Celebrating Jewish History at the White House

Posted By on June 1, 2012

President Barack Obama delivers remarks during a Jewish American Heritage Month reception in the East Room of the White House, May 30, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

For the third consecutive year, special items from the Library of Congress Jewish American collections have been put on display at the White House. In honor of Jewish American Heritage Month, President Barack Obama hosted a reception at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. on Wednesday evening.

Generations of Jewish Americans have brought to bear some of our countrys greatest achievements and forever enriched our national life, he said in his official proclamation. Our country is stronger for their contributions, and this month, we commemorate the myriad ways they have enriched the American experience.

During his speech at the reception, President Obama focused in large part on Gen. Ulysses S. Grants order in 1862 to expel Jews as a class from the military department of Tennessee. American Jews protested and, with the help of President Abraham Lincoln, the order was revoked.

And to General Grants credit he later realized he had made a serious mistake, the president said in his speech. So later in his life he apologized for this order and as president went out of his way to appoint Jews to public office and to condemn the persecution of Jews in Eastern Europe.

The small display of items contributed by the Librarys Manuscript Division included a set of resolutions to Lincoln from the Board of Delegates of American Israelites; a letter to Lincoln from The Missouri Lodge of Bn Brith, the first Jewish organization to formally protest against Order No. 11; Lincolns note rescinding Order No. 11; and a receipt for President Grants contribution to Washington Synagogue Adas Israel, the first synagogue building built in DC.

In 2004, the Library mounted a major exhibition titled From Haven to Home to commemorate 350 years of Jewish life in America.

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Celebrating Jewish History at the White House

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