of the 1924 law.
Jewish involvement in opposing restrictions during this period was
motivated partly by attempts to establish precedents in which the quota
system was bypassed and partly by attempts to increase immigration of
Jews from Eastern Europe. The Citizen's Committee on Displaced Persons,
which advocated legislation to admit 400,000 refugees as nonquota immigrants
over a period of 4 years, was funded mainly by the AJ Committee and
other Jewish contributors (See Cong. Rec., October 15, 1949, pp. 14647-14654;
Neuringer 1971, p. ii) and maintained a staff of 65 people. Witnesses
opposing the legislation complained that the bill was an attempt to
subvert the ethnic balance of the United States established by the 1924
legislation (Divine 1957, p. 117). In the event, the bill that was reported
out of the subcommittee did not satisfy Jewish interests because it
established a cutoff date that excluded Jews who had migrated from Eastern
Europe after World War II, including Jews fleeing Polish anti-Semitism.
The Senate subcommittee "regarded the movement of Jews and other
refugees from eastern Europe after 1945 as falling outside the scope
of the main problem and implied that this exodus was a planned migration
organized by Jewish agencies in the United States and in Europe" (Senate
Report No. 950 [1948], pp. 15-16).
Jewish representatives led the assault on the bill (Divine 1957,
p. 127), Representative Emanuel Celler terming it as "worse than no
bill at all. All it does is exclude . . . Jews" (in Neuringer, 1971,
p298; see also Divine, 1957, p. 127). In reluctantly signing the bill,
President Truman noted that the 1945 cutoff date "discriminates in callous
fashion against displaced persons of the Jewish faith" (Interpreter
32 Releases, 25 [July 21, 1948], pp. 252-254). On the other hand, Senator
Chapman Revercomb stated that "there is no distinction, certainly no
discrimination, intended between any persons because of their religion
or their race, but there are differences drawn among those persons who
are in fact displaced persons and have been in camp longest and have
a preference" (Cong. Rec. May 26, 1948, p. 6793). In his analysis, Divine
(1957, p. 143) concludes that the expressed motive of the restrictionists,
to limit the program to those people displaced during the course of
the war, appears to be a valid explanation for these provisions. The
tendency of Jewish groups to attribute the exclusion of many of their
co-religionists to anti-Semitic bias is understandable; however, the
extreme charges of discrimination made during the 1948 presidential
campaign lead one to suspect that the northern wing of the Democratic
party was using this issue to attract votes from members of minority
groups. Certainly Truman's assertion that the 1948 law was anti-Catholic,
made in the face of Catholic denials, indicates that political expediency
had a great deal to do with the emphasis on the discrimination issue.
In the aftermath of this bill, the Citizens Committee on Displaced
Persons released a report labeling the bill as characterized by "hate
and racism" and Jewish organizations were unanimous in denouncing the
law (Divine, 1957, p. 131). After the 1948 elections resulted in a Democratic
Congress and a sympathetic President Truman, Representative Celler introduced
a bill without the 1945 cutoff date, but the bill, after passing the
House, failed in the Senate because of the opposition of Senator Pat
McCarran. During the hearings, McCarran noted that the Citizens Committee
had spent over $800,000 lobbying for a liberalized bill, with the result
that "there has been disseminated over the length and breadth of this
nation a campaign of misrepresentation and falsehood which has misled
many public-spirited and well-meaning citizens and organizations" (Cong.
Rec., April 26, 1949, pp. 5042-5043). After defeat, the Citizen's Committee
increased expenditures to over $1,000,000 and succeeded in passing a
bill, introduced by Representative Celler, with a 1949 cutoff date that
did not discriminate against Jews but largely excluded ethnic Germans
who had been expelled from Eastern Europe. In an odd twist in the debate,
restrictionists now accused the anti-restrictionists of ethnic bias
(e.g., Senator Eastland, Cong. Rec. April 5, 1950, p. 2737; Senator
McCarran, Cong. Rec. April 5, 1950, p. 4743).
At a time when there were no outbreaks of anti-Semitism in other
parts of the world creating an urgent need for Jewish immigration and
with the presence of Israel as a safe haven for Jews, Jewish organizations
still vigorously objected to the continuation of the national origins
provisions of the 1924 law in the McCarran-Walter law of 1952 (Neuringer
1971, p. 337ff). Indeed, when District Court of Appeals Judge Simon
H. Rifkind testified on behalf of a wide range of Jewish organizations
against the {33} McCarran-Walter bill he noted emphatically that because
of the international situation and particularly the existence of Israel
as a safe haven for Jews, Jewish views on immigration legislation were
not predicated on the "plight of our co-religionists but rather the
impact which immigration and naturalization laws have upon the temper
and quality of American life here in the United States." {16} The argument
was now typically couched in terms of "democratic principles and the
cause of international amity" (Cohen 1972, p. 368) - the implicit theory
being that the principles of democracy required ethnic diversity and
the theory that the good will of other countries depended on American
willingness to accept their citizens as immigrants. Rifkind noted that
"(T)he enactment of [the McCarran-Walter bill] will gravely impair the
national effort we are putting forth. For we are engaged in a war for
the hearts and minds of men. The free nations of the world look to us
for moral and spiritual reinforcement at a time when the faith which
moves men is as important as the force they wield." {17} The McCarran-Walter
law explicitly included racial ancestry as a criterion in its provision
that Orientals would be included in the token Oriental quotas no matter
where they were born. Herbert Lehman, a senator from New York and the
most prominent senatorial opponent of immigration restriction during
the 1950s (Neuringer 1971, p. 351), argued during the debates over the
McCarran-Walter bill that immigrants from Jamaica of African descent
should be included in the quota for England and stated that the bill
would cause resentment among Asians (Neuringer 1971, pp. 346, 356).
Representative Emanuel Celler and Representative Jacob Javits, the leaders
of the anti-restrictionists in the House, made similar arguments (Cong.
Rec., April 23, 1952, pp. 4306, 4219).
As was also apparent in the battles dating back to the nineteenth
century (see above), the opposition to the national origins legislation
went beyond its effects on Jewish immigration to include advocacy of
immigration into the United States of all of the racial/ethnic groups
of the world.
Reflecting a concern for maintaining the ethnic status quo as well
as the salience of Jewish issues during the period, the hearings of
the subcommittee considering the McCarran immigration law noted that
"The population of the United States has increased three-fold since
1877, while the Jewish population has increased twenty-one fold during
the same period" (Senate Report No. 1515 [1950], pp2-4). The bill also
included a provision that naturalized citizens automatically lost citizenship
if they resided abroad continuously for 5 years. This provision was
viewed by Jewish organizations as motivated by anti-Zionist attitudes:
"Testimony by Government officials at the hearings . . . made it clear
that the provision stemmed from a desire to dissuade naturalized American
Jews from subscribing to a deeply held ideal which some officials in
contravention of American policy regarded as undesirable. . . ." {18}{34}
Reaffirming the logic of the 1920s restrictionists, the subcommittee
report emphasized that a purpose of the 1924 law was "the restriction
of immigration from southern and eastern Europe in order to preserve
a predominance of persons of northwestern European origin in the composition
of our total population" but noted that this purpose did not imply "any
theory of Nordic supremacy" (Senate Report, No. 1515, [1950], pp. 442,
445-446). The argument was sometimes phrased in terms of an emphasis
on the "similarity of cultural background" of prospective immigrants,
but again the underlying logic was that ethnic groups already in the
country had legitimate interests in maintaining the ethnic status quo.
