Dovi Safier Profile picture
Dec 11, 2023 23 tweets 10 min read Read on X
Thread🧵 1/ Harvard & Hitler’s Henchman: When exploring the history of antisemitism at @Harvard, there lies a disturbing, yet forgotten episode from the 1930’s, especially as it relates to the inaction of its president and faculty in the face of true evil.
Image
Image
2/ Ernst “Putzi” Hanfstaengl was born into affluence and influence in Munich, Germany, in 1887. His father, Edgar was a prominent art publisher, while his mother, Katharine was the Boston-born daughter of William Heine, a Union Army officer in the Civil War & a cousin of legendary Union Army General John Sedgwick.

Image
General John Sedgwick
3/ This bicultural upbringing would later afford Ernst a cosmopolitan perspective, with a foot on each continent. In 1909, Hanfstaengl graduated from Harvard, where he was not particularly noted for academic excellence but rather for his musical talent and his height, which earned him the affectionate nickname “Putzi” — (little boy in German) — due to his lanky stature.

Image
Image
4/ Hanfstaengl’s charm, wit and music talents made him a popular member of the student body, most notably through his musical contributions to the Harvard football team, for which he played piano and composed fight songs that rallied crowds at games. After college, he met Helen Niemeyer, a native New Yorker and offspring of German immigrants, while working at a branch of his family business in NYC. After they married and had a son, the couple moved to Munich in 1921.
Image
5/ Ernst Hanfstaengl’s encounter with Hitler in a Munich beer hall in 1922 marked a pivotal turn in both of their lives. After attending his first Nazi rally, spellbound by Hitler’s oratory, Hanfstaengl min declared, “What Hitler was able to do to a crowd in 2½ hours will never be repeated for 10,000 years.”
A Nazi Rally in Nuremberg in the 1920’s
6/ Hanfstaengl became one of Hitler’s most ardent followers. Their bond deepened through the fervor of early Nazi ambitions and the failed Beer Hall Putsch of 1923. Post-Putsch, Hitler hid from authorities in Hanfstaengl’s home outside Munich suburb in Uffing. In a critical moment, Hanfstaengl’s wife is said to have prevented Hitler’s suicide—a turning point in history.
Troops supporting Hitler arrive in Munich during the Beer Hall Putsch on November 9, 1923. (US Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of William O. McWorkman)
7/ It was Hanfstaengl who helped integrate Hitler into Munich’s elite circles, aiding in transforming the image of the future dictator from a political firebrand into a figure of society. Beyond social introductions, Hanfstaengl’s $$ contributions to the Nazi cause were substantial.
Ernst Hanfstaengl, with Adolf Hitler at Café Heck in 1930
8/ He helped finance the printing of Hitler’s ‘Mein Kampf’ and crafted marching songs for the Brownshirts and Hitler Youth, drawing inspiration from his Harvard days. Hanfstaengl claimed to have adapted the infamous “Sieg Heil” chant from a Harvard football Image
9/ His role in the Nazi regime was not trivial. As the party’s Foreign Press Chief, he was responsible for presenting the Führer’s facade to the international press and was instrumental in shaping the image of the Third Reich abroad. However it wasn’t just the press he worked to influence…
Adolf Hitler  with his personal pilot, Hans Baur (center, right) and confidante Ernst Hanfstaengl (right) during an election campaign, circa 1930. (Photo by Heinrich Hoffmann/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
10/ On April 3, 1933, he informed an old classmate, American diplomat James G. McDonald (later the first US Ambassador to Israel) that, “the Jews must be crushed," and that the Nazis planned to assign a member of the Sturmabteilung (storm troopers) to every Jew. Ambassador James Grover McDonald and his wife visit Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion and his wife Pola at their home in Sde Boker.
11/ A major firestorm erupted when Hanfstaengl was invited to a seat of honor at Harvard at his class’s 25th reunion in 1934. Hanfstaengl’s affiliation with the Nazis was well known and Jews across America were enraged over the “open arms” he was to be greeted with. Image
12/ Harvard President James B. Conant, chose a path of polite engagement over confrontation, positing “It is not a university’s function to incite political battles and fan the flames of international discord.” It was a stance that would be heavily critiqued in hindsight. Image
13/ While his biographers have tried their best to prove otherwise, the facts remain. In 1933, Boston’s Jewish community rallied against the rise of antisemitism in Nazi Germany. President Conant, unlike other local leaders, neither participated nor acknowledged the protest, which was in stark contrast to his later communications with German universities which he sent letters of congratulations to following milestone events.
Image
14/ The faculty and student body at Harvard followed his lead. In a telling 1934 incident, a mock trial over Hitler’s actions led to his acquittal on two of four charges by a panel primarily composed of Harvard professors. Notably, they dismissed charges related to the persecution of Jews as “irrelevant,” reflecting what was hard to see as something other than blatant anti-semitism.
In 1933, Dr. James B. Conant was named the 23rd president of Harvard, a position he would hold for 20 years.
16/ Leading up to Hanfsteangl’s visit, an editorial in the Harvard Crimson suggested the unthinkable: “If Herr Hanfsteangl is to be received at all," the editorial reads, "it should be with the marks of honor appropriate to his high position in the Government of a friendly country, which happens to be a great world Power, that is, by conferring upon him an honorary degree.
Image
17/ While the complaints vocalized by Jews across the country caused the organizers of the event to tone down the Nazi’s role to a mere participant. However they made up for it by ushering him around town like a celebrity, with both prestigious alumni and President Conant hosting parties for him at their homes. In his autobiography, published in 1970, long after the Holocaust, Conant continued to insist that Hanfstaengl "had every right" to participate in the reunion.
Image
18/ The @BostonGlobe reported on one such social outing:
“After a luncheon hosted by George S. West, Hanfstaengl accompanied a group to the country club horse races, where he placed only one bet, choosing the horse, he told reporters, because its jockey wore a brown shirt like the Nazis.
Image
19/ As the Nazi official partied with his classmates, Campus police were instructed to be on high alert against any protests. Police tore down scores of anti-Nazi stickers that had been pasted to the fence around Harvard Yard which proclaimed "Drive the Nazi Butcher Out," and suggested that he be awarded the honorary degree of “Doctor of Pogroms”
Ernst “Putzi” F.S. Hanfstaengl, Class of 1909, seen here chatting it up with a classmate at his 25th reunion in 1934,
20/ The joyous festivities were briefly interrupted when Rabbi Joseph Shubow (a close friend of Rabbi Joseph B Soloveitchik) confronted Hanfstaengl as he was talking to reporters in Harvard Yard. Rabbi Shubow demanded to know the meaning of a remark Hanfstaengl had made to the press on June 17, that “everything would soon be settled for the Jews in Germany." "Trembling violently," Rabbi Shubow cried out, “My people want to know . . . does it mean extermination?"
Hanfstaengl meets the press
21/ A flustered Hanfstaengl replied that he did not care to discuss political matters, and the Harvard police quickly ushered the Nazi away to President Conant's house for protection. (Perhaps the only silver lining in the story is the fact that Conant refused Hanfstaengl’s offer of an annual $1,000 scholarship for a Harvard student to study in Germany)
Image
22/ Upon his return to Germany, Hitler honored Hanfstaengl by having him open the sixth Nazi party convention in Nuremberg. Amidst adulation, Hanfstaengl lauded the Third Reich’s endorsement of racial “purity,” reflecting the chilling ideologies taking hold in Germany. Hanfstaengl speaking for the press in Nuremberg
23/ Eventually, Hanfstaengl had a falling out with Hitler and fled Germany. He spent the rest of his life trying (often with the help of his friends from @Harvard) to separate himself from his actions during the 20’s and 30’s and his relationship with Hitler. (More on this in a future thread)
@BillAckman

