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Jewish Pride
During WWII
Pride in Jewish heritage was always strong in
Youngstown, but particularly during World War II. Zionist community
leaders, like David Fish and Oscar Altshuler, were encouraged by
National Jewish leaders to promote public outcries over the atrocities
in Europe. As a result, an overall increase in Jewish pride emerged
during the late 1930s and 1940s.
An excellent example of the pride and unity during
the WWII era came in the summer of 1941 when a “Jewish Day” at Idora
Park was held. The event brought the community together not only to
support the war but to strengthen the bonds of Jews on the home front.
Nearly 10,000 Jews gathered to celebrate their heritage.[1]
Anti-Semitism in
Youngstown
Anti-Semitism did by no means appear in Youngstown
as a result of World War II. In fact, it had been a constant bias, in
various degrees, since the first Jewish settles arrived in the area in
the nineteenth-century. During the 1930s and 40s, the prejudice became
temporarily more organized with the advent of Ku Klux Klan and other
groups who promoted racial and religious hate. Chief among these were
the Silver Shirts, an offshoot faction of the Nazi party. In 1937, Rabbi
Stitskin of Beth Israel Temple led an “aggressive campaign to nip the
organization in the bud.” Through a combined effort of the rabbi, the
American Legion, Warren Ministerial Organizations, and regular citizens,
the leader of the Silver Shirts was impeached from his position as
president of the City Council.
The type and intensity of the bigotry appears in
differing degrees in personal recollections, from some not remembering
it at all to vivid accounts. The variances speak to the many levels of
covert and overt anti-Semitism present in Youngstown over the last two
centuries.
[1]
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