Walter Bernstein has written one of those books that are, on the surface, a simple retelling. And the story he retells is one we think we know. During the 1950s, we have learned, actors and others in Hollywood were blacklisted – unable to work at their profession because of the witch hunt for Communists, led by Senator Joseph McCarthy and the Un-American Activities Commission. (Patriot Act, anyone?) But what does it mean to a person to lose his ability to work? And what does it mean to a country – to AMERICA, the “land of the free” – to label some of its citizens as un-American, as subversive, as evil? We (well, I) have always taken it for granted that the blacklist was a bad thing, an evil thing, but that communism, too, is bad and evil. The blacklist was a wrongheaded way to combat what was a true threat to America. Right? At the end of his ordeal, Bernstein agreed to answer questions about his communist attachments for a studio head in Hollywood. Here is his account:
“I told him to ask his questions, and I would answer. He went down the list carefully, making notes as he went. I felt like the star guest of This Is Your Life. When we came to Yugoslavia, Marshal Tito would bound out from the wings, grinning at my amazement. The audience would applaud. The causes rolled by, bearing their load of nostalgia. How noble this one was, how misguided that one, how could this other one be both noble and misguided? How stupid I was to join this, how lucky to have been part of that! These causes were what had shaped my life, given it purpose, enriched it, impeded it, gotten me blacklisted for eight years. They belonged to a time when I had hope and belief in what they represented. Most of them had ended in defeat and some in corruption, but there were many that I still believed in, would join their equivalents again if they existed, even if they were thought subversive, even if I knew their time had not yet come.”
How like any American’s life! How like my own! I have been an evangelical Christian, a fundamentalist, a proponent of having many children, and a homeschooler in years past. “How stupid I was to join this; how lucky to have been part of that!” My political views have veered from very liberal to very conservative and back again. Walter Bernstein and his fellows, whatever their ideals, were no threat to America, any more than I am. In fact, we are a celebration of the freedom of speech and thought that makes America a wonderful place to live.