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Mișu Benvenisti

Mișu Benvenisti, also known as Mishu or Moshe Benvenisti (Hebrew: מישו בנבנישתי; July 1, 1902 – 1977), was a Romanian lawyer, Zionist militant, and leader of the Romanian Jewish community. Born into a family of printers and publishers, he was one of the few Sephardi Jews to reach prominence in political life during the Romanian Kingdom era. His association with Zionism began in his teenage years, and saw him emerging as leader of the Zionist Youth Organization (part of the HeHalutz, HH) in the early 1920s. Benvenisti was then primarily affiliated with the Renașterea Noastră group in Bucharest, joining the small Jewish National Party by 1930; through these, he participated in the formation of a nation-wide Jewish Party (PER), wherein he was youth organizer and general secretary. After 1936, he was also a member of the Romanian office of the World Jewish Congress (WJC), serving as its lawyer and as a rapporteur on the growth of local antisemitism.

Mișu Benvenisti
Benvenisti in 1948
President of the Jewish Party
In office
July 21, 1946 – 1947
Preceded byCollective leadership
Succeeded bynone
(party dissolved)
Chairman of the Romanian Zionist Executive
In office
March/April 1941 – January 1944
Preceded byLeon Mizrachi
Succeeded byA. L. Zissu
In office
May 1, 1946 – May 30, 1948
Preceded byBernard Rohrlich
Succeeded bytriumvirate:
Chaim Kraft, Sami Iakerkaner, Simon "Shmuel" Zalman
Personal details
BornJuly 1, 1902
Died1977 (aged 74–75)
Israel
NationalityRomanian
Other political
affiliations
Jewish National Party (1930)
Zionist Democratic Group Klal (1944)
SpouseSuzana Mărculescu
ProfessionLawyer, accountant
Signature
NicknameMoshe
Military service
Allegiance Romania
Branch/service Romanian Land Forces
Years of service1924, 1939–1940
Rank Sublieutenant

During the late 1930s, Romania drew closer to Nazi Germany and gradually introduced discrimination against Jews; the National Renaissance Front banned the PER, along with all other Romanian political parties, in early 1938. Zionists were allowed to form non-political bodies, which encouraged a wave of emigrations into Mandatory Palestine. As Nazi pressures increased with the arrival in power of Ion Antonescu, Benvenisti considered emigrating, but accepted appointment as chairman of the Zionist Executive. His political line there was one of moderation: he expressed loyalty toward Romania and increased control over the rebellious HH, intervening as a negotiator between the regime and the Jewish community. His stance was criticized by Jews on the right, including A. L. Zissu, as a form of collaborationism, especially due to his contacts with the submissive Central Jewish Office.

Faced with the Holocaust occurring on Romania's borders, Benvenisti also cultivated the Jewish resistance—in particular by helping Hungarian, Slovak and Polish Jews find temporary shelter in Romania, or by assisting survivors of Antonescu's own deportations to Transnistria. Benvenisti and other Jewish leaders persuaded the Antonescu government to relax pressures on the Jews, though the Executive also had to agree to collect large sums as contributions and bribes. The Romanian Zionists' role in sabotaging the Holocaust was documented by the local Judenberater, Gustav Richter. As a result of his investigations, Romanian authorities reluctantly arrested Benvenisti in January 1944. He was released in March, by which time he had lost the confidence of his peers, being replaced at the head of the Executive by his rival Zissu. For the rest of 1944, Benvenisti presided upon his own splinter party, the Zionist Democratic Group Klal.

Antonescu's downfall in August 1944 revived Romania's multi-party regime; consequently, Zissu and Benvenisti returned as factional leaders of the PER, with the former holding the party chairmanship. Benvenisti was moving toward the Jewish left, and embracing cooperation with the Romanian Communist Party and the Jewish Democratic Committee (CDE). In mid 1946, he replaced the anti-communist Zissu as president of both the WJC chapter and the PER, drawing the latter into an alliance with the CDE before the November elections. With the communists' turn to anti-Zionism, Benvenisti shut down the PER, criticized illegal emigration, and took political advice from CDE cadres such as Bercu Feldman. When the Romanian communist regime took over on the last days of 1947, he ended his Zionist involvement, though he and his wife Suzana still applied for emigration into Israel. Benvenisti was arrested in 1950 by the Securitate, tortured into confessing that he was a spy for Israel, and appeared at a show trial, alongside Zissu, in 1954. He was sentenced to life imprisonment, but ultimately freed and allowed to settle in Israel, which became his home for the final two decades of his life.

Biography Edit

Early life and career Edit

The Benvenistis belonged to the Sephardi minority (Romanian: evrei sefarzi or evrei spanioli) within the larger Jewish community. They were first noted locally for their contribution in publishing: in 1876, two of its members, Sandu and David, created Frații Benvenisti—a major Jewish printing press, centered on Craiova city.[1] Memoirist Mariu Theodorian-Carada recalled in 1938 that "Benvenisti the elder was the only Craiova Jew to wear a fur-lined caftan".[2] Mișu was born to Simon Benvenisti and Ernestina Schlanger on July 1, 1902.[3] His maternal grandfather, Adolf Schlanger, was Romania's oldest traveling salesman at the time of his death in December 1906.[4] Mișu's father, who lived between 1870 and 1943,[5] had worked for Frații Benvenisti library and then for Editura Alcalay company, until establishing his own editorial imprint, Editura Ancora.[6] He was highly respected in the Romanian literary community, and noted especially for his role in promoting figures such as Eugen Lovinescu, George Bacovia, and Liviu Rebreanu.[7] In 1922, Simon was sponsoring an annual Benvenisti Prize, awarded by the Romanian Writers' Society to debuting poets.[8] His elder son Felix preserved the family tradition as director of Bicurim publishers;[9] born in Bucharest in 1900, Felix was working as a clerk during the 1950s.[10] Maternal cousins of Felix and Mișu included Dolfi Urseanu, who worked at the State Opera Theater.[11]

As the second son, Mișu was primarily interested in the legal profession and politics. In 1918 or 1919, soon after hearing about the Balfour Declaration, and influenced by his colleague Carol Singer, he joined a Zionist youth group called Hatalmid.[12] He served as its president in 1919–1920, during which time he was acquainted with more senior Zionist figures, including activist Leon Mizrachi, Mișu Weissman, and Chief Rabbi Jacob Itzhak Niemirower.[13] In 1920, while studying law at the University of Bucharest, he was recruited by the Jewish students' organization, Hașmonea, and, on Mizrachi's proposal, was elected chairman of the Zionist Youth Organization of Romania (1923–1924).[14] This period saw him involved in at least one scuffle with antisemitic colleagues: on January 31, 1923, they tried to prevent Benvenisti and Samuel Steinberg from hearing a lecture by Mircea Djuvara; "other Jewish students arrived in" to assist, after which the two groups fought each other, leaving three Jews and one Romanian slightly injured.[15] His brother, meanwhile, had embraced anti-Zionism, joining the Association of Romanian Jews in Brăila, which declared itself in favor of complete Jewish assimilation.[16]

In 1925, Mișu Benvenisti joined Cornel Iancu's new Zionist lodge, Renașterea Noastră ("Our Rebirth"), where he remained an active member until the early months of 1944.[17] A hostile A. L. Zissu recalled in 1951: "All that I now when it comes to Benvenisti's political activity in the interwar is that he was a very active member of the Zionist group Renașterea, and very ambitious about rapidly acquiring offices, ahead of those who were older and more committed, that he was extremely conceited about his own political genius, going as far as to imagine himself a predestined leader."[18] Benvenisti graduated in 1924. After completing a one-year mandatory term in the Romanian Land Forces (at Timișoara), he registered with the bar association in Ilfov County.[19] In early 1928, he was providing legal services for Renașterea Noastră, with Moți (Motti) Moscovici as his secretary.[20] Moscovici also recounts that, in 1928–1929, Benvenisti also went on a study trip to Paris, where he intended to become a Doctor of Law: "He was absent for about a year, but never graduated."[21] In July 1929, he and I. Schechter were among the 15 delegates of the Romanian Jewry to the Sixteenth Zionist Congress in Zürich. They were also the only two Romanians to have been elected by "radical" Zionist lodges, against a "centrist" mainstream.[22]

By August 1929, Benvenisti had returned to Bucharest. The Jewish members of Parliament, who had since established an ethnic club, elected him to represent them at a Tomis Hall meeting protesting the anti-Jewish incidents in Mandatory Palestine;[23] by 1930, he was officially the Jewish club secretary.[24] In November, he challenged a clerk, Ștefan Iacobescu, to duel him on Luterană Street (Iacobescu never showed up).[25] Benvenisti's major client as a lawyer was the firm Frații Buhler, a Swiss–Romanian importer of grinding machines.[26] This job initially provided him with "modest revenue" that, from about 1932, he was forced to share with his gravely ill father.[27] Around 1932, he met and fell in love with the seven-years-younger bank clerk Suzana Mărculescu, but could not live with her full-time, as both had to attend to their ailing parents. According to his recollections, she did not share his Zionist ideals, and maintained "irony and regret for the time and energy I spent on matters such as politics".[28] They were only wed under Jewish law in May 1944—making Benvenisti cousins by marriage with composer Ricu Mălineanu and with singer Mara Ianoli-Mălineanu.[29]

 
Zionist allegory of youth in uniform, for a Romanian-language pamphlet, Program de Mosava (1933)

By March 1930, Benvenisti and Sami Stern had joined a Bucharest-based Jewish National Party, inspired by the views of Adolphe Stern. In speeches he made at the time, he noted that the group's existence was not directed "against the Romanian parties, but against all organizations which trample upon the Jewish population's needs."[30] In August, shortly after the Sighet Jewish Temple had been set ablaze, the "General Council of Romanian Jews" delegated him to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, where he demanded details on the investigation.[31] The same month, with local elections held in Bucharest, he submitted his candidacy on the "Jewish group" list for Bucharest Sector II (Black), second on that list after Sami Stern.[32]

Benvenisti subsequently affiliated with Tivadar Fischer's nationwide Jewish Party (PER). In the parliamentary election of June 1931, he unsuccessfully contested two seats in the Assembly of Deputies—holding the last place on the PER's Ilfov list,[33] and the first place in Tutova County.[34] He was voted in as leader of the Sector II chapter on September 8, 1932.[35] Benvenisti set up the PER youth branch (Tineretul Partidului Evreiesc) in 1934; the same year, he was also appointed the general secretary of the party at large. He was seconded at the youth section by Sami Iakerkaner, and had Jean Cohen among his subordinates.[36] Moscovici nominates him as the PER's major electoral agent and propagandist.[37] Historian Valeriu-Alexandru Moraru notes that Benvenisti and Cohen were the only two Sephardi men to be active in the PER; according to Moraru, the two, alongside M. Leon of the rival Union of Romanian Jews (UER), were also the only three Sephardim active in Romanian Jewish politics at any level.[38]

Fighting antisemitism Edit

Benvenisti was reportedly a perennial candidate for parliamentary seats throughout the interwar. During the general elections of December 1933, he ran in two Bessarabian constituencies—Bălți and Orhei. The lists, respectively headlined by Rahmil Ioffe and Michel Landau, only took small percentages of the vote—6% in Bălți, and 1% in Orhei.[39] He also ran second after Mayer Ebner in Suceava County, sharing in the 3.7% result; and third, after Tivadar Fischer and Alexandru Nobel, on the list for Rădăuți County, which took 3.8%.[40] As part of his efforts, Benvenisti also went on national conference tours, and, while in Turnu Severin, met a future Zionist doctrinaire, Theodor Loewenstein-Lavi.[41] Those years brought him into contact with the World Zionist Organization (WZO), allowing him to greet Nahum Goldmann and Nahum Sokolow on their respective visits to Romania.[42] Benvenisti notes that the WZO's Romanian delegate Sami Singer, who was following the Nazi takeover in Weimar Germany, asked him to become a rapporteur on Romania's own "antisemitic currents".[43] On May 7, 1935, he spoke at the Sephardi Community House in Bucharest about the plight of Jews under the Nazi regime.[44]

On January 29, 1936, Benvenisti was one of five party representatives who signed into existence the PER–UER alliance. Called Central Council of Romanian Jews, it existed for the "defence of all rights and liberties of a general character of the Jews who are Roumanian citizens or subjects, within the framework of the Constitution and of the Laws of the Country."[45] In May of that year, Renașterea Noastră's eponymous newspaper carried an article by Benvenisti which made him an official enemy of Germany, for celebrating the boycott of Nazi business and for condemning German rearmament.[46] In late 1936 or early 1937, both Cohen and Benvenisti were recruited by the Romanian Committee of World Jewish Congress (WJC), serving under Sami Singer and Sami Stern. His was a salaried position, and included acting as WJC corporate lawyer.[47]

Benvenisti was elected the PER's vice president in 1936.[48] During the parliamentary election of December 1937, the PER ran as an informal ally of the National Peasants' Party (PNȚ), despite the latter having a non-aggression pact with the fascist Iron Guard. The arrangements were made by Tivadar Fischer but approved by other PER men. They included Benvenisti, who later reflected on his contribution as having been a "great mistake."[49] He and Francisc Jambor headlined the PER list for the Assembly in Roman County, which only took 2% of the vote; Benvenisti also had an eligible second position in Hotin County (3% of the vote) and Soroca County (4%), as well as the third position in Storojineț (5%).[50]

The advent of antisemitism after the election marginalized both assimilated and Zionist Jews. On March 30, 1938, a dictatorial regime formed around King Carol II banned the PER,[51] later setting up its single official party, or National Renaissance Front (FRN). Carol still allowed Jews to organize for emigration into Palestine (Aliyah Bet). In 1939, shortly before the start of World War II, Benvenisti was again called under arms, serving to 1940 as a Sublieutenant and regimental paymaster.[52] As part of its expansion of antisemitic laws, the government debarred Benvenisti. A review board under Coty Stoicescu found that his claim for a legal exemption was groundless, upholding his debarment in early September 1940;[53] this remained his status until reinstatement in 1944.[54] The emigration effort was organized through a Zionist Executive, which survived the FRN's downfall. During late September 1940, Romania emerged as an ally of the Axis countries; Ion Antonescu took over government, as Romania's Conducător, and, initially, as a senior partner of the Iron Guard. The latter was expelled from government in January 1941, following a Guardist revolt and anti-Jewish pogrom. According to Moscovici, Benvenisti was in Bucharest shortly after these events, frantically preparing his own escape to Palestine, and upset by the lengthy approval process.[55] In March or April,[56] Benvenisti was made leader of the Zionist Executive—which coordinated Renașterea Noastră and other organizations. He took over from Mizrachi, who had actually managed to obtain a Palestine visa.[57]

This assignment put Benvenisti in direct contact with the Istanbul branch of the Jewish Agency for Israel and its representatives Mayer Segall and Haim Barlas, who successively handled the emigration project in Romania.[58] On May 17, the Executive received its legal recognition from the Siguranța police, allowing it to be formally joined in May by factions such as Tnuat HaMizrahi and Ihud.[59] Allegedly, Romanian recognition was granted only after General Emanoil Leoveanu, as head of the Siguranța, had Litman appointed as Moscovici's second-in-command; the allegation is that Litman was trusted by Leoveanu's clique.[60] According to Zissu, Benvenisti's claim to chairmanship was still questionable: Mizrachi had allegedly delegated his duties by phone.[61] This is contracted by a Siguranța reports, which notes that Mizrachi, "disgusted" by Romanian politics, announced his departure and delegation of powers with an "impressive session" of the Zionist movement.[62] According to Cohen, Mizrachi had recommended his friend as "the most capable of solving what was then a most delicate problem, namely disciplining youth and coordinating its activities."[63]

June 1941 witnessed the onset of Operation Barbarossa, which saw Romania waging war on the Soviet Union as a German ally. According to Cohen, many in the Executive, including Benvenisti, Iancu and himself, as well as M. H. Maxy, Moscovici, Tully Rosenthal and Iosif Ebercohn, supported Romania's war effort.[64] Renașterea Noastră published an article by Leon B. Wexler which celebrated the recovery of Bessarabia as a victory for Romanian nationalism.[65] Despite such displays of loyalism, pressures on Jews were again increased—a Transnistria Governorate, established in former Soviet territory, became a target of deportation and selective killing for Bessarabian Jews, as well as for some groups of Jews in Romania-proper. Benvenisti and fellow Zionist Executive man Cornel Iancu joined the Assistance Committee presided upon by Arnold Schwefelberg, which offered some relief to survivors of Transnistrian marches. He also organized relief for survivors of the Iași pogrom who were stranded at Călărași—alongside fellow Zionists Abraham Feller, Iacov Litman, and Lazăr Wurmbrand, he oversaw a fundraiser for this group.[66]