It is important to note that Jewish spokesmen differed from other
liberal groups in their motives for opposing restrictions on immigration
during this period. In the following I emphasize the Congressional testimony
of Judge Simon H. Rifkind who represented a very broad range of Jewish
agencies in the hearings on the McCarran-Walter bill in 1951. {19}
(1.) Immigration should come from all racial/ethnic groups: We conceive
of Americanism as the spirit behind the welcome that America has traditionally
extended to people of different races, all religions, all nationalities.
Americanism is a tolerant way of life that was devised by men who differed
from one another vastly in religion, race background, education, and
lineage, and who agreed to forget all these things and ask of a new
neighbor not where he comes from but only what he can do and what is
his spirit toward his fellow men (p. 566).
2.) The total number of immigrants should be maximized within very
broad economic and political constraints: "(T)he regulation [of immigration]
is the regulation of an asset, not of a liability" (p. 567). Rifkind
emphasized several times that unused quotas had the effect of restricting
total numbers of immigrants, and he viewed this very negatively (e.g.,
p. 569).
3.) Immigrants should not be viewed as economic assets and imported
only to serve the present needs of the United States: Looking at [selective
immigration] from the point of view of the United States, never from
the point of view of the immigrant, I say that we should, to some extent,
allow for our temporary needs, but not to make our immigration problem
an employment instrumentality. I do not think that we are buying economic
commodities when we allow immigrants to come in. We are admitting human
beings who will found families and raise children, whose children may
reach the heights - at least so we hope and pray. For a small segment
of the immigrant stream I think we are entitled to say, if we happen
to be short of a particular talent, "Let us go out and look for them,
" if necessary, but let us not make that the all-pervading thought.
(p. 570) {35} The opposition to needed skills as the basis of immigration
was consistent with the prolonged Jewish attempt to delay the passage
of a literacy test as a criterion for immigration beginning in the late
nineteenth century until a literacy test was finally passed in 1917.
While Rifkind's testimony was free of the accusation that present
immigration policy was based on the theory of Nordic superiority, Nordic
superiority continued to be a prominent theme of other Jewish groups
advocating immigration from all ethnic groups, particularly the AJ Congress.
The statement of the AJ Congress at these hearings focused a great deal
of attention on the importance of the theory of Nordic supremacy as
motivating the 1924 legislation, but also noted the previous history
of ethnic discrimination that existed long before these theories were
developed, including the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the gentlemen's
agreement with Japan of 1907 which limited immigration of Japanese workers,
and the exclusion of other Asians in 1917. The statement noted that
the 1924 legislation had succeeded in its aim of preserving the ethnic
balance of the U.S. as of the 1920 census. However, it noted that "the
objective is valueless. There is nothing sacrosanct about the composition
of the population in 1920. It would be foolish to believe that we reached
the peak of ethnic perfection in that year." {20} Moreover, in an explicit
statement of Horace Kallen's multicultural ideal, the AJ Congress statement
advocated "the thesis of cultural democracy which would guarantee to
all groups 'majority and minority alike . . . the right to be different
and the responsibility to make sure that their differences do not conflict
with the welfare of the American people as a whole.'" {21} During this
period, the Congress Weekly, the journal of the AJ Congress, regularly
denounced the national origins provisions as based on the "myth of the
existence of superior and inferior racial stocks" (Oct. 17, 1955; p.
3) and advocated immigration on the basis of "need and other criteria
unrelated to race or national origin" (May 4, 1953, p. 3). Particularly
objectionable from the perspective of the AJ Congress was the implication
that there should be no change in the ethnic status quo prescribed by
the 1924 legislation (e.g., Goldstein, 1952 a, p. 6). The national origins
formula "is outrageous now . . . when our national experience has confirmed
beyond a doubt that our very strength lies in the diversity of our peoples"
(Goldstein, 1952 b, p. 5).
As indicated above, there is some evidence that the 1924 legislation
and the restrictionism of the 1930s was motivated partly by anti-Semitic
attitudes. Anti-Semitism and its linkage with anti-Communism was also
apparent in the immigration arguments during the 1950s preceding and
following the passage of the McCarran-Walter act. Restrictionists often
pointed to evidence that over 90% of American Communists had backgrounds
linking them to Eastern Europe and a major thrust of their efforts was
to prevent immigration from this area and to ease deportation procedures
to prevent {36} Communist subversion. Since Eastern Europe was also
the origin of most Jewish immigration and because Jews were disproportionately
represented among American Communists, these issues became linked and
the situation lent itself to broad anti-Semitic conspiracy theories
about the role of Jews in American politics (e.g., Beaty, 1951). In
Congress, the notorious anti-Semite Representative John Rankin, without
making explicit reference to Jews, stated that "They whine about discrimination.
Do you know who is being discriminated against? The white Christian
people of America, the ones who created this nation. . . . I am talking
about the white Christian people of the North as well as the South.
. . Communism is racial. A racial minority seized control in Russia
and in all her satellite countries, such as Poland, Czechoslovakia,
and many other countries I could name. They have been run out of practically
every country in Europe in the years gone by, and if they keep stirring
race trouble in this country and trying to force their communistic program
on the Christian people of America, there is no telling what will happen
to them here" (Cong. Rec., April 23, 1952, p. 4320).
Reinforcing these links, the position of mainstream Jewish organizations
such as the AJ Committee, which opposed communism, often coincided with
the position of the CPUSA on issues of immigration. For example, both
the AJ Committee and the CPUSA condemned the McCarran-Walter act while,
on the other hand, the AJ Committee had a major role in influencing
the recommendations of President Truman's Commission on Immigration
and Naturalization (PCIN) for relaxing the security provisions of the
McCarranWalter act, and these recommendations were warmly greeted by
the CPUSA at a time when a prime goal of the security provisions was
to exclude communists (Bennett, 1963, p166). Jews were disproportionately
represented on the PCIN as well as in the organizations viewed by Congress
as Communist front organizations involved in immigration issues, and
this was undoubtedly highly salient to anti-Semites. The Chairman of
the PCIN was Philip B. Perlman and the staff of the commission contained
a high percentage of Jews, headed by Harry N. Rosenfield (Executive
Director)and Elliot Shirk (Assistant to the Executive Director), and
its report was wholeheartedly endorsed by the AJ Congress (see Congress
Weekly, Jan. 12, 1952, p. 3). The proceedings were printed as the report
"Whom We Shall Welcome" with the cooperation of Representative Emanuel
Celler.
In Congress, Senator McCarran accused the PCIN of containing communist
sympathizers, and the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC)
released a report stating that "some two dozen Communists and many times
that number with records of repeated affiliation with known Communist
enterprises testified before the Commission or submitted statements
for inclusion in the record of the {37} hearings. . . . Nowhere in either
the record of the hearings or in the report is there a single reference
to the true background of these persons" (House Report No. 1182, 85th
Congress, 1st Session, p. 47). The report referred particularly to Communists
associated with the American Committee for the Protection of Foreign
Born (ACPFB) headed by Abner Green. Green, who was Jewish, figured very
prominently in these hearings, and Jews were generally disproportionately
represented among those singled out as officers and sponsors of the
ACPFB (pp. 13-21). HUAC provided evidence that ACPFB had close ties
with the CPUSA and noted that 24 of the individuals associated with
the ACPFB had signed statements incorporated into the printed record
of the PCIN.
