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Jewish Involvement in Shaping American Immigration Policy, 1881-1965: A
Historical Review

Kevin MacDonald Department of Psychology California State University-Long
Beach Long Beach, CA 90840-0901

Population and Environment, in press.

 Jewish Involvement in Shaping American Immigration Policy, 1881-1965: A
Historical Review

ABSTRACT This paper discusses Jewish involvement in shaping United States
immigration policy. In addition to a periodic interest in fostering the
immigration of co-religionists as a result of anti-Semitic movements, Jews
have an interest in opposing the establishment of ethnically and culturally
homogeneous societies in which they reside as minorities. Jews have been at
the forefront in supporting movements aimed at altering the ethnic status quo
in the United States in favor of immigration of non-European peoples. These
activities have involved leadership in Congress, organizing and funding
anti-restrictionist groups composed of Jews and gentiles, and originating
intellectual movements opposed to evolutionary and biological perspectives in
the social sciences.

 Jewish Involvement in Shaping American Immigration Policy, 1881-1965: A
Historical Review

INTRODUCTION

Ethnic conflict is of obvious importance for understanding critical aspects
of American history, and not only for understanding Black/White ethnic
conflict or the fate of Native Americans. Immigration policy is a
paradigmatic example of conflict of interest between ethnic groups because
immigration policy influences the future demographic composition of the
nation. Ethnic groups unable to influence immigration policy in their own
interests will eventually be displaced or reduced in relative numbers by
groups able to accomplish this goal. This paper discusses ethnic conflict
between Jews and gentiles in the area of immigration policy. Immigration
policy is, however, only one aspect of conflicts of interest between Jews and
gentiles in America.

The skirmishes between Jews and the gentile power structure beginning in the
late nineteenth century always had strong overtones of anti-Semitism. These
battles involved issues of Jewish upward mobility, quotas on Jewish
representation in elite schools beginning in the nineteenth century and
peaking in the 1920s and 1930s, the anti-Communist crusades in the post-World
War II era, as well as the very powerful concern with the cultural influences
of the major media extending from Henry Ford's writings in the 1920s to the
Hollywood inquisitions of the McCarthy era and into the contemporary era.
That anti-Semitism was involved in these issues can be seen from the fact
that historians of Judaism (e.g., Sachar 1992, p. 620ff) feel compelled to
include accounts of these events as important to the history of Jews in
America, by the anti-Semitic pronouncements of many of the gentile
participants, and by the self-conscious understanding of Jewish participants
and observers. The Jewish involvement in influencing immigration policy in
the United States is especially noteworthy as an aspect of ethnic conflict.
Jewish involvement has had certain unique qualities that have distinguished
Jewish interests from the interests of other groups favoring liberal
immigration policies. Throughout much of this period, one Jewish interest in
liberal immigration policies stemmed from a desire to provide a sanctuary for
Jews fleeing from anti-Semitic persecutions in Europe and elsewhere.


Anti-Semitic persecutions have been a recurrent phenomenon in the modern
world beginning with the Czarist persecutions in 1881, and continuing into
the post-World War II era in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. As a
result, liberal immigration has been a Jewish interest because "survival
often dictated that Jews seek refuge in other lands" (Cohen 1972, p. 341).
For a similar reason, Jews have consistently advocated an internationalist
foreign policy for the United States because "an internationally-minded
America was likely to be more sensitive to the problems of foreign Jewries"
(Cohen 1972, p. 342). However, in addition to a persistent concern that
America be a safe haven for Jews fleeing outbreaks of anti-Semitism in
foreign countries, there is evidence that Jews, much more than any other
European-derived ethnic group in America, have viewed liberal immigration
policies as a mechanism of ensuring that America would be a pluralistic
rather than a unitary, homogeneous society (e.g., Cohen 1972). Pluralism
serves both internal (within-group) and external (between-group) Jewish
interests. Pluralism serves internal Jewish interests because it legitimates
the internal Jewish interest in rationalizing and openly advocating an
interest in Jewish group commitment and non-assimilation, what Howard Sachar
(1992, p. 427) terms its function in "legitimizing the preservation of a
minority culture in the midst of a majority's host society." The development
of an ethnic, political, or religious monoculture implies that Judaism can
survive only by engaging in a sort of semi-crypsis. As Irving Louis Horowitz
(1993, 86) notes regarding the long-term consequences of Jewish life under
Communism, "Jews suffer, their numbers decline, and emigration becomes a
survival solution when the state demands integration into a national
mainstream, a religious universal defined by a state religion or a near-state
religion." Both Neusner (1987) and Ellman (1987) suggest that the increased
sense of ethnic consciousness seen in Jewish circles recently has been
influenced by this general movement within American society toward the
legitimization of minority group ethnocentrism. More importantly, ethnic and
religious pluralism serves external Jewish interests because Jews become just
one of many ethnic groups. This results in the diffusion of political and
cultural influence among the various ethnic and religious groups, and it
becomes difficult or impossible to develop unified, cohesive groups of
gentiles united in their opposition to Judaism.

