Published: 10 June 2022
Last updated: 5 March 2024
A new book tells how members of Murder Inc cracked Nazi skulls to defend the American Jews before World War Two
The way author Michael Benson tells it, one day in 1938, New York judge and Jewish communal leader Nathan Perlman sat at a bar and thought, “How come these Nazis get to march down 86th Street, goose-stepping and ‘sieg heiling’ like it’s the Macy’s Parade? Why are they so brazen?”
It was because they were not worried about the consequences. Too few people in then-isolationist America really cared about what was being said about the Jews or what was happening to them in Europe, Benson said. What was needed, then, were Jews who weren’t afraid to break some laws — and some bones — as they challenged the homegrown Nazi threat.
And that’s when, in Benson’s words, “Judge Perlman thought outside the box.”
What happened next is the subject of Benson’s book, Gangsters Vs. Nazis: How Jewish Mobsters Battled Nazis in Wartime America.
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Photo: Members of the German-American Bund parading through the streets of New York City in 1938. (Three Lions/Getty Images)