Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • Page 96

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
96
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

E10 THURSDAY. AlXiUST .10. 1990 I.OS ANCiKl.ES TIMES FRUMKIN: Fight to Evacuate Jews Changes Course are starting to give back. They're becoming mensches responsible people) like the rest of us." He speaks to students twice a week during the school year for the Simon Wiescnthal Center for Holocaust Studies, writes a weekly column for the B'nai B'rith Messenger and translates it for Panorama, a Russian -language weekly newspaper. His reactivated Council is sending books on Judaism and the history of anti-Semitism to Soviet Jews by the thousands.

He keeps up the pressure on Soviet and American bureaucracies about visas. He does not stop. The pictures of Frumkin with conservative politicians and right-wing personalities are not the only indicator that the former Vietnam War protester has hung a right. His columns often wave the flag for America or Israel, and he comes down hard on peaceniks, anti-interventionists, Palestinian sympathizers, would-be flag burners, affirmative action advocates. "As time goes by, I suppose I've gotten Tighter and righter.

At one time, I was on the board of Americans for Democratic Action. I have learned about the Soviet bloc and the oppression taking place. I have come to learn that communism and extreme socialism always hurts people. "And I've come to see that left-wing believers are a much greater menace to Jews than others. It's the left wing that raised anti-Semitism to the point where it is almost acceptable if you call it anti-Zionism.

'Zionism is racism' that's infamous." He sees a double standard operating often, for example, holding Israel to a higher standard than its neighbors, or making allowances for certain actions of minorities. He rejects it out of hand, arguing with a stubborn logic that keeps a narrow focus. He can work himself Into a fury quickly and come out with hard-nosed statements. Taking the wrongfulness and "absurdity of classifying human beings by race" as a starting point, he took off on a tangent that included a scornful dismissal of recent Los Angeles County reap- portionment attempts to ensure more Latino representation, and a question about why, if South Africa is so bad, do so many black Africans from other countries try to get in? "It's nonsense and it annoys the hell out of me," he said of quotas and an affirmative action mentality, before moving on the Middle "Israel Is the only country in the world where Arabs can vote and sit in Parliament," he said. "So Jews bought a building in East Jerusalem and want to live there, In the Arab quarter.

Why not? THere are Arabs living in the Jewish quarter and nobody talks about that." And then, the fury spent, he was back to being his own different drummer: "Having said all this, it's entirely possible if I were an Arab on the West Bank, I'd be out on the street throwing rocks. Once you believe you're oppressed At best, his stubbornness is idealistic, based on a lot of "shoulds." "I am idealistic," he said smiling, calmed down to irony again. "I guess I'm looking for fairness in an unfair world." Si Frumkin leads demonstration outside Shrine Auditorium during 1975 appearance of the Bolshoi Ballet. The women were deported to Poland, the men to Germany. His father died "of weakness" 20 days before Dachau was liberated in 1945.

Frumkin was 14. Deciding against a return to the Soviet Union, where survivors were being treated as collaborators, he joined the thousands wandering around Europe and made his way through the chaos to Italy where he and his mother reunited. "I didn't resent the fact nobody wanted us. It didn't occur to me I had that right. Who knew from human rights? I didn't really even resent the Nazis.

I was scared of them, but I didn't question it. It was like being scared of an earthquake." Rather, he said, "I wanted to go to the movies and chew gum. More than anything else I wanted to go to school and catch up on my education. I knew I was ignorant." He studied in Switzerland and England, emigrated briefly to Venezuela before coming to New York in 1949. He graduated from New York University in 1953.

Years later, when he was married, living in Los Angeles and running the Universal Drapery Co. out of a Skid Row building, he earned a master's degree in history from UC North-ridge at night. Once the message from Soviet Jews reached him, "Why have you forgotten us," Frumkln's drapery company increasingly became a sideline. His grab for normalcy seems to have come to a complete and permanent halt. L.A.

Councilman Zev Yaroslav-sky's stories about the early days of working with Frumkin on behalf of Soviet Jewry kept him going for two hours late one afternoon In his office at City Hall. If there is one story that sums up Si Frumkin, however, he would have to choose the one about the toilet plunger. A Soviet freighter came into Los Angeles Harbor in the early 70s, and Yaroslavsky and Frumkin rented a motorboat and chugged out to the ship, intending to paint "Let the Jews Go" on the side. But how to stay in place once the engine was shut off? Frumkin solved the problem. They moored themselves to the freighter with a toilet plunger.

"He's such a smart man," Yaroslavsky said, chuckling fondly. "He's so quick. His talents are so interchangeable. He'll be translating Russian one minute, fixing the refrigerator the next, figuring out the toilet plunger." Mention "Soviet Jews" in 1968, Frumkin said recently, and the average American, Jews included, would probably be puzzled, unaware that there were any Soviet Jews. Once they were on Frumkin's mind, however, he was not going to rest: The Jewish Federation Council of Greater Los Angeles had a Commission on Soviet Jewry and Frumkin went to volunteer.