Benvenisti once explained the Executive as having limited power over adherents: "The independence of groups, be they adult or junior, was strict and absolute, without there being any possibility of intrusion by any of the Executive leaders."[67] He spoke of his main activities at the Executive as including "the preparation of youth for emigration, as well as cultural activity".[68] In line with promises made to Mizrachi, he stepped in to discipline the Zionist youth, or HeHalutz (HH), and, Moscovici notes, was the first-ever Zionist leader to manage this task.[69] Soon after taking over, he had discovered a postcard which showed that the group had convened a national conference "without telling him about it and without the necessary authorization." Benvenisti was infuriated, particularly since this could make him a suspect in Siguranța's eyes.[70] He reformed the HH into a single structure, and set up the first Hebrew-language school, Tarbuth. Poldi Filderman was tasked with overseeing its day-to-day administration, while Iancu and Loewenstein-Lavi directed the education efforts.[71]

Against Richter Edit

 
Lag BaOmer celebration at the Jewish community center in Bucharest, May 1942. Central Jewish Office's Henric Streitman is seated in the middle, flanked by the bearded Chief Rabbi Alexandru Șafran and Theodor Loewenstein-Lavi

In January 1942, Antonescu's government formed a state-controlled Central Jewish Office, which nominally supplanted the Zionist Executive; its direct overseer was a non-Jewish Commissioner, Radu Lecca. Bevenisti was immediately inducted as its regional leader in Ilfov. He resigned on the spot, but accepted a parallel appointment to the Office's Transnistrian relief committee on Calea Moșilor (until being sacked later in 1942).[72] He and his colleagues rejected the implicit outlawing of their Zionist organization, and sought remedial action. As he recounts, Romanian authorities were sympathetic to such demands, but noted that the matter was of direct interest to the Nazi agency in Romania; consequently, Benvenisti and Iancu visited with the local Judenberater, Gustav Richter.[73] Richter reportedly informed his guests that Germany was allied with the Palestinian Arabs, and that Jews could only hope for another "area of land outside Europe", allocated to them by Adolf Hitler. In the meantime, they were to "consider Zionist activity in Romania as finished".[74] Benvenisti and Iancu pleaded with Lecca, informing him that a ban would push Zionism into active resistance against Antonescu. Lecca reviewed their arguments and decided to override Richter, renewing the organizational permits.[75] Together with Chief Rabbi Alexandru Șafran and Zalman Rabinsohn, he also persuaded Romanian authorities to allow Sabbath worship in Jewish schools.[76]

Benvenisti's policy drew immediate criticism in the Jewish community. When, in May 1942, he asked that all Zionist groups adhere to his political line, those left in the minority complained about his "autocratic attitude".[77] Cohen was among the dissenters, angered that Benvenisti had scaled down emigration and was working on it only with a highly corrupt Greek freighter, Yannos Pandelis.[78] Zissu maintained that Benvenisti was guilty of "collaboration", especially by allowing Loewenstein-Lavi to serve on the board of the Central Jewish Office.[79] He resented Benvenisti for cultivating former UER head Wilhelm Filderman, despite Filderman being a Jewish assimilationist: "[his] politics were categorically opposed to the national policy".[80] This notion was rejected by Benvenisti, who argued that, at any point during the war, Filderman spoke in favor of "mass emigration".[81] In various contexts, Benvenisti was also adamant that he never allowed his Zionist group to be either collaborative or usable by the Antonescu regime.[82] Lavi's role, he claimed, was in "sabotaging" Richter's attempts at complete racial segregation[83] (an interpretation which was supported by Moscovici).[84] He admitted to having assisted his own brother in securing unpaid employment at the Central Jewish Office, which helped Felix with fulfilling the requirements to be spared from his forced labor duties.[85]

While reviewing his own activities, Benvenisti described at some length his contribution to rescuing Hungarian, Slovak, and Polish Jews escaping the Holocaust in Europe. He notes that he participated in covering up the details of these operations: though officially presented as "500 families" largely comprising children, the refugees were in fact mostly young men and women.[86] In order to accomplish this task, he contacted General Leoveanu, who permitted that the refugees sail out of Constanța Harbor.[87] Benvenisti made a point of preserving links with Jewish groups in southern Transylvania (the region's northern half having been ceded to Hungary). He visited these constituencies on two occasions, in mid 1942 and mid 1943, and claimed to have blocked Romanian authorities from staging a "judicial farce" that would have resulted in the prosecution of Transylvanian Zionists.[88] Moscovici, who renders an account by Itzhak Herzig "Artzi", suggests that Benvenisti's on Popa Petre Street 42 (in Bucharest's Armenian Quarter) was always "packed full with Zionist eminences and youth leaders", who presented Benvenisti with topical reports.[89]

According to his own reports, Benvenisti once overheard Lecca's conversations, becoming the first person to record his approval for the mass deportation of 40,000 Transylvanian and Banatian Jews to Nazi extermination camps; he also notes his and Carol Reiter's role in stopping "this new monstrosity", by appealing to Antonescu himself.[90] Similarly, Benvenisti and Wilhelm Filderman also persuaded Lecca not to detain Polish Jews who were transiting Romania: "[we showed that] our country's prestige was going to be even more tarnished, given the interest of foreign countries in the plight of these Polish citizens."[91] He recounts his contribution to a concentrated effort by the "informal Jewish leaders", whereby they prevented the authorities of Cernăuți from expelling Jewish refugees back into the General Government.[92] Such activities were angrily reviewed by Richter. On August 8, 1942, Bukarester Tagblatt published Richter's piece exposing Zionist activities, which also alleged that Benvenisti was an English spy.[93] The Zionist Executive had been formally outlawed on August 7[94] by Romanian authorities answering to Richter's requests, but continued to meet in conspiratorial secrecy.[95]

In autumn 1942, Lecca and the Central Jewish Office informed Zionist leaders that they were expected to cover Romania's wartime expenses with a major loan. According to Benvenisti, he tried to oppose the measure, noting that "its realization would be impossible". He also claimed to have been threatened with deportation to Transnistria for either himself or the Jews as a whole; researchers Teodor Wexler and Mihaela Popov view this version of events as truthful.[96] At the time, Wilhelm Filderman was singled out as a "saboteur" of the war effort by Lecca, for having sought to block the loan. Benvenisti and Rabbi Șafran stood by Filderman, and, as Benvenisti notes, expected to persuade Antonescu himself to rescind the order. Instead, their opposition resulted in Filderman's deportation to a Transnistrian camp, at Moghilău.[97] Benvenisti's name was found on a document which agreed to furnish the loan—however, he claimed to have no recollection of signing it.[98] Moscovici alleged that Benvenisti personally handled collection, and that he coerced the "masses of Jewish laborers" into contributing.[99] Himself a "loan inspector" in that context, Cohen attests that Benvenisti gave directives to postpone payments as much as possible.[100] In April 1943, the Executive leader was included on a list of Jewish hostages who had to account for their whereabouts with the authorities—in his case, those of Bucharest's 2nd Police Precinct, who recorded his residence as still being on Popa Petre.[101]

HeHalutz trial and marginalization Edit

 
Roll call of the HeHalutz in Bucharest, 1941

The Zionist Executive dissolved itself in summer 1943—according to Zissu, this was a public embarrassment, resulting from corrupt deals made by Shlomo Entzer at the Palestine Office, under Benvenisti's watch.[102] Benvenisti contrarily reports that he was always critical of Entzer's focus on prioritizing "rich children" for places on outbound ships.[103] In mid 1943, after an intercession by Romanian doctor Bazil Teodorescu,[104] Benvenisti and Filderman obtained an audience with Deputy Premier Mihai Antonescu. Upon meeting him, they asked for urgent humanitarian measures to redress the Romanian Jews' precarious situation.[105] Their host promised to curb the Transnistrian experiment, and to repatriate its survivors; he also expressed approval for mass emigration into Palestine, and guaranteed that he would contact the governments of Germany and Bulgaria "so that no obstacles would be posed to an emigration that the Romanian government also supported."[106]

Over the next months, Benvenisti prepared 75 children for "overland emigration" by rail. His effort was curbed by the Bulgarian authorities, who cancelled the group's transit visas.[107] With Filderman and Carol Iancu, he also approached the smuggler Arthur Tester, who informed that that he was the only one capable of bypassing Bulgarian opposition. Tester asked that they pay him 2,500 lei per child rescued.[108] Benvenisti and Filderman also kept contacts with the semi-legal opposition, represented in the main by the PNȚ. They met with PNȚ leaders Iuliu Maniu and Ghiță Popp, who promised to assist them with preventing the deportation of Bukovina Jews, as well as with asking Antonescu's men to improve the living conditions of those already held in Vapniarka and Grosulovo.[109] Accompanied by Iancu's wife Mella, he also visited Dinu Brătianu of the National Liberal Party. Though noting that he could not hope to persuade the Conducător to improve on his antisemitic record, Brătianu put Benvenisti in contact with his party colleague Ion Costinescu, who was presiding over the Romanian Red Cross and who "undertook the most energetic efforts toward [the deportees'] repatriation."[110]

Benvenisti believes that, throughout 1943, Richter had remained on his trail. In mid 1942, the chairman of the Central Jewish Office (namely, Henric Streitman) "though it best to warn me that it would be best for me to leave for Palestine, to save myself, while assuring me that I would get my permit to leave from the Romanian government."[111] As noted by historian Dennis Deletant, his name surface during an investigation of Zionist escape routes by the German Foreign Ministry, which "passed this information on to the Romanian authorities as evidence of 'hostile' activities";[112] Siguranța and Gestapo agents chanced upon letters and receipts which implicated Benvenisti in illegal acts, resulting in his arrest on January 30, 1944.[113] Together with Fischer and Jacques Rosenzweig, he appeared before the Bucharest Tribunal, specifically charged with aiding and abetting Polish Jews in Cernăuți. He was held at the Police Prefecture, where, he claims, the Gestapo became directly involved in securing his indictment. Likewise, "Lecca and Richter [...] came by once a day [...], asking for new arrests to be made and compiling grounds for accusations against us."[114]

Benvenisti was ultimately released in early March 1944, after Wilhelm Filderman and the Swiss ambassador, René de Weck, had vouched for him.[115][116] Mella Iancu recounts that she was also involved in bribing Siguranța Commissioner Albert Rădulescu with hundreds of thousands of lei from Zionist Executive coffers, which, she claims, contributed to his leniency on that specific matter.[117] In his official notes, Rădulescu asserted that neither Benvenisti nor his Zionist colleagues posed any danger for Romania's internal order.[118] Benvenisti himself credited his success to his defense team, which comprised Doru Gherson and S. Hart, to Filderman and Zissu, as well as to "the most progressive left-wing circles"—the trial, he maintained, was one of "racial persecution".[119] This account is partly contradicted by Moscovici, who argues that Zissu was entirely opposed to bailing out his adversary.[120] Officially, he and all the other defendants received six-month sentences, but their time in confinement was reduced.[121] Bevenisti complained that his "five-weeks detention" was "succeeded by month upon month of me being tormented with harassment and threats".[122]

Zissu reports that, in the resulting panic following the arrests, Renașterea wanted Benvenisti stripped of any decision-making powers, for which reason Zissu himself was made president of a new, but unrecognized, Zionist Executive.[123] This is partly contradicted by Benvenisti's account, which notes that he willingly resigned "by the end of 1943, or by the start of 1944", or "not long after my liberation".[124] He took this decision when a group of Romanian and Palestinian Zionists (including Zissu, Entzer, Barlas and Moritz Geiger) expressed their wish to defy the British caps on immigration by fitting illegal transports of Jews.[125] From the moment of his release to April 1946, Benvenisti was largely absent from the Zionist Executive—though he accepted invitations to attend meetings chaired by Zissu, and spoke there on several occasions.[126] He was instead elected chairman of a more centrist political party, the Zionist Democratic Group Klal, which had also rejected Zissu's policies.[127]

The period also saw a round-up of the HH by Romanian authorities. As reported by Benvenisti, the Zionist youth had drawn attention to itself in 1942, when members of the Hashomer Hatzair were allegedly caught circulating lei banknotes marked Jos războiul! ("Down with war!")[128] or Afară cu nemții! ("Out with the Kraut!").[129] They were indicted for "communist activities"; in similar vein, Gordonia youths were prosecuted for assisting in the emigration effort. Before being himself arrested, Benvenisti had been approached by Gherș Tabacinic-Sunea and two other young Zionists, who had allegedly asked him to bribe Romanian policemen handling the case.[130] He also appeared as a defense witness in both trials, which took place in April–May 1944.[131] He argued there that all communist propaganda found with the HH was purely for informative purposes, and that Gordonia had official approval for its actions.[132] The Tribunal asked for him to repeat his plea, which "was unheard of" in judicial annals.[133] This apparent show of clemency was overturned by the final verdict, which passed harsh sentences on all defendants, including the 12-years-old Bianca Calmy; three HH boys were sentenced to death and subsequently executed.[134] All survivors were pardoned in early 1944 by King Michael I.[135]

 
Roundup of Jewish orphans upon their release from Transnistria Governorate, 1944

Together with Wilhelm Fischer, Benvenisti continued to organize the relief effort for Jewish deportees in Transnistria: "I was the one providing exact instructions for the HeHalutz personnel who went on illegal trips into Transnistria to provide aid and to attempt the rescue of people wherever this was feasible."[136] However, "once my persecution by Richter became more acute, I was removed from the assistance commission, on his express order. [...] Thanks to the continuous interventions I made with the Central [Jewish Office], Zionist representatives were finally accepted on the commissions that had left for Transnistria, which were presided upon by Mr Fred Șaraga."[137] By February 1944, Benvenisti, Moscovici and Iancu Scarlat were facing prosecution for an alleged participation in forging papers that exempted Isac Juman and other Jews from their labor duties.[138]

Both Zissu and Cohen argue that, in May or June 1944, Benvenisti unwittingly jeopardized a major rescue plan for the Hungarian Jews, when he showed up for direct talks with Lecca and Antonescu, without consulting them and other Jewish leaders. These asked for an "honor jury" of the Zionist Executive to rule on Filderman and Benvenisti's conduct—its members were Șafran, Poldi Filderman, and Leon Ghelerter.[139] He agreed to appear, and testified that he was only present in Antonescu's office to validate Zissu as the person of contact; Zissu himself continued to allege that this was a lie.[140] At the time, however, Zissu also approached Benvenisti during talks to reestablish the PER as an illegal resistance group—negotiations toward this end were held in the Iancus' home.[141]

Communist turn Edit

Throughout the first half of 1944, with Soviet troops on Romania's border, it became apparent that Germany could no longer vouch for Romania's survival as an independent country. After his marriage in May, Benvenisti was preparing to join the Hungarian Jewish exodus by embarking with his family on one of the ships for which Zissu had obtained permission to leave Romania.[142] He informed Mihai Antonescu of this during a second meeting in Teodorescu's home, prompting the latter to ask a favor of him: upon arrival, he was to inform the Western Allies that Romania would surrender, if Britain and the United States agreed to partake in its occupation. The Deputy Premier regarded Soviet occupation as the guarantee of an "exclusively communist regime". Antonescu also wanted the Yishuv to know that the regime had been comparatively lenient toward Jews, and that communism would be detrimental to both communities.[143] Benvenisti gave up on his emigration plan when his mother was diagnosed with a heart condition which made it unlikely that she could survive the journey; he also noted that Suzana was depressed by the thought of leaving Romania.[144]

Benvenisti claims that, on August 22, 1944, government officials rushed him to the Sturdza Palace on Calea Victoriei, asking him to urgently send a message to the "world's Jewish organizations", and, through them, the Churchill war ministry, announcing that Romania was ready to surrender. He reports that he declined, prompting one bureaucrat to comment: "That Mr [Wilhelm] Filderman is more of a patriot than you are."[145] These alleged events were closely followed by the coup of August 23, which deposed the Antonescus and denounced the Axis alliance. From that moment on, Zionists were again allowed to organize in the open. Benvenisti returned to public life with an essay detailing his contribution to Jewish life and Zionist politics during the previous three years. It was published over three issues of Viața Evreească weekly, and then as a booklet.[146] Viața Evreească was a joint venture between Benvenisti and Mendel H. Bady, but did not survive for long.[147]

Like Cohen, Wilhelm Filderman and Zissu, Benvenisti was reassigned a seat on the WJC Romanian Committee. It elected him a local vice president, alongside Schwefelberg, Eduard Manolescu, and Bernard Rohrlich.[148] The PER was soon reestablished; he and Wilhelm Fischer were co-opted by Zissu to serve as its vice presidents.[149] Benvenisti formed a Mixed Judicial Commission, which represented Zionist and non-Zionist parties and organizations, in a common effort to undo the antisemitic legacy and obtain increased rights for Jews.[150] Together with Wilhelm Fischer and Schwefelberg, he presented WJC demands to Gheorghe Vlădescu-Răcoasa, the Romanian Secretary for National Minorities.[151] Cohen places him among the PER group leaders attending a meeting with PNȚ leaders, including Maniu, "around October 1944". The Zionists wanted Maniu's support for overturning all antisemitic legislation; they were largely disappointed, in that Maniu endorsed positive discrimination in favor of the "Romanian element".[152] Also according to Cohen, in May–July 1945 WJC pressed for a merger between the PER and the UER, with Zissu as honorary president, Wilhelm Filderman as active chairman, and Benvenisti as co-chairman.[153]