Historically, major anti-Semitic movements have tended to erupt in societies
that have been, apart from the Jews, religiously and/or ethnically
homogeneous (MacDonald, 1994; 1998). Conversely, one reason for the relative
lack of anti-Semitism in America compared to Europe was that "Jews did not
stand out as a solitary group of [religious] non-conformists (Higham 1984, p.
156). It follows also that ethnically and religiously pluralistic societies
are more likely to satisfy Jewish interests than are societies characterized
by ethnic and religious homogeneity among gentiles.

Beginning with Horace Kallen, Jewish intellectuals have been at the forefront
in developing models of the United States as a culturally and ethnically
pluralistic society. Reflecting the utility of cultural pluralism in serving
internal Jewish group interests in maintaining cultural separatism, Kallen
personally combined his ideology of cultural pluralism with a deep immersion
in Jewish history and literature, a commitment to Zionism, and political
activity on behalf of Jews in Eastern Europe (Sachar 1992, p. 425ff; Frommer
1978). Kallen (1915; 1924) developed a "polycentric" ideal for American
ethnic relationships.

Kallen defined ethnicity as deriving from one's biological endowment,
implying that Jews should be able to remain a genetically and culturally
cohesive group while nevertheless participating in American democratic
institutions. This conception that the United States should be organized as a
set of separate ethnic/cultural groups was accompanied by an ideology that
relationships between groups would be cooperative and benign: "Kallen lifted
his eyes above the strife that swirled around him to an ideal realm where
diversity and harmony coexist" (Higham 1984, p. 209). Similarly in Germany,
the Jewish leader Moritz Lazarus argued in opposition to the views of the
German intellectual Heinrich Treitschke that the continued separateness of
diverse ethnic groups contributed to the richness of German culture (Schorsch
1972, p. 63). Lazarus also developed the doctrine of dual loyalty which
became a cornerstone of the Zionist movement. Kallen wrote his 1915 essay
partly in reaction to the ideas of Edward A. Ross (1914). Ross was a
Darwinian sociologist who believed that the existence of clearly demarcated
groups would tend to result in between-group competition for resources.
Higham's comment is interesting because it shows that Kallen's romantic views
of group co-existence were contradicted by the reality of between-group
competition in his own day. Indeed, it is noteworthy that Kallen was a
prominent leader of the American Jewish Congress (AJCongress).

During the 1920s and 1930s the AJCongress championed group economic and
political rights for Jews in Eastern Europe at a time when there was
widespread ethnic tensions and persecution of Jews, and despite the fears of
many that such rights would merely exacerbate current tensions. The
AJCongress demanded that Jews be allowed proportional political
representation as well as the ability to organize their own communities and
preserve an autonomous Jewish national culture. The treaties with Eastern
European countries and Turkey included provisions that the state provide
instruction in minority languages and that Jews have the right to refuse to
attend courts or other public functions on the Sabbath (Frommer 1978, p.
162). Kallen's idea of cultural pluralism as a model for America was
popularized among gentile intellectuals by John Dewey (Higham 1984, p. 209),
who in turn was promoted by Jewish intellectuals: "If lapsed
Congregationalists like Dewey did not need immigrants to inspire them to
press against the boundaries of even the most liberal of Protestant
sensibilities, Dewey's kind were resoundingly encouraged in that direction by
the Jewish intellectuals they encountered in urban academic and literary
communities" (Hollinger, 1996, p. 24).

 The well-known author and prominent Zionist Maurice Samuel (1924, p. 215)
writing partly as a negative reaction to the immigration law of 1924, wrote
that "If, then, the struggle between us [i.e., Jews and gentiles] is ever to
be lifted beyond the physical, your democracies will have to alter their
demands for racial, spiritual and cultural homogeneity with the State. But it
would be foolish to regard this as a possibility, for the tendency of this
civilization is in the opposite direction. There is a steady approach toward
the identification of government with race, instead of with the political
State." Samuel deplored the 1924 legislation and in the following quote he
develops the view that the American state as having no ethnic implications.