The AJ Committee was also heavily involved in the deliberations of
the PCIN, including providing testimony and distributing data and other
material to individuals and organizations testifying before the PCIN
(Cohen, 1972, p. 371). All of its recommendations were incorporated
into the final report (Cohen, 1972, p. 371) (including a de-emphasis
on economic skills as criteria for immigration, scrapping the national
origins legislation, and opening immigration to all the peoples of the
world on a "first come, first served basis"), the only exception being
that the report recommended a lower total number of immigrants than
recommended by the AJ Committee and other Jewish groups. The AJ Committee
thus went beyond merely advocating the principle of immigration from
all racial/ethnic groups (token quotas for Asians and Africans had already
been included in the McCarran-Walter act) to attempt to maximize the
total number of immigrants from all parts of the world within the current
political climate.
Indeed, the Commission (PCIN, 1953, p. 106) pointedly noted that
the 1924 legislation had succeeded in maintaining the racial status
quo and that the main barrier to changing the racial status quo was
not the national origins system (because there were already high levels
of non-quota immigrants and because the countries of Northern and Western
Europe did not fill their quotas) but the total number of immigrants
allowed into the United States. The Commission thus viewed changing
the racial status quo of the United States as a desirable goal, and
to that end made a major point of the desirability of increasing the
total amount of immigration (PCIN, 1953, p. 42). As Bennett (1963, p.
164) notes, in the eyes of the PCIN, the 1924 legislation reducing the
total number of immigrants "was a very bad thing because of its finding
that one race is just as good as another for American citizenship or
any other purpose." Correspondingly, the defenders of the 1952 legislation
conceptualized the issue as fundamentally one of ethnic warfare. Senator
McCarran stated that subverting the national origins system "would,
in the course of a generation or so, tend to change the ethnic and cultural
composition of this nation" (in 38 Bennett, 1963, p. 185), and Richard
Arens, a Congressional staff member who had a prominent role in the
hearings on the McCarran-Walter bill as well as in the activities of
the HUAC, stated that "these are the critics who do not like America
as it is and has been. They think our people exist in unfair ethnic
proportions. They prefer that we bear a greater resemblance or ethnic
relationship to the foreign peoples whom they favor and for whom they
are seeking disproportionately greater immigration privileges" (in Bennett,
1963, 186). As Divine (1957, p. 188) notes, ethnic interests predominated
on both sides; the charges of racism made against the restrictionists
who were advocating the ethnic status quo were balanced against the
attempts by antirestrictionists to alter the ethnic status quo in a
manner that conformed to their own perceived ethnic interests.
The salience of Jewish involvement in immigration during this period
is also apparent in several other incidents. In 1950 the representative
of the AJ Congress testified that the retention of national origins
in any form would be "a political and moral catastrophe" ("Revision
of Immigration Laws" Joint Hearings, 1950, pp. 336-337). The national
origins formula implies that "persons in quest of the opportunity to
live in this land are to be judged according to breed like cattle at
a country fair and not on the basis of their character fitness or capacity"
(Congress Weekly 21, 1952, pp. 3-4). Divine (1957, p173) characterizes
the AJ Congress as representing "the more militant wing" of the opposition
because of its principled opposition to any form of the national origins
formula, whereas other opponents merely wanted to be able to distribute
unused quotas to Southern and Eastern Europe.
Representative Francis Walter noted the "propaganda drive that is
being engaged in now by certain members of the American Jewish Congress
opposed to the Immigration and Nationality Code" (Cong. Rec. Mar, 13,
1952, p. 2283), noting particularly the activities of Dr. Israel Goldstein,
president of the AJ Congress, who had been reported in the New York
Times as having stated that the Immigration and Nationality law would
place "a legislative seal of inferiority on all persons of other than
Anglo-Saxon origin." Representative Walter then noted the special role
that Jewish organizations had played in attempting to foster family
reunion rather than special skills as the basis of United States immigration
policy. After Representative Jacob Javits stated that opposition to
the law was "not confined to the one group the gentleman mentioned"
(Congressional Record, March 13, 1952, p. 2284), Walter responded as
follows: I might call your attention to the fact that Mr. Harry N. Rosenfield,
Commissioner of the Displaced Persons Commission and incidentally a
brother-in-law of a lawyer who is stirring up all this agitation, in
a speech recently said: {39} The proposed legislation is America's Nuremberg
trial. It is "racious" and archaic, based on a theory that people with
different styles of noses should be treated differently.
Representative Walter then went on to note that during the hearings
on the bill, the only two organizations that were hostile to the entire
bill were the AJ Congress and the Association of Immigration and Nationality
Lawyers, the latter "represented by an attorney who is also advising
and counseling the American Jewish Congress." (Indeed, Goldstein [1952b]
himself noted that "at the time of the Joint House-Senate hearings on
the McCarran bill, the American Jewish Congress was the only civic group
which dared flatly to oppose the national origins quota formula.") Representative
Emanuel Celler then stated that Walter "should not have overemphasized
as he did the people of one particular faith who are opposing the bill"
(p. 2285). Representative Walter agreed with Celler's comments, noting
that "there are other very fine Jewish groups who endorse the bill."
Nevertheless, the principle Jewish organizations, including the AJ Congress,
the AJ Committee, the ADL, the National Council of Jewish Women, and
the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, did indeed oppose the bill (Cong.
Rec., April 23, 1952, p. 4247), and when Judge Simon Rifkind testified
against the bill in the Joint Hearings, he emphasized that he represented
a very wide range of Jewish groups, "the entire body of religious opinion
and lay opinion within the Jewish group, religiously speaking, from
the extreme right and extreme left" (p. 563). {22} Rifkind represented
a long list of national and local Jewish groups, including in addition
to the above, the Synagogue Council of America, the Jewish Labor Committee,
the Jewish War Veterans of the United States, and 27 local Jewish councils
throughout the United States
Moreover, the fight against the bill was led by Jewish members of
Congress, including especially Celler, Javits, and Lehman, all of whom,
as indicated above, were prominent members of the ADL
Albeit by indirection, Representative Walter was clearly calling
attention to the special Jewish role in the immigration conflict of
1952. The special role of the AJ Congress in opposing the McCarran-Walter
act was a source of pride within the group: on the verge of victory
in 1965, the Congress biWeekly editorialized that it was "a cause of
pride" that Rabbi Israel Goldstein had been "singled out by Rep. Walter
for attack on the floor of the House of Representatives as the prime
organizer of the campaign against the measures he co-sponsored" (Feb.
1, 1965; p. 3).
The perception that Jewish concerns were an important feature of
the opposition to the McCarran-Walter act can also be seen in the following
exchange between Representative Celler and Representative Walter. Celler
noted that "The national origin theory upon which our immigration law
is based . . . [mocks] our protestations based on a question of equality
of opportunity for all peoples, {40} regardless of race, color, or creed."
Representative Walter replied that "a great menace to America lies in
the fact that so many professionals, including professional Jews, are
shedding crocodile tears for no reason whatsoever" (Cong. Rec. Jan.
13, 1953, p. 372). And in a comment referring to the peculiarities of
Jewish interests in immigration legislation, Richard Arens, Staff Director
of the Senate subcommittee that produced the McCarran-Walter act, pointedly
noted that "one of the curious things about those who most loudly claim
that the 1952 act is 'discriminatory' and that it does not make allowance
for a sufficient number of alleged refugees, is that they oppose admission
of any of the approximately one million Arab refugees in camps where
they are living in pitiful circumstances after having been driven out
of Israel" (in Bennett, 1963, p. 181).