He heard nothing for six months, he said, then learned a demonstration was planned during Passover in the Fairfax area. Thinking "the more publicity the better," he said, Frumkin took it upon himself to approach then-Councilman Tom Bradley, not going through channels. Bradley declared Soviet Jewry Day. "Did I get in trouble!" Frumkin said. "They told me I'd offended other council-men." It was a bad fit from the beginning.

"Si was always more activist than corporate," Yaroslavsky explained. They met through the demonstration where Yaroslavsky, a UCLA student and leader of California Students for Soviet Jewry, spoke on his recent trip to the Soviet Union. Both men found the Jewish Establishment, as represented by the Federation, too conservative, cau them in the past tense. In fact, Frumkin is now a member of the Commission's executive board. "The organized Jewish community came late to the issue," Scheindlin said.

"If not for Si and Zev, it would never have happened to such a degree. By the end of my tenure there, it had happened. We were an issue to be contended with." Continued from El ting our wish." He did not describe that fighting, the years of demonstrations at Soviet cultural events, of confrontations with the guardians of bureaucratic procedures, of being a gadfly to the discomfort and embarrassment of. many in the Jewish Establishment. He has often called himself obsessed and driven in those years, and readily says it made him "a lousy father" to two sons, now grown, and broke up his marriage.

He did tell, however, of his recent trips to the Soviet Union which led him to one conclusion: "They've got to get out of there." Before the parlor meeting was over, those assembled would fill out pledge cards amounting to more than $200,000, bringing Los Angeles that much closer to its goal of $36 million, part of a national goal of $420 million and a worldwide goal of $600 million. One man, Eugene Davis, clearly impressed and moved by Frumkin, went up to him at the end and said, "SI, you're a book that needs reading." SI Frumkin lives in Studio City with his second wife, Kathy. He runs the council out of a crammed study where the combination of office machines and welghtlifting equipment leaves little room to walk. There is plenty to look at thought The walls arc covered with photographs of demonstrations and pictures of Frumkin with President Ronald Reagan, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Sen. Daniel Moynihan Sen.

Pete Wilson television commentator Bruce Her- The problem with the Jewish Establishment was not fear of our actions' effect on Jews in the Soviet Union. It was ego, turf and bureaucracy. We were making SI FRUMKIN schensohn), newsman George Putnam. He has hung his family photos near the entry and history has given them a haunting effect. Most were taken in Lithuania in the years leading up to the Holocaust.

Innocence, well-being, family ties and affection hang suspended in a time without much strife. Mother and son, grandfather as a schoolboy in the uniform of his military academy, a New Year's Eve party where the guests, his parents among them, in white-tie-and-tails elegance have paused, Champagne glasses in hand, for a semi-formal portrait. One picture stands out: his parents leaning on a fence in the woods on a sunny day, a little dog between them on the fence rail. "That was Tommy, my terrier. The Germans took him away.

They wanted him because he was a purebred. It was just as well we couldn't feed him." Before he became Prisoner 82191 of Dachau, he was born and started to grow up in Kaunas as Simas Frumkinas. His was "a prominent family in an East European town," Frumkin said. His father was an automobile and motorcycle dealer, and when the Harley-Davldson salesman visited, he brought Si a present. "I was the only kid in Lithuania with a Mickey Mouse toothbrush." Affluent and assimilated, there was no shtetl life, no Yiddish, no visits to the synagogue.

Just a yearly Passover dinner. To this day he is "quite irreligious" explaining it away a little lamely, saying, "I never acquired the habit. I never learned the prayers. I never made my bar mitzvah by then I was in the camps." The good life ended in stages. When the Soviets took over Lithuania in 1940, communism ended his father's business.

In 1941 the Germans came, and the 40,000 Jews of Kaunas were herded into a ghetto surrounded by barbed wire. When the ghetto was evacuated in 1944, there were about 7,000 surviving. mum cial buildings, he was able to retire in 1987. "I never realized retirement could be such an Olympic event," he said dryly of his life now. He is driven, acknowledges he is full of survivor's guilt and a sense that he owes.

He is seemingly incapable of not responding to the problem at hand. Once the Soviet Jews started arriving here, he realized existing efforts to help them adjust were inadequate. He was a founding member of the Assn. of Soviet Jewish Emigres. There are lectures of the "how to write a resume and go on an interview" genre, clothing and household goods giveaways, a network of free medical care providers.

Those who are established are urged to help the newcomers. "They came in very poor and very selfish," he told the group at the Operation Exodus gathering. "I'm happy to say, some of them "Who Wlll.lnvent the 21st Century President Richard Nixon at San Clemente, they released 5,000 helium-filled balloons imprinted with "Let My People Go." When the Bolshoi Ballet came, they distributed fake programs outside the Shrine Auditorium which said: "Enjoy the show, but They got accused of scare tactics, of intimidation in some of their boycott threats, such as their efforts to stop travel agents from promoting trips to the Soviet Union. "We found out there were other nuts like us across the country," Frumkin said. They teamed up to form the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews.

