A Jewish Boxer Who Fought for His People
by Dr. Rafael Medoff, Director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, which focuses on issues related to America's response to the Holocaust.
Published in the Jewish World Review on January 7, 2004, Teves 5764
Jewish boxers are making a comeback,
according to a feature story in a recent issue of the New York Times. Several
Israeli and Russian-born Jewish prizefighters are leading the resurgence of a
phenomenon unknown since the 1930s, when the likes of Benny Leonard, Maxie
Rosenbloom, and Barney Ross were prominent in the ring.
When his father was murdered in a holdup on Chicago's West Side in 1923, 14
year-old Barney turned to boxing to earn money for his mother and five siblings.
He eventually won the lightweight, junior welterweight,and welterweight
championships, in a career that saw him victorious in 77 of 81 bouts. Ross
became wildly popular among American Jews, who saw him as an antidote to the
stereotypical image of Jews as physically unfit.
Bergson, a maverick Zionist emissary from Jerusalem, used a variety of
protest methods to press the Allies to rescue Jews from Hitler. His group placed
full-page ads in hundreds of American newspapers, organized public rallies, and
staged a dramatic march to the White House by 400 rabbis. A Bergson-inspired
resolution was introduced in Congress, urging creation of a U.S. government
agency to rescue Jewish refugees. Together with behind-the-scenes lobbying by
Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr. and his aides, the resolution persuaded
FDR to establish the War Refugee Board. The Board's activities, which included
financing the rescue work of Raoul Wallenberg, saved the lives of over 200,000
people during the last 15 months of the war.
But what is not well known about Barney Ross is that he was one of the first
professional athletes to use his stardom on behalf of a political cause. Ross
was not only a boxing champion; he also publicly championed the cause of
rescuing Jews from the Holocaust and establishing a Jewish state.
Ross retired from the boxing ring in 1938, but was back in the public eye just
three years later, when, at age 32, he enlisted in the U.S. army after Pearl
Harbor. In the battle of Guadalcanal, Ross was seriously wounded while rescuing
injured comrades from a Japanese ambush. His battlefield heroics earned him a
Silver Star.
Upon his return to the United States, Ross championed a new cause, when he
became a prominent supporter of the Emergency Committee to Save the Jewish
People of Europe. This was not merely another worthy charity. For Ross to
support the controversial Emergency Committee took real political courage--the
committee's public criticism of the Allies' apathy toward the Holocaust had
infuriated government officials in Washington and London. In fact, the State
Department repeatedly tried to have the Emergency Committee's chairman, Peter
Bergson, drafted or deported. At the State Department's urging, the FBI opened
Bergson's mail, rummaged through his trash, and planted informants in his
organization.
Bergson's Emergency Committee played an important supporting role during the
crucial early months of the War Refugee Board's work. The committee sponsored
newspaper ads backing the rescue effort; provided the War Refugee Board with
information about rescue opportunities; and dispatched two special emissaries to
Turkey to assist rescue activity (one was Ira Hirschmann, the Bloomingdale's
executive). To raise funds for this work, the Bergson group organized an
all-star "Show of Shows" at Madison Square Garden on March 13, 1944.
Barney Ross helped attract publicity for the event by announcing that he was
personally paying for the tickets of 150 U.S. servicemen to attend.
Ross also became active in another Bergson committee, the American League for a
Free Palestine, which sought to rally American support for the creation of a
Jewish State. He spoke at its public rallies and served as leader of its George
Washington Legion, which recruited American volunteers to aid the Irgun Zvai
Leumi, the Jewish underground militia (headed by Menachem Begin) that was
fighting the British in Mandatory Palestine. The Legion was patterned on the
famous Abraham Lincoln Brigade, which had recruited Americans to fight against
Franco in the Spanish Civil War. One of the group's newspaper ads featured a
photo of Ross with this message from the boxing champ: "There is no such
thing as a former fighter. We must all continue the fight."
In 1947, a group of St. Louis Jewish gangsters associated with reputed mob boss
Mickey Cohen agreed to hold a fundraiser for the American League for a Free
Palestine, on one condition--that the League provide Ross as the keynote
speaker. In their eyes, the former boxer was the living symbol of Jewish
toughness. League officials later estimated that thanks to Ross, the event
brought in more than $100,000 for the cause of Jewish statehood.
In the 1960s, Mohammed Ali --then known as Cassius Clay-- surprised many when he
declared his opposition to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war. But it was
Barney Ross, two decades earlier, who was the first boxing champion to enter the
ring of public political activism. Today's new generation of Jewish
prizefighters basks in a legacy that extends well beyond the boxing ring.
(Posted on Web site: Jan 14, 2004)