The McCarran-Walter Act was passed over President Truman's veto,
and Truman's "alleged partisanship to Jews was a favorite target of
antiSemites" (Cohen, 1972, p. 377). Prior to the veto, Truman was intensively
lobbied, "particularly [by] Jewish societies" opposed to the bill, while
government agencies, including the State Department urged Truman to
sign the bill (Divine, 1957, p184). Moreover, individuals with openly
anti-Semitic attitudes, such as John Beaty (1951), often focused on
Jewish involvement in the immigration battles during this period.
Jewish Anti-Restrictionist Activity, 1953-1965
During this period, the Congress Weekly regularly noted the role
of Jewish organizations as the vanguard of liberalized immigration laws:
For example, in its editorial of Feb. 20, 1956 (p. 3), it congratulated
President Eisenhower for his "unequivocal opposition to the quota system
which, more than any other feature of our immigration policy, has excited
the most widespread and most intense aversion among Americans. In advancing
this proposal for 'new guidelines and standards' in determining admissions,
President Eisenhower has courageously taken a stand in advance of even
many advocates of a liberal immigration policy and embraced a position
which had at first been urged by the american Jewish Congress and other
Jewish agencies." The AJ Committee made a major effort to keep the immigration
issue alive during a period of widespread apathy among the American
public between the passage of the McCarran-Walter act and the early
1960s. Jewish organizations intensified their effort during this period
(Cohen, 1972, pp. 370-373; Neuringer, 1971, p. 358), with the AJ Committee
helping to establish the Joint Conference on Alien Legislation and the
American Immigration Conference (organizations representing pro-immigration
forces) as well as providing most of the funding and performing most
of the work of these groups. In 1955 the AJ Committee organized a group
of influential citizens as the National Commission on {41} Immigration
and Citizenship "in order to give prestige to the campaign" (Cohen,
1972, p. 373). "All these groups studied immigration laws, disseminated
information to the public, presented testimony to Congress, and planned
other appropriate activities. . . . There were no immediate or dramatic
results; but AJC's dogged campaign in conjunction with like-minded organizations
ultimately prodded the Kennedy and Johnson administrations to action"
(Cohen, 1972, p. 373).
An article by Oscar Handlin (1952), the prominent Harvard historian
of immigration, is a fascinating microcosm of the Jewish approach to
immigration during this period. Writing in Commentary (a publication
of the AJ Committee) almost 30 years after the 1924 defeat and in the
immediate aftermath of the McCarran-Walter act, Handlin entitled his
article "The immigration fight has only begun: Lessons of the McCarran-Walter
setback." The title is a remarkable indication of the tenacity and persistence
of Jewish commitment to this issue. The message is to not be discouraged
by the recent defeat which occurred despite "all the effort toward securing
the revision of our immigration laws" (p. 2).
Handlin attempts to cast the argument in universalist terms as benefiting
all Americans and as conforming to American ideals that "all men, being
brothers, are equally capable of being Americans" (p.7). Current immigration
law reflects "racist xenophobia" (p. 2) by its token quotas for Asians
and its deprivation of the right of West Indian Blacks to take advantage
of British quotas. Handlin ascribes the restrictionist sentiments of
Pat McCarran to "the hatred of foreigners that was all about him in
his youth and by the dim, recalled fear that he himself might be counted
among them" (p. 3) - a sort of psychoanalytic identification-with-the-aggressor
argument (McCarran was Catholic).
In his article Handlin repeatedly uses the term "we" (as in "(i)f
we cannot beat McCarran and his cohorts with their own weapons, we can
do much to destroy the efficacy of those weapons (p. 4), "suggesting
Handlin's belief in a unified Jewish interest in liberal immigration
policy and presaging a prolonged "chipping away" of the 1952 legislation
in the ensuing years. Handlin's antirestrictionist strategy included
altering the views of social scientists to the effect "that it was possible
and necessary to distinguish among the 'races' of immigrants that clamored
for admission to the United States" (p. 4).
Handlin's proposal to recruit social scientists in the immigration
battles is congruent with the political agenda of the Boasian school
of anthropology discussed above. And as Higham (1984) notes, the ascendancy
of such views was as an important component of the ultimate victory
over restrictionism.
In an arguably tendentious rendering of the logic of preserving the
ethnic status quo that underlay the arguments for restriction in the
period from 1921-1952, Handlin stated: {42} The laws are bad because
they rest on the racist assumption that mankind is divided into fixed
breeds, biologically and culturally separated from each other, and because,
within that framework, they assume that Americans are Anglo-Saxons by
origin and ought to remain so. To all other peoples, the laws say that
the United States ranks them in terms of their racial proximity to our
own 'superior' stock; and upon the many, many millions of Americans
not descended from the Anglo-Saxons, the laws cast a distinct imputation
of inferiority (p. 5)
Handlin then deplored the apathy of other "hyphenated Americans"
to share the enthusiasm of the Jewish effort: "Many groups failed to
see the relevance of the McCarran-Walter Bill to their own position;"
he suggested that they ought to act as groups to assert their rightful
interests: "The Italian American has the right to be heard on these
issues precisely as an Italian American" (p. 7; italics in text). The
implicit assumption is that America ought to be composed of cohesive
subgroups with a clear sense of their group interests in opposition
to the peoples deriving from Northern and Western Europe or of the United
States as a whole. And there is the implication that Italian-Americans
have an interest in furthering immigration of Africans and Asians and
in creating such a multiracial and multicultural society
Shortly after Handlin's article, William Petersen (1955), also writing
in Commentary, argued that pro-immigration forces should be explicit
in their advocacy of a multicultural society, and that the importance
of this goal transcended the importance of achieving any self-interested
goal of the United states, such as obtaining needed skills or improving
foreign relations. In making his case he cited a group of predominantly
Jewish social scientists whose works, beginning with Horace Kallen's
plea for a multicultural, pluralistic society, "constitute the beginning
of a scholarly legitimization of the different immigration policy that
will perhaps one day become law" (p. 86), including, besides Kallen,
Melville herskovits, Geoffrey Gorer, Samuel Lubell, David Riesman, Thorsten
Sellin, and Milton Konvit.
These social scientists did indeed contribute to the immigration
battles. For example, the following quotation from a scholarly book
on immigration policy by Milton Konvitz of Cornell University reflects
the rejection of national interest as an element of United States immigration
policy-a hallmark of the Jewish approach to immigration: "To place so
much emphasis on technological and vocational qualifications is to remove
every vestige of humanitarianism from our immigration policy. We deserve
small thanks from those who come here if they are admitted because we
find that they are "urgently" needed, by reason of their training and
experience, to advance our national interests. This is hardly immigration;
it is the importation of special skills or know-how, not greatly different
from the importation of 43 coffee or rubber. It is hardly in the spirit
of American ideals to disregard a man's character and promise and to
look only at his education and the vocational opportunities he had the
good fortune to enjoy." (Konvitz, 1953, p. 26)
Handlin wrote that the McCarran-Walter law was only a temporary setback
and he was right. Thirty years after the triumph of restrictionism,
only Jewish groups remained as persistent and tenacious advocates of
a multicultural America. Forty-one years after the 1924 triumph of restrictionism
and the national origins provision and only 13 years after its reaffirmation
with the McCarran-Walter Act of 1952, Jewish organizations successfully
supported ending the geographically based national origins basis of
immigration intended to result in an ethnic status quo in what was now
a radically altered intellectual and political climate.
