Singles Connection


Singles Connection
STORIES IN THIS ISSUE
FEATURES
     Volunteer offers getaway
     Bush courts votes
     Thurmond tempered with time
COMMUNITY
     Agencies hit hard
     Kosher restaurant opens in Scottsdale
NATION
     Streams split on sodomy case
ISRAEL
     Joint patrols resume in Gaza Strip
     Citizen proposal praised
OPINION
     Editorial - Extending equal rights
     Commentary - Who needs political heroes?
     Voices - Jews not allowed at negotiating table?
     In the Mail - Letters to the Editor
ARTS
     Kosher 'Sex'
     Arts briefs
BUSINESS
     Stopping stink
     Mind Your Own Business - Business Calendar
     People on the move
COMING UP
     This Week
MILESTONES
     Births
     Obituaries
SENIORS
     Events
SINGLES
     Datebook
YOUTH
     Overprotective parents
TORAH STUDY
     Moses confronts twin rebellions

Singles Connection
Logo

July 4, 2003/Tamuz 4 5763, Vol. 55, No. 45

Thurmond tempered with time

MATTHEW E. BERGER
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
Sen. Strom Thurmond's 100th birthday
President Bush helps celebrate the 100th birthday of Sen. Strom Thurmond Dec. 6, 2002, at the White House.
Photo by Eric Draper/White House
When Hyman Bookbinder, the American Jewish Committee's longtime Washington representative, watched the Senate approve a national holiday in memory of Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1985, one of the most significant moments was the "aye" vote by Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.)

"It was a sign," says Bookbinder, who watched the vote from a Senate visitors gallery with Coretta Scott King, the civil rights leader's widow. "When he voted in support of civil rights goals, he reflected what was happening in this country."

Thurmond, the longest-serving member in the history of the Senate, died June 26 in South Carolina, the state he had represented for 47 years. He was 100 years old, and had left the Senate in January.

Jewish leaders in Washington and South Carolina remember the longtime lawmaker as a bellwether for the civil rights movement, and as a friendly and gentle man who made time for members of the Jewish community even though he frequently disagreed with them on policy issues.

A vocal opponent of the civil rights movement, Thurmond, then a Democratic governor, ran for president in 1948 as a "Dixiecrat," opposing Harry Truman's civil rights platform for the Democratic Party.

He lost, but was elected to the Senate as a write-in candidate six years later. In his first years in Congress, he was a strict segregationist, filibustering civil rights laws, but his position changed over time. He eventually supported the appointment of black federal judges and employed several African-Americans on his staff.

Thurmond became a Republican in 1964. But no matter what party he affiliated with, he often disagreed with the Jewish community.

"The original Thurmond was a guy who was against civil rights, the war on poverty, the liberal agenda," says Bookbinder, who began working in Washington in 1951. "The liberal agenda was distasteful to him and he became distasteful to us."

Thurmond often opposed foreign aid, a pet issue for a Jewish community seeking to help Israel. He also had little personal affinity for the South Carolina Jewish community, which was predominantly Democratic. However, that didn't stop him from reaching out to the small Jewish community in his state.

"On a one-on-one level he would always respond to you," says Samuel Tannenbaum, a Jewish leader in the state's capital, Columbia. "That was the ultimate success for him."


Home