Sunday, February 05, 2023
The Jewish Atomic Empire
The little-known story of the Jewish impact
on nuclear energy
By Ken Spiro
Unlike the ancient Greeks or
Romans, the Jewish people have never been into building physical empires. Demographically
they have always been one of the smallest peoples on the planet - stateless for
much of their history. Yet despite being tiny, stateless, and powerless, the
Jewish people have been remarkably impactful and transformative in so many ways. The true Jewish influence has always been
through ideas and innovation that have transformed the world.
This disproportionate impact
started with Abraham, the founding father of the Jewish people, 3,700 years ago
in what is today Iraq, when in a world full of idol worship, he chose to
reconnect humanity to the idea of one God and an absolute God-given standard of
morality. Ethical monotheism, as it is
often called, is certainly the first, most transformative and impactful of all
ideas that the Jews brought to the world, but it’s hardly the last. Since the time of Abraham onward, the Jewish
people have continued to leave their mark on the world in so many areas besides
just religion and morality.
A great, modern example of Jewish
innovation is in the entertainment industry.
In the early 20th century Jews were the driving force behind
the creation of the motion picture industry. MGM. Warner Brothers, Paramount,
Columbia Pictures, and 20th Century Fox were all founded by Jewish
immigrants from Eastern Europe-refugees from Czarist Russian persecution. (1)
Hollywood may be one of the only Jewish Empires in history, but there is
another modern example of a Jewish “empire,” less known, but certainly more
impactful: nuclear fission.
For better or for worse, nuclear Fission
(The process in nuclear physics in which the
nucleus of an atom splits into two nuclei thus enabling both nuclear energy and the atomic
bomb.) has been one of the greatest scientific discoveries of all time
unleashing immense power for both energy and destruction. The number of Jews
involved in splitting the atom in the 20th century is truly staggering.
The
term itself, “nuclear fission,” was coined in Germany in 1939 by a female physicist
named Lise Meitner, but being both a woman and Jewish (She fled to Sweden to
escape Nazi persecution and continued her research in Stockholm) she was denied
credit for her research which was given solely to her fellow German researcher,
Otto Hahn, who later received the Nobel prize for his work.
In the
first half of the 20th century, Germany was the world leader in
science and innovation and once the Nazis came to power in 1933, they directed much
of this German know-how toward their military-rocket technology and weapons of
mass destruction. It was precisely this
fear that Germany would be the first country to get a nuclear weapon that led
the Hungarian-Jewish physicist, Leo Szilard to convince the great Albert
Einstein, who was a pacifist, (both were refugees from Nazi persecution living
in the US) to co-write a letter to President Roosevelt urging him to start a nuclear
research program in the U.S. and beat the Germans to the A-bomb. This letter played a key role in convincing Roosevelt
to launch “The Manhattan Project, ” America’s program to build an atomic bomb.
(2)
The
number of Jewish involved in the project was astounding-probably close to 90% of
the scientist. Almost all of them were German, Hungarian, or Austrian scientist refugees from Nazi German persecution. The list included: J. Robert Oppenheimer-Project director and
nicknamed “The father of the atomic bomb,” Edward Teller, Leo Szilard, Otto Frisch,
Niels Bohr Felix Bloch, Hans Bethe, John von Neuman, Rudolf Peierls, Franz
Eugene Simon, Hans Halban, Joseph Rotblatt, Stanislav Ulam, Richard Feynman,
Eugene Wigner, and the list goes on. One
of the few prominent non-Jews involved in the project, Enrico Fermi, left Italy
to save his Jewish wife from fascist persecution. There is little doubt that
had the Nazis been more tolerant of Jews, Germany would have had an atomic bomb
first.
Chaim
Weizmann, himself a prominent chemist and Israel’s first president later wrote:
“Very
few people … have any notion of the role which Jews have played in modern
science, and particularly of their astounding share in the development of
nuclear physics. … I have heard Einstein speak of ninety percent. … I am
continuously struck by the utter disproportion of the Jewish contribution.” (3)
The is no question that these scientists realized the
profound implications of creating such a weapon of mass destruction. As Oppenheimer witnessed the first test
detonation of an atomic bomb on July 16th, 1945, he quoted from
Hindu Bhagavad Gita “Now I become death, the destroyer of all worlds,” yet he
never expressed any regret about the Manhattan Project. He like many others in the scientific and
military communities recognized the urgency of getting the bomb before
America’s enemies and realized that the war would have dragged on for far
longer with far greater American casualties had the US military been forced to
conquer Japan with conventional ground forces.