Particularly important is the provision in the Immigration Act of
1965 that expanded the number of non-quota immigrants. Beginning in
their testimony on the 1924 law, Jewish spokesmen had been in the forefront
in attempts to admit family members on a nonquota basis (Neuringer,
1971, p. 191). During the House debates on immigration surrounding the
McCarran-Walter Act, Representative Walter (Cong. Rec., p. 2284, March
13, 1952) noted the special focus that Jewish organizations had on family
reunion rather than on special skills. Responding to Representative
Javits who had complained that under the bill 50% of the quota for "Negroes"
from the British West Indies colonies would be reserved for people with
special skills, Walter noted that "I would like to call the gentleman's
attention to the fact that this is the principle of using 50 percent
of the quota for people needed in the United States. But, if that entire
50 percent is not used in that category, then the unused numbers go
down to the next category which replies to the objections that these
Jewish organizations make much of, that families are being separated."
Prior to the 1965 law, Bennett (1963, p. 244), commenting on the family
unification aspects of the 1961 immigration legislation, noted that
the "relationship by blood or marriage and the principle of uniting
families have become the 'open Sesame' to the immigration gates." Moreover,
despite repeated denials by the anti-restrictionists that their proposals
would affect the ethnic balance of the country, Bennett (1963, p. 256)
commented that the "repeated, persistent extension of nonquota status
to immigrants from countries with oversubscribed quotas and flatly discriminated
against by [the McCarran-Walter act] together with administrative waivers
of inadmissibility, adjustment of status and private bills, is helping
to speed and make apparently inevitable a change in the ethnic face
of the nation" (p. 257) - a reference to the "chipping away" of the
1952 law recommended as a strategy in Handlin's article. Indeed, a major
argument apparent in the debate over the 1965 legislation was that the
{44} 1952 law had been so weakened that it had largely become irrelevant
and there was a need to overhaul immigration legislation to legitimize
a de facto situation.
Bennett also noted that "(t)he stress on the immigration issue arises
from insistence of those who regard quotas as ceilings, not floors [opponents
of restriction often referred to unused quotas as "wasted"], who want
to remake America in the image of small-quota countries and who do not
like our basic ideology, cultural attitudes and heritage. They insist
that it is the duty of the United States to accept immigrants irrespective
of their assimilability or our own population problems. They insist
on remaining hyphenated Americans" (1963, p. 295).
The family-based emphasis of the quota regulations of the 1965 law
(e.g., the provision that at least 24% of the quota for each area be
set aside for brothers and sisters of citizens) has resulted in a multiplier
effect which ultimately subverted the quota system entirely by allowing
for a "chaining" phenomenon in which endless chains of the close relatives
of close relatives are admitted outside the quota system: Imagine one
immigrant, say an engineering student, who was studying in the U. S.
during the 1960's. If he found a job after graduation, he could then
bring over his wife [as the spouse of a resident alien], and six years
later, after being naturalized, his bothers and sisters [as siblings
of a citizen]. They, in turn, could bring their wives, husbands, and
children. Within a dozen years, one immigrant entering as a skilled
worker could easily generate 25 visas for in-laws, nieces, and nephews
(McConnell 1988, p. 98).
The 1965 law also de-emphasized the criterion that immigrants should
have needed skills. (In 1986, less than 4% of immigrants were admitted
on the basis of needed skills, while 74% were admitted on the basis
of kinship [see Brimelow, 1995].) As indicated above, the rejection
of a skill requirement or other tests of competence in favor of "humanitarian
goals" and family unification had been an element of Jewish immigration
policy at least since debate on the McCarran-Walter act of the early
1950s and extending really to the long opposition to literacy tests
dating from the end of the nineteenth century.
Senator Jacob Javits played a prominent role in the Senate hearings
on the 1965 bill, and Emanuel Celler, who fought for unrestricted immigration
for over 40 years in the House of Representatives, introduced similar
legislation in that body. Jewish organizations (American Council for
Judaism Philanthropic Fund; Council of Jewish Federations & Welfare
Funds; B'nai B'rith Women) filed briefs in support of the measure before
the Senate Subcommittee, as did organizations such as the ACLU and the
Americans for Democratic Action with a large Jewish membership. {45}
Indeed, it is noteworthy that well before the ultimate triumph of the
Jewish policy on immigration, Javits (1951) authored an article entitled
"Let's open the gates" that proposed immigration level of 500,000 per
year for 20 years with no restrictions on national origin. In 1961 Javits
proposed a bill that "sought to destroy the [national origins quota
system] by a flank attack and to increase quota and nonquota immigration"
(Bennett, 1963, p. 250). In addition to provisions aimed at removing
barriers due to race, ethnic and national origins, included in this
bill was a provision that brothers, sisters, and married sons or daughters
of United States citizens and their spouses and children who had become
eligible under the quota system in legislation of 1957 be included as
nonquota immigrants - an even more radical version of the provision
whose incorporation in the 1965 law facilitated non-European immigration
into the United States. Although this provision of Javit's bill was
not approved at the time, the bill's proposals for softening previous
restrictions on Asian and Black immigration as well as removing racial
classification from visa documents (thus allowing unlimited nonquota
immigration of Asians born in the Western Hemisphere) were approved.
It is also interesting that the main victory of the restrictionists
in 1965 was that Western Hemisphere nations were included in the new
quota system thus ending the possibility of unrestricted immigration
from those regions. In speeches before the Senate, Senator Javits (Cong.
Rec. 111, 1965, p24469) bitterly opposed this extension of the quota
system, arguing that placing any limits on immigration of all of the
people of the Western Hemisphere would have severely negative implications
on United States foreign policy. In a highly revealing discussion of
the bill before the Senate, Senator Sam Ervin (Cong. Rec. 89th Congress,
1st session, pp. 24446-51, 1965) noted that "those who disagree with
me express no shock that Britain, in the future, can send us 10,000
fewer immigrants than she has sent on an annual average in the past.
They are only shocked that British Guyana cannot send us every single
citizen of that country who wishes to come." Clearly the forces of liberal
immigration really wanted unlimited immigration into the United States.
The pro-immigrationists also failed to prevent a requirement that
the Secretary of Labor determine that there are insufficient Americans
able and willing to perform the labor which the aliens intend to perform,
and that the employment of such aliens will not adversely affect the
wages and working conditions of American workers. Writing in the American
Jewish Year Book, Liskofsky (1966, 174) notes that pro-immigration groups
opposed these regulations but agreed to them in order to get a bill
that ended the national origins provisions. After passage "they became
intensely concerned. They voiced publicly the fear that the new, administratively
cumbersome procedure might easily result in {46} paralyzing most immigration
of skilled and unskilled workers as well as of non-preference immigrants."
Reflecting the long Jewish opposition to the idea that immigration policy
should be in the national interest, the economic welfare of American
citizens was irrelevant; securing high levels of immigration had become
an end in itself.
The 1965 law is having the effect that it seems reasonable to suppose
had been intended by its Jewish advocates all along: the Census Bureau
projects that by the year 2050, European-derived peoples will no longer
be a majority of the population of America. Moreover, multiculturalism
has already become a powerful ideological and political reality (Brimelow,
1995). Although the proponents of the 1965 legislation continued to
insist that the bill would not affect the ethnic balance of the United
States or even impact its culture, it is difficult to believe that at
least some of the proponents were unaware of the eventual implications.
