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Columbia Defends Its Nazi Links: "Everyone Was Doing It"
Jewish Press ^ | 12-11-06

Posted on 12/11/2006 6:27:28 PM PST by SJackson

NEW YORK — Columbia University is coming under increasing criticism over revelations that it built friendly relations with Nazi Germany in the 1930's. Now Columbia's provost is firing back – but he may have shot himself in the foot.

The controversy began last month when the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies publicized research by one of its scholars, Professor Stephen Norwood of the University of Oklahoma, revealing a series of steps taken by Columbia president Nicholas Murray Butler during 1933-1937 to forge ties with the Hitler regime.

After first trying to avoid the issue, Columbia officials are now defending Butler's actions on the grounds that many other prominent individuals behaved similarly.

In 1933, Nazi Germany's ambassador to the United States, Hans Luther, was invited to speak on the Columbia campus.

Butler hosted a reception for the Nazi ambassador, whose remarks were devoted to defending Hitler's "peaceful intentions" toward the rest of Europe. Butler said that as a representative of "the government of a friendly people," Luther was "entitled to be received with the greatest courtesy and respect."

Columbia, like many American universities, continued its program of student exchanges with Germany even after the Nazis came to power.

Norwood points out that a top Nazi official at the time described German exchange students as "political soldiers of the Reich" who were doing Hitler's work abroad.

In 1936, President Butler sent a delegate to take part in anniversary celebrations at the Nazi-controlled University of Heidelberg. He did so even though the university had already fired all of its Jewish instructors, implemented a curriculum based on Nazi ideology, and even was host to a mass book-burning.

Butler defended his decision on the grounds that "academic relationships have no political implications." But Columbia students disputing that claim at the time held a mock book-burning on campus and a peaceful rally in front of Butler's residence.

In an episode that seems to have been unique in the history of American academia's responses to Nazism, Columbia expelled a student, Robert Burke, for leading that rally.

The administration's official charge against Burke was that he "spoke disrespectfully" about President Butler, which at that time was grounds for expulsion. Despite his excellent grades, Burke was never readmitted to the university.

In a series of articles in the Columbia student newspaper, The Spectator, and elsewhere, Wyman Institute director Dr. Rafael Medoff has urged Columbia to apologize for its actions regarding the Nazis, and award an honorary degree to Burke "as an acknowledgment that Columbia was wrong, and that Burke was treated unjustly."

Professor Norwood, who is working on a book about how American universities responded to Hitler, described Columbia's actions in the 1930's as "shameful" and said they "helped legitimize the Nazi regime" in the West. Norwood earned his Ph.D. in history at Columbia.

The controversy at Columbia has attracted additional attention in recent weeks because another major institution, Brown University in Rhode Island, has been facing up to its own skeletons. A Brown University committee recently completed a three-year study of Brown's links to slave-holders. The committee urged the university to make amends by building a memorial to the slaves, establishing a center for the study of slavery, and recruiting more black students.

"We cannot change the past, but an institution can hold itself accountable for the past, accepting its burdens and responsibilities along with its benefits and privileges," Brown University president Ruth Simmons said. The Wyman Institute is urging Columbia "to follow Brown's example and face its own troubling past."

Columbia at first tried to duck the controversy. A Columbia spokesman told the New York Post last month that "the university was aware of the accusations, but the administration hasn't decided whether it will investigate them."

But in recent weeks, the controversy has snowballed, including a feature story in the online journal "Inside Higher Ed," a widely respected voice in the academic community.

Columbia provost Alan Brinkley has now responded, telling Inside Higher Ed, "If the events that Professor Norwood describes are examples of 'collaboration,' then the collaborators include many thousands of leaders and citizens of the United States, Britain, and many other nations."

"That kind of everyone-was-doing-it attitude is appalling," said Medoff. "Is that the kind of message that one of the most prominent universities in America wants to send to its students – that if many people are doing something, it can't be so bad...?"

An associate dean at Columbia, Professor Michael Rosenthal, has also jumped into the fray. But his defense of Columbia and Butler is raising some eyebrows. Rosenthal is the author of a recent biography of President Butler, called "Nicholas Miraculous."

In an interview with a Columbia students' website earlier this year, Rosenthal said that Butler "was in the forefront" of limiting the admission of Jews to Columbia, "but he was doing nothing that the other schools didn't do." Rosenthal said Butler "was anti-Semitic, but not in a rabid way." Rosenthal also said that Butler "supported Italian fascism" in the 1930's, but it was "a time when many people did ... the notion that he was a Fascist is absurd."

