| The Catholic Zionist Who Helped Steer
Israeli Independence through the UN
This is the story of the
friendship between two men, as told nearly half a century after both of
the protagonists died young. The author is the brother of one of them.
Mojzesz Pomeranz and Ksawery
Pruszynski met at the university in Cracow, where they were both studying
law. Pomeranz was the son of a prosperous merchant from the Kazimierz district,
while Pruszynski was the son of an aristocratic widow who had lost her
estate and her family fortune in Eastern Poland during the Bolshevik revolution.
Pomeranz grew up in a traditional Jewish home, while Pruszynski received
a Jesuit education.
As Mieczyslaw Pruszynski
tells it, the two law students (legal studies in Poland consist of a five-year
undergraduate course) shared a sense of exile and a longing to return to
a lost home. For Pomeranz, that lost home was the land of Israel, and the
Zionist movement provided the conceptual and the practical means for returning
there after almost 2,000 years of exile. For Pruszynski, home was his family's
estate in the lost world of the Polish eastern marches. Between the wars,
ironically, the Jewish return seemed more practicable than a Polish return
to the estates now incorporated into the Soviet Union.
Imaginative and sensitive
individuals have a gift for transcending mental barriers between groups
and stepping not so much into the shoes, as into the dreams of people with
a different identity. Ksawery Pruszynski learned about Zionism from his
friend Mojzesz, and became an ardent proponent of the idea. Not only did
he become a proponent, but he also traveled from Poland to Palestine in
1933, a couple of years after graduating, when he was beginning to make
a career for himself as a journalist.
Ksawery journeyed to Rumania
by train, booked a passage in steerage on a Black Sea steamer, and sailed
to Palestine by way of Istanbul. He was the only non-Jewish passenger in
steerage, and spent the voyage talking to the young pioneers in the other
bunks. Upon arrival, he visited Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, the Dead Sea, the
hydroelectric projects, and the kibbutzim.
The book that Ksawery Pruszynski
published on his return sold well and made him into a local authority on
Palestine. It praised the miracles of development that the settlers had
achieved, as he would always point out, not on the best land in the country,
but on the worst. Pruszynski continually emphasized that this important
difference, and the fact that the settlers purchased every square foot
of the property they developed, rendered any comparison with colonialism
untenable. He traveled the country giving lectures to both Jewish and Catholic
audiences. At the Catholic University in Lublin, he addressed the "Rebirth"
youth movement, many of whose members, such as Jerzy Turowski and Stanislaw
Stomma, played important roles in the struggle over the next 65 years for
a democratic, tolerant Poland.
In the inter-war political
landscape, Ksawery and Mieczyslaw Pruszynski belonged to the pro-Pilsudski
camp. Their greatest enemies were the nationalist, anti-Semitic right as
grouped in the National Democratic (Endek) party and its Wszechpolska (All-Polish)
youth branch.
The Pilsudski party, which
held undisputed sway in the country as long as Marshal Pilsudski remained
alive (until 1935), promoted its own youth movement, the Legion Mlodych
(Legion of the Young), which supported like-minded student leaders, co-opted
them into posts in the government ministries, and maintained an active
press under the leadership of figures who would loom large in the coming
decades, like Jerzy Giedroyc and Jozef Mackiewicz.
Pilsudski had Jewish associates,
and some of his closest non-Jewish lieutenants had Jewish wives. Mieczyslaw
Pruszynski notes how, in 1926, Pilsudski issued a blanket decree granting
citizenship to 600,000 Jewish refugees from the Soviet Union; the author
regards this as an unparalleled step in the period before World War II,
when most other countries in Europe and America slammed the door. During
Pilsudski's lifetime and afterwards, when his "Colonels" attempted to maintain
their hold on power, they cooperated with Jewish groups and supported the
Zionist ideal of emigration to a Jewish state in Palestine. Zionists and
the Polish authorities paid lip service to each other as fighters for the
national independence of their respective peoples, and some major Zionist
leaders cited Pilsudski as their personal inspiration. In the final years
before 1939, this cooperation became highly concrete, with the army offering
special military training to Jewish self-defense activists and supplying
arms for the struggle in Palestine. In their most optimistic hopes, the
Polish authorities envisioned a Jewish state in Israel with a population
originating predominantly in Poland; such a state would maintain close
diplomatic and economic links with the country of origin and even serve
as a sort of surrogate for the colonial empire that Poland never had. (Mieczyslaw
Pruszynski does not discuss the way in which some of the post-Pilsudski
colonels attempted, in the last desperate years before the war, to "triangulate"
the Jewish question by pandering to the anti-Semitic venom of the opposition
Endek electorate.)
At the university in Cracow,
both of the Pruszynski brothers stood up against the cane-wielding young
anti-Semites in the All-Poland youth movement. At the beginning of every
academic year, the university in Cracow, like others in Poland, was rocked
by the "autumn maneuvers" in which the anti-Semite thugs attempted to intimidate
their Jewish fellow students into sitting in "ghetto benches" in the classroom,
and agitated in favor of the numerus clausus that limited the number
of Jewish students in certain faculties, or even a numerus nullus
that would ban them altogether.
While he was still a student,
Ksawery addressed a counter-demonstration on the steps of Collegium Novum,
and finished his speech with blood flowing down his face after a rock thrown
by a nationalist struck him in the forehead. Later, when Ksawery had gone
out into the world in his budding journalistic career, Mieczyslaw took
up the struggle and cooperated with Mojzesz Pomeranz in organizing a successful
campaign to block the anti-Semites from seizing control of the important
law students' association at the university.
By that time, Mieczyslaw
was spending a lot of time with his older brother's friend, Mojzesz. Mieczyslaw
sampled Sabbath suppers at the traditional Pomeranz home in Kazimierz and
later took Mojzesz along for a country-house weekend.
Mojzesz Pomeranz emigrated
to Palestine in the late 1930s and embarked on a career as a lawyer in
Tel Aviv. When the winds of war carried Mieczyslaw Pruszynski to Palestine
as an officer in the Polish army-in-exile, he looked Mojzesz up. Together,
they visited some of the places Ksawery had written about in 1933. Soon
Ksawery was also in Palestine. He had fought on the western front and in
Norway and then traveled to Russia as a diplomatic representative of the
Polish government-in-exile in London.
After the war, Ksawery continued
his diplomatic career as part of the Polish delegation to the United Nations.
When the issues connected with the expiration of the British mandate in
Palestine and the future of the Jewish settlements came up, Ksawery threw
himself into the work. At Flushing Meadows in 1947, he served as chairman
of the ad-hoc subcommission that prepared the case for a Jewish state,
and presented its proposals to the General Assembly (a second "Arab" sub-committee
prepared an alternative proposal for a unitary Palestinian entity that
did not envision a Jewish state). After Ksawery Pruszynski's impassioned
speech, which contained references to both his early experience of Palestine
and the suffering that the Germans had inflicted on Jews and Poles during
the war, the General Assembly narrowly passed the resolution that served
as the basis for the independence of Israel.
Mojzesz Pomeranz succumbed
to heart disease in Tel Aviv in 1949. A year later, Ksawery Pruszynski
died in a car accident in Germany, while traveling home to his young bride.
The official diplomatic histories of communist Poland omitted his role
in bringing Israel into being, since Soviet policy took a pro-Arab turn
soon afterwards. This book by Mieczyslaw Pruszynski is a tribute to a youthful
friendship and a reminder of Ksawery's remarkable career. The narrative
is laconic, but Mieczyslaw Pruszynski includes extracts from the UN records
and, more importantly, generous samplings of his older brother's audaciously
brilliant pre-war journalism.
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