Morris U. Schappes (pronounced SHAP-pess, born Moishe Shapshilevich; May 3, 1907 – June 3, 2004) was an American educator, writer, radical political activist, historian, and magazine editor, best remembered for a 1941 perjury conviction obtained in association with testimony before the Rapp-Coudert Committee (investigating Communism in education in New York) and as long-time editor of the radical magazine Jewish Currents.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Background
Morris U. Schappes was born Moishe ben Haim Shapshilevich in Kamianets-Podilskyi, Ukraine, then part of the Russian empire. The Shapshilevich family left Tsarist Russia when Morris was a small child, living first in Brazil before emigrating to the United States in 1914.[2] The family name was truncated to "Schappes" by Brazilian immigration authorities and Moishe's mother later Americanized his name to "Morris" upon the family's arrival in North America.[3] His middle initial, "U," referred to nothing, but was inserted by Schappes as a collegiate journalist to add zest to his byline.[3] He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from City College of New York and a Master's degree from Columbia University.[2]
In 1928, he accepted a position as a lecturer in the English Department of City College.[2] He was "highly regarded'[8] as an effective teacher and was awarded annual pay raises seven times during his career at City College.[4] He was regarded as a scholar by his peers and frequently contributed reviews and commentary to the popular and academic press, including such magazines as Saturday Review, the New York Post, The Nation, Poetry, and American Literature.[4]
On April 23, 1936, a new head of the English Department at City College wrote to Schappes announcing that his position at City College was to be regarded as temporary, and that he was therefore summarily dismissed from the staff.[4] Students at City College erupted at what they perceived to be a politically motivated personnel decision, with 1500 students signing a petition calling for Schappes' reinstatement and protest meetings held by the American Student Union and former students of Schappes.[4][9]
Investigations
Rapp-Coudert
In 1941, Schappes was one of 40 educators fired in conjunction with an investigation by the Joint Legislative Committee to Investigate the Educational System of the State of New York, commonly known as the Rapp-Coudert Committee, a body which attempted to identify and remove members of the Communist Party USA from the public education system of New York state.[2][6]
In sworn testimony given to the Committee, Schappes stated that he only knew three members of the Communist Party at City College — two of whom were dead and one who was a well-known party organizer.[4]
After another City College Communist had "named names," implicating fifty employees of City College as party members, Schappes was indicted for having committed perjury in his testimony.[4]
Schappes served nearly 14 months in state prison, where he learned Hebrew, attended Sabbath, and studied Jewish history. Upon release, he worked in a war production factory in Long Island City.[3]
Mr. Morris: Would you tell us the circumstances of your joining the Communist Party? Mr. Balamuth: Well, I was recruited into the Communist Party by Morris Schappes ... There as a club called the Penn and Hammer club that met somewhere in the Chelsea area ... They discussed literature and science from the point of view of Marxism ... I attended two or three of the meetings of this group and ... shortly thereafter Mr. Schappes invited me to join the Communist Party ... I did join the Communist Party."[10]
In 1981, City University apologized to Schappes and still-living professors for firing them four decades earlier.[1][6][11]
Jewish Life
In November 1946, he became a member of the editorial board of Jewish Life (later known as Jewish Currents), an English-language magazine associated with the Communist Party USA dealing with Jewish issues and targeted to a Jewish readership.[3][12] He served as editor of this publication for the next four decades, ending in 2000. He wrote "The Editor's Diary."[3][6]
In the aftermath of Nikita Khrushchev's February 1956 "Secret Speech" and the violent repression of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 in the fall of that year,[12]Jewish Currents aligned with a dissident liberal faction of the CPUSA headed by John Gates. The magazine ultimately decided to leave the Communist Party orbit altogether to pursue an independent existence.[12]
Schappes garnered professional recognition for his work as a historian; in 1993 he received the Torchbearer Award of the American Jewish Historical Society.[2]
Personal life, death, legacy
In 1930, Schappes married Sonya Laffer, who died in 1992.[1][2][5]
In 1942, Henry Foner composed "The Ballad of Morris Schappes."[13]
Regarding the Communist Party, the New York Times noted at his death:
It is not clear when Mr. Schappes broke with the Communist Party, but at least one account, J. Edgar Hoover's book Masters of Deceit, suggests that Mr. Schappes was still active as late as 1957. By 1958, Ms. Jochnowitz said, the Jewish Life staff had become anguished by the Soviet Union's abrupt discarding of Stalin and the only sort of Communism they had known. They started Jewish Currents that year as a voice independent of Moscow, both in content and financing.
Morris Schappes died age 97 on June 3, 2004, in New York City.[3][2]
^ abcdefg"Morris Schappes". Dreamers and Fighters: The NYC Teacher Purges. 2009. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
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Leberstein, Stephen (November 2004). "Morris Schappes: An Activist's Life"(PDF). Clarion. City University of New York: 11. Retrieved 2 September 2018.