Regarding the current controversy over Butler and the Nazis, Rosenthal told Inside Higher Ed that Robert Burke was "expelled not for the anti-Nazi substance of his protest, but for the fact of the disturbance." He said "Butler was not necessarily one of those who appreciated students' expressions of views. Butler was an autocratic guy."

"More circling of the wagons," Medoff says. "Instead of just coming clean and admitting that Columbia was wrong to expel Burke, Professor Rosenthal offers what sounds like an attempt to rationalize the expulsion. I understand that this is embarrassing for Columbia, but after seventy years, one would have expected a more mature response."

"One of the reasons for writing the book is to develop more public awareness in these institutions, to get universities to address their pasts," Norwood told Inside Higher Ed.

"I think that universities should look at their pasts and examine them carefully and take steps when they can to acknowledge past injustices, and not give such priority to protecting their own reputations."

The Wyman Institute has initiated several successful efforts to persuade prominent institutions to acknowledge mistakes they made during the Hitler era.

Earlier this year, another Wyman-affiliated scholar, Professor Laurel Leff of Northeastern University, completed a study which found that America's top journalism schools and newspaper publishers refused to assist German Jewish refugee journalists who were trying to come to America to escape Hitler in the 1930's.

The Wyman Institute organized a petition signed by more than 80 prominent journalist, editors, and journalism school faculty members urging the Newspaper Association of America to express remorse for those actions.

The NAA issued a public apology, published Leff's findings in its journal, and invited her to address its board of directors.

In 2003, a leading British publisher, IPC Media, became embroiled in controversy when it tried to restrict public access to a pro-Hitler article that had appeared in one of its magazines, Homes & Gardens, in 1938.

After the Wyman Institute organized a petition by 75 Holocaust scholars from around the world, IPC Media publicly apologized, made the article accessible to the public, and even assigned its researchers to investigate whether its magazines had published any other articles sympathetic to Hitler. They found one: a 1936 article in Country Life magazine glorifying Hitler's summer home.

In 2004, Norwood was the keynote speaker at a Wyman Institute conference at Boston University, where he unveiled research concerning Harvard's relations with the Nazis. He revealed that Harvard president James Conant gave a friendly reception to Ernst "Putzi" Hanfstangl, Hitler's foreign press chief, when Hanfstangl visited the campus to attend his 25th class reunion in 1934. The Harvard student newspaper, The Harvard Crimson, urged that Hanfstangl be awarded an honorary degree.

The current managing editor of the Harvard Crimson, Elisabeth Theodore, spoke at the Wyman Institute's conference and acknowledged that the Crimson's articles about Hanfstangl were "regrettable and abhorrent."

Harvard also hosted visits by Nazi ambassador Hans Luther in 1934 and the Nazi consul-general in Boston, Baron Kurt Von Tippelskirch, in 1935; sent a delegate to the 1936 Heidelberg event, and built relations with another Nazi-controlled university, Gottingen.

The current Harvard administration declined the Wyman Institute's invitation to send a representative to the conference to respond to Norwood's findings.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: academia; cacademia; columbia; nazi; sds; underground; weatherman; weathermen; ww2
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To: oyez

I honestly don't see the point of re-visiting 70 year old "news".

My grandfather (born 1889) was a member of the Klan. Not especially relevant to me now.


21 posted on 12/11/2006 6:57:37 PM PST by mgstarr
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To: SJackson

Hey, Butler sounds just like a modern university official! Free speech for totalitarian thugs, PC for everyone else.


22 posted on 12/11/2006 6:59:20 PM PST by popdonnelly
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To: Teflonic

"So will there be scandals like this concerning presently liberal colleges 70+ years from now?"

There should have been scandals concerning liberal colleges published 30 years ago.


23 posted on 12/11/2006 7:00:54 PM PST by popdonnelly
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To: spanalot

A lot of organizations sucked up to Stalin and I never here any crap about that.


24 posted on 12/11/2006 7:02:47 PM PST by oyez (Why is it that egalitarians act like royalty?)
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To: SJackson

Didn't Columbia University hold lectures by Iranian government officials???


25 posted on 12/11/2006 7:08:40 PM PST by Thunder90
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To: SJackson

Columbia Defends Its Nazi Links: "Everyone Was Doing It"

The sad fact is a great many people were "Doing It". That doesn't make it right however. Particularly in the 30's it was fashionable in certain circles to say that the day of democracy was over and Fascism or Socialism was the wave of the future.


26 posted on 12/11/2006 7:10:47 PM PST by Valin (History takes time. It is not an instant thing.)
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To: SJackson

Didn't some of the oldest Northeast colleges support, encourage and cheer on drowning witches? Universities "go with the flow" without regard for the morality. Drowning witches, communism, "diversity" or any other fad is the way of life of campus.


