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  Texas : Features : Columns : All Things Historical :

Rabbi Cohen

by Archie P. McDonald
Archie McDonald Ph.D.
About twenty years ago I attended the premier of a film titled “West of Hester Street.” This was a documentary partially financed by an agency known then as the Texas Committee for the Humanities.

Hester Street served as a gathering place of Jewish immigrants in New York City in the decade before and after 1900, and their accumulating numbers produced a rise in xenophobia and anti-Semitism. Hence, a plan to locate the continued tide of Jewish immigrants “west of Hester Street.”

The focus, then, was on Rabbi Henry Cohen, who provide a place for thousands of Jewish immigrants now routed through the port of Galveston.

Cohen was born in England in 1863 and educated in its schools. He was ordained a rabbi in 1884 and accepted his first assignment in Jamaica. In 1885 he moved to Woodville, Mississippi, to serve the Jewish community there, then moved on to Galveston in 1888 to become rabbi of Temple B’nai Israel.

Cohen became a prominent citizen of Galveston and was instrumental in helping the community respond to the destruction of the hurricane which destroyed a great deal of the island’s buildings and took the lives of more than 6,000 of its citizens in 1900. Cohen also served in the American forces in France during WWI and helped with the struggle to make rabbis eligible for appointment as military chaplains. He also served in appointed state offices and on many boards, but Cohen’s work with immigrants is the focus here.

In Galveston, Cohen founded the Jewish Immigrant Information Bureau to help relieve the pressure of anti-Semitism on Hester Street. As the flow of Jewish immigrants began to flow through Galveston, Cohen recruited sponsors, usually other Jews, not just in Texas but also throughout the Great Plains of the United States. Many a community enjoyed significant economic development due to the industry and hard work of these new citizens.

And there is this anecdote in Ronald Axelrod’s article on Rabbi Cohen that appeared in the East Texas Historical Journal. A Russian immigrant arrived in Galveston without appropriate admission papers. The man was immediately retained for deportation, until Rabbi Cohen traveled to Washington to petition President William Howard Taft to overrule the regulations. When Taft replied that it was unfair for him to change the rules for one of Cohen’s Jews, the Rabbi told the president that the immigrant was not Jewish but an Orthodox Christian. Cohen had traveled all that way in behalf of someone in need, whether of his faith or not.

Rabbi Cohen died in 1952.


© Archie P. McDonald
All Things Historical
>
May 8, 2005 column
A syndicated column in over 40 East Texas newspapers
(This column is provided as a public service by the East Texas Historical Association. Archie P. McDonald is director of the Association and author of more than 20 books on Texas.)
 
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