American MaccabeeĀ by author Ā Andrew Porwancher parallelsĀ Americaās twenty- sixthĀ President to heroic warriorsĀ whom Jews celebrate on Chanukah.Ā Granted Roosevelt did not vanquish the Seleucids, nor banish Hellenistic culture fromĀ Judea and Samaria. Nevertheless, Porwancher makes a convincing case to show that āTeddyā not onlyĀ āfantasized about martial gloryā butĀ engaged inĀ political battles for the civilĀ rights of Jews, especially those who continued to uphold Orthodoxy rather thanĀ assimilatingĀ into the melting potĀ of their adopted country.
Ā A 5th cousin to FDR, Teddy wasĀ a blue bloodedĀ statesman. Born with a sliver spoon in his mouth he had nothing in common with EastĀ EuropeanĀ immigrants barely escaping pogroms,Ā nowĀ crammed into the tenementsĀ and sweat shops of New Yorkās lower east side.Ā When he was appointed Police Commissioner in 1895, Roosevelt saw an opportunity for reform. He chose his police force purely on the bases of merit. Rejecting the ancient tropes of Jewish weakness Ā Roosevelt saw, āJews can be brawny not just brainyā. His politics of meritocracy bought him affection and trust from both the ādowntown Jewsā in the Lower East Side and Uptown Jews such asĀ Oscar Straus orĀ banker JacobĀ Schiff, both Rooseveltās close advisers.
Roosevelt decried āidentity politicsā treating Jews and other ethnic minoritiesĀ as Americans.Ā Identity neutral, Roosevelt tried to make cabinet appointments on talent alone. Ā Loyal to Roosevelt, several JewsĀ joined his regiment, The Rough Riders, battling with the vigor of ancient Maccabees, for Cubaās independence from Spanish imperialists. Roosevelt proudly led them to Victory --- on horseback.
RooseveltĀ assumed presidency in 1901 after the assassination ofĀ then President WilliamĀ McKinley. Ā He championed a humanitarian agenda courageously Ā āmeddlingā in the domestic affairs of foreign counties on behalf of Jewish rights. Rooseveltās famous words, āSpeak softly and carry a big stickā did not always materialize as he had hoped. Ā Though Roosevelt persistentlyĀ triedĀ diplomatic channels to register AmericaāsĀ disappointmentĀ withĀ the treatment of Jews in Russia and Romania,Ā he was tepid in his efforts to haltĀ the horrific pogroms inĀ Kishinev (1903)Ā Odessa, Bialystok (1905). However,Ā author Porwancher points out America in theĀ 1900sĀ was far from pure in its ownĀ treatment of Blacks with lynchings--- at time, greater in number than the casualties in some of the shtetels in the Pale of Settlement.
PossiblyĀ fromĀ pressure ofĀ the State Department, RooseveltĀ upheldĀ policies somewhat unsympathetic to Jewish immigrants. Ā For example he endorsed the āliteracy testā for aspiring immigrants. The ātestā prohibited many illiterate Eastern European Jews (and other immigrants)Ā from entering American shores.Ā Yet, ironically, he appointed Oscar Straus, the first foreign-born Jew in American historyĀ to his cabinet in charge of immigration! Not quite as invincible as the Maccabees neverthelessĀ a stoic, risk takerĀ Roosevelt, could more accurately be defined an, āAmerican cowboyā cultivating a spirit of adventure and American Ā individualism