In his farewell speech to Los Alamos scientists in
November 1945, Oppenheimer summarized the necessity of the US creating the A-bomb:
“…all over the world men would be
particularly ripe and open for dealing with this problem because of the
immediacy of the evils of war, because of the universal cry from everyone that
one could not go through this thing again, even a war without atomic bombs. And
there was finally, and I think rightly, the feeling that there was probably no
place in the world where the development of atomic weapons would have a better
chance of leading to a reasonable solution, and a smaller chance of leading to
disaster, than within the United States.”
The
Jewish people’s relationship with the atom didn’t end with the Manhattan
project:
-David
Lilienthal was appointed the first chairman of the United States Atomic Energy Commission
in 1946
-Edward Teller and Stanislav Ulam created the
hydrogen bomb in 1952
-Admiral
Hyman Rickover was the architect of the Polaris Nuclear Submarine fleet in
1954.
The
innovative and transformative impact of the Jewish people extends well beyond
the entertainment industry and the atom bomb.
The Jewish people are just .2% of the world’s population yet Jews have
won 22% of all Nobel prizes since 1901 (4) and little Israel, the Jewish State,
has the largest number of startups per capita in the world. This disproportionate impact has been noticed
by many, including British historian Paul Johnson:
“For the Jewish impact
on humanity has been protean. In
antiquity, they were the great innovators in religion and morals. In the Dark Ages and early medieval Europe, they were still an advanced people transmitting scarce knowledge and technology…Breaking
out of the ghettos, they once more transformed human thinking, this time in the
secular sphere. Much of
the mental furniture of the modern world to is of Jewish fabrication.” (5)
Jews do
not have a monopoly on innovation and not all Jewish “contributions” have been
positive, but given how small and how persecuted the Jewish people have been
throughout history, it begs the question why?
American sociologist, Ernest van den Haag asked the same question:
“The Jews have invented more ideas, have made the world more
intelligible, for a longer span and for more people than any other group. They have done this indirectly, always
unintentionally, and certainly not in concert, but never less
comprehensibly...In a world where Jews are only a tiny percentage of the
population, what is the secret of the disproportionate importance the Jews have
had in the history of Western culture?”
From Abraham onward, Jews have consistently manifested
certain personality traits that have driven them to question and look at the
world in a different way. They seem to possess traits in their collective “spiritual
DNA” that have always driven them to challenge excepted norms, think outside
the box, and create and innovate. As strange
as this may sound, it seems to be the most logical explanation especially since
so many of the most innovative Jews, including most of the scientists who
worked on The Manhattan Project, had little or no Jewish education and no substantial
connection to Judaism. Most were Jews by
birth and nothing more yet “thou shalt innovate” was still deep in their core.
Perhaps, Rabbi, Lord Jonathan Sacks said it the best:
“To be Jewish, to be a child of Abraham is to have
the courage to be different, to challenge the idols of the age, whatever the
idols and whichever the age.” (7)
(1)
For more on this topic see: An Empire of Their Own – How the Jews Invented
Hollywood – Neal Gabler
(2)
In 1954, a year before his death, Einstein said to his old
friend, Linus Pauling, "I made one great mistake in my life—when I
signed the letter to President Roosevelt recommending that atom bombs be made;
but there was some justification—the danger that the Germans would make them.” Clark,
Ronald W. (1971). Einstein: The Life and Times. New York: Avon Books
(3)
Tablet Magazine, November 9, 2022. Imagining a Jewish Atom
Bomb, Or Rabinowitz & Yehonaton Abramson
(4)
http://www.jinfo.org/Nobel_Prizes.html
(5)
-Paul Johnson, A
History of the Jews
(6)
Ernest van den Haag, The
Jewish Mystique
(7) Covenant and Conversation-The Heroism of Ordinary Life, 5768
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