Opponents, certainly, were quite clear that it would indeed affect the
ethnic balance of the United States. Given the intense involvement of
organizations such as the AJ Committee in the details of immigration
legislation and their very negative attitudes toward the NorthWestern
European bias of pre-1965 United States immigration policy and very
negative attitudes toward the idea of an ethnic status quo embodied,
e.g., in the PCIN document Whom We Shall Welcome, it appears unlikely
to suppose that these organizations were unaware of the inaccuracy of
the projections of the effects of this legislation that were made by
its supporters. Given the clearly articulated interests in ending the
ethnic status quo evident in the arguments of anti-restrictionists throughout
the period from 1924-1965, the 1965 law would not have been perceived
by its proponents as a victory unless they viewed it as ultimately changing
the ethnic status quo. Revealingly, the 1965 law was viewed as a victory
by the anti-restrictionists, and it is noteworthy that after regularly
condemning United States immigration law and championing the eradication
of the national origins formula precisely because it had produced an
ethnic status quo, The Congress bi-Weekly completely ceased publishing
articles on this topic.
Moreover, Lawrence Auster (1990, p. 31ff) shows that the supporters
of the legislation repeatedly glossed over the distinction between quota
and non-quota immigration and failed to mention the effect that the
legislation would have on non-quota immigration. Projections of the
number of new immigrants failed to take account of the well-known and
often commentedupon fact that the old quotas favoring Western European
countries were not being filled. Moreover, continuing a tradition of
over 40 years, the rhetoric of those in favor of the bill presented
the legislation of 1924 and 1952 as based on theories of racial superiority
and as involving racial discrimination rather than in terms of an attempt
to create an ethnic status quo. {47}
Even in 1952, Senator McCarran was well aware of the high stakes
at risk in immigration policy: "I believe that this nation is the last
hope of Western civilization and if this oasis of the world shall be
overrun, perverted, contaminated or destroyed, then the last flickering
light of humanity will be extinguished. I take no issue with those who
would praise the contributions which have been made to our society by
people of many races, of varied creeds and colors. America is indeed
a joining together of many streams which go to form a mighty river which
we call the American way. However, we have in the United States today
hard-core, indigestible blocs which have not become integrated into
the American way of life, but which, on the contrary are its deadly
enemies. Today, as never before, untold millions are storming our gates
for admission and those gates are cracking under the strain. The solution
of the problems of Europe and Asia will not come through a transplanting
of those problems en masse to the united States. . . . I do not intend
to become prophetic, but if the enemies of this legislation succeed
in riddling it to pieces, or in amending it beyond recognition, they
will have contributed more to promote this nation's downfall than any
other group since we achieved our independence as a nation." (Senator
Pat McCarran, Cong. Rec., March 2, 1953, p. 1518.)
CONCLUSION
The defeats of 1924 and 1952 did not prevent the ultimate victory
of the Jewish interest in combating the cultural, political, and demographic
dominance of the European-derived peoples of the united States. What
is truly remarkable is the tenacity with which Jewish ethnic interests
were pursued for a period of close to 100 years. Also remarkable was
the ability to frame the argument of immigration-restrictionists in
terms of racial superiority in the period from 1924-1965 rather than
in such positive terms as the ethnic interests of the peoples of northern
and western Europe in maintaining a status quo as of 1924.
During the period between 1924 and 1965 Jewish interests were largely
thwarted, but this did not prevent the ultimate triumph of the Jewish
perspective on immigration. In a very real sense the result of the immigration
changes fostered by Jewish intellectual and political activity have
constituted a long term victory over the political, demographic, and
cultural representation of "the common people of the South and West"
(Higham 1984, 49) whose congressional delegates were in the forefront
of the restrictionist forces. Former Secretary of the Navy James Webb
(1995) notes that it is the descendants of those WASPS who settled the
West and South who "by and large did the most to lay out the {48} infrastructure
of this country, quite often suffering educational and professional
regression as they tamed the wilderness, built the towns, roads and
schools, and initiated a democratic way of life that later white cultures
were able to take advantage of without paying the price of pioneering.
Today they have the least, socioeconomically, to show for these contributions.
And if one would care to check a map, they are from the areas now evincing
the greatest resistance to government practices." Webb's ideas are not
new but reflect the sentiments a great many congressmen voiced during
the immigration debates of the 1920's.
It is instructive to consider the possible long term effects of this
sea change in American immigration policy combined with the current
emphasis on multiculturalism. The shift to multiculturalism has coincided
with an enormous growth of immigration from non-European-derived peoples
beginning with the Immigration Act of 1965 which favored immigrants
from non-European countries. Many of these immigrants come from non-Western
countries where cultural, gender, and genetic segregation are the norm.
Within the context of multicultural America, they are encouraged to
retain their own languages and religions and encouraged to marry within
the group
The movement toward ethnic separatism is highly problematic. Historically,
ethnic separatism has been an extremely divisive force within societies.
At the present time there are ethnically based conflicts on every continent,
and formerly multi-ethnic societies are breaking away and establishing
ethnostates based on ethnic homogeneity (Tullberg & Tullberg, 1997).
These results confirm the expectation that indeed ethnicity is important
in human affairs. People appear to be extremely aware of group membership,
and ethnicity remains a common source of group identity. Individuals
are also keenly aware of the relative standing of their own group in
terms of resource control and social status.
And they are willing to take extraordinary steps in order to achieve
and retain economic and political power in defense of these group imperatives.
It is instructive to think of the circumstances which could minimize
group conflict given the assumption of ethnic separatism. Theorists
of cultural pluralism, such as Horace Kallen, envision the possibility
that different ethnic groups would retain their distinctive identity
in the context of complete political equality and economic opportunity.
The difficulty with this scenario is that no provision is made for the
results of competition for resources within the society.
In the best of circumstances one might suppose that the separated
ethnic groups would engage in absolute reciprocity with each other,
so that there would be no differences in terms of any measure of success
in the society, including social class membership, economic role (e.g.,
producer versus consumer; creditor versus debtor; manager versus worker),
or fertility between the separated ethnic {49} groups. All groups would
have approximately equal numbers and equal political power, or if there
were different numbers there would be provisions ensuring that minorities
could retain equitable representation in terms of the markers of success.
Such conditions would minimize hostility between the groups because
it would be difficult to attribute one's status to the actions of the
other group.
However, given the existence of ethnic separatism, it would still
be in the interests of each group to advance its own interests at the
expense of the other groups. All things being equal, a given ethnic
group would be better off if it ensured that the other group had fewer
resources, a lower social status, lower fertility, and proportionately
less political power than itself. (Indeed, lowering the political and
demographic power of the European-derived peoples of the United States
has clearly been the aim of the Jewish political and intellectual activities
discussed here.) The hypothesized steady state of equality therefore
implies a set of balance of power relationships - each side constantly
checking to make sure that the other is not cheating; each side constantly
looking for ways to obtain dominance and exploitation by any possible
means; each side willing to compromise only because of the threat of
retaliation by the other side; each side willing to cooperate in a manner
which involves a cost only if forced to do so by, e.g., the presence
of external threat. Clearly any type of cooperation which would involve
true altruism toward the other group would not be expected.
Thus the ideal situation of absolute equality would certainly require
a great deal of monitoring and undoubtedly be characterized by a great
deal of mutual suspicion. However, in the real world even this rather
grim ideal is highly unlikely. In the real world, ethnic groups differ
in their talents and abilities; they differ in their numbers, fertility,
and the extent to which they encourage parenting practices conducive
to resource acquisition; and they differ in the resources held at any
point in time and in their political power. Equality or proportionate
equity would be extremely difficult to attain, or to maintain after
it has been achieved, without extraordinary levels of monitoring and
without extremely intense social controls which would enforce ethnic
quotas on the accumulation of wealth, admission to universities, obtaining
high status jobs, etc.