We have just witnessed, in America, the repetition, in the peculiar form
adapted to this country, of the evil farce to which the experience of many
centuries has not yet accustomed us. If America had any meaning at all, it
lay in the peculiar attempt to rise above the trend of our present
civilization- the identification of race with State. . . . America was
therefore the New World in this vital respect- that the State was purely an
ideal, and nationality was identical only with acceptance of the ideal. But
it seems now that the entire point of view was a mistaken one, that America
was incapable of rising above her origins, and the semblance of an
ideal-nationalism was only a stage in the proper development of the universal
gentile spirit. . . .

To-day, with race triumphant over ideal, anti-Semitism uncovers its fangs,
and to the heartless refusal of the most elementary human right, the right of
asylum, is added cowardly insult. We are not only excluded, but we are told,
in the unmistakable language of the immigration laws, that we are an
"inferior" people. Without the moral courage to stand up squarely to its evil
instincts, the country prepared itself, through its journalists, by a long
draught of vilification of the Jew, and, when sufficiently inspired by the
popular and "scientific" potions, committed the act. (pp. 218-220)

A congruent opinion is expressed by prominent Jewish social scientist and
political activist Earl Raab 1 who remarks very positively on the success of
American immigration policy in altering the ethnic composition of the United
States since 1965. Raab notes that the Jewish community has taken a
leadership role in changing the Northwestern European bias of American
immigration policy (1993a, p. 17), and he has also maintained that one factor
inhibiting anti-Semitism in the contemporary United States is that "(a)n
increasing ethnic heterogeneity, as a result of immigration, has made it even
more difficult for a political party or mass movement of bigotry to develop"
(1995, p. 91).

Or more colorfully: The Census Bureau has just reported that about half of
the American population will soon be non-white or non-European. And they will
all be American citizens. We have tipped beyond the point where a Nazi-Aryan
party will be able to prevail in this country. We [i.e., Jews] have been
nourishing the American climate of opposition to bigotry for about half a
century. That climate has not yet been perfected, but the heterogeneous
nature of our population tends to make it irreversible- and makes our
constitutional constraints against bigotry more practical than ever. (Raab
1993b, p. 23).2

 It should be noted as a general point that the effectiveness of Jewish
organizations in influencing American immigration policy has been facilitated
by certain characteristics of American Jewry. As Neuringer (1971, p. 87)
notes, Jewish influence on immigration policy was facilitated by Jewish
wealth, education, and social status.

Reflecting its general disproportionate representation in markers of economic
success and political influence, Jewish organizations have been able to have
a vastly disproportionate effect on United States immigration policy because
Jews as a group are highly organized, highly intelligent, and politically
astute, and they were able to command a high level of financial, political,
and intellectual resources in pursuing their political aims.

Similarly, Hollinger (1996, p. 19) notes that Jews were more influential in
the decline of a homogeneous Protestant Christian culture in the United
States than Catholics because of their greater wealth, social standing, and
technical skill in the intellectual arena. In the area of immigration policy,
the main Jewish activist organization influencing immigration policy, the
American Jewish Committee (AJCommittee), was characterized by "strong
leadership [particularly Louis Marshall], internal cohesion, well-funded
programs, sophisticated lobbying techniques, well-chosen non-Jewish allies,
and good timing" (Goldstein 1990, p. 333). In this regard, the Jewish success
in influencing immigration policy is entirely analogous to their success in
influencing the secularization of American culture. As in the case of
immigration policy, the secularization of American culture is a Jewish
interest because Jews have a perceived interest that America not be a
homogeneous Christian culture.

"Jewish civil rights organizations have had an historic role in the postwar
development of American church-state law and policy" (Ivers 1995, p. 2).
Unlike the effort to influence immigration, the opposition to a homogeneous
Christian culture was mainly carried out in the courts. The Jewish effort in
this case was well funded and was the focus of well-organized, highly
dedicated Jewish civil service organizations, including the AJCommittee, the
AJCongress, and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL).

