The Friends of Israel Turns 70
by Elwood McQuaid
(Originally published in Israel My Glory Magazine, Vol. 66, No. 3 )
When the calendar turned the page into
2008, Israel
began celebrating six full decades as a modern nation. The story of Judaism’s
return to its “place of places” in the Holy Land
is a chronicle of events too miraculous to be attributed to human capabilities.
Providentially speaking, it involved a convergence of circumstances that grew
out of centuries of maltreatment, capped by the unimaginable: the Holocaust.
Israel’s
modern resurrection was reminiscent of the story unfolded in the book of
Esther: a people under siege, delivered by God-empowered individuals who were
in the right place at the right time. In other words, people strategically
positioned for such a time as this.
Ten years prior to that biblical and
historical landmark in 1948, other events were converging that would create a
tandem force in the Christian world. Though not of equal magnitude, the
founding of The Friends of Israel Refugee Committee, later to become The
Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry (FOI), would show another side of the coin in
the affairs of the era.
By 1938 Adolf Hitler was on a rampage
against the Jewish people, bearing a grudge and a promise. His promise: to
create an Aryan, 1,000-year Reich by exterminating European Jewry under the
guise of fostering, in British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain’s
terminology, “peace in our time.”
Unfortunately, the vast majority of the
world chose to look the other way, hoping that silence and concessions would
satisfy the Nazi dictator’s lust for land and power. Of course, the vast
majority was wrong.
The Nazi regime’s cruelty was visible and
premeditated. Nazi doctrine rested on an evil, three-pronged axis: deception,
fabrication, and brutality.
• Deception
played on the naiveté of decent people who believed Germany was an oppressed nation
desiring nothing more than to break free from the economic stranglehold imposed
on it following its defeat in World War I. Many viewed Hitler’s purges and
military buildup as merely an attempt to rebuild national pride and
self-confidence. Unfortunately, these people operated on the premise that
Hitler meant what he said and would keep his promises.
• Fabrication
was central to the Nazi scheme, which revolved around propagating the “big
lie.” Hitler needed a scapegoat through which to birth his “superrace” and fuel
his delusions of national grandeur. He found it in European Jewry. Every
conceivable evil afflicting Germany
was blamed on the Jewish people, whom the Nazis claimed contaminated the
hallowed Aryan ground. Eliminate the Jews, Hitler declared, and utopia would
quickly become reality.
• Brutality
was the Nazi modus operandi. That people bought into the regime’s gargantuan
lies threw open the door to an inferno of savage cruelty the likes of which had
never before been displayed in modern times. Brutality became so infused in the
nation’s psyche that the stench from the death-camp ovens and the stacks of
Jewish skeletons being carted to mass graves were excused by another lie: We
didn’t know what was going on.
Men of Vision, Men of Faith
One of the great tragedies of the run up to
World War II was that major national political leaders, clergy, and citizens in
the Christian West—including Americans—joined the masses behind the wall of
silence that doomed 6 million Jewish people and traumatized virtually the
entire world.
There were, however, others who saw the
situation through a different prism, one of care and compassion for people
unable to help themselves.
Thus, in 1938, a group of evangelical
Christian men in the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, decided to break the silence and rescue as
many Jewish people as possible from the inferno engulfing Europe.
The Friends of Israel Refugee Committee (FIRC) sought to aid displaced Jewish
people in a host of countries. A quote from Israel My Glory, established in
1942, read as follows:
We are anxiously awaiting the end of the
war, preparing to go to the stricken lands of Europe with spiritual and
material comfort for the little remnant of Israel, which, we pray, will have
survived the greatest calamity in Jewish history.
While awaiting that eventuality, FIRC
workers ministered to Jewish soldiers and allied troops waiting to take part in
the invasion that would liberate Europe.
As a Christian organization, the ministry
functioned under two inalienable mandates: the obligation to “comfort, yes,
comfort My people” (Isa. 40:1) and the command to “preach the gospel to every
creature” (Mk. 16:15).
The times were impeccably expressive of the
prophet Jeremiah’s lament during the stresses of another dark chapter in the
history of Israel:
Is it nothing to you, all you who pass by?
Behold and see if there is any sorrow like my sorrow, which has been brought on
me (Lam. 1:12).
Friends of Israel relief was distributed in
many material and practical ways. Food, clothing, housing, medicine, and other
forms of aid and comfort were basic features of the program.
And as an evangelical organization, there
was (and remains) the spiritual aspect: to make the Messiah known to Jewish
people, on an equal footing with ministry to all people the world over. Jesus’
command is to propagate an equal-opportunity message: “And He said to them, ‘Go
into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature.’”
In fact, the apostle Paul established a
sense of indebtedness to do so. “I am a debtor,” he wrote, “both to Greeks and
to barbarians, both to wise and to unwise,” and to his kinsmen: the Jewish
people (Rom. 1:14).