The 1944–1947 period brought Romania under institutional control by the Romanian Communist Party (PCR), which presented the Zionists with opposition from the left—manifested as the PCR-affiliated Jewish Democratic Committee (CDE). Benvenisti recounts having been approached by the CDE's original cell, formed around M. H. Maxy and Lică (Abramovici) Chiriță, "immediately after August 23". They wanted him to direct "Zionist elements that are thought of as democratic" into an umbrella group. The project stalled until 1945, when he realized that Maxy had established the CDE without consulting him at all.[154] In a report presented by the Committee to the Siguranța on June 22, 1946, both Benvenisti (as "interim president" of the PER) and Zissu (still the WJC branch leader) were described as "centrists".[155] Cohen suspected that Benvenisti embraced the rhetoric of cooperation with "democratic forces" (namely, communism) only for tactical reasons, since he would have known these to be incompatible with the Zionist agenda.[156]

Benvenisti himself claimed to have embraced a "left-wing orientation [...] from back during the war."[157] This was influenced by his contacts with Mella Iancu, a Labor Zionist, and veered into support for a "people's democracy"; Benvenisti boasted his participation in collecting funds for the International Red Aid.[158] At a March 1945 speech in front of the Zionist group Dor Hadash, he noted that Zionism enjoyed support from the world's "most radically progressive circles", variously including the Communist Party USA and the Soviet trade unions; Zionism, he claimed at the time, would solve the "Jewish Question", leaving "fascist circles" to reveal themselves "for their true, unmasked, self: enemies of democracy, proving that we Jews were but their mere pretext."[159] In February 1946, Benvenisti criticized the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry, arguing that Palestinian issues could only be solved with Soviet input.[160] He later explained that he viewed the Soviet government as Zionism and Israel's one true ally, since the "Jewish bourgeoisie was never fully committed to creating this state [of Israel]."[161] On May 11, 1946, he was a witness for the prosecution at Mihai Antonescu's trial by the People's Tribunal, where he spoke of deportations in Tansnistria as amounting to an "extermination regime", concluding that over 270,000 Jews had been killed under the Antonescus.[116]

On May 1, 1946, Benvenisti had been unanimously elected head of the Zionist Executive, taking over from Rohrlich (who had successfully ousted Zissu in autumn 1945).[162] Under his mandate, the Executive embarked on a conflict with the Revisionist Zionists, whom he declared to be dangerously far-right.[163] On July 23, Benvenisti attended a CDE-coordinated meeting of various groups, which focused on discussing the prospects of "common political action"; he was a representative of the Executive, with the PER represented by Isaia Tumarkin.[164] He was also a delegate at the WJC conferences in Paris (summer 1946), Basel, Karlovy Vary, and Zürich (all 1947).[165] During the first of these, accompanied by the CDE's Maxy, Benvenisti met Mapai's leader David Ben-Gurion and Moshe Sneh of the Haganah. In one account of his meetings, he claims to have only discussed politics with Sneh, telling him of "the gratitude that Jews in Romania feel toward the Soviet Union".[166] As he recalls, he repeated these guidelines at Zürich—when he argued that Romanian Jews had had their problems solved by the new regime, and that mass immigration was no longer desired. According to Benvenisti, his report was heard "with interest" by the likes of Sneh, Eliyahu Dobkin, and Nahum Goldmann.[167] Elsewhere, Benvenisti acknowledges that his contacts with Ben-Gurion and Léon Blum were centered on obtaining help for more emigration to Palestine.[168] Nominally, he was by then a supervisor of the Zionist press department (which consisted largely of wall newspapers and hectographed bulletins), but delegated this business to Moscovici. The latter supported the Jewish revolt in Palestine, which led him to be investigated by the Allied Commission.[169]

On July 7, 1946, the PER had deposed Zissu; a leadership committee took over. It comprised Ebercohn, Wilhelm Fischer, Doctor Harschfeld, Cornel Iancu, Leon Itzacar, Iakerkaner, Edgar Kanner, M. Rapaport, Rohrlich, Leon Rozenberg, Rosenthal, and Tumarkin.[170] After Zissu agreed to relinquish chairmanship on July 21,[171] Benvenisti became interim president, appointing S. Segall as the PER's new secretary.[172] These developments reportedly alarmed Wilhelm Filderman, who asked Cohen to help the Zionist right with resuming control of the PER and curb its infiltration by communism.[173] Zissu discusses Benvenisti's continued Zionism, but views it as entirely in line with the moderate version advanced at the WJC by Chaim Weizmann. He alleges that Cohen and Benvenisti were drawn into an alliance with each other by Zissu's own criticism of Weizmann. He blames them for conspiring to strip him of his editorial position at Mântuirea magazine, which was subsequently assigned to be managed by Cohen.[174] The latter reports that Benvenisti "kept in contact with the CDE and the UER regarding the party's demands [from the Romanian political establishment]".[175] Cohen notes having maintained his own grievances against Benvenisti, which led him to resign from his position as general secretary of WJC Romania in early 1947.[176]

Zionist ban Edit

In preparation for the general elections in November 1946, the CDE, UER, and PER established a "Jewish Representation", which ran as a minor ally of the PCR's governing coalition, itself called Bloc of Democratic Parties (BPD).[177] During Benvenisti's visit to Paris, the PER endorsed Rohrlich as its parliamentary candidate—according to Benvenisti's own reading of this event, Rohrlich took the nomination because he was much less friendly toward the CDE than he himself was. Though he resented his colleagues for having upstaged him, he opted to continue as the party chairman.[178] In March 1947, Benvenisti also went public with his critique of BPD Prime Minister Petru Groza, accusing him of tolerating antisemitism and of doing very little towards addressing Jewish grievances. He responded to allegations (denied by Groza) according to which various ministers wanted to make "the solution of the Jewish problem in Rumania conditional upon securing $100,000,000 from American Jews for the relief of non-Jews in the famine area of Rumania". According to Benvenisti: "If there is anybody who must pay a price of reconciliation in Rumania it is not the Jewish people but the Rumanians who partly committed and partly tolerated the crimes against Jews."[179] As the Siguranța reported, his speech saw "participants frantically applauding all points that reflected any grievances of the Jewish population."[180]

Groza met with Benvenisti on several occasions, when he repeated reassurances that he would not stand in the way of emigration.[181] As reported by Rabbi Șafran, in April Benvenisti intervened to ask Wilhelm Filderman not to speak at a Zionist rally; shortly after, Filderman defected from Romania, having been informed of his pending arrest.[182] Benvenisti and Șafran now met each other daily, with the former showing himself to be a "pragmatic psyche, ready to adapt himself to the new realities."[183] The final days of 1947 saw the PCR and the BPD reestablishing Romania as a communist republic. Benvenisti spoke of the PER as having been voluntarily dissolved at some point in 1947, after talks between himself and CDE man Bercu Feldman.[184] He declared himself opposed to the Zionist Executive's involvement in organizing illegal transports of Jews to Palestine, citing cases in which refugees became victims of human-trafficking cartels and gangs of robbers; he also argued that many Jews could do better in Romanian society than as "pensioners" of The Joint.[185] He recalled that he once denounced Ihud members for tolerating clandestine emigration cells, which the party was then forced to purge out of its ranks.[186] During the legislative election of March 1948, he "supported the election of regime-backed candidates in speeches, articles, and manifestos."[187]

Benvenisti resigned from the Executive on May 30, 1948, leaving it to elect a new leadership.[188] On that occasion, he had attempted to get the Romanian Zionists to express support for collaboration between all Zionist groups and the Maki (Israel's communist party).[189] As Moscovici notes, he was pushed out by the Mishmar faction, who, while espousing a left-wing agenda, was also interested in speeding up mass emigration for Jewish workers. Winning backing from Ihud, they imposed a triumvirate presidency: Iakerkaner, Chaim Kraft, and Simon "Shmuel" Zalman.[190] Benvenisti continued to be engaged with the Zionist circles months after that date, and endorsed the notion that a "small number" of Jews could still leave Romania. He looked forward to joining them to "work for the progressive idea" in Israel, expecting that he would be welcomed into Maki ranks.[191] He had filed a request to emigrate shortly before his resignation.[192]

Benvenisti and Isaia Tumarkin still represented the Romanian Jews at the WJC Congress in Montreux (June–July 1948)—they were given approval to leave after first agreeing to be joined there by nine CDE men, including Feldman.[193] News of this agreement infuriated Zissu; he accused Benvenisti of "national treason". He alleged that the CDE wished to spy on the WJC for his communist patrons, or, alternatively, that it was interested in forcing Montreux delegates to take a pro- or anti-communist position, which would have compromised the Romanian movement.[194] Both Benvenisti and the other WJC Committee members were reportedly in agreement that it was "too late" for the nine delegates to be disinvited.[195] Zissu claims that, upon returning from Montreux, Benvenisti declared his delegation to have been "the most important and most subtle political act I ever undertook."[196] Benvenisti himself recalled that his speech at Montreux was about how "we [the Jews] must stand with the Soviet Union alongside the people's democracies. [...] the Jewish people must reshape its life into a system of productive labor, alongside the Soviet Union."[197] He reportedly directed the WJC's left-wing in boycotting the American delegation, since it included no Jewish communists.[198]

At some point in late 1948, Romania's Minister of Internal Affairs, Teohari Georgescu, informed Jewish allies, including Benvenisti, of his decision to ban all Zionist groups. In their face-to-face meeting, Georgescu reportedly spoke of Zionists, and especially the HH, as a nuisance which "prevents the people from fitting into society".[199] In subsequent interrogations, Benvenisti claimed have personally engaged the HeHalutz in order to dismantle their provincial networks, receiving some assistance from Feldman.[200] The period saw a first wave of repression by the new secret police, called Securitate. Interrogated by the latter in 1952, Cohen confessed that Benvenisti helped Zionist prisoners by appealing to members of the PNȚ underground, namely Gheorghe Zane and Emil Hațieganu.[201] In similar circumstances, Benvenisti himself noted that he had maintained only "very vague and very infrequent" relations with Zionist activists after their movement had come to be repressed.[202]

Benvenisti took pride in observing that the WJC maintained a presence in Romania until June 1950, despite having been chased almost entirely out of the Eastern Bloc. According to Benvenisti, the decision to maintain it in place was taken between himself and Feldman, much to the chagrin of the Israeli Ambassador, Reuven Rubin.[203] He served as WJC chapter president throughout the interval, with Litman as his second-in-command.[204] Moscovici argues that Benvenisti and Feldman hoped to attract communist Jews into that organization, which, in reality, was "a simple bureau, employing 2 or 3 clerks."[205] Benvenisti recalled making a single visit to the Israeli Embassy in Bucharest, on Independence Day 1949; here, he conversed with Rubin and his counsel Moshe Averbuch Agamy, informing them of his objections "as to how the Israeli government has oriented itself".[206] He also met with Rubin and Averbuch Agamy on another occasion "early in 1949", reportedly to inform them that the Romanian state was right to be fully compensated by the Jewish National Fund. He speculated that achieving this would result in the liberation of Zionist political prisoners, including Leon Itzacar.[207] Zissu similarly confirmed that his rival was not involved in the anti-regime underground, though he passed on messages from Zissu to Rubin's subordinate Eliezer Halevy. Also according to Zissu, Benvenisti was tutoring Halevy's children and his dentist Wrankel in Hebrew.[208]

Communist imprisonment and release Edit

 
Building of the communist Ministry of Internal Affairs, where Benvenisti was held as a prisoner; nowadays hosts the Senate of Romania

Benvenisti managed to survive a political purge which took place in 1950 at Ilfov's bar association.[209] In March or April of that year, he applied at the Embassy for an extension of his entry visa to Israel, hoping to receive his Romanian passport, allowing him to leave the country. He admitted to have engaged Halevy in conversation on that and several other occasions.[210] Suzana, unemployed by 1947, found work at the WJC and helped her husband with documentation for Averbuch Agamy (though she reportedly regarded Israeli diplomats as "imperialists"); by 1948, she had switched to a position in the Romanian state bureaucracy, at the Nicolae Bălcescu Cultural Fund, and in February 1949 was working as a typist for the Israeli Embassy.[211] The Securitate was expanding on its actions against the Zionists, with Cohen and Cornel Iancu targeted by June. As the former recalls, they had tried to warn Benvenisti that he could expect the same outcome.[212] Under interrogation, Moscovici alleged that Suzana was passionate about getting Ben-Gurion's government to rescue the Zionist groups, pleading with her superiors at the Embassy to advocate the issue on her behalf.[213]

The Benvenistis were living in an apartment on Republicii Boulevard, 37 when Mișu was arrested on July 10, 1950.[214] He was held at the Interior Ministry building to early August, and then moved to "the basement of a large villa" until October, and possibly kept in Malmaison prison in October–December.[215] Benvenisti was first interrogated on August 14 by a Securitate team known to have been led by Lieutenant Major Gheorghe Rujan, but whose other members remained entirely anonymous.[216] Comparing these records with parallel testimonies provided by Zionist Smaya Avny-Steinmetz, Wexler and Popov also argue that Benvenisti was tortured "liberally" after that date, in what was an attempt to extract his confession to have spied for Israel. They believe that such treatment would explain Benvenisti's subsequent health problems.[217] On September 21, 1950, "after 73 days of inquiry", he still maintained that he owed his arrest to "a slanderous or knavish action by some enemy of mine".[218]

Over the following days, Benvenisti recanted his earlier confessions about his 1949 meetings with Averbuch Agamy, agreeing with the Securitate that these were meant for Zionist purposes: Benvenisti and Mella Iancu were asked to handle Israeli aid for the Romanian Jews; he refused, since he believed the aid was tied to the emigration policy.[219] During these early sessions, Benvenisti was asked about his contacts with Foreign Minister (and communist factional leader) Ana Pauker—possibly because her rivals were preparing to implicate her in the scandal.[220] Benvenisti reported no direct encounters, though he notes that Averbuch Agamy was discussing Jewish emigrations with Pauker.[221] On June 18, 1951, Securitate Lieutenant Aurel Manu, who had been introduced as Benvenisti's second case worker, staged a confrontation between Benvenisti and Lecca. The latter presented a version of wartime events in which Benvenisti was "not a defender of the Zionists, not of the Jews [at large], but a defender of his own existence and his very own pocket."[222] This was followed on June 21 by another such confrontation, one between Zissu and Benvenisti. The two men displayed their contempt for each other—though they still presented similarly negative portrayals of Lecca.[223]

During December 1951, Benvenisti was moved back to a cell at the Ministry of the Interior.[224] Again interrogated, he agreed with the charge of wartime collaborationism, noting that his actions had been detrimental to the "working-class people" of Romania.[225] He fully caved in on January 4, 1952, when he gave a false confession to having spied for international Zionism. He claimed to quote from memory a letter once received from Tabacinic-Sunea, who had fled to Istanbul. As Wexler and Popov note, the supposed document integrated terminology that "no Western intelligence service would have been caught using", and contained orders for Benvenisti to send Tabacinic-Sunea newspaper clippings "which is to say publicized material that anyone would have had access to, in a free country."[226] Genuine elements in this confession referred to his having sent abroad fragments from the official newspapers (including Monitorul Oficial, Timpul, Curentul and Universul) and photographs by Fred Șaraga, all of which referred to the Bucharest and Iași pogroms of 1941.[227] Benvenisti also claimed that Averbuch Agamy was blackmailing him into spying, by pretending not to care about Itzacar's ultimate fate.[228] In March, when asked to describe his involvement with military intelligence, Benvenisti spoke of his having witnessed the arrival in Bucharest of Soviet-trained units from the Tudor Vladimirescu and HCC Divisions, and of sending Israel information about them being "very well equipped and highly motivated".[229] Securitate Colonel Mișu Dulgheru sent this confession to be analyzed by the Bucharest Military Tribunal.[230]