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Dovi Safier

Dovi Safier Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @safier

Feb 23
🧵 1/ I want to tell you a story.

On June 21, 1941 the German army invaded the Soviet Union.

Even before they reached the city of Ponevezh (Panevežys) five days later, the local Lithuanians started to insult and abuse the local Jews
2/ Behind these activities there were several people from the Lithuanian elite in town, like the principal of the high-school, the deputy of the district prosecutor, the secretary of the provincial court and others. They organized the local students who were subsequently involved in the majority of the murders of Ponevezh Jews.
3/ On July 4, 1941 a call to the local Lithuanian population was published in the periodical "The Liberated Ponevezh Citizen" stating: "Help the German army to clean our forests and groves of Jews, Bolsheviks and other strangers (foreigners), including Lithuanian traitors as fast as possible. So your lives and properties would be saved.”
Read 16 tweets
Aug 1, 2024
🧵 1/11 Several leading media outlets have reported that former Hamas leader Kahled Mashal will replace Ismail Haniyeh as political leader of the group, Of course, @netanyahu and Mashal have a long history, specifically a dramatic episode which occurred in 1997, during Bibi’s first term as Israeli PM.Image
2/11 In 1997, following a spate of bloody attacks on Israeli civilians by Hamas, including a twin suicide bombing at Jerusalem’s Mahane Yehuda market which killed 16, the Israeli government decided to strike back. After convening with Mossad chief Danny Yatom, Netanyahu signed off on an operation to assassinate Kahled Mashal, a senior Hamas leader, in Amman, Jordan.Image
Image
3/11 This operation, however, would have far-reaching consequences.
On September 25, 1997, two Mossad agents posing as Canadian tourists approached Mashal on the street in Amman. One of the men put a device next to the Hamas leader’s ear and sprayed him with a poisonous substance, aiming for a subtle, untraceable, “silent kill.”Image
Read 11 tweets
May 26, 2024
🧵: It was Lag B’Omer 1924 and the old Jewish cemetery of Lublin pulsated with unusual vitality. A small group of yeshivah students from Piotrkow along with some curious onlookers assembled in the cemetery, their collective gaze fixed upon one magnetic figure. Amid the ancient gravestones stood a 36-year-old Rav Meir Shapiro. 1/Image
As he faced the gravestones of some of Poland’s greatest Torah scholars, the words he uttered seemed to resonate with the weight of centuries:

“To you great rabbanim, the scholars of Lublin, who spread Torah in this city. You established great yeshivos and nurtured many students… I have come to tell you that I, your servant, Yehuda Meir ben Margala, has decided to restore the crown to its rightful place and I am inviting you to join us in the laying of the cornerstone for this yeshivah, a place where we will raise the honor of Torah until the coming of Mashiach. I am confident that it’s in your merit and in the merit of the Torah that I will succeed in my endeavors for the sake of His great Name and His Torah.” 2/Image
The cornerstone for the most ambitious yeshivah project of its time was laid later that Lag B’Omer day in front of 50,000 onlookers. The new yeshivah was to be named Yeshivas Chachmei Lublin, in acknowledgment of the city’s seminal historic role in the blossoming of Torah study in Poland. Lublin had been host to some of the Jewish nation’s most influential disseminators of Torah — including but not limited to Rav Shalom Shachna, the Maharam of Lublin, the Maharshal, as well as chassidic masters such as the Chozeh, Rav Leibele Eiger, and Rav Tzaddok HaKohein — and Rav Meir hoped his new yeshivah would be a fitting addition to the city’s impressive Torah pedigree. 3/Image
Read 7 tweets
Mar 19, 2024
1/ Thread: They Are All Holy!
Rav Arele Belzer’s legendary Ahavas Yisroel shone brightly during the years he spent living in Tel Aviv.
In our 2022 article "The Kingdom Rebuilt: How Rav Aharon Rokeach Brought Postwar Belz Back To Life" () @Jsoundbites & I shared several powerful anecdotesmishpacha.com/a-kingdom-rebu…
2/ At a Shalosh Seudos meal held two weeks after his arrival, the Rebbe remarked to Rav Gershon Yosef Horowitz, “When we arrived in Eretz Yisrael my brother, the Bilgoraj Rav, said Eretz Yisrael is 100 times better than we anticipated. I replied that it is in fact 200 times better.” This was in keeping with the Rebbe’s general approach to ignore the negative and focus on the positive, finding only good in every Jew — even the worst transgressors.
3/ The Rebbe once admonished his chassidim in this regard: “If you are learning and you are confronted with a difficult Rambam, what do you do? You work hard at it until you find a solution. The same should apply whenever you come across a difficult Jew. You must work hard at understanding him until you find the solution.”
Read 10 tweets
Jan 7, 2024
Thread 🧵: When Shlomo Artzi sang with the Belzer Choir:

Nearly 30 years ago, when Yosef Moshe Kahana (of L’Chaim Tisch fame) and the Belzer choir were recording his classic song “Kol Zman,” there was a knock at the studio door. They were shocked to see Shlomo Artzi, one of Israel’s leading secular singers standing in the doorway. 1/Image
Artzi explained that he’d been recording his latest album in the adjacent studio and heard the Belzer choir singing. He was transfixed by the particular song and wanted to hear more about it, because it reminded him of his chasidic ancestors. 2/
Legendary arranger Mona Rosenblum (who was well aware of Artzi’s practical immortal status in the world of secular Israeli music) explained: “Kol zman shahaner dolek efshar od lesaken — as long as the candle is burning one can still mend and repair.” Clearly moved, Artzi asked for the microphone. 3/
Read 7 tweets
Nov 19, 2023
Thread🧵: Friday, while perusing the archives of Life Magazine, I encountered an unbelievable story. Paul Schutzer was born into a traditional Jewish family in Boro Park in 1930. When he was 10 years old, he starting taking pictures with a broken camera he found in a garbage. 1/A Image
Years later, after studying to be a painter & a lawyer, he realized that what he really wanted to do was be a photographer. He traveled the world for LIFE, visiting Israel numerous times and took many photographs in the country –including several iconic photos in Kfar Chabad. 2/


Image
Image
Image
Image
A trip to Auschwitz was a turning point in his life. In 🇮🇱 he 📷 a Holocaust survivor as she lifted her arm, showing her prisoner number branded on it. She did so while holding a copy of a newspaper in her other hand, whose headline announced the capture of Adolf Eichmann. 3/ Image
Read 16 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(