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Metro Views: The Morgenthau century

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  • Metro Views: The Morgenthau century

    Jerusalem Post
    March 15 2009


    Metro Views: The Morgenthau century
    By MARILYN HENRY

    When Robert Morgenthau announced last month that he would retire as
    Manhattan's district attorney, it marked the end of a remarkable
    era. Morgenthau, 89, was first elected to be Manhattan's prosecutor in
    1974.

    His retirement also marks the end of nearly a century of public and
    communal service by three generations of this esteemed New York
    family.

    Originally from among "Our Crowd" - non-Zionist Jews of German descent
    - these three generations of Morgenthaus were mavericks and crusaders
    on behalf of the weak and of victims of genocide.

    Morgenthau's grandfather, Henry Sr., was the American ambassador to
    Turkey who protested the 1915 Turkish massacre of Armenians. "Why are
    you so interested in the Armenians? You are a Jew; these people are
    Christians," a Young Turk asked. "Why can't you just let us do with
    these Christians as we please?" But Henry Sr. was relentless, and to
    this day is revered in Armenia for railing against the genocide.

    And although Henry Sr. believed the Jews of America had found their
    Zion here, he raised $50,000 within weeks in 1914 for some 80,000 Jews
    who faced starvation because of the war blockade of Palestine.

    Robert Morgenthau's father, Henry Jr., was president Franklin
    D. Roosevelt's treasury secretary who, in 1944, accused the State
    Department of "willful attempts to prevent action from being taken to
    rescue Jews from Hitler." Roosevelt then created the War Refugee
    Board, giving it special powers to rescue and aid Nazi victims. Yes,
    it was too little, too late by the US government, but Henry Jr. made
    certain the State Department was called to account.

    WITH ROBERT Morgenthau's retirement, there are accolades about his
    work as a prosecutor; even his office's successful convictions of the
    wrong suspects are viewed in admiring terms for the ways in which
    Morgenthau corrected legal errors. In a 2005 editorial, The New York
    Times had opposed Morgenthau's bid for reelection - saying he had
    given Manhattan a "world-class" DA's office but, after three decades,
    it was time to go.

    Four years later, when the DA announced he would not seek reelection,
    the Times spoke of his legacy, commending Morgenthau in an editorial,
    saying that "his core instincts about the need for fairness and
    humanity in the law outweighed everything else."

    This is the family's legacy: fairness and humanity.

    The art world is still reeling from Morgenthau's exercise in fairness
    in January 1998, when he detained two Egon Schiele paintings on
    temporary loan from Vienna to the Museum of Modern Art in New
    York. Two families claimed the paintings had been seized in Austria by
    the Nazis. One painting is still the subject of a federal court
    case. Morgenthau's action put every museum in the world on notice that
    it must review the artworks among its collection and identify those
    that once belonged to Nazi victims.

    "I didn't view our involvement in the paintings as a Jewish issue. It
    is a stolen property issue. Possession of stolen property is a crime,"
    he told The Jerusalem Post at the time.

    As a public servant of the Jewish community, Morgenthau is the
    indomitable chairman of Manhattan's Museum of Jewish Heritage, which
    opened in 1997. Many thought it would never be built; but built it
    was, at the southern tip of the city, blocks from the World Trade
    Center, with the Statue of Liberty as a backdrop.

    He saw the museum as "a symbol of the power of renewal after
    catastrophe, and the ability of the Jewish people to survive and
    endure." David Marwell, the museum's director, recalled having lunch
    with Morgenthau in 2001 shortly after the September 11 attacks. "He
    told me to reopen the museum as soon as possible and to continue with
    our plans to build the new wing," Marwell said. "He was confident
    about the future at a time when that was a rare commodity."

    Two years after September 11, the museum opened the "Morgenthau Wing."
    The museum's expansion was the first new construction project in Lower
    Manhattan after the terror attacks. "This project began as the dust
    was still being settled and quickly became an important part of
    rebuilding Lower Manhattan - bringing jobs and restoring a sense of
    normalcy," Mayor Michael Bloomberg said at the 2003
    dedication. "Robert Morgenthau's tenacity sent a message that our
    spirit will not be crushed."

    JEWS HAVE mixed sentiments about dynasties. In the past, the Court
    Jews or the great banking and trading families were protectors, the
    natural community leaders whose heirs also inherited communal
    obligations. These days, however much we need and admire
    philanthropists, we do not anoint them as kings whose children inherit
    the realm.

    The Morgenthaus were in a different class. The three generations were
    talented public servants who balanced civic and communal roles with
    principle, poise and passion. This past century was a perilous
    one. The Morgenthaus were essential participants who went about their
    missions, not with the exaggeration or grandstanding we have seen from
    many communal officials, but with a dogged determination to do what is
    right and just.

    About 10 years ago, I interviewed Morgenthau for a profile. Among the
    mementos, certificates and photos that covered every bit of space in
    his office were artifacts from his navy days during World War II. One
    - a hand-drawn "proclamation" decorated with a drawing of a mermaid -
    commemorates that the USS Harry F. Bauer, on which Morgenthau was the
    executive officer, "survived 79 days at Iwo Jima and Okinawa." After
    another of his ships was torpedoed and sank, Morgenthau made a vow
    while swimming in the Mediterranean, without a life jacket. If he
    survived, he pledged, he would devote himself to public service.

    Pledge honored. Honorably so.

    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=12 36764182700&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowF ull
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