Wexler and Popov note that the "Kafkaesque" Securitate became invested in presenting Jewish resistance during the Holocaust as in itself evidence of a Zionist spying network.[231] Benvenisti was also able to resist Securitate pressures on at least three counts—he refused to present himself as a paid spy, noting that "I was a lawyer and made enough money as such"; he also would not incriminate Cohen, and did not confirm the Securitate claim that all Jewish aid societies were foreign spy-rings.[232] By mid-1952, his political friends, including Menahem Fermo, were also picked up, and held together with Benvenisti at Jilava Prison; Zissu was also held there, and, as Fermo reports, would still treat each other as rivals—though they also supported each other by walking hand in hand.[233] Benevnisti alternated between enthusiasm about rebuilding Romanian Zionism and moments of deep depression, in which he contemplated suicide (he and Fermo also talked literature, and in particular Marcel Proust).[234] According to Securitate records, all interrogations ceased from October 1952 to January 1953, which, Wexler notes, was a means of exercising "psychological pressure" on Benvenisti.[235] Suzana Benvenisti was tried on November 13, 1953, alongside Litman; she had been implicated in her husband's affairs by Mella Iancu's testimonies.[236] She was convicted to 10 years in prison, prompting Goldman to issue a formal protest on behalf of the WJC.[237] Suzana's absence reportedly left her mother-in-law destitute; she received a modest sum from the Embassy, which Rohrlich was trying to supplement by December 1951.[238]

Benvenisti himself appeared alongside Zissu, Cohen and ten others at a trial in March 1954.[239] He was sentenced to lifetime imprisonment and hard labor.[240] In July 1954, as part of a selective release of the imprisoned Zionists, it was announced that Suzana Benvenisti would be retried by a civilian court.[241] The following year, on Yom Kippur, her husband has slipped into a diabetic coma, and was at a high risk of dying. Reportedly, he obtained medical assistance only because of an intervention on his behalf by Groza's Jewish barber, Max Friedman.[242] On April 14, 1956, shortly before a détente in Israel–Romania relations, the Presidium of the Great National Assembly (then under Constantin Pîrvulescu) pardoned Benvenisti and Zissu together.[243] The new Chief Rabbi, Moses Rosen, was among those involved in negotiating emigration waivers for both men. As he himself noted, the two received their Romanian passports during Rosen's meeting with Deputy Premier Emil Bodnăraș, who reportedly exclaimed: "They wish to leave, so Mazal tov!"—"as if speaking out loud his thoughts: 'there is no downside to their leaving, godspeed to them'."[244]

Benvenisti began a new stage in his life, as an Israeli diplomat integrated with the Jewish Agency for Israel.[245] Known as "Moshe Benvenisti", in October 1946 he traveled with Idov Cohen and others to West Germany, where he negotiated compensation rights for Transnistria deportees—based on the claim that "Bucharest had been the Nazi center from which the persecution of Jews in all parts of Romania was controlled." Benvenisti supported this claim by adding that "he himself had negotiated with agents of the Nazi regime in Bucharest", and "brought evidence that the Nazis had a direct influence on the persecution of Jews in Romania."[246] Before his death in 1977, he established a fund for research into Romanian Jewish history—as noted in 2014 by Moraru, "nothing is known about what came of [it]."[247] His widow Suzana died at Ramat Aviv in early 1996; she was aged 89.[248] In November of that year, a memorial plaque for both Benvenistis was put up at Beit Ya'akov Yosef (Zvi Gutman) Synagogue in Tel Aviv.[249]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ C. D. Fortunescu, "Inceputurile tipografiei în Craiova", in Almanahul Graficei Române, 1926, p. 121. See also Cajal Marin, p. 83; Moraru, pp. 175–176, 204
  2. ^ Mariu Theodorian-Carada, "Note și comunicări. Privitor la negustorimea craioveană", in Arhivele Olteniei, Vol. XVII, Issues 97–100, May–December 1938, p. 387
  3. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 238
  4. ^ See death announcement for Adolf Schlanger in Dimineața, December 25, 1906, p. 3
  5. ^ Moraru, p. 248
  6. ^ Cajal Marin, p. 83. See also Moraru, p. 248
  7. ^ Cajal Marin, pp. 83–85
  8. ^ Constantin Călin, "Note despre premii", in Cardan Cultural, Vol. I, Issue 3, September–October 2018, p. 21
  9. ^ Moraru, pp. 204, 248
  10. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 238
  11. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 238
  12. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 229, 238, 245, 335, 441, 443, 445, 857
  13. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 335, 445
  14. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 229, 238, 245, 249, 335, 443, 445, 857. See also Moraru, p. 248
  15. ^ "In jurul agitațiilor studențești. Un incident la Facultatea de drept", in Viitorul, January 31, 1923, p. 4
  16. ^ "Evreii și politica. Inițiativa de la Brăila", in Mișcarea, June 6, 1920, p. 1
  17. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 238, 245, 249–250, 335–336, 419, 429, 443
  18. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 102
  19. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 336, 418, 443, 527, 944
  20. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 863
  21. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 857
  22. ^ "Congresul sionist din Zuerich. Delegații din România", in Dimineața, August 6, 1929, p. 3
  23. ^ "Ultima oră. Evreii din Capitală protestează contra masacrelor din Palestina", in Universul, September 4, 1929, p. 7
  24. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 730, 857
  25. ^ "Cutia cu scrisori. O chestiune de onoare", in Adevărul, November 26, 1929, p. 3
  26. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 443, 857, 863
  27. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 352
  28. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 352–353
  29. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 238, 352
  30. ^ "Intrunirea partidului național-evreesc", in Adevărul, March 4, 1930, p. 4
  31. ^ "O anchetă la Sighet", in Cuvântul, August 17, 1930, p. 2
  32. ^ "Alegerile comunale dela 10 August", in Universul, August 2, 1930, p. 5
  33. ^ "Campania electorală. Lista 'Partidului Evreesc' la Ilfov", in Lupta, May 10, 1931, p. 3
  34. ^ "Campania electorală. Alte candidaturi ale partidului evreesc", in Curentul, May 24, 1931, p. 5
  35. ^ "Un congres al partidului evreesc", in Cuvântul, September 12, 1932, p. 2
  36. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 535, 616, 657, 722, 730, 786, 859, 863
  37. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 863–864
  38. ^ Moraru, p. 89
  39. ^ "Tablou indicând rezultatele", pp. 7960, 8025. See also Wexler & Popov, pp. 863–864
  40. ^ "Tablou indicând rezultatele", pp. 8032, 8050
  41. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 524, 812
  42. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 339
  43. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 398–399, 419, 444–447, 491–492
  44. ^ "Caleidoscopul vieții intelectuale. Conferințe", in Adevărul, May 7, 1935, p. 2
  45. ^ Politics and Political Parties in Roumania, pp. 296–297. London: International Reference Library Publishers Co., 1936. OCLC 252801505
  46. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 45–46
  47. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 419–420, 443, 444–447, 491
  48. ^ Moraru, p. 248; Wexler & Popov, pp. 337, 445, 857, 925, 926
  49. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 448–449, 470
  50. ^ "Rezultatul alegerilor pentru adunarea deputaților din 20 Decembrie 1937", in Monitorul Oficial, Issue 301/1937, pp. 9765, 9795, 9809, 9810
  51. ^ Ioan Scurtu (ed.), Enciclopedia partidelor politice din România, 1859-2003, pp. 58–59. Bucharest: Editura Meronia, 2003. ISBN 973-8200-54-7
  52. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 865
  53. ^ "Consiliul baroului Ilfov a radiat alți 55 avocați evrei. Aceștia pretindeau că fac parte din categoria a II-a", in Curentul, September 9, 1940, p. 4
  54. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 418
  55. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 864
  56. ^ Benvenisti, p. 4; Kuller, p. 176
  57. ^ Kuller, p. 176; Wexler & Popov, pp. 102–103, 241, 249–250, 336, 421–422, 619–620, 631–632, 748, 857, 864
  58. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 374–376, 749, 822, 873
  59. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 4–6, 46–48
  60. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 968
  61. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 102–103
  62. ^ Kuller, p. 176
  63. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 620
  64. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 664, 740, 741, 749–751, 850, 914
  65. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 927, 961
  66. ^ Benvenisti, p. 9
  67. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 279
  68. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 250
  69. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 872–873
  70. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 869–870
  71. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 5–6, 31–34
  72. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 333, 339–340, 393, 476–477, 527, 695, 857–858, 915, 925, 961
  73. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 9–13; Wexler & Popov, p. 340
  74. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 11–12. See also Wexler & Popov, pp. 340–341
  75. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 12–13; Wexler & Popov, p. 341
  76. ^ Benvenisti, p. 32
  77. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 37–38
  78. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 633–634, 673–674
  79. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 102–103, 108, 144
  80. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 135
  81. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 41–42
  82. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 38–41; Wexler & Popov, pp. 229, 245–245, 250, 275–277, 341–342
  83. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 39–41
  84. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 849, 857
  85. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 332–333
  86. ^ Benvenisti, p. 7
  87. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 250
  88. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 34–35
  89. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 835, 873–874, 913, 929, 968–969
  90. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 17–18
  91. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 14–15
  92. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 18–19
  93. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 12, 45–46
  94. ^ Kuller, p. 138
  95. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 12, 37, 42; Wexler & Popov, pp. 336, 384–385, 658
  96. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 229–230, 245–245, 250–251, 342
  97. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 15–16
  98. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 275–277
  99. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 924–925, 961
  100. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 660–662
  101. ^ H. D., "Elocvența documentelor — Aprilie 1943. Ostaticii din București", in Buletinul Centrului, Muzeului și Arhivei Istorice a Evreilor din România, Issue 11, 2005, p. 47
  102. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 107–110, 121
  103. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 265, 277–278, 55–356
  104. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 294–295, 320, 357, 478
  105. ^ Benvenisti, p. 20; Wexler & Popov, p. 295
  106. ^ Benvenisti, p. 20
  107. ^ Benvenisti, p. 36
  108. ^ Ion Calafeteanu, "Regimul antonescian și emigrarea populației evreiești (II)", in Revista Istorică, Vol. V, Issues 5–6, May–June 1994, p. 463
  109. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 20–21
  110. ^ Benvenisti, p. 21
  111. ^ Benvenisti, p. 42
  112. ^ Dennis Deletant, Hitler's Forgotten Ally: Ion Antonescu and His Regime, Romania, 1940–1944, p. 217. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. ISBN 1-4039-9341-6
  113. ^ Kuller, p. 137; Wexler & Popov, pp. 108, 111, 192, 193, 253, 390–392
  114. ^ Benvenisti, p. 30
  115. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 230, 253, 337, 435, 479–480, 482–483
  116. ^ a b "Ședințele de eri ale procesului. Depoziția d-lui M. Benvenisti", in Adevărul, May 14, 1946, p. 3
  117. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 808, 812–813, 821–822
  118. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 231, 233, 851
  119. ^ Benvenisti, p. 31
  120. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 858
  121. ^ Benvenisti, p. 31
  122. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 42–43
  123. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 108, 192, 207
  124. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 336, 337
  125. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 250, 295, 336–337, 355–356, 385, 469. See also Benvenisti, p. 36
  126. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 253–254, 337
  127. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 36–37
  128. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 27, 29
  129. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 346, 482
  130. ^ Kuller, p. 137
  131. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 480, 483
  132. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 246, 250, 346, 480, 482, 483
  133. ^ Benvenisti, p. 28
  134. ^ Benvenisti, pp. 28–30
  135. ^ Benvenisti, p. 29
  136. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 265
  137. ^ Benvenisti, p. 24
  138. ^ "Curier judiciar. Trafic, corupție, bătae, etc...", in Universul, February 12, 1944, p. 7
  139. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 681
  140. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 103–105, 110–113, 116–121, 201, 295–296, 321–325, 328–332, 357–359, 479, 542, 681–682, 813–814, 822
  141. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 103
  142. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 295–297, 353–354
  143. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 295–297, 813–814
  144. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 297, 353–354, 439
  145. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 324
  146. ^ Benvenisti, passim
  147. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 240, 858
  148. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 127, 334, 359, 398, 628–629, 691, 753–754, 779, 858, 899–901. See also Kuller, p. 179
  149. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 99, 359
  150. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 359–360, 904
  151. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 127, 148
  152. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 572, 675, 765, 801
  153. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 752–754, 778
  154. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 520
  155. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 33–34
  156. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 671
  157. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 244–245
  158. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 244–245, 247, 251, 267, 284
  159. ^ "Conferința conducătorilor organizației Dor-Hadaș. Discursul d-lui avocat M. Benvenisti", in Tineretul Nou/Hanoar Hazioni, Vol. II, Issues 11–12, March 1945, p. 5
  160. ^ "Meetingul dela templul coral", in Universul, February 13, 1946, p. 3
  161. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 247
  162. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 120, 253–254, 261, 362–363, 395, 488, 576, 632, 858, 875, 904, 949
  163. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 261
  164. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 33
  165. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 149, 230, 254–256, 258–259, 360–361, 401–407, 415, 464, 497–510, 527–528, 672, 757–758, 878, 879, 903, 921. See also Moraru, p. 248
  166. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 255–256
  167. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 260
  168. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 361, 498–499, 509–510
  169. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 877–878
  170. ^ "Ultimele informațiuni. Buletin intern", in Argus, July 10, 1946, p. 3
  171. ^ Kuller, p. 180
  172. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 34
  173. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 568
  174. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 203–204
  175. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 802
  176. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 578
  177. ^ Șlomo Leibovici-Laiș, "În culisele unei 'afaceri politice'", in Magazin Istoric, May 2002, pp. 24–25
  178. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 361, 521, 879–880
  179. ^ Rumanian Government Charged with Failure to Implement Election Promises to Jews, Jewish Telegraphic Agency release, March 6, 1947
  180. ^ Kuller, p. 183
  181. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 1267
  182. ^ Șafran, p. 33
  183. ^ Șafran, p. 34
  184. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 248, 338, 361, 372, 419, 511
  185. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 271–272, 875–876
  186. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 350–351
  187. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 314
  188. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 241, 242, 261, 280, 362, 396, 488, 881. See also Kuller, p. 185
  189. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 247, 262
  190. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 881–882, 1080
  191. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 248–249, 251, 261–262
  192. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 261
  193. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 158, 220, 242, 720, 884–885, 905
  194. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 157–158, 220
  195. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 158
  196. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 158–159
  197. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 256
  198. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 257, 362, 521
  199. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 366
  200. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 304, 314, 366
  201. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 688
  202. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 241–242, 257–258, 279, 281–283
  203. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 266, 298, 334, 362, 372–373, 884–885, 905
  204. ^ Kuller, p. 197
  205. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 885
  206. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 252
  207. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 252–253, 263–266, 274, 285, 289–293, 300–301, 314–315, 364–365, 371
  208. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 101
  209. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 944
  210. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 368–369
  211. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 370–372, 858, 890, 937, 941, 964, 1039, 1147
  212. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 597, 636
  213. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 893–894
  214. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 238, 288–289, 368–369, 394
  215. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 394
  216. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 229
  217. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 230–234, 810
  218. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 288
  219. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 289–293, 297, 299–304, 367–368, 440–441, 815–816, 818, 829–830, 894
  220. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 231
  221. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 231
  222. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 231, 327
  223. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 92, 116–121
  224. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 394
  225. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 343–347
  226. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 231–232
  227. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 232, 379–381, 389, 461, 467–468
  228. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 364–365
  229. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 234, 410
  230. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 234
  231. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 233–237
  232. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 234
  233. ^ Fermo, pp. 39–43
  234. ^ Fermo, p. 43
  235. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 237
  236. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 70, 818, 833. See also Pleșa, p. 196
  237. ^ "Goldman Pide la Libertad Para los Judíos Arrestados en Rumanía", in Prensa Israelita, Issue 242/1953, pp. 1, 5
  238. ^ Wexler & Popov, pp. 1131–1132
  239. ^ Kuller, p. 145; Wexler & Popov, pp. 70–71
  240. ^ Moraru, p. 248
  241. ^ Rumania Releases Zionist Leaders; Upsets Two Convictions, Jewish Telegraphic Agency release, July 6, 1954
  242. ^ Moses Rosen, "Memoriile Rabinului Moses Rosen", in Minimum, Vol. I, Issue 1, April 1987, p. 24
  243. ^ Pleșa, p. 197
  244. ^ Wexler & Popov, p. 72
  245. ^ Moraru, p. 248
  246. ^ "Hírek. Izraeli küldöttség Németországban tárgyalt a romániai zsidók kártérítéséről. Körülbelül 60-70 millió dollárt tesz ki a követelések összege", in Új Kelet, October 11, 1960, p. 2
  247. ^ Moraru, p. 248
  248. ^ "Clepsidra. Deces", in Minimum, Vol. X, Issue 109, April 1996, p. 80
  249. ^ "Clepsidra. Placă comemorativă", in Minimum, Vol. X, Issue 116, November 1996, p. 80

