Cape Argus

Chilling account of the execution of an innocent

- ETHEL ROSENBERG: A COLD WAR TRAGEDY Anne Sebba Weidenfeld & Nicolson/Jonathan Ball Review: Beverley Roos-Muller

ETHEL Rosenberg’s story was a cruel, cold war tragedy. She remains the only American woman ever to be executed for a crime other than murder, yet she was innocent; and that continues, rightly, to haunt us.

She was sacrificed in the era of the 1950s anti-Communist and anti-Semitic reign of terror by McCarthyis­m in the US, not very different to the fear-mongering mob mentality that dominates parts of that country even today.

This powerful book by Anna Sebba covers the Rosenberg story with efficient, chilling clarity.

Ethel was born in 1915 in an America full of new immigrants from Europe, many of them Jewish, many of them fleeing pogroms and dictatorsh­ips and yearning for a new world of equality and opportunit­y.

In a world struggling to make sense of World War I to look towards a different way of living: to support Communist ideals, whether in Oxford or New York, was neither unusual at the time nor – importantl­y – was it illegal.

Ethel was born into a poor home, full of ambition to better herself. She had an unkind mother who doted on her younger brother David, a favourite son who later perjured himself against Ethel, to save his own wife from arrest after he had passed on classified documents to the Soviets.

She adored her husband Julius and shared his idealism, but as a housewife consumed with caring for her two little sons, she was not a participan­t in his undergroun­d activities.

Their actions happened during WWII, when Russia was an ally, fighting the Nazis. Many believed that such informatio­n should be shared among nations as a way of ensuring peace.

Whether right or wrong, what they did was not in fact treason, for that is a crime only when secrets are passed on to an enemy nation.

The Rosenberg couple were known to be passionate­ly in love. Ethel’s devotion to Julius meant that, despite her long imprisonme­nt designed to put pressure on Julius, she would not betray him as she deeply believed he was innocent of treason, and knowing herself to be innocent she utterly believed that she too, would be freed.

Ethel Rosenberg was more than just a Cold War tragedy. She was taken from two grieving, muchloved sons aged 10 and 6, who were then abandoned by family members who were afraid of guilt by associatio­n, and sent to an orphanage.

When it became clear that not even the highest offices in the US, including the FBI’s J Edgar Hoover, thought she was guilty, but neverthele­ss thought her conviction would be a “deterrent”, it was too late to save her and restore her to her orphaned sons.

She was victim of a government terrified of showing weakness in the face of a frantic fear of Communism at the height of the Cold War, and which knowingly allowed this miscarriag­e of justice. She might as well have been burnt at the stake.

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