American filmmaker Ken Burns has a Palestine problem - opinion

Why is Burns trying to disqualify Palestine from the conversation? Why resort to a technicality about sovereignty in order to try to push Palestine out of the discussion?

 Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns filming interviews for "The Roosevelts" in 2014.  (photo credit: Daniel J. White/PBS)
Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns filming interviews for "The Roosevelts" in 2014.
(photo credit: Daniel J. White/PBS)

For the past five months, in interviews and press releases about his upcoming documentary, filmmaker Ken Burns has been claiming that the Roosevelt administration accepted more refugees than any other sovereign nation during the Nazi era.

The phrase “sovereign nation” struck us as odd. Ordinarily, one would say, “than any other country.” Why emphasize the word “sovereign?”

Now Burns has let the cat out of the bag. Apparently responding to criticism of his handling of the immigration statistics, Burns admitted to an interviewer from The Daily Beast on September 4 that he has been using the term sovereign nation to distinguish from the fact that people escaped to other places, like Palestine.

Why is Burns trying to disqualify Palestine from the conversation? Why resort to a technicality about sovereignty in order to try to push Palestine out of the discussion?

A sovereign Palestine?

Even though Palestine was not sovereign, the ruling authorities there – the British – certainly were a sovereign power and they had to make a decision about how many Jews to admit either to the United Kingdom or to the territories under its control. Likewise, president Franklin D. Roosevelt had to make a decision about how many Jews he would admit either to the mainland United States or to the non-sovereign territories it controlled, such as the US Virgin Islands.

Sadly, Roosevelt chose to keep Jews out of the Virgin Islands, despite the offer by the governor and legislative assembly of that territory to open their doors to Jews fleeing Hitler. Treasury secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr. specifically raised the possibility of admitting the 930 refugees aboard the infamous ship, the St. Louis, to the Virgin Islands, in June 1939. But Roosevelt said No and the refugees were forced to return to Europe; many of them were murdered in the Holocaust.

 A CHILD is lifted up to touch fingertips with a statue of US president Franklin D. Roosevelt, in Washington. It is a fact that the Roosevelt administration’s track record on admitting Jewish refugees was worse than that of the Soviets and the British, says the writer (credit: KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS)
A CHILD is lifted up to touch fingertips with a statue of US president Franklin D. Roosevelt, in Washington. It is a fact that the Roosevelt administration’s track record on admitting Jewish refugees was worse than that of the Soviets and the British, says the writer (credit: KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS)

Jewish refugees in the US post-Holocaust

If Roosevelt had allowed the St. Louis passengers or other Jewish refugees to stay in the Virgin Islands, surely today we would be crediting him for doing so. We wouldn’t say that rescuing them doesn’t count because the Virgin Islands are not sovereign. The same goes for Palestine.

When we compare the number of Jewish refugees admitted by Roosevelt to the US during the Nazi era and the number admitted by the British to Palestine, we begin to understand the rhetorical game Ken Burns has been playing.

From the rise of Hitler to power in early 1933 to the defeat of the Nazis in May 1945, the US admitted between 200,000 and 210,000 Jewish refugees.

The British authorities ruling Palestine admitted over 250,000 Jews to Palestine during that same period. (We are using the numbers cited by Dalia Ofer and other widely-accepted historians.)

REMARKABLY, EVEN if Palestine is arbitrarily removed from the calculation, the Roosevelt administration still doesn’t qualify as having accepted more Jewish refugees than any other sovereign nation. That distinction actually belongs to the Soviet Union.

According to the website of the US Holocaust Museum, which Burns says persuaded him to make the film in the first place, between 1939 and 1941 nearly 300,000 Polish Jews, almost 10% of the Polish Jewish population fled German-occupied areas of Poland and crossed into the Soviet zone.

We have no illusions about what life was like for Jewish refugees in the Soviet Union, but those Jews fled there for a simple reason: they chose life under the Soviets, instead of likely death under the Germans.

Likewise, in noting how many Jews the British authorities admitted to Palestine, we are not gainsaying the tragic fact that the cruel British White Paper of May 1939 reduced Jewish immigration to a trickle, precisely when it was the most urgent. And even the White Paper’s paltry pledge of 75,000 over the next five years was not fulfilled. Fearing Arab anger over a flood of Jews, the British doled out those immigration certificates ever so slowly, not reaching the promised figure until late 1945.

Nevertheless, it is a fact that the Roosevelt administration’s track record on admitting Jewish refugees was worse than that of either the Soviets or the British.

Even more important than who took in the most is who could have taken in many more. The British could and should have let more Jews into Palestine. Their fear that Jewish immigration would make the Arabs pro-Nazi was obviated by the fact that many Arab leaders and a large segment of the Arab masses were pro-Nazi anyway.

As for the US, the Roosevelt administration deliberately suppressed immigration below what the existing laws allowed. That left more than 190,000 quota places from Germany and German-occupied territories unused during the Holocaust years.

But reminding viewers of all those unused US quota places would mean admitting that it was president Roosevelt’s deliberate policy, not the general atmosphere of nativism and isolationism, that prevented the rescue of those 190,000 Jews. And that, apparently, would not have been consistent with Burns’s chosen narrative.

Professor Medoff is the founding director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies and the author of more than 20 books about Jewish history and the Holocaust. Professor Penkower is a professor emeritus of modern Jewish history at the Machon Lander Graduate School of Jewish Studies and the author of a five-volume study about the rise of Israel between 1933-1948.