An interesting footnote to the early
beginnings of The Friends of Israel is that in 1938 there was no State of
Israel. Therefore, those who attempt to make this organization a dupe of
Israeli politicians, claiming we believe Israel right or wrong, do so
completely without factual substance. Our founders had one goal: to reach out
to people in the utmost distress. Not a single shred of evidence exists to the
contrary. This ministry was never about politics. It was, and
remains, about helping people in need.
Foundation and Function
Dr. Victor Buksbazen, born in 1903, became
the general secretary of the ministry in March 1943. For the next 33 years he
set the course for the work and epitomized the integrity, clarity, dignity, and
trustworthiness upon which the organization is fixed today.
Born and educated in Warsaw, Poland,
Victor was a classical scholar in the best sense of the word. After receiving a
bachelor of divinity degree at the University
of Warsaw in 1926, he
became assistant professor of Hebrew and Old Testament at the university. An
expert in linguistics, Victor was fluent in Polish, English, Hebrew, Yiddish,
German, Russian, Greek, and Latin.
Dr. Buksbazen manifested the same
intellectual acumen as another Hebrew-Christian scholar, the renowned Alfred
Edersheim. Both were steeped in the life and culture of their people and shared
a passion for biblical and historical accuracy that Gentile theologians do not
possess in quite the same way. Victor’s superb commentary, The Prophet Isaiah,
remains a legacy for generations to come.
Sensing the imminent danger facing Polish
Jewry, Victor immigrated to England
in 1937. There he could continue to write and minister to the increasing
numbers of refugees forced to flee Nazi occupation. As was the case with many
who left before the concentration camps became operational, he had close
emotional and physical ties to kinsmen who were unable to escape the coming
terror. His personal attachment undergirded his work with a foundation of
compassion and concern that others were incapable of experiencing in the same
acute way.
I suppose one could say that such personal
attachment defines a ministry, as opposed to an organization that is simply
benevolent and philanthropic. A passion for the survival of family and friends
caught in a desperate situation does more to produce action, depth, and
sensitivity than merely observing from afar.
God’s gift of Victor to the helm of
The
Friends of Israel was richly augmented by Victor’s wife, Lydia. Lydia
was an
English Jewess who possessed all of the positive refinements of
European grace
and quality that enhanced the growing ministry. She, too, had a family
history
punctuated by the isolation and treachery of marauding anti-Semites. In
Lydia’s experience, it was the pogromists in Russia who put
her people to the sword. Her book They Looked for a City tells her
gripping
story in ways that have moved the hearts and changed the lives of
thousands.
So, under the duress of the Nazi reign of
terror, God raised up an organization fitted with all of the tools necessary to
build for the future. FOI was not created as a personality-driven movement that
would rise or fall on the strength or weakness of individuals. And though
others would eventually embellish what the early founders began, it was the
founders who positioned the ministry to build for the future.
For Such a Time As This
When this Mission was born, the future of the Jewish
people was in serious jeopardy. They were without a homeland and were crying
out in desperation for hearts to care and hands to help. As we celebrate The
Friends of Israel at 70, how much has really changed?
Admittedly, the players are different. But
the playbook remains the same. The world’s condition is unaltered. Deception,
fabrication, and brutality are still the enemy’s main tactics.
This time it is the Western confederation
of nations, led by the UN, that is swallowing the land-for-peace delusion.
Palestinians and other Islamists claim to be the oppressed people who wish only
for a nation to restore their pride and self-worth. All the while they dangle
the carrot of good intentions and promise peace and prosperity—until they get
what they want, which is everything.
The big lie is still at center stage.
Replace the name Hitler with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who rants against his selected
scapegoats, Israel
and the Jewish people, blaming them for every iniquity and offering the only
“acceptable” solution: genocide and annihilation of the Jewish state. His
desire is not for a 1,000-year Reich but for a global, Islamic caliphate.
Now the door is open to unbridled
brutality. It is endemic in every sector of the plan to eliminate Israel and the
Western democracies. Look at the situation in the Jewish communities bordering
the Gaza Strip. Thousands of rockets have assaulted Israeli citizens,
indiscriminately causing an untold number of casualties.
As we launch into the eighth decade of
FOI’s service, we can only conclude that this ministry has been well prepared
to meet the uncertainties of the future. Today we are able to minister to more
people by more means than ever before. Our international staff, media
technology, and literature penetration enhance our worldwide stature, building
bridges to Israel
and the Jewish people. And the times we live in are providing opportunities
that were inconceivable 70 years ago.
That having been said, I’m sure that if we
could stand today among that heavenly cloud of witnesses who saw it all begin,
we would hear the words As good as it has been, the best is yet to come.
Happy birthday, FOI!