Friday, November 20, 2015

When Will They Ever Learn



When Will They Ever Learn?

By Ephraim Ben
In the mid 1960's there was a very popular song written by Pete Seeger and performed by Peter, Paul & Mary and also by Joan Baez.  The song was "Where have all the flowers gone" and the last line of the chorus was "when will they ever learn?"
Since the horrendous attack by ISIS on Paris on the night of November 13, 2015 there is a growing debate in this country as well as in Europe on whether to restrict asylum for Syrian refugees, whether to permit them to come to the United States, whether we should in fact take in these refugees for fear of terrorists being among them.
It reminds me of the Evian Conference of 1936 in the south of France.  In 1923 Adolf Hitler had written his book "Mein Kampf" (My Struggle), in which he blamed Germany's Jews for all of Germany's problems [SIC] and predicted that if he ever would become Germany's prime minister (chancellor) he would expel all the German Jews from Germany.  In 1933 he in fact became Germany's chancellor calling himself "Fuehrer' (Leader) and surely enough he started to unleash his venom for the Jews of Germany. 
America's president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, called for an international conference in Evian to discuss the problems of the German Jews.  Leaders from all major countries attended, except Mr. Roosevelt himself.  He sent a delegate to attend the conference on his behalf.  All the leaders, one by one, stood up and expressed their disgust with Mr. Hitler, how unacceptable it was what Hitler was doing.  But in the end they all said, without exception, that their countries could not help and could not take in any Jewish refugees.  The only person to stand up and promise to take in 5000 Jews was the leader of the Dominican Republic Rafael Trujillo.
Making a long story short, since no country was willing to take in Jewish refugees, it forced Hitler's hand.  Hitler had never had a plan to annihilate the Jews.  He just wanted Germany to be rid of the Jews ("Judenrein").  Since no country would accept the Jews it gave Hitler license to murder the Jews in various concentration camps in Germany and Poland.  All in all the German Nazis murdered six million Jews and six million non-Jews who were declared enemies of the state, which included gypsies, communists, socialists, chronically ill people and opponents to the German Government of the time.
Among those six million Jews were my thirteen year old brother, my paternal grandparents, and my father's two brothers.
On the other hand some German Jews did make it to the United States and contributed to the community of mankind:  Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, many players (actors, directors, musicians, producers etc.) in Hollywood as well as scientists, especially in the medical sciences and Dr. Henry Kissinger, who became Nixon's National Security advisor and who opened China to America.
Eight hundred Jews accepted Trujillo's invitation to come to the Dominican Republic.  There, in Sosua, they started a dairy industry which became the biggest and the best dairy industry in the Caribbean.  After two decades these former German Jewish Refugees moved on to developing Real Estate in the Dominican Republic and made Sosua one of the biggest and greatest resorts in the 1960's, becoming a flagship resort for Club Med vacationers from the US.
As far as the German Jewish refugees in America were concerned not a single German Jew ever sabotaged America, although German spies and a fifth column did manage to enter the United States by U-boats to sabotage America.  They were caught by the authorities and their attempts to do so were foiled.
If America takes the same stand as many of the delegates took at the Evian Conference, who knows how we will be depriving ourselves of valuable talent.  America has taken in Koreans, Vietnamese and many, many other ethnic groups and all of them have made valuable contributions to our society.
In the 1960's Germany was experiencing an "Economic Miracle".  It had full employment and was forced to invite foreign workers from Turkey, Romania and Italy to come to Germany to supplement Germany's labor force.  Many of the Turks have remained n Germany and created new Turkish conclaves in Berlin, lifting Berlin's economy.  Recently Germany has offered to take in 800,000 Syrian refugees because Germany has an aging labor force which needs to be replenished.  I saw one Syrian woman on the News proudly showing that she already was taking German lessons and could already count in German.  The Syrians were known to be the most educated and enterprising people other than the Israelis in the Middle East
If America is afraid that members of ISIS will come with the flow of refugees, those terrorists may already be in America or can easily enter America without the help of refugees, as did Al Queda before 9/11.  As the there is this enormous income gap in America now there is a big chance that some Americans are already so frustrated that they may be planning lone wolf attacks themselves on America.
I happen to believe that the attack on soft targets in Paris on Friday, November 13 2015 were the beginning phase of ISIS's end.  It may still take another couple of years for ISIS to die completely but the fact that ISIS has attacked Russia and now France, it has now created a bully force as the Allies were in World War II.  Sooner or later we will defeat ISIS.
There is also a chance that America's economy will even be lifted by Syrian refugees.  Let's open our minds, our hearts and our doors and be more welcoming to those refugees rather than keeping them out of America.  If we don't do this we will only make ISIS stronger.  These refugees have the same rights as human beings as we had before we came to America, not just the German Jews, but the Irish, the Italians and so many others.

