(FORD, Henry) "Statement by Henry Ford Regarding Charges Against Jews Made in his Publications, The Dearborn Independent, and a Series of Pamphlets Entitled "The International Jew", together with an Explanatory Statement by Louis Marshall, President of the American Jewish Committee and his Reply to Mr. Ford. Published by the American Jewish Committee, 1927. WorldCat locates ONE print copy, University of Michigan. (There are 5 other copies located, all overseas, Australia, NZ,2 UK, Canada) though they all seem to be only online copies.) SOLD
So, the Dearborn Independent was owned and published by Ford beginning in 1920 and rose to 900,000 copies/day, the second-leading circulation in the country. It was partially put over the hill via incentive quotas in every Ford dealership. There were many anti-Semitic articles appearing in the newspaper, which also published "The International Jew". It was bad stuff. Anyway, boycotts against the Ford company were lodged and a lawsuit appeared in 1927. Ford finally responded to the accusations in June 1927 saying that he had no idea that the paper had published this sort of garbage since 1920, and that he was shocked by it, and repelled. He recanted, though it seems from historical sources that the letter wasn't written or signed by Ford. The response by Louis Marshall, president of the American Jewish Congress, was reserved, and hoped that the paper no longer published the anti-Semitic filth. Ford closed the paper by the end of 1927. In 1938, Ford accepted the Nazi award of the Grand Cross of the German Eagle, the highest medal offered by the Nazis to a foreign. Hitler had been in power for five years by this point, and his war against the Jews was years old.
So: actions and words...
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