My Weekly Reader 21 March 2026.

            Zionism is nationalism for Jews in places where Jews aren’t allowed to assimilate.  It began in the late Nineteenth Century and drew most of its followers from the anti-Semitic states of Eastern Europe.[1]  For the most part, Eastern European Jews preferred to emigrate to Western Europe or—best of all—the United States.  After the First World War, American immigration restrictions choked down on Eastern European immigrants of all varieties.  The Depression had much the same effect on Western Europe.  Then Hitler came to power in Germany.  Suddenly, British-ruled Palestine began to look attractive.  The British government “recognized” a Jewish Agency as the spokesman for the “Yishuv,” the Jews in Palestine. 

            Then came the Second World War.  Jewish emigration from Nazi-ruled Europe slowed to the occasional droplet.  Early German victories forced Britain to play offense from its back foot.  To this end, Britain had two “intelligence” organizations with a special interest in Nazi Europe.  The Special Operations Executive (S.O.E.) fomented and supported resistance in occupied countries.  MI-9 tried to rescue the crews of downed British planes.  At first, they concentrated their work in Western Europe.  By 1944, they both had an interest in Eastern Europe. 

            While there were lots of agent candidates who knew Western Europe and its languages, equivalent people who were familiar with eastern Europe were thin on the ground.  Where to find people who could pass anonymously in Hungary, Rumania, Czechoslovakia, or Yugoslavia?   After a while, it occurred to someone that British Palestine had a bunch.  Here, the Jewish Agency had begun to learn of the Holocaust and wanted to know what might be done to help the besieged Jews.[2]  S.O.E., MI-9, and the Jewish Agency collaborated in recruiting 250 male and female volunteers; approving 150 of them for training; and sending 37 behind German lines.  They would be parachuted into Eastern Europe, where they would work with resistance movements, set up evasion lines for downed aircrew, and investigate the situation of the Jews. 

            By Spring 1944, the situation in the region had become highly unstable.  A revolt against the puppet-government of Slovakia was about to begin.  Traditional conservative nationalists struggled with fascists for control of Hungary.  The Red Army had made a dramatic advance westward in Spring and early Summer 1944.  If the Germans were pinned down by the Red Army, their allies in Hungary and Slovakia might be toppled.  Or not. 

            Most of the 37 parachuted in between March and September 1944.  Some fought with the Slovaks and some with the Yugoslav partisans, while some went to Budapest at the moment of the German coup to put the fascist Arrow Cross in power.  Twelve were captured and seven of these were executed.[3]  None of them accomplished their original missions.  Nevertheless, the effort has inspired interest.[4]  Why? 

            Perhaps because how we live our lives is more important than what we accomplish in them?  Courage and self-sacrifice are recurring themes in the world’s art, literature, and myth. 


[1] The Russian Empire, which then included most of Poland; Rumania; and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Subsequently, Poland and Hungary became independent states. 

[2] See: Walter Laqueur, The Terrible Secret (1980) on the Yishuv’s incomprehension of the Holocaust. 

[3] Of the seven who were executed, the most famous is Hanna Szenes, a sort of Jewish Noor Inayat Khan. 

[4] Amos Ettinger, Blind Jump (1992); Judith Baumel-Schwartz, Perfect Heroes (2010); Taviva Ofer, Haviva Reick (2014); Matti Friedman, Out of the Sky (2026).   

A Piece of Resistance.

            Nationalism preaches that all the people speaking the same language should be grouped together in one independent country.  Nationalism came to Rumania in the later 19th Century, when part of it escaped from the Ottoman Empire to form the new country.  However, many Rumanian-speakers still lived outside the country.  After Russia collapsed into revolution and civil war during the First World War, Rumania grabbed the mostly-Rumanian territory of Bessarabia (1918). 

            Anti-Semitism walked in daylight in Rumania.[1]  Jews had no rights and could not be citizens.  Most lived in miserable poverty.  A large Jewish community lived in Bessarabia, so the change of borders brought them under Rumanian rule.  In 1923, a new constitution—imposed by the Western powers—granted Jews citizenship.  Nothing else changed.  Many Jews pined for the Soviet Union which they believed to be a socialist utopia where religion didn’t matter. 

            Baruch Bruhman (1908-2004) began life as a Jewish Russian subject in Bessarabia; then became Rumanian.[2]  He rejected everything about the Rumanian state: he joined the illegal Communist Party (1929); went to jail for it (1930); deserted from the army during compulsory service (1932); went to jail for it; did organizational work for the Communist Party; fled to Czechoslovakia one step ahead of the police (1936); went to France to join the International Brigades fighting in the Spanish Civil War (1938), but arrived too late; worked for the French Communist Party (PCF) for a year; and enlisted in the French Foreign Legion under the name Boris Holban when the Second World War broke out (1939).[3] 

            The Germans captured Holban in June 1940, but he escaped in December 1940 and returned to Paris.  In June 1941, Germany attacked the Soviet Union.  All foreign Communist parties were ordered to attack the Germans to divert troops from the Russian front.  The PCF knew that the Germans would shoot a lot of French civilian hostages in reprisal.  Holban had spent his life on the run and had been to war.  The PCF set him to recruiting immigrant workers to kill Germans.  Holban found Rumanians, Hungarians, Poles, and Italians willing to fight the Germans.  Most were Jews and veterans of Spain.  If Germany won, they were doomed. 

            From August 1942 to June 1943, Holban’s group derailed trains, attacked factories, and killed 83 Germans on the streets of Paris.  Both the Germans and the French police hunted the “terrorists.”  Holban fell out with his PCF bosses.  They wanted more attacks; he wanted to slow down while concentrating on security.  In July 1943, Holban was replaced by Missak Manouchian, who accelerated attacks.  Then Manouchian was caught.  The PCF brought Holban back to run a rat-hunt for whoever had betrayed the group (December 1943). 

            Returning to now-Communist Rumania after the war, Holban soon fell into the whirlpool of the Stalinist purges.  Many years later, after he had re-settled in France (1984), he was accused of betraying Manouchian.  A storm followed, but Holban was proved innocent. 

            A puzzle: Was this Jewish resistance or Communist resistance or French resistance? 


[1] Even if vampires did not.  See: Bram Stoker, Dracula (1897); “Nosferatu” (dir. F. W. Murnau, 1922). 

[2] Renee Poznansky, Jews in France during World War II (2001). 

[3] This is very significant.  In August 1939, Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin did a deal with German dictator Adolf Hitler.  The Soviet Union would remain neutral in any war between Germany and other countries.  All foreign Communist parties were ordered to oppose their own nation’s war effort.  Bruhman/Holban was defying orders.