Passover 2003/5763

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The Day President Van Buren Helped Rescue Syrian Jewry  
by
Dr. Michael Feldberg

Over the centuries, Passover unfortunately has been associated with a vicious anti-Semitic blood libel that Jews use gentile blood for ritual purposes. Recently this ugly lie has again been widely circulated in the Arab world. The following true story shows how this hatred has been successfully fought and defeated by Jews. The story is consistent with the Passover messages of freedom and fighting for the oppressed; as such,we offer it and other articles on these pages as additions to your Seder. 

"All who preserve a single soul of Israel… it is as if he preserved an entire world."— The Babylonian Talmud 

The earliest collective action by North American Jews on behalf of their overseas brethren came in 1840, in response to a false "blood libel" charge in Damascus. That spring, in the ancient capital of Syria, an Italian friar and his Muslim servant mysteriously disappeared. The Capuchin order of monks charged that Jews had kidnapped and ritually murdered the two men to fulfill a supposed Jewish injunction that non-Jewish blood be used in making Passover matzoh. Under torture, two "witnesses "named several prominent Damascus Jews as the "killers". The accused were arrested, tortured, and sentenced to death. Knowing the suggestibility of child witnesses, local officials then seized 63 Jewish children to compel them to "reveal" where the blood was hidden. 

Word of these outrages reached the United States in the summer of 1840. American Jews were dismayed that the ancient blood libel — the charge that Jews were ritual murderers — had reared its ugly head. What were American Jews, so few in number and weak in international influence, to do? While the English and French Jewish communities sent delegations to the Ottoman Sultan protesting the treatment of the Jews in Damascus, American Jewry — no more  than 15,000 individuals scattered across a vast nation — had no national organization or recognized leader to speak for it. American Jewry had no experience at presenting a united front on any issue of national or international moment. 

Rabbi Isaac Leeser of Philadelphia, America’s leading traditionalist rabbi, joined by communal leaders from other major American cities, filled the breach. Leeser helped organize public rallies, meetings of synagogue congregations and committees of correspondence in New York, Philadelphia, Richmond,and Cincinnati, among other cities. The rallies called on President Martin Van Buren to intervene on behalf of the Jews of Damascus. 

The American Jewish petitions argued that "the moral influence of the Chief Magistrate of the United States would be, under Heaven, the best aid we could invoke for the protection of our persecuted brethren under the Mohammedan domain." The New York protesters did "most emphatically and solemnly deny as well in our own name as in that of the whole Jewish people, that murder was ever committed by the Jews of Damascus, or those of any other part of the world, for the purpose of using the blood or any part of a human being in the ceremonies of our religion." 

Van Buren ordered American diplomats in Constantinople and Alexandria to inform Ottoman officials of the "horror" felt by all Americans at the "extravagant charges strikingly similar to those which, in less enlightened ages, were made pretexts for the persecution and spoliation of these unfortunate people. "Van Buren cited America’s institutions, which "place upon the same footing, the worshipers of God, of every faith and form." American values compelled him to protest "in behalf of an oppressed and persecuted race, among whose kindred are found some of the most worthy and patriotic of [American] citizens." 

Bowing to pressure from the governments of the United States, Britain, and France, Pasha Muhammed Ali, Ottoman overlord of Syria, ordered an end to the torture and confinement of Jewish prisoners and instructed Damascus officials to protect the city’s Jewish community. The American ambassador helped Sir Moses Montefiore secure from the Ottoman Sultan an imperial decree in November declaring that the blood libel had "not the least foundation in truth" and that Jews "shall possess the same advantages and enjoy the  same privileges" as his other subjects, especially the free exercise of their religion. 

American Jewry had experienced its first taste of successful united action on behalf of its brethren overseas. Rabbi Leeser expressed the thinking of many American Jews of that time, as well as the spirit of the Babylonian Talmud, when he observed: "As citizens we belong to the country we live in; but as believers in one God, as the faithful adorers of the Creator, as the inheritors of the law, the Jews [of other lands] are no aliens among us,and we hail the Israelite as brother, no matter whether his home be the torrid zone, or where the poles encircle the earth with impenetrable fetters of icy coldness." These words remain the credo of North American Jewry to the present day. 

This article is reprinted by permission of the American Jewish Historical Society in New York, New York.You can get a collection of 120 such stories in the book Blessings of Freedom: Chapters in American Jewish History. Contact the Society at www.ajhs.org, or 617-559-8880. 

The Four Apples
by Anne Kuperberg

Four children jumped out of the van and rushed toward the apple orchard.Their parents followed slowly behind them. A warm August morning sun shone down on the rows of trees, filtering angled streams of light on the ripening fruit. The weight of bright red apples pulled the branches toward the ground. 

One child stood beneath a mature tree. Its trunk was double his width and its lowest limb was within an arm’s reach. He asked his parents, "What is the age of this tree and when was the orchard planted? Tell me all you know of its history." His parents replied, "You are so wise, just like us.You are the apple of our eye." 

A second child ran to another tree whose apples sparkled in the sunlight. She reached for the nearest fruit and plucked it from the branch. She turned it around and around, and moved one finger over its shiny surface. She asked her parents, "What can you make from these apples? Tell me of all the ways you can change the form to make the taste last longer." Her parents replied, "You should appreciate the beauty you see instead of wanting to change it. You are the apple of the earth." 

A third child scampered after her older siblings, finding her own tree. She gazed at its immense size and asked, "What is this? Can we eat the fruit if it’s not from a store? Will I get sick from it? Will it taste sweet? What if I don’t like it?" Her parents replied, "You ask so many questions and are always complaining. You are a crabapple." 

The baby of the family tottered over to a small tree and pointed at the fruit. He tried reaching for one, but his little hands could not reach high enough. "Me want. Me want," he howled. His parents replied, "You are still too little to reach on your own. We will help you until you gain your own strength. You are as sweet as apple pie." 

Four apples were eaten that morning. Each one provided nourishment. One gave sustenance in the past, one gave a challenge for the future, one gave appreciation of the present, and one gave hope. 

Ann Kuperberg is a freelance writer in Tucson and maintains a Jewish soul wherever she calls home.You can reach her at annkuperberg@juno.com.

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