It involved keen legal expertise both in the actual litigation but also in
influencing legal opinion via articles in law journals and other forums of
intellectual debate, including the popular media. It also involved a highly
charismatic and effective leadership, particularly Leo Pfeffer of the
AJCongress:

No other lawyer exercised such complete intellectual dominance over a chosen
area of law for so extensive a period* as an author, scholar, public citizen,
and above all, legal advocate who harnessed his multiple and formidable
talents into a single force capable of satisfying all that an institution
needs for a successful constitutional reform movement. . . . That Pfeffer,
through an enviable combination of skill, determination, and persistence, was
able in such a short period of time to make church-state reform the foremost
cause with which rival organizations associated the AJCongress illustrates
well the impact that individual lawyers endowed with exceptional skills can
have on the character and life of the organizations for which they work. . .
. As if to confirm the extent to which Pfeffer is associated with
post-Everson [i.e., post-1946] constitutional development, even the major
critics of the Court's church-state jurisprudence during this period and the
modern doctrine of separationism rarely fail to make reference to Pfeffer as
the central force responsible for what they lament as the lost meaning of the
establishment clause. (Ivers 1995, pp. 222-224) Similarly, Hollinger (1996,
p. 4) notes "the transformation of the ethnoreligious demography of American
academic life by Jews" in the period from the 1930s to the 1960s, as well as
the Jewish influence on trends toward the secularization of American society
and in advancing an ideal of cosmopolitanism (p. 11).

The pace of this influence was very likely influenced by immigration battles
of the 1920s. Hollinger notes that the "the old Protestant establishment's
influence persisted until the 1960s in large measure because of the
Immigration Act of 1924: had the massive immigration of Catholics and Jews
continued at pre-1924 levels, the course of American history would have been
different in many ways, including, one may reasonably speculate, a more rapid
diminution of Protestant cultural hegemony. Immigration restriction gave that
hegemony a new lease of life" (p. 22). It is reasonable to suppose,
therefore, that the immigration battles from 1881 to 1965 have been of
momentous historical importance in shaping the contours of American culture
in the late twentieth century.

Notes 2In Australia, Miriam Faine, an editorial committee member of the
Australian Jewish Democrat stated that "The strengthening of multicultural or
diverse Australia is also our most effective insurance policy against
anti-semitism. The day Australia has a Chinese Australian Governor General I
would feel more confident of my freedom to live as a Jewish Australian" (in
McCormack 1994, p. 11). 3

Moreover, a deep concern that an ethnically and culturally homogeneous
America would compromise Jewish interests can be seen in Silberman's comments
on the attraction of Jews to "the Democratic party . . . with its traditional
hospitality to non-WASP ethnic groups. . . . A distinguished economist who
strongly disagreed with Mondale's economic policies voted for him
nonetheless. 'I watched the conventions on television,' he explained, 'and
the Republicans did not look like my kind of people." That same reaction led
many Jews to vote for Carter in 1980 despite their dislike of him; 'I'd
rather live in a country governed by the faces I saw at the Democratic
convention than by those I saw at the Republican convention' a well-known
author told me" (pp. 347-348).

 Equality Moreover, achieving parity between Jews and other ethnic groups
would entail a very high level of discrimination against individual Jews for
admission to universities or employment opportunities, and would even entail
a large taxation on Jews in order to prevent the present Jewish advantage in
the possession of wealth, since at present Jews are vastly over-represented
among the wealthy and the successful in the United States (e.g., Ginsberg,
1994; Lipsett & Raab, 1995).

Beginning in the 1920s, studies have repeatedly shown that Ashkenazi Jews
have a full-scale IQ of approximately 117 and a verbal IQ in the range of 125
(see MacDonald, 1994 for a review).

By 1988, Jews constituted about 40% of admissions to Ivy League colleges and
Jewish income was at least double that of gentiles (Shapiro (1992, p. 116).
Shapiro also shows that Jews are overrepresented by at least a factor of nine
on indexes of wealth, but that this is a conservative estimate because much
Jewish wealth is in real estate which is difficult to determine and easy to
hide. While constituting approximately 2.4% of the population of the United
States, Jews represented one half of the top 100 Wall Street executives.

Lipset and Raab (1995) note that Jews contribute between one-quarter and
one-third of all political contributions in the United States, including
one-half of Democratic Party contributions and one-fourth of Republican
contributions. Indeed, many Jewish intellectuals (including
"neo-conservatives" such as Daniel Bell, Sidney Hook, Irving Howe, Irving
Kristol, Nathan Glazer, Norman Podhoretz, and Earl Raab) as well as Jewish
organizations (including the ADL, the AJCommittee, and the AJCongress) have
been eloquent opponents of affirmative action and quota mechanisms for
distributing resources (see Sachar 1992, p. 818ff).

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