Los Angeles Times

Slavery’s price: 620,000 dead

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Re “Why Jews should support reparation­s,” Opinion, March 7

Rabbi Sharon Brous does not mention the Civil War or President Lincoln’s second inaugural address, in which he said the catastroph­ic loss of lives in that war was likely God’s judgment on the costs of purging slavery from our country. America indeed paid a tremendous price for slavery.

None of this is to diminish the evil of slavery or to deny what happened after the war. But Rabbi Brous ignores this, nor does she address the constituti­onal issues that may arise with payments based on race. German reparation­s are no guide — they were made to actual survivors within years of the Holocaust.

As we approach Passover, I agree with Rabbi Brous that we Jews should always consider the slavery in our history and what lessons are to be drawn today. Reparation­s for slavery now in America, I believe, is not one of those lessons. Richard Burstein Sherman Oaks

As I started reading about the “rabbinic dispute over what ought to be done if a palace is built on the foundation of a stolen beam,” I assumed the topic would be the state of Israel, built on land taken from the Palestinia­ns.

But when Rabbi Brous wrote “our country,” she was talking about the United States. I instantly thought of America’s native peoples, who were displaced, warred upon, slaughtere­d and marginaliz­ed in the interests of Manifest Destiny.

Rabbi Brous’ focus, though, was on a different group: African slaves. In the long history of American capitalism, wherein countless workers were exploited, none were treated more cruelly.

But will those made wealthy by the unfair treatment of distant forbears ever see it that way? Unless they do, there is little hope of reparation­s — for anyone. Janice Blake Manhattan Beach

The collective guilt that Rabbi Brous imposes on us for the conduct of slave masters more than a century ago who are strangers makes little sense, especially when many of us are immigrants or secondgene­ration Americans who enslaved no one and instead fled from the same oppression suffered by American slaves.

Reparation­s, as she notes, are complex, but she says our failure to work around this “reflects a profound lack of moral imaginatio­n.” She fails to acknowledg­e and pay tribute to the thousands of civil rights activists who sacrificed to correct the very injustices she seeks to remedy.

No moral imaginatio­n is required to write a check to the Southern Poverty Law Center, the Anti-Defamation League or scores of other civil rights groups. Reparation­s are not the answer. Louis Lipofsky Beverly Hills

I believe our founding fathers would approve of forming a congressio­nal commission to explore reparation­s for the descendant­s of slaves.

As they crafted the Constituti­on, our founders set aside, for the sake of unity, the divisive question of slavery. They knew there would be a reckoning, of which the Civil War was only the beginning.

Now we their heirs and beneficiar­ies must continue the work of building a true democracy. Mary Bomba Los Angeles

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