The Dearborn Independent
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![]() Even before the articles were written, E.G. Pipp, editor of The Dearborn Independent, resigned in April, 1920, and was replaced by William J. Cameron. Ernest Liebold, Henry Ford’s personal secretary, collected much of the material and Cameron likely wrote many of the articles himself. For another five years after the last of the “International Jew” articles was published, the Dearborn Independent continued to attack Jews. 3 After being accused by the Dearborn Independent in 1927, of trying to control American wheat production, Jewish lawyer Aaron Sapiro filed a defamation suit in Detroit but a mistrial was declared after a juror spoke to a reporter. Although Ford never testified, after the mistrial was declared, he issued public statements and apologies to individuals and Jews as a group.4 On July 16, 1927, an out-of-court settlement of the Sapiro suit was announced. Ford shortly thereafter sold the newspaper. In a 1942 letter to Sigmund Livingston, then ADL national chairman, Ford wrote, “I do not subscribe to or support, directly or indirectly, any agitation which would promote antagonism against my Jewish fellow citizens.” He pointed out that he “destroyed copies” of The International Jew when he first apologized and had refused to give “permission or sanction to anyone to use my name as sponsoring such publication, or being the accredited author thereof.” 5 “[Ku Klux] Klan editors later assembled ninety-six of Henry Ford‘s antisemitic essays from The Dearborn Independent and bound them in a volume they entitled The International Jew The book subsequently was reprinted in Germany by the Nazi World Service. 6 On January 12, 1942, an embarrassed Henry Ford wrote [Imperial Wizard James A.] Colescott saying that he did ‘not subscribe or support, directly or indirectly, any agitation which would promote antagonism against my Jewish fellow citizens.’ Ford threatened the Klan with legal action unless it ceased publication and circulation of his misbegotten essays.” 7 During the Nürnberg Trial of Nazi war criminals after the Second World War, two of the twenty-one defendants present, Hitler Youth Leader Baldur von Schirach and Radio Propaganda Chief Hans Fritzsche, cited the German edition of The International Jew as a major influence on their antisemitic views. 8 Ford’s retraction—whether opportunistic or heartfelt— did not discourage a California group, the Christian Nationalist Crusade, from reprinting an abridged and much smaller edition within a decade of his death, introducing the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” to a new generation.9 |
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1![]() 2 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 3 ![]() 4 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 5 ![]() 6 ![]() 7 ![]() 8 ![]() 9 ![]() Note: Dearborn Independent cover page from issue of 6 August 1921. |