Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- Note on Editorial Practice
- Note on Transliteration
- Introduction: Modern Jewish Preaching
- Part I The Wars of the Napoleonic Era
- Part II The Wars of the Mid-Nineteenth Century
- Part III The Wars of the Late Nineteenth Century
- Part IV The First World War
- Part V The Second World War
- Part VI Wars of the Later Twentieth Century
- Part VII Responses to 9/11
- Source Acknowledgements
- Bibliography
- Index of Passages Cited
- General Index
27 - Ferdinand M. Isserman, ‘The United States Is at War’, 12 December 1941, St Louis
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- Note on Editorial Practice
- Note on Transliteration
- Introduction: Modern Jewish Preaching
- Part I The Wars of the Napoleonic Era
- Part II The Wars of the Mid-Nineteenth Century
- Part III The Wars of the Late Nineteenth Century
- Part IV The First World War
- Part V The Second World War
- Part VI Wars of the Later Twentieth Century
- Part VII Responses to 9/11
- Source Acknowledgements
- Bibliography
- Index of Passages Cited
- General Index
Summary
BORN in 1898 in Antwerp, Belgium, Ferdinand Isserman emigrated to America with his family in 1906. Like many Reform rabbis of his generation, he completed a combined programme at the University of Cincinnati and the Hebrew Union College. Though exempt from conscription as a rabbinical student, he enlisted in the army in 1918, an experience to which he alluded in his subsequent preaching on war. After ordination, he served as assistant rabbi in Rodef Shalom of Philadelphia, rabbi of Holy Blossom Congregation in Toronto (preceding Eisendrath), and—beginning in 1929—in Temple Israel of St Louis, where he remained until his death in 1971.
In the summer of 1933 Isserman spent a month in Germany, and upon returning in the autumn he preached about his impressions of how Jews were living under the Nazi regime. On 28 October that year, after reporting extensively on the tragic experiences of individuals he had met, he concluded by warning Americans against being deceived by the disinformation circulated by Nazi propagandists:
Americans might believe Hitler's professions of peace and good will, but the people of Czecho-Slovakia, Poland, Holland, Belgium, England and France, who have seen the victims of Hitler's brown-[shirted] soldiers, who have seen the welts on their backs, the bruises on their faces, who have seen them maimed for life, know that Naziism is not the rebirth of a great nation. They know that Naziism is the degradation of a noble people. They know that Hitler is neither a prophet nor a messiah, but a fanatical maniac, who is leading a revolt against civilization, against the humanities, against God.
Two years later, reporting on a second visit, he concluded that ‘the antidemocratic, anti-Christian nationalistic Nazi philosophy is relentlessly being worked out’, though—perhaps rather naively—he also claimed that the policies of the regime were creating ‘a vast and an increasing opposition’. As for practical advice to Americans and the rest of the civilized world: ‘Whoever gives the Nazi regime moral support, whether it be by participating in the [Berlin] Olympic games, or in any other fashion, is strengthening the hands of the barbarians who are in the process of ruining Germany and who may bring chaos upon all of Europe and destroy Western civilization.’
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- Jewish Preaching in Times of War, 1800–2001 , pp. 450 - 461Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2012