References Edit

  • "Tablou indicând rezultatele pe circumscripții electorale ale alegerilor pentru Adunarea deputaților, efectuate în ziua de 20 Decembrie 1933", in Monitorul Oficial, Issue 300/1933, pp. 7950–8071.
  • Mișu Benvenisti, Sionismul în vremea prigoanei. Publicat în Viața Evreească, Nr. 7–8–9–10. Bucharest: Imprimeriile Independența, 1944.
  • Irina Cajal Marin, "Aportul evreilor sefarzi la dezvoltarea României", in Irina Airinei (ed.), Rolul minorităților naționale la dezvoltarea societății românești. Reflecții și oportunități. Lucrările conferinței Centenarul Marii Uniri și rolul minorităților naționale la dezvoltarea societății românești, 13 noiembrie 2018, București, pp. 83–85. Bucharest: Universul Academic, 2019. ISBN 978-606-9062-02-9
  • Menahem Fermo, "Scrisorile pe care nu le-am scris", in Minimum, Vol. XXIII, Issue 262, January 2009, pp. 39–51.
  • Hary Kuller, "Sioniștii sub 'lupa' Siguranței și Securității. 1925 – 1949", in Buletinul Centrului, Muzeului și Arhivei Istorice a Evreilor din România, 2008, pp. 135–208.
  • Valeriu-Alexandru Moraru, Istoria comunităților sefarde din România de la începuturi și până azi. Cluj-Napoca: Presa Universitară Clujeană, 2014. ISBN 978-973-595-664-6
  • Liviu Pleșa, "Epurarea din Securitate a cadrelor de origine evreiască (1960–1961)", in Caietele CNSAS, Vol. XI, Issue 2, 2018, pp. 177–254.
  • Alexandru Șafran, "Memoriile Șef-rabinului Dr. Alexandru Șafran. 12", in Minimum, Vol. V, Issue 52, July 1991, pp. 32–36.
  • Teodor Wexler, Mihaela Popov, Anchete și procese uitate, 1945–1960. I. Documente. Bucharest: Fundația W. Filderman, [n. y.]. ISBN 973-99560-4-1

