Jewish Group
Related: About this forum(Jewish Group) American Blood Libel: It did happen here
Massena is an undistinguished small town with a population of about 10,000 in upstate New York. But in the fall of 1928, an incident occurred that brought the town national newspaper coverage and frightened Jews across America. On Sept. 22, a few days before Yom Kippur, Barbara Griffiths, a 4-year-old girl, wandered into the woods surrounding the village and disappeared. When she did not return home hours later, her frantic parents contacted the mayor and the local police. Thus began the tale of the only blood libel accusation against Jews in American history.
The blood libel is the accusation that Jews murdered Christian children at Passover to use their blood for making matzo. The charge first appeared in Norwich, England, in 1144, and from then on it popped up repeatedly throughout European history. It even appears in Chaucers The Prioresss Tale, which is included in his Canterbury Tales. The myth never received any official backing from the popes, but that did not prevent local Catholic parish priests from referring to it on Good Friday and in Easter services.
1920s America was rife with such antisemitic narratives. These feelings were undoubtedly stoked by Henry Fords libelous series, The International Jew: The Worlds Foremost Problem, which was first published in his newspaper, The Dearborn Independent, from 1920 to 1922. The newspaper had a wider circulation than The New York Times. The articles were also collected and republished in pamphlets by the same title. Everyone who bought a Ford automobile received a copy. He was the most popular American, and millions of Americans bought his automobiles, and they believed and trusted him.
Thus it was easy for Protestant Americans, unnerved by the massive immigration and perceived social threat of Catholics and Jews into the United States during the early 20th century, to believe what Ford wrote. The Ku Klux Klan, which had been dormant, subsequently attracted large numbers of disaffected Protestants and reached a nationwide membership of 3 million by 1925. The Klansmans creed concluded with the pledge, I am a native-born American citizen and I believe my rights in this country superior to those of foreigners. A contemporary observer remembered that Massena was awash in flyers advertising Klan meetings and hundreds of locals showed up at them.
Antisemitic attitudes were also reflected in the passage of restrictive national immigration laws in 1921, especially in the 1924 act severely limiting immigration from Eastern Europe (where most Jewish immigrants hailed from.) Magazines catering to Protestant readers consistently warned about America becoming the dumping ground for Europes refuse. The 1924 Immigration Act, and its openly discriminatory quotas, also catered to this audience, with disastrous consequences for Jews. Most of the would-be immigrants remained in Eastern Europe and perished in the Holocaust.
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LetMyPeopleVote
(154,421 posts)JustAnotherGen
(33,539 posts)I was not aware of this.
Behind the Aegis
(54,852 posts)It is just a reminder of how much of Jewish history is unknown, even by Jews and those who love us. It is much like the histories of other marginalized persons, relegated to the garbage until someone comes and brushes away the years of dust and cobwebs.
JustAnotherGen
(33,539 posts)It was actually truly upstate (Canadian Border) - not what those of us from Western NY call The Southern Tier. She just died two years ago.
And I'm so proud of the Rabbi for NOT accepting their apology.