The 5 must-read books about American anti-Semitism

Jonathan Sarna, one of the country's preeminent historians of American Judaism, offers his recommendations for anyone interested in understanding how we got to where we are today.

Jonathan Sarna

With anti-Semitism in America again in the news, BrandeisNOW asked distinguished historian Jonathan Sarna '75, MA'75 to recommend some background reading.

Sarna is the University Professor and Joseph H. and Belle R. Braun Professor of American Jewish History. He has written about a notorious anti-Semitic incident in the Civil War in his award-winning 2012 book, "When General Grant Expelled the Jews."



Here are his suggestions along with his comments on each book:

Antisemitism in America

By Leonard Dinnerstein



Exactly one comprehensive scholarly history of American anti-Semitism exists and this is it. Dinnerstein chronicles all aspects of anti-Semitism in American history from the colonial period to the 1990s. He situates anti-Semitism within the context of Christian hostility toward Jews, and compares hatred of Jews with other forms of American animus.



And the Dead Shall Rise: The Murder of Mary Phagan and the Lynching of Leo Frank

By Steve Oney



Until Pittsburgh, the most notorious anti-Semitic incident in American history was the lynching of Leo Frank just outside Atlanta on August 17, 1915. Frank had been charged with the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan two years earlier, and his trial took place in an atmosphere poisoned by virulent anti-Semitism.



A terrorized jury found Frank guilty, but the judge and later the governor thought the evidence unconvincing; the sentence was commuted. Outraged citizens, stirred up by the demagogic Thomas E. Watson, broke into the jail, seized Frank and lynched him. Only later was the true culprit identified.



Journalist Steven Oney spent many years investigating this tragedy, and his book — written like an epic novel — peels away its many layers and provides the definitive story, replete with ironies, paradoxes and horrors.



Henry Ford and the Jews: The Mass Production of Hate

By Neil Baldwin



For 91 successive weeks beginning on May 22, 1920, automaker Henry Ford’s newspaper, The Dearborn Independent, purported to describe an international Jewish conspiracy based on the notorious anti-Semitic forgery known as "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion."



"The International Jew," drawn from the series and four volumes in length, reprinted these scurrilous charges. Hundreds of thousands of copies were distributed and included such fantastic claims as “Rule of the Jewish Kehillah Grips New York” and “Jewish Jazz Becomes Our National Music.”



Only in 1927, under intense economic and legal pressure, did Ford publicly recant and apologize, but by then the damage had been done. Neil Baldwin recounts the story of Ford’s anti-Semitism from its roots in his childhood to its repercussions in the 1930s. His is the definitive account of Ford’s anti-Semitism, with implications that extend to our own day.



The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton

By Jerome Karabel