mișu, benvenisti, also, known, mishu, moshe, benvenisti, hebrew, מישו, בנבנישתי, july, 1902, 1977, romanian, lawyer, zionist, militant, leader, romanian, jewish, community, born, into, family, printers, publishers, sephardi, jews, reach, prominence, political,. Mișu Benvenisti also known as Mishu or Moshe Benvenisti Hebrew מישו בנבנישתי July 1 1902 1977 was a Romanian lawyer Zionist militant and leader of the Romanian Jewish community Born into a family of printers and publishers he was one of the few Sephardi Jews to reach prominence in political life during the Romanian Kingdom era His association with Zionism began in his teenage years and saw him emerging as leader of the Zionist Youth Organization part of the HeHalutz HH in the early 1920s Benvenisti was then primarily affiliated with the Renașterea Noastră group in Bucharest joining the small Jewish National Party by 1930 through these he participated in the formation of a nation wide Jewish Party PER wherein he was youth organizer and general secretary After 1936 he was also a member of the Romanian office of the World Jewish Congress WJC serving as its lawyer and as a rapporteur on the growth of local antisemitism Mișu BenvenistiBenvenisti in 1948President of the Jewish PartyIn office July 21 1946 1947Preceded byCollective leadershipSucceeded bynone party dissolved Chairman of the Romanian Zionist ExecutiveIn office March April 1941 January 1944Preceded byLeon MizrachiSucceeded byA L ZissuIn office May 1 1946 May 30 1948Preceded byBernard RohrlichSucceeded bytriumvirate Chaim Kraft Sami Iakerkaner Simon Shmuel ZalmanPersonal detailsBornJuly 1 1902Died1977 aged 74 75 IsraelNationalityRomanianOther politicalaffiliationsJewish National Party 1930 Zionist Democratic Group Klal 1944 SpouseSuzana MărculescuProfessionLawyer accountantSignatureNicknameMosheMilitary serviceAllegiance RomaniaBranch serviceRomanian Land ForcesYears of service1924 1939 1940RankSublieutenantDuring the late 1930s Romania drew closer to Nazi Germany and gradually introduced discrimination against Jews the National Renaissance Front banned the PER along with all other Romanian political parties in early 1938 Zionists were allowed to form non political bodies which encouraged a wave of emigrations into Mandatory Palestine As Nazi pressures increased with the arrival in power of Ion Antonescu Benvenisti considered emigrating but accepted appointment as chairman of the Zionist Executive His political line there was one of moderation he expressed loyalty toward Romania and increased control over the rebellious HH intervening as a negotiator between the regime and the Jewish community His stance was criticized by Jews on the right including A L Zissu as a form of collaborationism especially due to his contacts with the submissive Central Jewish Office Faced with the Holocaust occurring on Romania s borders Benvenisti also cultivated the Jewish resistance in particular by helping Hungarian Slovak and Polish Jews find temporary shelter in Romania or by assisting survivors of Antonescu s own deportations to Transnistria Benvenisti and other Jewish leaders persuaded the Antonescu government to relax pressures on the Jews though the Executive also had to agree to collect large sums as contributions and bribes The Romanian Zionists role in sabotaging the Holocaust was documented by the local Judenberater Gustav Richter As a result of his investigations Romanian authorities reluctantly arrested Benvenisti in January 1944 He was released in March by which time he had lost the confidence of his peers being replaced at the head of the Executive by his rival Zissu For the rest of 1944 Benvenisti presided upon his own splinter party the Zionist Democratic Group Klal Antonescu s downfall in August 1944 revived Romania s multi party regime consequently Zissu and Benvenisti returned as factional leaders of the PER with the former holding the party chairmanship Benvenisti was moving toward the Jewish left and embracing cooperation with the Romanian Communist Party and the Jewish Democratic Committee CDE In mid 1946 he replaced the anti communist Zissu as president of both the WJC chapter and the PER drawing the latter into an alliance with the CDE before the November elections With the communists turn to anti Zionism Benvenisti shut down the PER criticized illegal emigration and took political advice from CDE cadres such as Bercu Feldman When the Romanian communist regime took over on the last days of 1947 he ended his Zionist involvement though he and his wife Suzana still applied for emigration into Israel Benvenisti was arrested in 1950 by the Securitate tortured into confessing that he was a spy for Israel and appeared at a show trial alongside Zissu in 1954 He was sentenced to life imprisonment but ultimately freed and allowed to settle in Israel which became his home for the final two decades of his life Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and career 1 2 Fighting antisemitism 1 3 Against Richter 1 4 HeHalutz trial and marginalization 1 5 Communist turn 1 6 Zionist ban 1 7 Communist imprisonment and release 2 Notes 3 ReferencesBiography EditEarly life and career Edit The Benvenistis belonged to the Sephardi minority Romanian evrei sefarzi or evrei spanioli within the larger Jewish community They were first noted locally for their contribution in publishing in 1876 two of its members Sandu and David created Frații Benvenisti a major Jewish printing press centered on Craiova city 1 Memoirist Mariu Theodorian Carada recalled in 1938 that Benvenisti the elder was the only Craiova Jew to wear a fur lined caftan 2 Mișu was born to Simon Benvenisti and Ernestina Schlanger on July 1 1902 3 His maternal grandfather Adolf Schlanger was Romania s oldest traveling salesman at the time of his death in December 1906 4 Mișu s father who lived between 1870 and 1943 5 had worked for Frații Benvenisti library and then for Editura Alcalay company until establishing his own editorial imprint Editura Ancora 6 He was highly respected in the Romanian literary community and noted especially for his role in promoting figures such as Eugen Lovinescu George Bacovia and Liviu Rebreanu 7 In 1922 Simon was sponsoring an annual Benvenisti Prize awarded by the Romanian Writers Society to debuting poets 8 His elder son Felix preserved the family tradition as director of Bicurim publishers 9 born in Bucharest in 1900 Felix was working as a clerk during the 1950s 10 Maternal cousins of Felix and Mișu included Dolfi Urseanu who worked at the State Opera Theater 11 As the second son Mișu was primarily interested in the legal profession and politics In 1918 or 1919 soon after hearing about the Balfour Declaration and influenced by his colleague Carol Singer he joined a Zionist youth group called Hatalmid 12 He served as its president in 1919 1920 during which time he was acquainted with more senior Zionist figures including activist Leon Mizrachi Mișu Weissman and Chief Rabbi Jacob Itzhak Niemirower 13 In 1920 while studying law at the University of Bucharest he was recruited by the Jewish students organization Hașmonea and on Mizrachi s proposal was elected chairman of the Zionist Youth Organization of Romania 1923 1924 14 This period saw him involved in at least one scuffle with antisemitic colleagues on January 31 1923 they tried to prevent Benvenisti and Samuel Steinberg from hearing a lecture by Mircea Djuvara other Jewish students arrived in to assist after which the two groups fought each other leaving three Jews and one Romanian slightly injured 15 His brother meanwhile had embraced anti Zionism joining the Association of Romanian Jews in Brăila which declared itself in favor of complete Jewish assimilation 16 In 1925 Mișu Benvenisti joined Cornel Iancu s new Zionist lodge Renașterea Noastră Our Rebirth where he remained an active member until the early months of 1944 17 A hostile A L Zissu recalled in 1951 All that I now when it comes to Benvenisti s political activity in the interwar is that he was a very active member of the Zionist group Renașterea and very ambitious about rapidly acquiring offices ahead of those who were older and more committed that he was extremely conceited about his own political genius going as far as to imagine himself a predestined leader 18 Benvenisti graduated in 1924 After completing a one year mandatory term in the Romanian Land Forces at Timișoara he registered with the bar association in Ilfov County 19 In early 1928 he was providing legal services for Renașterea Noastră with Moți Motti Moscovici as his secretary 20 Moscovici also recounts that in 1928 1929 Benvenisti also went on a study trip to Paris where he intended to become a Doctor of Law He was absent for about a year but never graduated 21 In July 1929 he and I Schechter were among the 15 delegates of the Romanian Jewry to the Sixteenth Zionist Congress in Zurich They were also the only two Romanians to have been elected by radical Zionist lodges against a centrist mainstream 22 By August 1929 Benvenisti had returned to Bucharest The Jewish members of Parliament who had since established an ethnic club elected him to represent them at a Tomis Hall meeting protesting the anti Jewish incidents in Mandatory Palestine 23 by 1930 he was officially the Jewish club secretary 24 In November he challenged a clerk Ștefan Iacobescu to duel him on Luterană Street Iacobescu never showed up 25 Benvenisti s major client as a lawyer was the firm Frații Buhler a Swiss Romanian importer of grinding machines 26 This job initially provided him with modest revenue that from about 1932 he was forced to share with his gravely ill father 27 Around 1932 he met and fell in love with the seven years younger bank clerk Suzana Mărculescu but could not live with her full time as both had to attend to their ailing parents According to his recollections she did not share his Zionist ideals and maintained irony and regret for the time and energy I spent on matters such as politics 28 They were only wed under Jewish law in May 1944 making Benvenisti cousins by marriage with composer Ricu Mălineanu and with singer Mara Ianoli Mălineanu 29 nbsp Zionist allegory of youth in uniform for a Romanian language pamphlet Program de Mosava 1933 By March 1930 Benvenisti and Sami Stern had joined a Bucharest based Jewish National Party inspired by the views of Adolphe Stern In speeches he made at the time he noted that the group s existence was not directed against the Romanian parties but against all organizations which trample upon the Jewish population s needs 30 In August shortly after the Sighet Jewish Temple had been set ablaze the General Council of Romanian Jews delegated him to the Ministry of Internal Affairs where he demanded details on the investigation 31 The same month with local elections held in Bucharest he submitted his candidacy on the Jewish group list for Bucharest Sector II Black second on that list after Sami Stern 32 Benvenisti subsequently affiliated with Tivadar Fischer s nationwide Jewish Party PER In the parliamentary election of June 1931 he unsuccessfully contested two seats in the Assembly of Deputies holding the last place on the PER s Ilfov list 33 and the first place in Tutova County 34 He was voted in as leader of the Sector II chapter on September 8 1932 35 Benvenisti set up the PER youth branch Tineretul Partidului Evreiesc in 1934 the same year he was also appointed the general secretary of the party at large He was seconded at the youth section by Sami Iakerkaner and had Jean Cohen among his subordinates 36 Moscovici nominates him as the PER s major electoral agent and propagandist 37 Historian Valeriu Alexandru Moraru notes that Benvenisti and Cohen were the only two Sephardi men to be active in the PER according to Moraru the two alongside M Leon of the rival Union of Romanian Jews UER were also the only three Sephardim active in Romanian Jewish politics at any level 38 Fighting antisemitism Edit Benvenisti was reportedly a perennial candidate for parliamentary seats throughout the interwar During the general elections of December 1933 he ran in two Bessarabian constituencies Bălți and Orhei The lists respectively headlined by Rahmil Ioffe and Michel Landau only took small percentages of the vote 6 in Bălți and 1 in Orhei 39 He also ran second after Mayer Ebner in Suceava County sharing in the 3 7 result and third after Tivadar Fischer and Alexandru Nobel on the list for Rădăuți County which took 3 8 40 As part of his efforts Benvenisti also went on national conference tours and while in Turnu Severin met a future Zionist doctrinaire Theodor Loewenstein Lavi 41 Those years brought him into contact with the World Zionist Organization WZO allowing him to greet Nahum Goldmann and Nahum Sokolow on their respective visits to Romania 42 Benvenisti notes that the WZO s Romanian delegate Sami Singer who was following the Nazi takeover in Weimar Germany asked him to become a rapporteur on Romania s own antisemitic currents 43 On May 7 1935 he spoke at the Sephardi Community House in Bucharest about the plight of Jews under the Nazi regime 44 On January 29 1936 Benvenisti was one of five party representatives who signed into existence the PER UER alliance Called Central Council of Romanian Jews it existed for the defence of all rights and liberties of a general character of the Jews who are Roumanian citizens or subjects within the framework of the Constitution and of the Laws of the Country 45 In May of that year Renașterea Noastră s eponymous newspaper carried an article by Benvenisti which made him an official enemy of Germany for celebrating the boycott of Nazi business and for condemning German rearmament 46 In late 1936 or early 1937 both Cohen and Benvenisti were recruited by the Romanian Committee of World Jewish Congress WJC serving under Sami Singer and Sami Stern His was a salaried position and included acting as WJC corporate lawyer 47 Benvenisti was elected the PER s vice president in 1936 48 During the parliamentary election of December 1937 the PER ran as an informal ally of the National Peasants Party PNȚ despite the latter having a non aggression pact with the fascist Iron Guard The arrangements were made by Tivadar Fischer but approved by other PER men They included Benvenisti who later reflected on his contribution as having been a great mistake 49 He and Francisc Jambor headlined the PER list for the Assembly in Roman County which only took 2 of the vote Benvenisti also had an eligible second position in Hotin County 3 of the vote and Soroca County 4 as well as the third position in Storojineț 5 50 The advent of antisemitism after the election marginalized both assimilated and Zionist Jews On March 30 1938 a dictatorial regime formed around King Carol II banned the PER 51 later setting up its single official party or National Renaissance Front FRN Carol still allowed Jews to organize for emigration into Palestine Aliyah Bet In 1939 shortly before the start of World War II Benvenisti was again called under arms serving to 1940 as a Sublieutenant and regimental paymaster 52 As part of its expansion of antisemitic laws the government debarred Benvenisti A review board under Coty Stoicescu found that his claim for a legal exemption was groundless upholding his debarment in early September 1940 53 this remained his status until reinstatement in 1944 54 The emigration effort was organized through a Zionist Executive which survived the FRN s downfall During late September 1940 Romania emerged as an ally of the Axis countries Ion Antonescu took over government as Romania s Conducător and initially as a senior partner of the Iron Guard The latter was expelled from government in January 1941 following a Guardist revolt and anti Jewish pogrom According to Moscovici Benvenisti was in Bucharest shortly after these events frantically preparing his own escape to Palestine and upset by the lengthy approval process 55 In March or April 56 Benvenisti was made leader of the Zionist Executive which coordinated Renașterea Noastră and other organizations He took over from Mizrachi who had actually managed to obtain a Palestine visa 57 This assignment put Benvenisti in direct contact with the Istanbul branch of the Jewish Agency for Israel and its representatives Mayer Segall and Haim Barlas who successively handled the emigration project in Romania 58 On May 17 the Executive received its legal recognition from the Siguranța police allowing it to be formally joined in May by factions such as Tnuat HaMizrahi and Ihud 59 Allegedly Romanian recognition was granted only after General Emanoil Leoveanu as head of the Siguranța had Litman appointed as Moscovici s second in command the allegation is that Litman was trusted by Leoveanu s clique 60 According to Zissu Benvenisti s claim to chairmanship was still questionable Mizrachi had allegedly delegated his duties by phone 61 This is contracted by a Siguranța reports which notes that Mizrachi disgusted by Romanian politics announced his departure and delegation of powers with an impressive session of the Zionist movement 62 According to Cohen Mizrachi had recommended his friend as the most capable of solving what was then a most delicate problem namely disciplining youth and coordinating its activities 63 June 1941 witnessed the onset of Operation Barbarossa which saw Romania waging war on the Soviet Union as a German ally According to Cohen many in the Executive including Benvenisti Iancu and himself as well as M H Maxy Moscovici Tully Rosenthal and Iosif Ebercohn supported Romania s war effort 64 Renașterea Noastră published an article by Leon B Wexler which celebrated the recovery of Bessarabia as a victory for Romanian nationalism 65 Despite such displays of loyalism pressures on Jews were again increased a Transnistria Governorate established in former Soviet territory became a target of deportation and selective killing for Bessarabian Jews as well as for some groups of Jews in Romania proper Benvenisti and fellow Zionist Executive man Cornel Iancu joined the Assistance Committee presided upon by Arnold Schwefelberg which offered some relief to survivors of Transnistrian marches He also organized relief for survivors of the Iași pogrom who were stranded at Călărași alongside fellow Zionists Abraham Feller Iacov Litman and Lazăr Wurmbrand he oversaw a fundraiser for this group 66 Benvenisti once explained the Executive as having limited power over adherents The independence of groups be they adult or junior was strict and absolute without there being any possibility of intrusion by any of the Executive leaders 67 He spoke of his main activities at the Executive as including the preparation of youth for emigration as well as cultural activity 68 In line with promises made to Mizrachi he stepped in to discipline the Zionist youth or HeHalutz HH and Moscovici notes was the first ever Zionist leader to manage this task 69 Soon after taking over he had discovered a postcard which showed that the group had convened a national conference without telling him about it and without the necessary authorization Benvenisti was infuriated particularly since this could make him a suspect in Siguranța s eyes 70 He reformed the HH into a single structure and set up the first Hebrew language school Tarbuth Poldi Filderman was tasked with overseeing its day to day administration while Iancu and Loewenstein Lavi directed the education efforts 71 Against Richter Edit nbsp Lag BaOmer celebration at the Jewish community center in Bucharest May 1942 Central Jewish Office s Henric Streitman is seated in the middle flanked by the bearded Chief Rabbi Alexandru Șafran and Theodor Loewenstein LaviIn January 1942 Antonescu s government formed a state controlled Central Jewish Office which nominally supplanted the Zionist Executive its direct overseer was a non Jewish Commissioner Radu Lecca Bevenisti was immediately inducted as its regional leader in Ilfov He resigned on the spot but accepted a parallel appointment to the Office s Transnistrian relief committee on Calea Moșilor until being sacked later in 1942 72 He and his colleagues rejected the implicit outlawing of their Zionist organization and sought remedial action As he recounts Romanian authorities were sympathetic to such demands but noted that the matter was of direct interest to the Nazi agency in Romania consequently Benvenisti and Iancu visited with the local Judenberater Gustav Richter 73 Richter reportedly informed his guests that Germany was allied with the Palestinian Arabs and that Jews could only hope for another area of land outside Europe allocated to them by Adolf Hitler In the meantime they were to consider Zionist activity in Romania as finished 74 Benvenisti and Iancu pleaded with Lecca informing him that a ban would push Zionism into active resistance against Antonescu Lecca reviewed their arguments and decided to override Richter renewing the organizational permits 75 Together with Chief Rabbi Alexandru Șafran and Zalman Rabinsohn he also persuaded Romanian authorities to allow Sabbath worship in Jewish schools 76 Benvenisti s policy drew immediate criticism in the Jewish community When in May 1942 he asked that all Zionist groups adhere to his political line those left in the minority complained about his autocratic attitude 77 Cohen was among the dissenters angered that Benvenisti had scaled down emigration and was working on it only with a highly corrupt Greek freighter Yannos Pandelis 78 Zissu maintained that Benvenisti was guilty of collaboration especially by allowing Loewenstein Lavi to serve on the board of the Central Jewish Office 79 He resented Benvenisti for cultivating former UER head Wilhelm Filderman despite Filderman being a Jewish assimilationist his politics were categorically opposed to the national policy 80 This notion was rejected by Benvenisti who argued that at any point during the war Filderman spoke in favor of mass emigration 81 In various contexts Benvenisti was also adamant that he never allowed his Zionist group to be either collaborative or usable by the Antonescu regime 82 Lavi s role he claimed was in sabotaging Richter s attempts at complete racial segregation 83 an interpretation which was supported by Moscovici 84 He admitted to having assisted his own brother in securing unpaid employment at the Central Jewish Office which helped Felix with fulfilling the requirements to be spared from his forced labor duties 85 While reviewing his own activities Benvenisti described at some length his contribution to rescuing Hungarian Slovak and Polish Jews escaping the Holocaust in Europe He notes that he participated in covering up the details of these operations though officially presented as 500 families largely comprising children the refugees were in fact mostly young men and women 86 In order to accomplish this task he contacted General Leoveanu who permitted that the refugees sail out of Constanța Harbor 87 Benvenisti made a point of preserving links with Jewish groups in southern Transylvania the region s northern half having been ceded to Hungary He visited these constituencies on two occasions in mid 1942 and mid 1943 and claimed to have blocked Romanian authorities from staging a judicial farce that would have resulted in the prosecution of Transylvanian Zionists 88 Moscovici who renders an account by Itzhak Herzig Artzi suggests that Benvenisti s on Popa Petre Street 42 in Bucharest s Armenian Quarter was always packed full with Zionist eminences and youth leaders who presented Benvenisti with topical reports 89 According to his own reports Benvenisti once overheard Lecca s conversations becoming the first person to record his approval for the mass deportation of 