Because of differing talents and abilities and differing parenting
styles between ethnic groups, there would be a need to have different
criteria for qualifying and retaining jobs depending on ethnic group
membership. {23} In the real world, therefore, there would have to be
extraordinary efforts made to attain this steady state of ethnic balance
of power and resources. It is of great interest that the ideology of
Jewish-gentile co-existence has sometimes included the idea that the
different ethnic groups develop a similar occupational profile and (implicitly)
control resources in proportion to their numbers. The dream of the German
assimilationists during the nineteenth-century was that the occupational
profile of the {50} Jews after emancipation would be highly similar
to that of the gentiles - a "utopian expectation . . shared by many,
Jews and non-Jews alike" (Katz, 1986, p. 67). Efforts were made to decrease
the percentage of Jews involved in trade and increase the percentages
involved in agriculture and artisanry. In the event, however, the result
of emancipation was that Jews were vastly over represented among the
economic and cultural elite of the society, and this over representation
was a critical feature of German anti-Semitism from 1870-1933
Similarly, during the 1920s plans were proposed in which each ethnic
group received a percentage of placements at Harvard and other universities
reflecting the percentage of racial and national groups in the United
States. These plans certainly reflect the importance of ethnicity in
human affairs, but surely a society based on this type of ethnic special
interest is not one which a social engineer in the manner of Lycurgus,
Moses, Plato, or the American Founding Fathers would design as a blueprint
for an entire society. The levels of social tension are bound to be
chronically high. Moreover, there is a considerable chance that ethnic
warfare would occur even if precise parity had been achieved via intensive
social controls: as indicated above, it would always be in the interests
of any ethnic group to obtain hegemony over the others.
If one adopts a cultural pluralism model in which there is free competition
for resources and reproductive success, differences between ethnic groups
are inevitable, and history suggests that such differences would result
in animosity from the groups that are losing out. The Tutsi/Hutu struggle
in Rwanda and its neighbors is only the latest of many tragic examples.
Assuming that there are ethnic differences in talents and abilities,
the supposition that ethnic separatism could be a stable situation without
ethnic animosity requires either a balance of power situation maintained
with powerful social controls, as described above, or it requires that
at least some ethnic groups be unconcerned that they are losing in the
competition
I regard this last possibility as remote at best. The proposition
that an ethnic group should or would be unconcerned with its own eclipse
and domination is certainly not expected by any theoretical or ideological
perspective of which I am aware. The present immigration policy essentially
places America "in play" as an arena of ethnic competition in a sense
which does not apply in the non-Western nations of the world where the
implicit assumption is that territory is held by its historically-dominant
people. Under present policies, each racial/ethnic group in the world
is encouraged to press its interest in expanding its demographic and
political presence in America and can be expected to do so if given
the opportunity. {51} Contrary to policies they advocate for the United
States, American Jews have had no interest at all in proposing that
immigration to Israel should be similarly multi-ethnic or that Israel
should have an immigration policy that would threaten the hegemony of
Jews in Israel. Indeed, the very deep ethnic conflict within Israel
is an excellent example of the failure of multiculturalism. Similarly,
while Jews have been on the forefront of movements to separate church
and state in the United States and often protested lack of religious
freedom in the Soviet Union, the control of religious affairs by the
Orthodox in Israel has received only belated and half-hearted opposition
by American Jewish organizations (Cohen, 1972, 317) and has not prevented
the all-out support of Israel by American Jews, despite the fact that
Israel's policy regarding immigration is quite the opposite of that
of Western democracies.
At present the interests of non-European-derived peoples to expand
demographically and politically in the United States are widely perceived
as a moral imperative, while the attempts of the European-derived peoples
to retain demographic, political, and cultural control are represented
as "racist" and patently immoral. From the perspective of these European-derived
peoples, the prescribed morality entails altruism and self-sacrifice,
and it is unlikely to be viable in the long run. And, as we have seen,
the viability of such a morality of self-sacrifice is especially problematic
in the context of a multicultural society in which everyone is highly
conscious of group membership and there is between-group competition
for resources.
Although the success of the anti-restrictionist effort is an indication
that people can be induced to be altruistic toward other groups, I rather
doubt such altruism will continue to occur if there are obvious signs
that the status and political power of the European-derived group is
decreasing while the power of other groups increases as a result of
immigration and other social policies. The prediction, both on common
sense grounds and on the basis of psychological research on social identity
process (e.g., Hogg & Abrams, 1987), is that as other groups become
increasingly powerful and salient in a multicultural society, the European-derived
peoples of the United States will become increasingly unified and that
contemporary divisive influences among the European-derived peoples
of the United States (e.g., issues related to gender and sexual orientation;
social class differences; religious differences) will be increasingly
perceived as unimportant. Eventually these groups will develop greater
cohesion and a sense of common interest in their interactions with the
other ethnic groups with profound consequences on the future history
of America and the West.
NOTES 52
- Raab is associated with the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai
B'rith (ADL), and is executive director emeritus of the Perlmutter
Institute for Jewish Advocacy at Brandeis University. He is also
a columnist for the San Francisco Jewish Bulletin. Among other works,
he is co-author, with Seymour Lipset of The Politics of Unreason:
Right Wing-Extremism in America, 17901970 (Lipset & Raab 1970),
a volume in a series of books on anti-Semitism in the United States
sponsored by the ADL.
- In Australia, Miriam Faine, an editorial committee member of
the Australian Jewish Democrat stated that "The strengthening of
multicultural or diverse Australia is also our most effective insurance
policy against anti-semitism. The day Australia has a Chinese Australian
Governor General I would feel more confident of my freedom to live
as a Jewish Australian" (in McCormack 1994, p. 11).
- Moreover, a deep concern that an ethnically and culturally homogeneous
America would compromise Jewish interests can be seen in Silberman's
comments on the attraction of Jews to "the Democratic party. . .
with its traditional hospitality to non-WASP ethnic groups. . .
. A distinguished economist who strongly disagreed with Mondale's
economic policies voted for him nonetheless. 'I watched the conventions
on television, ' he explained, 'and the Republicans did not look
like my kind of people."That same reaction led many Jews to vote
for Carter in 1980 despite their dislike of him; 'I'd rather live
in a country governed by the faces I saw at the Democratic convention
than by those I saw at the Republican convention' a well-known author
told me" (pp. 347-348).
- Goldberg (1996, 160) notes that the future neo-conservatives
were disciples of Trotskyist theoretician Max Schachtman. A good
example is Irving Kristol's (1983) "Memoirs of a Trotskyist."