Gimmicks such as sending greeting cards to Soviet Jews and the adopt-a-refusenik-family campaign were adopted across the country by synagogues. "Virtually everything that was done emanated from Si's head," Yaroslavsky said. "The problem with the Jewish Establishment was not fear of our actions' effect on Jews in the Soviet Union. It was ego, turf and bureaucracy. We were making news.

How do you explain to your boss, if you're being paid $41,000 a year in 1971 to do it, and there's this drapery salesman putting 10,000 people in the street?" Havi Scheindlin, who directed the Commission in the late '70s, recalled recently, "I was told, 'Don't get involved with his group. They have a different philosophy." There was an ideological split, she said. Frumkin, for example, worked with other dissident groups in the Soviet Union, rather than keeping Jews separate. Frumkin says he was often at odds with Israel and its supporters, because his Council insisted Jews should be allowed to emigrate wherever they wanted, not forced to go to Israel. Whatever the differences, Frumkin and Yaroslavsky describe RESERVATIONS, PLEASE.

271-2168 By 1976, 72,000 Jews were allowed to leave the Soviet Union. Their cause was a mainstream issue and Frumkin was burned put. He pulled back and the Council became dormant until the Gorbachev years. Frumkin is his own best enemy when it comes to slowing down. Having done well in the drapery business, and owning two commer If llll CD 1 1 weeeeleeea'wll anejneiavi WIWMIII, mr conmtomm, mv aims.

in BOHB1 (818)769-8100 InventorsEititrepreneursISxqp(ffi'90 InvenTectfTradeshow AMERICA'S INTE ONADONAL FORUM TRANSFER AND I CENSING AUGUST 31 SEPTEMBER 2, 1990 DISNEYLAND HOTEL ANAHEIM CALIFORNIA USA I ON-SITE REGISTRATION WELCOME I BMP! 805484-9786 714848-7773 'EXHIBITS SPECIAL EVENTS HUGE SHIPMENT tious and bureaucratic. Whatever their ideas, such as a candlelight walk in Westwood for Hanukkah, they were always cautioned not to rock the boat. The activist split off from Federation, formed the Council, teamed up with the student leader, and got going. Their modus operandi often bore the stamp of Frumkin's prankish wit. They hired a helicopter to fly over the Super Bowl with a banner: "Save Soviet Jewry." When Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev visited mi.mw.iimiv..

BASE STAYS SHOPPING IN THE CAR CAHI SALE LIGHT Eafll WEKJHT 513, ATTACHABLE 1383 deluxe cvciiii The bnl In creellvrry, dljcovery, eplorlUon and cxnlcal thinking takee place, ail undtt on loot, Inventore Workshop International (TWI) and The National Foundation (or Craatlva, Olttad and Talantad Chlldran comblna rorcee to produca Invantora Entrapranaura Expo aoH and KIDSCON Waat 90 at tha Olinayland Hotel In Anaheim, Calllornla, Augutt at- September 2. KIDSCON Waat 90 If a national 3-day conference tor blight and creative children, gradee 2-8. Invantora 1 Entrapranaura Eipo fto (I4E Epo) will be dedicated to the theme CreetMty and Innovation lor 1990V" and Incorporate the InvenTech1" Trade Show. OVER WORKSHOPS FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN Both conference! are dedicated to honoring and encouraging creativity and Invention, to nurturing the bright, creative mind. 1 1 Eipo often an ertemrve conference program with International enpertf on el etpectt of creativity, Invention, kiteeectual property protection, technology traniter, Beaming and entrepreneunhlp.

Attendeee at KIDSCON Waat participate In more then 70 participatory workihopa to cumulate critical thinking end creativity, explore hundrede ol hnndi-on acllvrtlee In the Discovery and enhlbnt area and Join many new frlende In epeclal avenle, that will be planned tor both conferencee Over 30 parent eemlnare on timely aubecll dealing with nurturing and coping with the gllted child are part of the temlly package ottered et KIDSCON. INVENTECH TRADESHOW OPEN TO PUBUC SAT SUN 1500 CO-SPONSORS' US. SUUl BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION 'TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER SOCIETY NASA DEPT. COMMERCE PATENT A TRADEMARK Of FKE INVENT! MAGAZINE CALIFORNIA ENERGY COMMISSION -AND UANYUOREI IIIUII Wlinill mmm I I L3 (213) 689-6969 DELUXE WITH PADDED SEAT LARGE 0NE-HAN0 OPERATION TRAY FOLDS EASL' 4JP I HH Mu-naawm LWC0LMBl.7t:. SPAYS ONLY imi-imm..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Los Angeles Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Los Angeles Times Archive

Pages Available:
7,612,743
Years Available:
1881-2024