D. Zaslavski
A new page in world history
The war in Europe is over. The greatest victory was scored over the forces of evil, reaction, death. The nations who were saved from death and slavery rejoice. Yet the boundless joy and resounding laughter are mixed with tears of sorrow for the tremendous losses and victims. The Jewish people have the biggest reason to rejoice; they also have the biggest reason to mourn: indeed, our people suffered the greatest losses in the war. But our people were also saved from the greatest misfortune hanging over them: the danger that the Jewish people would perish completely, one and all. But the one to die was Hitler, and the Jews live and will live.
We are not calculating now the numbers of victims. This is a matter for researchers, who will probably also never be able to determine exact numbers. Hitler wanted to separate the Jews from other peoples, as a different race. But he threw the Jewish dead in the same ditches as the dead of other nations, and these very ditches became the graves of brothers—memorials for the victims of the wild, bestial malice of fascism. Hitler wanted to incite all of humankind against the Jews, but he achieved the contrary: in the lines of the Allies, the Jews joined and united with the other peoples, and Jewish blood mixed together and became inseparable from the general stream of blood of all the nations, the blood shed for freedom of all humanity.
The victory over Hitler's Germany has colossal consequences for the Jews. It changes the course of Jewish history in Europe as such. The central nest of world reactionary forces has been destroyed. The nest of the wildest, the most bestial antisemitism has been blown apart. Over the course of the last decades, all movements of persecution against Jews have had their origin in Berlin. The countries that fell under the influence of Fascism began one after the other to introduce restrictions for Jews, deleting Jews from the slate of citizens, keeping them in the category of pariahs. It was not only in Germany that the medieval ghetto rose up, resuscitated from the dead. It was not only the Jews of Germany who faced the threat of downfall. Antisemitism began to spread even before the war—and the brown plague over all of western and southern Europe. From there it migrated over to Poland, Italy, Romania, Hungary, Austria, Bulgaria. In many countries the Jews, who until then had more or less enjoyed equal rights, were moved into ghettos. These were systematic measures in preparation for the extermination of the Jewish people, organized according to German plans. And if the war had lasted a little longer, if Hitler and his band had not suffered such a dismal defeat, those remnants of Jews in many states would certainly have been exterminated: states where they have now been saved by the Red Army and by the armies of the Allies.
Hitler's Germany and all of its satellites are now destroyed. In the former fascist and pro-fascist states there can no longer be any state antisemitism. The grounds for antisemitism have been wrested from underneath society as a whole, although certain remnants, an inheritance of sorts from that antisemitism, still remain and will last for a certain period of time. The carcass that carries the name antisemitism will continue to spoil the air of European society for a while. Yet a carcass is indeed no more than a carcass.
Hitlerism was dealt its defeat above all by the Red Army. This fact has worldwide historical significance and special significance for Jewish history. The highest honor in the victory over the enemy must be awarded to the Red Army and the Soviet people. The red flag of victory that waves proudly now over Berlin was planted by the heroic Red Army. This very Red Army occupied a large part of Germany, and especially such important areas like Eastern Prussia, Brandenburg, Pomerania, Silesia… Each of these parts of Germany were regions where the German reactionary forces had their strongest nests economically and politically; regions that were points of support for the power of the large property owners, for the German feudalist government; regions where the state possessions of the highest Prussian military hub were concentrated. The Red Army cleansed the whole of Eastern Europe from fascism. This means that firm foundations were laid for a democratic order in Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Poland. Wherever the Red Army passes through, it brings with it the great, human call for friendship of the peoples, for peaceful and brotherly cooperation between the peoples; and a soon end to conflicts between peoples, to baiting of others. The victory of the Red Army tremendously expanded the space for democracy in Europe. And wherever democracy triumphs, Jews have enough fresh air to breathe.
The influence of the Soviet people on humankind has extended over all borders, all partitions and barriers—and this very influence is based on the politics of the Bolshevik Party, on the Leninist-Stalinist program of national equality, on friendship of the peoples. Racial hatred flees before Soviet ideology, like the shadows of the night flee before the rays of the rising sun. Of course this does not all take place over the course of one day. In world history, the transition from night to day has proceeded along an entirely different scale. But the timeline is not important; only the laws of history are important. And these laws have their own logical course. After the victory over Hitler's Germany, the world will never return to that moment when the peaceful, everyday life of Europe was interrupted and the thunder of cannons resounded in the air. No, this victory leads the peoples of Europe further down the path that opened up after the First World War, when the old empires were broken down, and in the place of an empire like Tsarist Russia, which was a prison of the peoples, the magnificent and powerful Soviet Union rose up before the eyes of mankind.
The Second World War was to a significant degree, to a decisive degree, a conflict between the Soviet socialist state of a new type and fascist Germany, which in its entire governmental, societal, moral-political order resuscitated the dark Middle Ages. The new, rising world triumphed; the Soviet Union triumphed, too. The Soviet people saved European civilization, gave it a progressive push. The Soviet people fulfilled its heroic mission during the war, and it will fulfill the same mission after the war, too, in the struggle for a firm, lasting, and democratic peace.
Jews around the world are bound by a sacred duty: to support the Soviet people in its battle for a true, authentic peace. They are obliged to do this not only out of gratitude to the state that saved the Jews in Europe from complete destruction. No, this is a matter of their own flesh and blood, of life and death for all Jews—because only the complete victory of the Soviet people within the context of cooperation between peoples is a guarantee of the restoration, the further development and revival of the life of Jewish people around the world.