- Grant's letter to the House Committee on Immigration and Naturalization
emphasized the principle argument of the restrictionists, i.e.,
that the use of the 1890 census of the foreign born as the basis
of the immigration law was fair to all ethnic groups currently in
the country, and that the use of the 1910 census discriminated against
the "native Americans whose ancestors were in this country before
its independence." He also argued in favor of quotas from Western
Hemisphere nations because these countries "in some cases furnish
very undesirable immigrants. The Mexicans who come into the United
states are overwhelmingly of Indian blood, and the recent intelligence
tests have shown their very low intellectual status. We have already
got too many of them in our Southwestern States, and a check should
be put on their increase" (p. 571). Grant was also concerned about
the unassimilability of recent immigrants. He included with his
letter a Chicago Tribune editorial commenting on a situation in
Hamtramck, Michigan in which recent immigrants were described as
demanding "Polish rule, " the expulsion of nonPoles, and that only
the Polish language be spoken even by federal officials. Grant also
{53} argued that differences in reproductive rate would result in
displacement of groups that delayed marriage and had fewer children-
clearly a concern that as a result of immigration his ethnic group
would be displaced by ethnic groups with a higher rate of natural
increase. (Restriction of Immigration; Hearings Before the Committee
on Immigration and Naturalization House of Representatives, sixty-eighth
Congress, First Session, Jan. 5, 1924; p. 570.)
- Restriction of Immigration; Hearings Before the Committee on
Immigration and Naturalization House of Representatives, sixty-eighth
Congress, First Session, Jan. 5, 1924; p. 580-581.
- Statement of the AJ Congress, Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees
of the Committees on the Judiciary, 82nd Congress, first session,
on S. 716, H. R. 2379, and H. R. 2816. March 6-April 9, 1951, p391.
- Restriction of Immigration; Hearings Before the Committee on
Immigration and Naturalization House of Representatives, sixty-eighth
Congress, First Session, Jan. 3, 1924; p. 303.
- Restriction of Immigration; Hearings Before the Committee on
Immigration and Naturalization House of Representatives, sixty-eighth
Congress, First Session, Jan. 3, 1924; p. 341.
- For example, in the Senate debates of April 15-19, 1924, Nordic
superiority was not mentioned by any of the proponents of the legislation
but was mentioned by the following opponents of the legislation:
Senators Colt (p. 6542), Reed (p. 6468), Walsh (p. 6355). In the
House debates of April 5, 8, and 15, virtually all of the opponents
of the legislation raised the racial inferiority issue, including
Reps. Celler(p. 5914-5915), Clancy (p. 5930), Connery (p. 5683),
Dickstein (p. 5655-5656, 5686), Gallivan (p5849), Jacobstein (p.
5864), James (p. 5670), Kunz (p. 5896), LaGuardia (p. 5657), Mooney
(p. 5909-5910), O'Connell (p. 5836), O'Connor (p. 5648), Oliver
(p. 5870), O'Sullivan (p. 5899), Perlman (p5651); Sabath (p. 5651,
5662), and Tague (p. 5873). Several representatives (e.g., Reps.
Dickinson [p6267), Garber [pp. 5689-5693] and Smith [p. 5705]) contrasted
the positive characteristics of the Nordic immigrants with the negative
characteristics of more recent immigrants without distinguishing
genetic from environmental reasons as possible influences. They,
along with several others, noted especially the lack of assimilation
of the recent immigrants and their tendencies to cluster in urban
areas. Rep. Allen argued that there is a "necessity for purifying
and keeping pure the blood of America" (p. 5693). Rep. McSwain,
who argued for the need to preserve Nordic hegemony, did not do
so on the basis of Nordic superiority but on the basis of legitimate
ethnic self-interest (pp. 5683-5; see also comments of Reps. Lea
and Miller). Rep. Gasque introduced a newspaper article that referred
to the "laws of heredity" and to the swamping of the race that had
built America (p. 6270). {54}
- Restriction of Immigration. Hearings Before the Committee on
Immigration and Naturalization House of Representatives, sixty-eighth
Congress, First Session, Jan. 3, 1924; p. 351.
- See, e.g., Restriction of Immigration; Hearings Before the Committee
on Immigration and Naturalization House of Representatives, sixty-eighth
Congress, First Session, Jan. 5, 1924; p. 733Ff.
- Hearings before the Committee on Immigration and Naturalization,
House of Representatives, May 24-June 1, 1939: Joint Resolutions
to Authorize the Admission to the United States of a Limited Number
of German Refugee Children, p. 1.
- Hearings before the Committee on Immigration and Naturalization,
House of Representatives, May 24-June 1, 1939: Joint Resolutions
to Authorize the Admission to the United States of a Limited Number
of German Refugee Children, p. 78.
- Hearings before the Committee on Immigration and Naturalization,
House of Representatives, May 24-June 1, 1939: Joint Resolutions
to Authorize the Admission to the United States of a Limited Number
of German Refugee Children, p. 140.
- Statement of the AJ Congress, Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees
of the Committees on the Judiciary, 82nd Congress, first session,
on S. 716, H. R. 2379, and H. R. 2816. March 6-April 9, 1951, p565.
- Statement of the AJ Congress, Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees
of the Committees on the Judiciary, 82nd Congress, first session,
on S. 716, H. R. 2379, and H. R. 2816. March 6-April 9, 1951, p566.
See also statement of Rabbi Bernard J. Bamberger, President of the
Synagogue Council of America; See also the statement of the AJ Congress,
pp. 560-561.
- Statement of Will Maslow representing the AJ Congress, Joint
Hearings Before the Subcommittees of the Committees on the Judiciary,
82nd Congress, first session, on S. 716, H. R. 2379, and H. R. 2816
March 6-April 9, 1951, p. 394.
- Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees of the Committees on
the Judiciary, 82nd Congress, first session, on S. 716, H. R. 2379,
and H. R. 2816. March 6-April 9, 1951, pp. 562-595.
- Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees of the Committees on
the Judiciary, 82nd Congress, first session, on S. 716, H. R. 2379,
and H. R. 2816. March 6-April 9, 1951, p. 410.
- Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees of the Committees on
the Judiciary, 82nd Congress, first session, on S. 716, H. R. 2379,
and H. R. 2816. March 6-April 9, 1951, p. 404.
- Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees of the Committees on
the Judiciary, 82nd Congress, first session, on S. 716, H. R. 2379,
and H. R. 2816. March 6-April 9, 1951, p. 563. {55}
- Moreover, achieving parity between Jews and other ethnic groups
would entail a very high level of discrimination against individual
Jews for admission to universities or employment opportunities,
and would even entail a large taxation on Jews in order to prevent
the present Jewish advantage in the possession of wealth, since
at present Jews are vastly over-represented among the wealthy and
the successful in the United States (e.g., Ginsberg, 1994; Lipsett
& Raab, 1995). Beginning in the 1920s, studies have repeatedly shown
that Ashkenazi Jews have a full-scale IQ of approximately 117 and
a verbal IQ in the range of 125 (see MacDonald, 1994 for a review).
By 1988, Jews constituted about 40% of admissions to Ivy League
colleges and Jewish income was at least double that of gentiles
(Shapiro1992, p. 116). Shapiro also shows that Jews are over represented
by at least a factor of nine on indexes of wealth, but that this
is a conservative estimate because much Jewish wealth is in real
estate which is difficult to determine and easy to hide. While constituting
approximately 2.4% of the population of the united States, Jews
represented one half of the top 100 Wall Street executives. Lipset
and Raab (1995) note that Jews contribute between onequarter and
one-third of all political contributions in the United states, including
one-half of Democratic Party contributions and one-fourth of Republican
contributions. Indeed, many Jewish intellectuals (including "neoconservatives"
such as Daniel Bell, Sidney Hook, Irving Howe, Irving Kristol, Nathan
Glazer, Norman Podhoretz, and Earl Raab) as well as Jewish organizations
(including the ADL, the AJ Committee, and the AJ Congress) have
been eloquent opponents of affirmative action and quota mechanisms
for distributing resources (see Sachar 1992, p818ff)
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