The American Jewish Committee
The first American Jewish organization to fight for the civil rights of
Jews--and everyone--at home and abroad
Reprinted with permission
from the American
Jewish Desk Reference (The Philip Lief Group).
Founded November 11, 1906, the American Jewish Committee
was the first organization established by American Jews to address the need to
defend Jewish civil rights in the United States and throughout the world.
Sparked by the large wave of anti-Jewish pogroms in czarist Russia,
particularly the two massacres of Jews in Kishinev in 1903 and 1905, three
American Jewish leaders--Oscar S. Straus, Jacob F Schiff, and Cyrus L.
Sulzberger--undertook to raise funds for relief of the victims and thereby put
in place the machinery for significant fundraising within the Jewish community,
the first of its kind in the United States.
In early 1907, joined by
Cyrus Adler, Louis Marshall, Judah L. Magnes, Simon Wolf, and other important
American Jewish jurists and industrialists of the established German-Jewish
elite, they formed a Committee of Fifty to establish a permanent organization
that aimed "...to
prevent the infraction of the civil and religious rights of Jews, in any part
of the world" and "...to render all lawful assistance" to those
Jews whose rights were threatened.
Focus on Russia
In its early years, the
American Jewish Committee acted to keep the doors of the United States open to
Jewish immigrants and lobbied for the defense of the rights of American Jews
traveling in Russia.
The latter project, following
a key speech by Louis Marshall, resulted in the American government's abrogation
of the 1832 Russo-American Treaty of Commerce in 1911 because of Russia's
refusal to comply with an American demand for equal treatment of Jews. In
arguing for the inviolability of American citizenship, Marshall invoked
universal themes when he stated, "We can never suffer any question here
concerning individual rights but such as relates to the entire American
people."
Expanding the Mission
Under Marshall's leadership the
American Jewish Committee expanded its mission to the defense of the rights of
all Americans, regardless of race, creed, or religion. In 1913 the Committee
was one of a number of groups that lobbied the United States government to
press for human rights guarantees following the end of the Balkan Wars and
supported the New York State Civil Rights Law, which prohibited the
advertisement of discriminatory restrictions in hotels and other public
places. During World War I the Committee was instrumental in the founding of
the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, a relief organization, and
the National Jewish Welfare Board, a social welfare organization devoted to
the needs of American servicemen, both Jewish and non-Jewish.
In the post-war world the
Committee's agenda increasingly reflected American domestic concerns. In the 1920s
the Committee, through an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief,
supported the right of Catholics to send their children to private parochial
schools rather than to public school. Between 1933 and 1940, the Committee
sponsored an educational campaign in the United States to counter Nazi and
other anti-Semitic propaganda.
It also worked with the
press, civic organizations, businesses, labor unions, veterans organizations,
and church groups to promote its message of tolerance. In 1948 the Committee
filed a brief with the United States Supreme Court opposing racially
restrictive covenants and, in 1952, successfully advocated before the Court
the position that damages were not applicable should such a covenant be broken.
"Champions of Liberty"
Beginning in 1956 the
Committee began to sponsor conferences and studies by distinguished social
scientists concerning Jewish continuity in the Diaspora, relations with Israel,
and the present and projected role of religious and ethnic minorities in
American life. As part of its mission to break down barriers separating groups
from one another, the Committee invited Pope Pius XII to confer with them on
issues regarding racial and religious persecution and the status of refugees in
1957.
Activities such as these,
which remain ongoing today, led President Eisenhower to praise the Committee on
the occasion of its 50th anniversary in 1957. Saluting the Committee and its
membership as "champions of liberty," Eisenhower wrote: "They
have helped to protect and strengthen the institutions of American democracy, they
have helped to secure equal opportunities for all our citizens. By adding
substance to our principles, deeds to our words, they help us make effective
witness in the cause of world peace."
(c) 1999, the Philip Lief
Group. Reprinted with permission.