40 000 Transylvanian and Banatian Jews to Nazi extermination camps he also notes his and Carol Reiter s role in stopping this new monstrosity by appealing to Antonescu himself 90 Similarly Benvenisti and Wilhelm Filderman also persuaded Lecca not to detain Polish Jews who were transiting Romania we showed that our country s prestige was going to be even more tarnished given the interest of foreign countries in the plight of these Polish citizens 91 He recounts his contribution to a concentrated effort by the informal Jewish leaders whereby they prevented the authorities of Cernăuți from expelling Jewish refugees back into the General Government 92 Such activities were angrily reviewed by Richter On August 8 1942 Bukarester Tagblatt published Richter s piece exposing Zionist activities which also alleged that Benvenisti was an English spy 93 The Zionist Executive had been formally outlawed on August 7 94 by Romanian authorities answering to Richter s requests but continued to meet in conspiratorial secrecy 95 In autumn 1942 Lecca and the Central Jewish Office informed Zionist leaders that they were expected to cover Romania s wartime expenses with a major loan According to Benvenisti he tried to oppose the measure noting that its realization would be impossible He also claimed to have been threatened with deportation to Transnistria for either himself or the Jews as a whole researchers Teodor Wexler and Mihaela Popov view this version of events as truthful 96 At the time Wilhelm Filderman was singled out as a saboteur of the war effort by Lecca for having sought to block the loan Benvenisti and Rabbi Șafran stood by Filderman and as Benvenisti notes expected to persuade Antonescu himself to rescind the order Instead their opposition resulted in Filderman s deportation to a Transnistrian camp at Moghilău 97 Benvenisti s name was found on a document which agreed to furnish the loan however he claimed to have no recollection of signing it 98 Moscovici alleged that Benvenisti personally handled collection and that he coerced the masses of Jewish laborers into contributing 99 Himself a loan inspector in that context Cohen attests that Benvenisti gave directives to postpone payments as much as possible 100 In April 1943 the Executive leader was included on a list of Jewish hostages who had to account for their whereabouts with the authorities in his case those of Bucharest s 2nd Police Precinct who recorded his residence as still being on Popa Petre 101 HeHalutz trial and marginalization Edit nbsp Roll call of the HeHalutz in Bucharest 1941The Zionist Executive dissolved itself in summer 1943 according to Zissu this was a public embarrassment resulting from corrupt deals made by Shlomo Entzer at the Palestine Office under Benvenisti s watch 102 Benvenisti contrarily reports that he was always critical of Entzer s focus on prioritizing rich children for places on outbound ships 103 In mid 1943 after an intercession by Romanian doctor Bazil Teodorescu 104 Benvenisti and Filderman obtained an audience with Deputy Premier Mihai Antonescu Upon meeting him they asked for urgent humanitarian measures to redress the Romanian Jews precarious situation 105 Their host promised to curb the Transnistrian experiment and to repatriate its survivors he also expressed approval for mass emigration into Palestine and guaranteed that he would contact the governments of Germany and Bulgaria so that no obstacles would be posed to an emigration that the Romanian government also supported 106 Over the next months Benvenisti prepared 75 children for overland emigration by rail His effort was curbed by the Bulgarian authorities who cancelled the group s transit visas 107 With Filderman and Carol Iancu he also approached the smuggler Arthur Tester who informed that that he was the only one capable of bypassing Bulgarian opposition Tester asked that they pay him 2 500 lei per child rescued 108 Benvenisti and Filderman also kept contacts with the semi legal opposition represented in the main by the PNȚ They met with PNȚ leaders Iuliu Maniu and Ghiță Popp who promised to assist them with preventing the deportation of Bukovina Jews as well as with asking Antonescu s men to improve the living conditions of those already held in Vapniarka and Grosulovo 109 Accompanied by Iancu s wife Mella he also visited Dinu Brătianu of the National Liberal Party Though noting that he could not hope to persuade the Conducător to improve on his antisemitic record Brătianu put Benvenisti in contact with his party colleague Ion Costinescu who was presiding over the Romanian Red Cross and who undertook the most energetic efforts toward the deportees repatriation 110 Benvenisti believes that throughout 1943 Richter had remained on his trail In mid 1942 the chairman of the Central Jewish Office namely Henric Streitman though it best to warn me that it would be best for me to leave for Palestine to save myself while assuring me that I would get my permit to leave from the Romanian government 111 As noted by historian Dennis Deletant his name surface during an investigation of Zionist escape routes by the German Foreign Ministry which passed this information on to the Romanian authorities as evidence of hostile activities 112 Siguranța and Gestapo agents chanced upon letters and receipts which implicated Benvenisti in illegal acts resulting in his arrest on January 30 1944 113 Together with Fischer and Jacques Rosenzweig he appeared before the Bucharest Tribunal specifically charged with aiding and abetting Polish Jews in Cernăuți He was held at the Police Prefecture where he claims the Gestapo became directly involved in securing his indictment Likewise Lecca and Richter came by once a day asking for new arrests to be made and compiling grounds for accusations against us 114 Benvenisti was ultimately released in early March 1944 after Wilhelm Filderman and the Swiss ambassador Rene de Weck had vouched for him 115 116 Mella Iancu recounts that she was also involved in bribing Siguranța Commissioner Albert Rădulescu with hundreds of thousands of lei from Zionist Executive coffers which she claims contributed to his leniency on that specific matter 117 In his official notes Rădulescu asserted that neither Benvenisti nor his Zionist colleagues posed any danger for Romania s internal order 118 Benvenisti himself credited his success to his defense team which comprised Doru Gherson and S Hart to Filderman and Zissu as well as to the most progressive left wing circles the trial he maintained was one of racial persecution 119 This account is partly contradicted by Moscovici who argues that Zissu was entirely opposed to bailing out his adversary 120 Officially he and all the other defendants received six month sentences but their time in confinement was reduced 121 Bevenisti complained that his five weeks detention was succeeded by month upon month of me being tormented with harassment and threats 122 Zissu reports that in the resulting panic following the arrests Renașterea wanted Benvenisti stripped of any decision making powers for which reason Zissu himself was made president of a new but unrecognized Zionist Executive 123 This is partly contradicted by Benvenisti s account which notes that he willingly resigned by the end of 1943 or by the start of 1944 or not long after my liberation 124 He took this decision when a group of Romanian and Palestinian Zionists including Zissu Entzer Barlas and Moritz Geiger expressed their wish to defy the British caps on immigration by fitting illegal transports of Jews 125 From the moment of his release to April 1946 Benvenisti was largely absent from the Zionist Executive though he accepted invitations to attend meetings chaired by Zissu and spoke there on several occasions 126 He was instead elected chairman of a more centrist political party the Zionist Democratic Group Klal which had also rejected Zissu s policies 127 The period also saw a round up of the HH by Romanian authorities As reported by Benvenisti the Zionist youth had drawn attention to itself in 1942 when members of the Hashomer Hatzair were allegedly caught circulating lei banknotes marked Jos războiul Down with war 128 or Afară cu nemții Out with the Kraut 129 They were indicted for communist activities in similar vein Gordonia youths were prosecuted for assisting in the emigration effort Before being himself arrested Benvenisti had been approached by Gherș Tabacinic Sunea and two other young Zionists who had allegedly asked him to bribe Romanian policemen handling the case 130 He also appeared as a defense witness in both trials which took place in April May 1944 131 He argued there that all communist propaganda found with the HH was purely for informative purposes and that Gordonia had official approval for its actions 132 The Tribunal asked for him to repeat his plea which was unheard of in judicial annals 133 This apparent show of clemency was overturned by the final verdict which passed harsh sentences on all defendants including the 12 years old Bianca Calmy three HH boys were sentenced to death and subsequently executed 134 All survivors were pardoned in early 1944 by King Michael I 135 nbsp Roundup of Jewish orphans upon their release from Transnistria Governorate 1944Together with Wilhelm Fischer Benvenisti continued to organize the relief effort for Jewish deportees in Transnistria I was the one providing exact instructions for the HeHalutz personnel who went on illegal trips into Transnistria to provide aid and to attempt the rescue of people wherever this was feasible 136 However once my persecution by Richter became more acute I was removed from the assistance commission on his express order Thanks to the continuous interventions I made with the Central Jewish Office Zionist representatives were finally accepted on the commissions that had left for Transnistria which were presided upon by Mr Fred Șaraga 137 By February 1944 Benvenisti Moscovici and Iancu Scarlat were facing prosecution for an alleged participation in forging papers that exempted Isac Juman and other Jews from their labor duties 138 Both Zissu and Cohen argue that in May or June 1944 Benvenisti unwittingly jeopardized a major rescue plan for the Hungarian Jews when he showed up for direct talks with Lecca and Antonescu without consulting them and other Jewish leaders These asked for an honor jury of the Zionist Executive to rule on Filderman and Benvenisti s conduct its members were Șafran Poldi Filderman and Leon Ghelerter 139 He agreed to appear and testified that he was only present in Antonescu s office to validate Zissu as the person of contact Zissu himself continued to allege that this was a lie 140 At the time however Zissu also approached Benvenisti during talks to reestablish the PER as an illegal resistance group negotiations toward this end were held in the Iancus home 141 Communist turn Edit Throughout the first half of 1944 with Soviet troops on Romania s border it became apparent that Germany could no longer vouch for Romania s survival as an independent country After his marriage in May Benvenisti was preparing to join the Hungarian Jewish exodus by embarking with his family on one of the ships for which Zissu had obtained permission to leave Romania 142 He informed Mihai Antonescu of this during a second meeting in Teodorescu s home prompting the latter to ask a favor of him upon arrival he was to inform the Western Allies that Romania would surrender if Britain and the United States agreed to partake in its occupation The Deputy Premier regarded Soviet occupation as the guarantee of an exclusively communist regime Antonescu also wanted the Yishuv to know that the regime had been comparatively lenient toward Jews and that communism would be detrimental to both communities 143 Benvenisti gave up on his emigration plan when his mother was diagnosed with a heart condition which made it unlikely that she could survive the journey he also noted that Suzana was depressed by the thought of leaving Romania 144 Benvenisti claims that on August 22 1944 government officials rushed him to the Sturdza Palace on Calea Victoriei asking him to urgently send a message to the world s Jewish organizations and through them the Churchill war ministry announcing that Romania was ready to surrender He reports that he declined prompting one bureaucrat to comment That Mr Wilhelm Filderman is more of a patriot than you are 145 These alleged events were closely followed by the coup of August 23 which deposed the Antonescus and denounced the Axis alliance From that moment on Zionists were again allowed to organize in the open Benvenisti returned to public life with an essay detailing his contribution to Jewish life and Zionist politics during the previous three years It was published over three issues of Viața Evreească weekly and then as a booklet 146 Viața Evreească was a joint venture between Benvenisti and Mendel H Bady but did not survive for long 147 Like Cohen Wilhelm Filderman and Zissu Benvenisti was reassigned a seat on the WJC Romanian Committee It elected him a local vice president alongside Schwefelberg Eduard Manolescu and Bernard Rohrlich 148 The PER was soon reestablished he and Wilhelm Fischer were co opted by Zissu to serve as its vice presidents 149 Benvenisti formed a Mixed Judicial Commission which represented Zionist and non Zionist parties and organizations in a common effort to undo the antisemitic legacy and obtain increased rights for Jews 150 Together with Wilhelm Fischer and Schwefelberg he presented WJC demands to Gheorghe Vlădescu Răcoasa the Romanian Secretary for National Minorities 151 Cohen places him among the PER group leaders attending a meeting with PNȚ leaders including Maniu around October 1944 The Zionists wanted Maniu s support for overturning all antisemitic legislation they were largely disappointed in that Maniu endorsed positive discrimination in favor of the Romanian element 152 Also according to Cohen in May July 1945 WJC pressed for a merger between the PER and the UER with Zissu as honorary president Wilhelm Filderman as active chairman and Benvenisti as co chairman 153 The 1944 1947 period brought Romania under institutional control by the Romanian Communist Party PCR which presented the Zionists with opposition from the left manifested as the PCR affiliated Jewish Democratic Committee CDE Benvenisti recounts having been approached by the CDE s original cell formed around M H Maxy and Lică Abramovici Chiriță immediately after August 23 They wanted him to direct Zionist elements that are thought of as democratic into an umbrella group The project stalled until 1945 when he realized that Maxy had established the CDE without consulting him at all 154 In a report presented by the Committee to the Siguranța on June 22 1946 both Benvenisti as interim president of the PER and Zissu still the WJC branch leader were described as centrists 155 Cohen suspected that Benvenisti embraced the rhetoric of cooperation with democratic forces namely communism only for tactical reasons since he would have known these to be incompatible with the Zionist agenda 156 Benvenisti himself claimed to have embraced a left wing orientation from back during the war 157 This was influenced by his contacts with Mella Iancu a Labor Zionist and veered into support for a people s democracy Benvenisti boasted his participation in collecting funds for the International Red Aid 158 At a March 1945 speech in front of the Zionist group Dor Hadash he noted that Zionism enjoyed support from the world s most radically progressive circles variously including the Communist Party USA and the Soviet trade unions Zionism he claimed at the time would solve the Jewish Question leaving fascist circles to reveal themselves for their true unmasked self enemies of democracy proving that we Jews were but their mere pretext 159 In February 1946 Benvenisti criticized the Anglo American Committee of Inquiry arguing that Palestinian issues could only be solved with Soviet input 160 He later explained that he viewed the Soviet government as Zionism and Israel s one true ally since the Jewish bourgeoisie was never fully committed to creating this state of Israel 161 On May 11 1946 he was a witness for the prosecution at Mihai Antonescu s trial by the People s Tribunal where he spoke of deportations in Tansnistria as amounting to an extermination regime concluding that over 270 000 Jews had been killed under the Antonescus 116 On May 1 1946 Benvenisti had been unanimously elected head of the Zionist Executive taking over from Rohrlich who had successfully ousted Zissu in autumn 1945 162 Under his mandate the Executive embarked on a conflict with the Revisionist Zionists whom he declared to be dangerously far right 163 On July 23 Benvenisti attended a CDE coordinated meeting of various groups which focused on discussing the prospects of common political action he was a representative of the Executive with the PER represented by Isaia Tumarkin 164 He was also a delegate at the WJC conferences in Paris summer 1946 Basel Karlovy Vary and Zurich all 1947 165 During the first of these accompanied by the CDE s Maxy Benvenisti met Mapai s leader David Ben Gurion and Moshe Sneh of the Haganah In one account of his meetings he claims to have only discussed politics with Sneh telling him of the gratitude that Jews in Romania feel toward the Soviet Union 166 As he recalls he repeated these guidelines at Zurich when he argued that Romanian Jews had had their problems solved by the new regime and that mass immigration was no longer desired According to Benvenisti his report was heard with interest by the likes of Sneh Eliyahu Dobkin and Nahum Goldmann 167 Elsewhere Benvenisti acknowledges that his contacts with Ben Gurion and Leon Blum were centered on obtaining help for more emigration to Palestine 168 Nominally he was by then a supervisor of the Zionist press department which consisted largely of wall newspapers and hectographed bulletins but delegated this business to Moscovici The latter supported the Jewish revolt in Palestine which led him to be investigated by the Allied Commission 169 On July 7 1946 the PER had deposed Zissu a leadership committee took over It comprised Ebercohn Wilhelm Fischer Doctor Harschfeld Cornel Iancu Leon Itzacar Iakerkaner Edgar Kanner M Rapaport Rohrlich Leon Rozenberg Rosenthal and Tumarkin 170 After Zissu agreed to relinquish chairmanship on July 21 171 Benvenisti became interim president appointing S Segall as the PER s new secretary 172 These developments reportedly alarmed Wilhelm Filderman who asked Cohen to help the Zionist right with resuming control of the PER and curb its infiltration by communism 173 Zissu discusses Benvenisti s continued Zionism but views it as entirely in line with the moderate version advanced at the WJC by Chaim Weizmann He alleges that Cohen and Benvenisti were drawn into an alliance with each other by Zissu s own criticism of Weizmann He blames them for conspiring to strip him of his editorial position at Mantuirea magazine which was subsequently assigned to be managed by Cohen 174 The latter reports that Benvenisti kept in contact with the CDE and the UER regarding the party s demands from the Romanian political establishment 175 Cohen notes having maintained his own grievances against Benvenisti which led him to resign from his position as general secretary of WJC Romania in early 1947 176 Zionist ban Edit In preparation for the general elections in November 1946 the CDE UER and PER established a Jewish Representation which ran as a minor ally of the PCR s governing coalition itself called Bloc of Democratic Parties BPD 177 During Benvenisti s visit to Paris the PER endorsed Rohrlich as its parliamentary candidate according to Benvenisti s own reading of this event Rohrlich took the nomination because he was much less friendly toward the CDE than he himself was Though he resented his colleagues for having upstaged him he opted to continue as the party chairman 178 In March 1947 Benvenisti also went public with his critique of BPD Prime Minister Petru Groza accusing him of tolerating antisemitism and of doing very little towards addressing Jewish grievances He responded to allegations denied by Groza according to which various ministers wanted to make the solution of the Jewish problem in Rumania conditional upon securing 100 000 000 from American Jews for the relief of non Jews in the famine area of Rumania According to Benvenisti If there is anybody who must pay a price of reconciliation in Rumania it is not the Jewish people but the Rumanians who partly committed and partly tolerated the crimes against Jews 179 As the Siguranța reported his speech saw participants frantically applauding all points that reflected any grievances of the Jewish population 180 Groza met with Benvenisti on several occasions when he repeated reassurances that he would not stand in the way of emigration 181 As reported by Rabbi Șafran in April Benvenisti intervened to ask Wilhelm Filderman not to speak at a Zionist rally shortly after Filderman defected from Romania having been informed of his pending arrest 182 Benvenisti and Șafran now met each other daily with the former showing himself to be a pragmatic psyche ready to adapt himself to the new realities 183 The final days of 1947 saw the PCR and the BPD reestablishing Romania as a communist republic Benvenisti spoke of the PER as having been voluntarily dissolved at some point in 1947 after talks between himself and CDE man Bercu Feldman 184 He declared himself opposed to the Zionist Executive s involvement in organizing illegal transports of Jews to Palestine citing cases in which refugees became victims of human trafficking cartels and gangs of robbers he also argued that many Jews could do better in Romanian society than as pensioners of The Joint 185 He recalled that he once denounced Ihud members for tolerating clandestine emigration cells which the party was then forced to purge out of its ranks 186 During the legislative election of March 1948 he supported the election of regime backed candidates in speeches articles and manifestos 187 Benvenisti resigned from the Executive on May 30 1948 leaving it to elect a new leadership 188 On that occasion he had attempted to get the Romanian Zionists to express support for collaboration between all Zionist groups and the Maki Israel s communist party 189 As Moscovici notes he was pushed out by the Mishmar faction who while espousing a left wing agenda was also interested in speeding up mass emigration for Jewish workers Winning backing from Ihud they imposed a triumvirate presidency Iakerkaner Chaim Kraft and Simon Shmuel Zalman 190 Benvenisti continued to be engaged with the Zionist circles months after that date and endorsed the notion that a small number of Jews could still leave Romania He looked forward to joining them to work for the progressive idea in Israel expecting that he would be welcomed into Maki ranks 191 He had filed a request to emigrate shortly before his resignation 192 Benvenisti and Isaia Tumarkin still represented the Romanian Jews at the WJC Congress in Montreux June July 1948 they were given approval to leave after first agreeing to be joined there by nine CDE men including Feldman 193 News of this agreement infuriated Zissu he accused Benvenisti of national treason He alleged that the CDE wished to spy on the WJC for his communist patrons or alternatively that it was interested in forcing Montreux delegates to take a pro or anti communist position which would have compromised the Romanian movement 194 Both Benvenisti and the other WJC Committee members were reportedly in agreement that it was too late for the