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Institute for Historical
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Book Review
The Third Reich and the Palestine Question
- THE THIRD REICH AND THE PALESTINE QUESTION by Francis R. Nicosia.
Austin: The University of Texas Press, 1985, Hardbound xiv+ 319 pages,
$35.00, ISBN 0-292-72731-3.
Reviewed by John M. Ries
Although Zionists today are loath to admit it publicly, the fact
remains that the Zionist movement, during the period leading up to the
Second World War, worked closely with the National Socialist government in
Germany to solve the so-called Jewish question. Needless to say,
professional historians have largely neglected this surprising
cooperation. Two works by Jewish journalists, Lenni Brenner's Zionism
in the Age of the Dictators and Edwin Black's The Transit
Agreement, have dealt with the aspects of it, but their books must now
be regarded as superseded by Francis R. Nicosia's The Third Reich and
the Palestine Question, the first (and probably definitive) study of
National Socialist Germany's Palestine policy in the 1930's.
On August 25, 1933, the Ministry of Economics issued a circular to all
German currency control offices informing them of the recently concluded
agreement with the Jewish Agency for Palestine. Known as the Haavara, or
Transfer Agreement, it tied the emigration of Jews to Palestine to the
sale of the German goods. By permitting each Jew who indicated a
willingness to emigrate to Palestine the opportunity to take along a fixed
portion of assets in the form of German goods, Germany's tight currency
restrictions were circumvented, while the depressed export economy of the
Reich received a much needed stimulus. Above all, the arrangement greatly
promoted the removal of Jews from Germany, a principal domestic goal of
the Hitler regime.
Nicosia also feels that there is reason to believe that the Jewish
anti-German boycott, begun shortly after Hitler came to power in January
1933, may have been neutralized as a result of Haavara. In any event, even
though Germany became the number-one exporter of goods to Palestine by
1937 due to the Haavara Agreement, its significance did not reside in its
economic benefits, but in the fact that it created a consensus in the
German government for Palestine as the principal destination for German
Jews. This lasted until the effects of the Arab revolt beginning in 1936
and the Peel Partition Plan the following year forced a reconsideration.
Thereafter, the consensus was altered, but the policy of promoting Jewish
emigration remained the same.
The German Zionist Organization was employed by the government to
"re-educate" the largely liberal assimilationist German Jewish community
on the desirability of the Palestine option. The SS oversaw the
establishment of occupational retraining centers run by the Hechalutz, the
principal Zionist youth organization, to teach young Jews the necessary
skills in demand in Palestine. Located throughout Germany, the centers
also provided training for Jews who planned to emigrate to other
countries. The British Embassy in Berlin issued its stamp of approval in a
memorandum of April 3, 1936, pointing out that they "enabled the Jewish
Agency to select suitable candidates for admission to Palestine, better
prepared for absorption into the economy of the country."
The German government accorded preferential treatment to Zionist
organizations at the expense of liberal/assimilationist ones. For example,
in February 1935, Heydrich ordered the prohibition of speeches and
activities that counseled Jews to remain in Germany. The SD
(Sicherheitsdienst) attended Jewish meetings, censoring speakers who
advocated the continuation of a Jewish presence in Germany while
encouraging propaganda activities on the part of Zionists. By May 1935, "a
general ban on all meetings and speeches of Jewish organizations in
Germany was issued by the Gestapo ... although local Jewish cultural and
sports activities, as well as the activities of Zionist organizations,
were exempt." Nicosia's statement that "this was in keeping with the
Nurnberg laws of September 1935, according to which all German Jews were
formally placed beyond the pale of German citizenship" is in error, since
the Nurnberg laws had not yet been enacted. Nevertheless, it is important
to note that when they were passed on September 15,1935, they were
welcomed by Zionist groups which considered them important in breaking
down the resistance of the majority of German Jews, who still regarded the
Hitler regime as a temporary phenomenon. The net effect of this
German-Zionist connection was to make Zionism the principal movement among
Jewish youth in Germany in the 1930s, relegating support for liberal
assimilationism to the older generation.
An important aspect of German Palestine policy was the relationship of
Germany to Palestine's Arab population. From 1933 on, the Arabs of the
Middle East sought German help against the influx of Jews into Palestine,
feeling that the anti-Jewish policies of the Hitler regime could be
employed in behalf of the Arab cause for independence from the British
Mandate. However, this was not to be the case. German policy in the 1930's
was based on the acceptance of two things: Zionism and British
imperialism. Any official encouragement of Arab nationalism would have
upset the status quo in the region, a state of affairs totally
unacceptable to Germany. As a result, aside from a few insignificant
shipments of arms to Arab insurgents in the late 1930s, along with a brief
dalliance on the part of German Intelligence at the same time (probably
without the approval of Hitler), nothing substantial was done to change
this policy of willful neglect.
As mentioned earlier, the outbreak of an Arab revolt in 1936 forced a
reconsideration of Germangs Palestine policy and prompted the first
genuine debate over the primacy of Palestine as the destination for German
Jews. The Peel Partition Plan, an unsuccessful attempt to divide the
country into Jewish and Arab sectors, conjured up the specter of a Jewish
state, a state which was opposed by all German government and party
figures. Nicosia points out that it was not simply for ideological reasons
that National Socialism opposed the Jewish state (a section of the book is
devoted to just such a discussion). Rather it was the fact that "the
anti-Semitic policies of the Hitler regime would make a Jewish state a
natural enemy of the Reich and a dangerous addition to the growing
coalition of nations hostile to the new Germany." However, as the chances
for such an occurrence began to diminish, Hitler reaffirmed his support
for Palestine as the Zielland for German Jews, although efforts
were made to explore alternatives, such as Madagascar (Poland had already
made repeated overtures to the French for its use as a site for the large
Polish Jewish population). This change was prompted by the realization
that Palestine had a limited capacity to absorb the growing number of
Jewish immigrants, as the resistance of the Arab population and the
resultant tighter restrictions placed on Jewish immigration by British
authorities made increasingly clear.
Nicosia claims that by late 1937 Hitler began to "prepare for war" as
the chances for British cooperation with his proposed changes in the
European territorial arrangement seemed more and more remote. This thesis
has been challenged by Revisionists, if for no other reason than the
meeting held between Hitler and British foreign secretary Halifax at
Berchtegaden in November 1937, at which Halifax agreed in principal to all
of Hitler's territorial demands. In any event, a transfer of authority
over Jewish policy in Germany took place at this time, with the SS given
complete control over all its aspects. The mechanism for voluntary
emigration established by the Ha'avara Agreement earlier became obsolete
with the confiscation of Jewish capital from 1938 on. Henceforth, the
legal niceties of the Reich's previous Jewish emigration policy were
overlooked as the SS began to cooperate with the Zionist Mossad le Aliyah
Bet (Committee for Illegal Immigration) with the full knowledge of both
British and U.S. authorities. This policy of "compulsion" was to continue
until the "Final Solution," the nature of which Nicosia is careful to
avoid specifying.
Aside from a couple of minor discrepancies which in no way detract from
the credibility of this book, e.g. January 27 instead of January 26, 1932,
as the date given for Hitler's Düsseldorf Industry Club Speech, the main
thesis of The Third Reich and the Palestine Question is quite
convincing. Perhaps Nicosia's rather strong reliance on Hitler's musings
in Mein Kampf as a blueprint for his later foreign policy
initiatives should be challenged, as they indeed have by various
Revisionists, but that is more properly the subject of another study. What
is important is the author's recognition that Hitler had no desire to go
to war against England or to challenge the integrity of the British
Empire. The German acceptance of the status quo in the Middle East is
further confirmation of this fact. |