sexta-feira, 30 de outubro de 2015

Roosevelt

What FDR said about Jews in private

His personal sentiments about Jews may help explain America's tepid response to the Holocaust.

April 07, 2013|By Rafael Medoff

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  • President Franklin Roosevelt sits at the steering wheel of his automobile in Warm Springs, Ga., on April 4, 1939, as he parried questions at an outdoor press conference.
President Franklin Roosevelt sits at the steering wheel of his automobile… (Associated Press )
In May 1943, President Franklin Roosevelt met with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill at the White House. It was 17 months after Pearl Harbor and a little more than a year before D-Day. The two Allied leaders reviewed the war effort to date and exchanged thoughts on their plans for the postwar era. At one point in the discussion, FDR offered what he called "the best way to settle the Jewish question."
Vice President Henry Wallace, who noted the conversation in his diary, said Roosevelt spoke approvingly of a plan (recommended by geographer and Johns Hopkins University President Isaiah Bowman) "to spread the Jews thin all over the world." The diary entry adds: "The president said he had tried this out in [Meriwether] County, Georgia [where Roosevelt lived in the 1920s] and at Hyde Park on the basis of adding four or five Jewish families at each place. He claimed that the local population would have no objection if there were no more than that."

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