nine delegates to be disinvited 195 Zissu claims that upon returning from Montreux Benvenisti declared his delegation to have been the most important and most subtle political act I ever undertook 196 Benvenisti himself recalled that his speech at Montreux was about how we the Jews must stand with the Soviet Union alongside the people s democracies the Jewish people must reshape its life into a system of productive labor alongside the Soviet Union 197 He reportedly directed the WJC s left wing in boycotting the American delegation since it included no Jewish communists 198 At some point in late 1948 Romania s Minister of Internal Affairs Teohari Georgescu informed Jewish allies including Benvenisti of his decision to ban all Zionist groups In their face to face meeting Georgescu reportedly spoke of Zionists and especially the HH as a nuisance which prevents the people from fitting into society 199 In subsequent interrogations Benvenisti claimed have personally engaged the HeHalutz in order to dismantle their provincial networks receiving some assistance from Feldman 200 The period saw a first wave of repression by the new secret police called Securitate Interrogated by the latter in 1952 Cohen confessed that Benvenisti helped Zionist prisoners by appealing to members of the PNȚ underground namely Gheorghe Zane and Emil Hațieganu 201 In similar circumstances Benvenisti himself noted that he had maintained only very vague and very infrequent relations with Zionist activists after their movement had come to be repressed 202 Benvenisti took pride in observing that the WJC maintained a presence in Romania until June 1950 despite having been chased almost entirely out of the Eastern Bloc According to Benvenisti the decision to maintain it in place was taken between himself and Feldman much to the chagrin of the Israeli Ambassador Reuven Rubin 203 He served as WJC chapter president throughout the interval with Litman as his second in command 204 Moscovici argues that Benvenisti and Feldman hoped to attract communist Jews into that organization which in reality was a simple bureau employing 2 or 3 clerks 205 Benvenisti recalled making a single visit to the Israeli Embassy in Bucharest on Independence Day 1949 here he conversed with Rubin and his counsel Moshe Averbuch Agamy informing them of his objections as to how the Israeli government has oriented itself 206 He also met with Rubin and Averbuch Agamy on another occasion early in 1949 reportedly to inform them that the Romanian state was right to be fully compensated by the Jewish National Fund He speculated that achieving this would result in the liberation of Zionist political prisoners including Leon Itzacar 207 Zissu similarly confirmed that his rival was not involved in the anti regime underground though he passed on messages from Zissu to Rubin s subordinate Eliezer Halevy Also according to Zissu Benvenisti was tutoring Halevy s children and his dentist Wrankel in Hebrew 208 Communist imprisonment and release Edit nbsp Building of the communist Ministry of Internal Affairs where Benvenisti was held as a prisoner nowadays hosts the Senate of RomaniaBenvenisti managed to survive a political purge which took place in 1950 at Ilfov s bar association 209 In March or April of that year he applied at the Embassy for an extension of his entry visa to Israel hoping to receive his Romanian passport allowing him to leave the country He admitted to have engaged Halevy in conversation on that and several other occasions 210 Suzana unemployed by 1947 found work at the WJC and helped her husband with documentation for Averbuch Agamy though she reportedly regarded Israeli diplomats as imperialists by 1948 she had switched to a position in the Romanian state bureaucracy at the Nicolae Bălcescu Cultural Fund and in February 1949 was working as a typist for the Israeli Embassy 211 The Securitate was expanding on its actions against the Zionists with Cohen and Cornel Iancu targeted by June As the former recalls they had tried to warn Benvenisti that he could expect the same outcome 212 Under interrogation Moscovici alleged that Suzana was passionate about getting Ben Gurion s government to rescue the Zionist groups pleading with her superiors at the Embassy to advocate the issue on her behalf 213 The Benvenistis were living in an apartment on Republicii Boulevard 37 when Mișu was arrested on July 10 1950 214 He was held at the Interior Ministry building to early August and then moved to the basement of a large villa until October and possibly kept in Malmaison prison in October December 215 Benvenisti was first interrogated on August 14 by a Securitate team known to have been led by Lieutenant Major Gheorghe Rujan but whose other members remained entirely anonymous 216 Comparing these records with parallel testimonies provided by Zionist Smaya Avny Steinmetz Wexler and Popov also argue that Benvenisti was tortured liberally after that date in what was an attempt to extract his confession to have spied for Israel They believe that such treatment would explain Benvenisti s subsequent health problems 217 On September 21 1950 after 73 days of inquiry he still maintained that he owed his arrest to a slanderous or knavish action by some enemy of mine 218 Over the following days Benvenisti recanted his earlier confessions about his 1949 meetings with Averbuch Agamy agreeing with the Securitate that these were meant for Zionist purposes Benvenisti and Mella Iancu were asked to handle Israeli aid for the Romanian Jews he refused since he believed the aid was tied to the emigration policy 219 During these early sessions Benvenisti was asked about his contacts with Foreign Minister and communist factional leader Ana Pauker possibly because her rivals were preparing to implicate her in the scandal 220 Benvenisti reported no direct encounters though he notes that Averbuch Agamy was discussing Jewish emigrations with Pauker 221 On June 18 1951 Securitate Lieutenant Aurel Manu who had been introduced as Benvenisti s second case worker staged a confrontation between Benvenisti and Lecca The latter presented a version of wartime events in which Benvenisti was not a defender of the Zionists not of the Jews at large but a defender of his own existence and his very own pocket 222 This was followed on June 21 by another such confrontation one between Zissu and Benvenisti The two men displayed their contempt for each other though they still presented similarly negative portrayals of Lecca 223 During December 1951 Benvenisti was moved back to a cell at the Ministry of the Interior 224 Again interrogated he agreed with the charge of wartime collaborationism noting that his actions had been detrimental to the working class people of Romania 225 He fully caved in on January 4 1952 when he gave a false confession to having spied for international Zionism He claimed to quote from memory a letter once received from Tabacinic Sunea who had fled to Istanbul As Wexler and Popov note the supposed document integrated terminology that no Western intelligence service would have been caught using and contained orders for Benvenisti to send Tabacinic Sunea newspaper clippings which is to say publicized material that anyone would have had access to in a free country 226 Genuine elements in this confession referred to his having sent abroad fragments from the official newspapers including Monitorul Oficial Timpul Curentul and Universul and photographs by Fred Șaraga all of which referred to the Bucharest and Iași pogroms of 1941 227 Benvenisti also claimed that Averbuch Agamy was blackmailing him into spying by pretending not to care about Itzacar s ultimate fate 228 In March when asked to describe his involvement with military intelligence Benvenisti spoke of his having witnessed the arrival in Bucharest of Soviet trained units from the Tudor Vladimirescu and HCC Divisions and of sending Israel information about them being very well equipped and highly motivated 229 Securitate Colonel Mișu Dulgheru sent this confession to be analyzed by the Bucharest Military Tribunal 230 Wexler and Popov note that the Kafkaesque Securitate became invested in presenting Jewish resistance during the Holocaust as in itself evidence of a Zionist spying network 231 Benvenisti was also able to resist Securitate pressures on at least three counts he refused to present himself as a paid spy noting that I was a lawyer and made enough money as such he also would not incriminate Cohen and did not confirm the Securitate claim that all Jewish aid societies were foreign spy rings 232 By mid 1952 his political friends including Menahem Fermo were also picked up and held together with Benvenisti at Jilava Prison Zissu was also held there and as Fermo reports would still treat each other as rivals though they also supported each other by walking hand in hand 233 Benevnisti alternated between enthusiasm about rebuilding Romanian Zionism and moments of deep depression in which he contemplated suicide he and Fermo also talked literature and in particular Marcel Proust 234 According to Securitate records all interrogations ceased from October 1952 to January 1953 which Wexler notes was a means of exercising psychological pressure on Benvenisti 235 Suzana Benvenisti was tried on November 13 1953 alongside Litman she had been implicated in her husband s affairs by Mella Iancu s testimonies 236 She was convicted to 10 years in prison prompting Goldman to issue a formal protest on behalf of the WJC 237 Suzana s absence reportedly left her mother in law destitute she received a modest sum from the Embassy which Rohrlich was trying to supplement by December 1951 238 Benvenisti himself appeared alongside Zissu Cohen and ten others at a trial in March 1954 239 He was sentenced to lifetime imprisonment and hard labor 240 In July 1954 as part of a selective release of the imprisoned Zionists it was announced that Suzana Benvenisti would be retried by a civilian court 241 The following year on Yom Kippur her husband has slipped into a diabetic coma and was at a high risk of dying Reportedly he obtained medical assistance only because of an intervention on his behalf by Groza s Jewish barber Max Friedman 242 On April 14 1956 shortly before a detente in Israel Romania relations the Presidium of the Great National Assembly then under Constantin Pirvulescu pardoned Benvenisti and Zissu together 243 The new Chief Rabbi Moses Rosen was among those involved in negotiating emigration waivers for both men As he himself noted the two received their Romanian passports during Rosen s meeting with Deputy Premier Emil Bodnăraș who reportedly exclaimed They wish to leave so Mazal tov as if speaking out loud his thoughts there is no downside to their leaving godspeed to them 244 Benvenisti began a new stage in his life as an Israeli diplomat integrated with the Jewish Agency for Israel 245 Known as Moshe Benvenisti in October 1946 he traveled with Idov Cohen and others to West Germany where he negotiated compensation rights for Transnistria deportees based on the claim that Bucharest had been the Nazi center from which the persecution of Jews in all parts of Romania was controlled Benvenisti supported this claim by adding that he himself had negotiated with agents of the Nazi regime in Bucharest and brought evidence that the Nazis had a direct influence on the persecution of Jews in Romania 246 Before his death in 1977 he established a fund for research into Romanian Jewish history as noted in 2014 by Moraru nothing is known about what came of it 247 His widow Suzana died at Ramat Aviv in early 1996 she was aged 89 248 In November of that year a memorial plaque for both Benvenistis was put up at Beit Ya akov Yosef Zvi Gutman Synagogue in Tel Aviv 249 Notes Edit C D Fortunescu Inceputurile tipografiei in Craiova in Almanahul Graficei Romane 1926 p 121 See also Cajal Marin p 83 Moraru pp 175 176 204 Mariu Theodorian Carada Note și comunicări Privitor la negustorimea craioveană in Arhivele Olteniei Vol XVII Issues 97 100 May December 1938 p 387 Wexler amp Popov p 238 See death announcement for Adolf Schlanger in Dimineața December 25 1906 p 3 Moraru p 248 Cajal Marin p 83 See also Moraru p 248 Cajal Marin pp 83 85 Constantin Călin Note despre premii in Cardan Cultural Vol I Issue 3 September October 2018 p 21 Moraru pp 204 248 Wexler amp Popov p 238 Wexler amp Popov p 238 Wexler amp Popov pp 229 238 245 335 441 443 445 857 Wexler amp Popov pp 335 445 Wexler amp Popov pp 229 238 245 249 335 443 445 857 See also Moraru p 248 In jurul agitațiilor studențești Un incident la Facultatea de drept in Viitorul January 31 1923 p 4 Evreii și politica Inițiativa de la Brăila in Mișcarea June 6 1920 p 1 Wexler amp Popov pp 238 245 249 250 335 336 419 429 443 Wexler amp Popov p 102 Wexler amp Popov pp 336 418 443 527 944 Wexler amp Popov p 863 Wexler amp Popov p 857 Congresul sionist din Zuerich Delegații din Romania in Dimineața August 6 1929 p 3 Ultima oră Evreii din Capitală protestează contra masacrelor din Palestina in Universul September 4 1929 p 7 Wexler amp Popov pp 730 857 Cutia cu scrisori O chestiune de onoare in Adevărul November 26 1929 p 3 Wexler amp Popov pp 443 857 863 Wexler amp Popov p 352 Wexler amp Popov pp 352 353 Wexler amp Popov pp 238 352 Intrunirea partidului național evreesc in Adevărul March 4 1930 p 4 O anchetă la Sighet in Cuvantul August 17 1930 p 2 Alegerile comunale dela 10 August in Universul August 2 1930 p 5 Campania electorală Lista Partidului Evreesc la Ilfov in Lupta May 10 1931 p 3 Campania electorală Alte candidaturi ale partidului evreesc in Curentul May 24 1931 p 5 Un congres al partidului evreesc in Cuvantul September 12 1932 p 2 Wexler amp Popov pp 535 616 657 722 730 786 859 863 Wexler amp Popov pp 863 864 Moraru p 89 Tablou indicand rezultatele pp 7960 8025 See also Wexler amp Popov pp 863 864 Tablou indicand rezultatele pp 8032 8050 Wexler amp Popov pp 524 812 Wexler amp Popov p 339 Wexler amp Popov pp 398 399 419 444 447 491 492 Caleidoscopul vieții intelectuale Conferințe in Adevărul May 7 1935 p 2 Politics and Political Parties in Roumania pp 296 297 London International Reference Library Publishers Co 1936 OCLC 252801505 Benvenisti pp 45 46 Wexler amp Popov pp 419 420 443 444 447 491 Moraru p 248 Wexler amp Popov pp 337 445 857 925 926 Wexler amp Popov pp 448 449 470 Rezultatul alegerilor pentru adunarea deputaților din 20 Decembrie 1937 in Monitorul Oficial Issue 301 1937 pp 9765 9795 9809 9810 Ioan Scurtu ed Enciclopedia partidelor politice din Romania 1859 2003 pp 58 59 Bucharest Editura Meronia 2003 ISBN 973 8200 54 7 Wexler amp Popov p 865 Consiliul baroului Ilfov a radiat alți 55 avocați evrei Aceștia pretindeau că fac parte din categoria a II a in Curentul September 9 1940 p 4 Wexler amp Popov p 418 Wexler amp Popov p 864 Benvenisti p 4 Kuller p 176 Kuller p 176 Wexler amp Popov pp 102 103 241 249 250 336 421 422 619 620 631 632 748 857 864 Wexler amp Popov pp 374 376 749 822 873 Benvenisti pp 4 6 46 48 Wexler amp Popov p 968 Wexler amp Popov pp 102 103 Kuller p 176 Wexler amp Popov p 620 Wexler amp Popov pp 664 740 741 749 751 850 914 Wexler amp Popov pp 927 961 Benvenisti p 9 Wexler amp Popov p 279 Wexler amp Popov p 250 Wexler amp Popov pp 872 873 Wexler amp Popov pp 869 870 Benvenisti pp 5 6 31 34 Wexler amp Popov pp 333 339 340 393 476 477 527 695 857 858 915 925 961 Benvenisti pp 9 13 Wexler amp Popov p 340 Benvenisti pp 11 12 See also Wexler amp Popov pp 340 341 Benvenisti pp 12 13 Wexler amp Popov p 341 Benvenisti p 32 Benvenisti pp 37 38 Wexler amp Popov pp 633 634 673 674 Wexler amp Popov pp 102 103 108 144 Wexler amp Popov p 135 Benvenisti pp 41 42 Benvenisti pp 38 41 Wexler amp Popov pp 229 245 245 250 275 277 341 342 Benvenisti pp 39 41 Wexler amp Popov pp 849 857 Wexler amp Popov pp 332 333 Benvenisti p 7 Wexler amp Popov p 250 Benvenisti pp 34 35 Wexler amp Popov pp 835 873 874 913 929 968 969 Benvenisti pp 17 18 Benvenisti pp 14 15 Benvenisti pp 18 19 Benvenisti pp 12 45 46 Kuller p 138 Benvenisti pp 12 37 42 Wexler amp Popov pp 336 384 385 658 Wexler amp Popov pp 229 230 245 245 250 251 342 Benvenisti pp 15 16 Wexler amp Popov pp 275 277 Wexler amp Popov pp 924 925 961 Wexler amp Popov pp 660 662 H D Elocvența documentelor Aprilie 1943 Ostaticii din București in Buletinul Centrului Muzeului și Arhivei Istorice a Evreilor din Romania Issue 11 2005 p 47 Wexler amp Popov pp 107 110 121 Wexler amp Popov pp 265 277 278 55 356 Wexler amp Popov pp 294 295 320 357 478 Benvenisti p 20 Wexler amp Popov p 295 Benvenisti p 20 Benvenisti p 36 Ion Calafeteanu Regimul antonescian și emigrarea populației evreiești II in Revista Istorică Vol V Issues 5 6 May June 1994 p 463 Benvenisti pp 20 21 Benvenisti p 21 Benvenisti p 42 Dennis Deletant Hitler s Forgotten Ally Ion Antonescu and His Regime Romania 1940 1944 p 217 London Palgrave Macmillan 2006 ISBN 1 4039 9341 6 Kuller p 137 Wexler amp Popov pp 108 111 192 193 253 390 392 Benvenisti p 30 Wexler amp Popov pp 230 253 337 435 479 480 482 483 a b Ședințele de eri ale procesului Depoziția d lui M Benvenisti in Adevărul May 14 1946 p 3 Wexler amp Popov pp 808 812 813 821 822 Wexler amp Popov pp 231 233 851 Benvenisti p 31 Wexler amp Popov p 858 Benvenisti p 31 Benvenisti pp 42 43 Wexler amp Popov pp 108 192 207 Wexler amp Popov pp 336 337 Wexler amp Popov pp 250 295 336 337 355 356 385 469 See also Benvenisti p 36 Wexler amp Popov pp 253 254 337 Benvenisti pp 36 37 Benvenisti pp 27 29 Wexler amp Popov pp 346 482 Kuller p 137 Wexler amp Popov pp 480 483 Wexler amp Popov pp 246 250 346 480 482 483 Benvenisti p 28 Benvenisti pp 28 30 Benvenisti p 29 Wexler amp Popov p 265 Benvenisti p 24 Curier judiciar Trafic corupție bătae etc in Universul February 12 1944 p 7 Wexler amp Popov p 681 Wexler amp Popov pp 103 105 110 113 116 121 201 295 296 321 325 328 332 357 359 479 542 681 682 813 814 822 Wexler amp Popov p 103 Wexler amp Popov pp 295 297 353 354 Wexler amp Popov pp 295 297 813 814 Wexler amp Popov pp 297 353 354 439 Wexler amp Popov p 324 Benvenisti passim Wexler amp Popov pp 240 858 Wexler amp Popov pp 127 334 359 398 628 629 691 753 754 779 858 899 901 See also Kuller p 179 Wexler amp Popov pp 99 359 Wexler amp Popov pp 359 360 904 Wexler amp Popov pp 127 148 Wexler amp Popov pp 572 675 765 801 Wexler amp Popov pp 752 754 778 Wexler amp Popov p 520 Wexler amp Popov pp 33 34 Wexler amp Popov p 671 Wexler amp Popov pp 244 245 Wexler amp Popov pp 244 245 247 251 267 284 Conferința conducătorilor organizației Dor Hadaș Discursul d lui avocat M Benvenisti in Tineretul Nou Hanoar Hazioni Vol II Issues 11 12 March 1945 p 5 Meetingul dela templul coral in Universul February 13 1946 p 3 Wexler amp Popov p 247 Wexler amp Popov pp 120 253 254 261 362 363 395 488 576 632 858 875 904 949 Wexler amp Popov p 261 Wexler amp Popov p 33 Wexler amp Popov pp 149 230 254 256 258 259 360 361 401 407 415 464 497 510 527 528 672 757 758 878 879 903 921 See also Moraru p 248 Wexler amp Popov pp 255 256 Wexler amp Popov p 260 Wexler amp Popov pp 361 498 499 509 510 Wexler amp Popov pp 877 878 Ultimele informațiuni Buletin intern in Argus July 10 1946 p 3 Kuller p 180 Wexler amp Popov p 34 Wexler amp Popov p 568 Wexler amp Popov pp 203 204 Wexler amp Popov p 802 Wexler amp Popov p 578 Șlomo Leibovici Laiș In culisele unei afaceri politice in Magazin Istoric May 2002 pp 24 25 Wexler amp Popov pp 361 521 879 880 Rumanian Government Charged with Failure to Implement Election Promises to Jews Jewish Telegraphic Agency release March 6 1947 Kuller p 183 Wexler amp Popov p 1267 Șafran p 33 Șafran p 34 Wexler amp Popov pp 248 338 361 372 419 511 Wexler amp Popov pp 271 272 875 876 Wexler amp Popov pp 350 351 Wexler amp Popov p 314 Wexler amp Popov pp 241 242 261 280 362 396 488 881 See also Kuller p 185 Wexler amp Popov pp 247 262 Wexler amp Popov pp 881 882 1080 Wexler amp Popov pp 248 249 251 261 262 Wexler amp Popov p 261 Wexler amp Popov pp 158 220 242 720 884 885 905 Wexler amp Popov pp 157 158 220 Wexler amp Popov p 158 Wexler amp Popov pp 158 159 Wexler amp Popov p 256 Wexler amp Popov pp 257 362 521 Wexler amp Popov p 366 Wexler amp Popov pp 304 314 366 Wexler amp Popov p 688 Wexler amp Popov pp 241 242 257 258 279 281 283 Wexler amp Popov pp 266 298 334 362 372 373 884 885 905 Kuller p 197 Wexler amp Popov p 885 Wexler amp Popov p 252 Wexler amp Popov pp 252 253 263 266 274 285 289 293 300 301 314 315 364 365 371 Wexler amp Popov p 101 Wexler amp Popov p 944 Wexler amp Popov pp 368 369 Wexler amp Popov pp 370 372 858 890 937 941 964 1039 1147 Wexler amp Popov pp 597 636 Wexler amp Popov pp 893 894 Wexler amp Popov pp 238 288 289 368 369 394 Wexler amp Popov p 394 Wexler amp Popov p 229 Wexler amp Popov pp 230 234 810 Wexler amp Popov p 288 Wexler amp Popov pp 289 293 297 299 304 367 368 440 441 815 816 818 829 830 894 Wexler amp Popov p 231 Wexler amp Popov p 231 Wexler amp Popov pp 231 327 Wexler amp Popov pp 92 116 121 Wexler amp Popov p 394 Wexler amp Popov pp 343 347 Wexler amp Popov pp 231 232 Wexler amp Popov pp 232 379 381 389 461 467 468 Wexler amp Popov pp 364 365 Wexler amp Popov pp 234 410 Wexler amp Popov p 234 Wexler amp Popov pp 233 237 Wexler amp Popov p 234 Fermo pp 39 43 Fermo p 43 Wexler amp Popov p 237 Wexler amp Popov pp 70 818 833 See also Pleșa p 196 Goldman Pide la Libertad Para los Judios Arrestados en Rumania in Prensa Israelita Issue 242 1953 pp 1 5 Wexler amp Popov pp 1131 1132 Kuller p 145 Wexler amp Popov pp 70 71 Moraru p 248 Rumania Releases Zionist Leaders Upsets Two Convictions Jewish Telegraphic Agency release July 6 1954 Moses Rosen Memoriile Rabinului Moses Rosen in Minimum Vol I Issue 1 April 1987 p 24 Pleșa p 197 Wexler amp Popov p 72 Moraru p 248 Hirek Izraeli kuldottseg Nemetorszagban targyalt a romaniai zsidok karteriteserol Korulbelul 60 70 millio dollart tesz ki a kovetelesek osszege in Uj Kelet October 11 1960 p 2 Moraru p 248 Clepsidra Deces in Minimum Vol X Issue 109 April 1996 p 80 Clepsidra Placă comemorativă in Minimum Vol X Issue 116 November 1996 p 80References Edit Tablou indicand rezultatele pe circumscripții electorale ale alegerilor pentru Adunarea deputaților efectuate in ziua de 20 Decembrie 1933 in Monitorul Oficial Issue 300 1933 pp 7950 8071 Mișu Benvenisti Sionismul in vremea prigoanei Publicat in Viața Evreească Nr 7 8 9 10 Bucharest Imprimeriile Independența 1944 Irina Cajal Marin Aportul evreilor sefarzi la dezvoltarea Romaniei in Irina Airinei ed Rolul minorităților naționale la dezvoltarea societății romanești Reflecții și oportunități Lucrările conferinței Centenarul Marii Uniri și rolul minorităților naționale la dezvoltarea societății romanești 13 noiembrie 2018 București pp 83 85 Bucharest Universul Academic 2019 ISBN 978 606 9062 02 9 Menahem Fermo Scrisorile pe care nu le am scris in Minimum Vol XXIII Issue 262 January 2009 pp 39 51 Hary Kuller Sioniștii sub lupa Siguranței și Securității 1925 1949 in Buletinul Centrului Muzeului și Arhivei Istorice a Evreilor din Romania 2008 pp 135 208 Valeriu Alexandru Moraru Istoria comunităților sefarde din Romania de la inceputuri și pană azi Cluj Napoca Presa Universitară Clujeană 2014 ISBN 978 973 595 664 6 Liviu Pleșa Epurarea din Securitate a cadrelor de origine evreiască 1960 1961 in Caietele CNSAS Vol XI Issue 2 2018 pp 177 254 Alexandru Șafran Memoriile Șef rabinului Dr Alexandru Șafran 12 in Minimum Vol V Issue 52 July 1991 pp 32 36 Teodor Wexler Mihaela Popov Anchete și procese uitate 1945 1960 I Documente Bucharest Fundația W Filderman n y ISBN 973 99560 4 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mișu Benvenisti amp oldid 1180422035, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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