27 posted on 12/11/2006 7:11:12 PM PST by FreePaul
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To: mgstarr
Not especially relevant to me now.

Nor to any other rational person.

The point here is that "these guys" will fall over each other to scrape and grovel about something that happened centuries ago, but something even more barbaric that happened within living memory is "No Big Deal. Everyone Was Doing It."

28 posted on 12/11/2006 7:14:30 PM PST by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets

Good question.

Hosting Hatemi, unlike maintaining good relations with some of the pre-eminent universities in the world even after their country was taken over by a regime of antisemitic thugs, takes a bit of explaining.

In considering Columbia and Harvard's behavior, one really must remember that Germany was the country that invented the Ph.D., and that most of the major advances in mathematics, physics, chemistry and medicine in the period between 1870 and 1935 took place German universities or had participants who had graduated from German universities.


29 posted on 12/11/2006 7:17:45 PM PST by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know. . .)
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To: Thunder90

Yep - and they allowed protestors to break up a Minuteman seminar organized by a school club.


30 posted on 12/11/2006 7:20:22 PM PST by spanalot
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To: Alouette

Was this back when the left and commies in this country were supporting Hilter because of the Soviet-Nazi pact. If it was this is hilarious. But of coarse when Hilter went after their Red God Stalin they did a 189 degree turn about and all supported WW2. Hollyweird then made pro war movies not for the USA but for the survival of their Red God.


31 posted on 12/11/2006 7:20:41 PM PST by therut
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To: Socratic
I wonder what Senator Kennedy has to say about all this.

His father Joe was ambassador to England and an ardent, admirer and supporter of Hitler.

32 posted on 12/11/2006 7:27:19 PM PST by jokar (for it is by grace, http://www.gbible.org)
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To: The_Reader_David
My Grandfather took his BS/MS at MIT after a term at Heidelberg. Though Irish-American, judging from his choice in reading material, he was definitely a Nazi sympathizer. (He died in 1939 and didn't get a chance to burn his library.) I suspect like a lot of smart, well educated people he found facile explanations comforting and he did greatly admire res germanica, for the reasons you alluded to.
33 posted on 12/11/2006 7:37:05 PM PST by Lonesome in Massachussets (The hallmark of a crackpot conspiracy theory is that it expands to include countervailing evidence.)
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To: rmlew

brownshirts at your alma mater


34 posted on 12/11/2006 8:07:17 PM PST by Cacique (quos Deus vult perdere, prius dementat ( Islamia Delenda Est ))
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To: SJackson

I see little no difference between national socialists (Nazis) and international socialists (Commies). They were both despicable. When this is recognized, we will have made progress. Until then, Nazi bashing is just a way to give cover to Commies.

Roosevelt, and others, called Stalin "Uncle Joe." Did anyone call Hitler "Uncle Adolph?" Now that would be parity.


35 posted on 12/11/2006 8:16:48 PM PST by ChessExpert (Reagan defeated America's enemies despite the Democrats. I hope Bush can do the same.)
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To: SJackson

And this is different from our educating Saudi students...just how?


36 posted on 12/11/2006 8:24:18 PM PST by gcruse (http://garycruse.blogspot.com/)
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To: Alouette

So much of that (as far as I read) sounds exactly like what the Universities are doing with the Palis and Muzzies these days. It is really chilling to read that, to see the similarities.


37 posted on 12/11/2006 9:06:44 PM PST by bboop (Stealth Tutor)
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To: Teflonic

You mean like universities that hired propaganda ministers from governments like the Taliban?


38 posted on 12/11/2006 9:12:35 PM PST by weegee (Remember "Remember the Maine"? Well in the current war "Remember the Baby Milk Factory")
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To: ChessExpert

American Communists protested against efforts to go to war against Nazi Germany until Hitler betrayed their beloved Uncle Joe Stalin.

So yes they probably did like Uncle Adolph and Uncle Benito.


39 posted on 12/11/2006 9:14:42 PM PST by weegee (Remember "Remember the Maine"? Well in the current war "Remember the Baby Milk Factory")
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To: therut

George Orwell found that Communist editors in England also put Soviet Russia into a separate class above the US and UK. Criticism of the US-UK governments, institutions, etc. was ok but there was to be no criticism of Uncle Joe or the USSR.

He goes into detail about this in a forward published in the 50th anniversary edition of Animal House.


40 posted on 12/11/2006 9:18:56 PM PST by weegee (Remember "Remember the Maine"? Well in the current war "Remember the Baby Milk Factory")
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