When will we ever learn?

Monday, November 16, 2015

Take Heart America!

By Ephraim Ben

What happened on Friday, November 13, 2015 in Paris, the brutal, senseless attacks by ISIS on several soft targets, killing over 130 people and seriously injuring over 300 people, brings to mind George Santayana (1863-1952), a Spanish American author-philosopher, who wrote "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it."  

On December 7, 1941, at 7:48 a.m., Hawaiian time, planes of the Imperial Japanese Navy attacked the US Navy Fleet in Pearl Harbor, effectively challenging the United States to enter World War II.

The United States Navy was not prepared for this attack.  Quite frankly, we were caught with our pants down!  And down they were.  Pretty far down!  All the United States had left to fight the war was three air craft carriers, which, by coincidence had been hidden from the Japanese.

For the first half of the war we were on the losing side.  But at the Battle of Midway the tide changed and we won the upper hand.  Without going into too much detail, our three aircraft carriers destroyed eight of the Japanese aircraft carriers and as you probably know dropping two atomic bombs on the mainland of Japan ended the war in the Pacific.  But bombs or no bombs, after the battle of Midway the United States kept island hopping and winning the war at tremendous cost to our armed forces and of course to the Japanese, too.

Before the attack on Pearl Harbor Americans did not have much appetite to fight a war, just as we are reluctant to use our military now to force Bashar Al Assad from power.  We are always too reluctant to get heavily involved, even though we have the power and the expertise to do so.

I empathize with the French people.  But I will bet my bottom dollar that what happened on Friday in Paris will turn out to be the beginning of the end of ISIS as we have come to know ISIS.  Yes, there will be a few more attacks by ISIS or other extremist groups, but now most of the Western European countries that are in the line of fire and the cross hairs of ISIS will strike back and strike back hard.  They have to.  They have no choice.

ISIS did not win all their battles because of military supremacy.  They won because they had instilled fear in all of their opponents.  But frankly speaking, nobody of substance really resisted them.  The armies of the Middle East, with the exception of Israel and the Jordanian Air Force, are a joke.  They are weak, lack leadership and have no intelligence to guide their strategies.  Now all the major powers are on board.  We also have the great opportunity to hit all of them at the same time, Boka Haram, Al Queda in Yemen, Al Queda in Somalia, Hezbollah, the Taliban etc.  But ISIS is now doomed.  No country can afford to sit back and leave the fighting to others.

But this is not all there is to this fight.

The extremists are frustrated and angry at Bashar Al Assad and the fact that the West allows him to continue to hurt and kill his own people.  Unless we do something about Bashar Al Assad, the struggle will continue and other groups will take ISIS's place.

In America there is also frustration.  The kettle is bubbling, and unless Congress gets its act together soon and does something for the masses of our people who are unemployed we will soon have our own version of radical extremists.  Maybe not quite as extreme, but there will be a backlash.  We already had a mild portend of things to come with the "Occupy Wall Street" movement.

We are like a sleeping tiger.  We are powerful and strong, but we prefer to sleep.  OK.  So somebody annoys us while we sleep.  We don't like it but we go on sleeping, until we finally wake up angry and let loose all our anger and power.  Watch out world when this happens!

I hope that what happened in Paris will wake up our leaders from their slumber.  If they don't wake up soon, we too will be doomed.


May the force be with us all.  Go back to sleep.