Today We Lost a True Hero
11/14/02
by Fern
Sidman
When the phone rang today at 7:45 a.m., I had thought it might be someone
else, but to my great sorrow I was to find out
differently. Shelley Rubin,
the wife of JDL leader Irv Rubin was on the line to tell me that Irv had
passed away during the night. I
started to tremble, visions of my memories of
Irv came flooding back. Tears, anger, regret, a whole panoply of emotions
came to the
surface. Shelley was quite naturally bereaved but holding up.
We all know that death is a part of life, however the tragic way that
Irv
Rubin's life was cut so short is one that deserves closer examination. The
question cries out: WHO MURDERED IRV RUBIN??? Irv
Rubin was the national
chairman of the Jewish Defense League, a man who had devoted his life to the
pursuit of Jewish rights, who
feared no man and confronted Jew haters of all
stripes. Since 1970, Irv's raison d'etre was to defend Jews worldwide and
indeed he
had the courage to speak the truth, despite the slings and arrows
that were shot his way by the Jewish establishment, his sworn enemies and
the
government of the United States.
On December 11, 2001 Irv Rubin and Earl Krugel were arrested by the Federal
government
on charges of conspiring to blow up the King Fahd mosque in Los
Angeles as well the office of Arab congressman, Darryl Issa. In the fascist
frenzy that followed 9/11 the government was hell-bent on proving how
even-handed they could be. After all, they were rounding up
suspected Al
Qaeda members all across the country while President Bush kept repeating to
us that this is NOT a war on Islam or Arab
Americans.
Apparently, the President came under tremendous heat from the Arab American
community to prove that they were not the
only group that was being singled
out for persecution. It didn't take long before the federal government came
up with the perfect
scapegoat. The one person they had been trying to get rid
of for years. That pesky Jewish militant out in Los Angeles, they thought,
would be the focus of their energies.
One little problem remained, however. Irv Rubin was not a criminal and did
not engage
in criminal activities. He was never convicted of a crime, never
spent any time in prison, so that one hurdle would have to be overcome by
the
FBI. They did a little homework and came up with a perfect accomplice. Some
22-year-old punk named Danny Gillis who had a rap sheet
a mile long would fit
the bill. They sent this guy in wired to Irv Rubin and long time associate
Earl Krugel, proposing the idea of
bombing an Arab mosque. Irv's voice was
only on a few of the tapes and according to his lawyers he said nothing that
could be
construed as conspiring to perform a criminal act, but nonetheless
the Feds pressed on, figuring that Rubin and Krugel would just ride on
the
coattails of the 9/11 hysteria and that anyone that was arrested by the US
government as a "terrorist" would have no problem being
convicted by a jury.
Irv and I corresponded on a regular basis during his incarceration at the
Metropolitan Detention Center in
Los Angeles. He was there because the judge
they assigned to his case took his orders from Uncle Sam and decided to
revoke Irv and
Earl's constitutional right to bail, claiming that they were
both a flight risk and a danger to the community.
Irv's letters to
me smacked of resolve to have himself vindicated in a court
of law. He knew he was innocent of the charges leveled against him and wanted
the world to see him exonerated. Yes, prison life is rough on anyone and Irv
was not a happy camper in prison, yet it is my firm and
unwavering belief
that Irv Rubin did not commit suicide in prison as the media and the FBI and
the prison authorities would have you
believe.
The authorities would have us believe that on the morning of November 4,
2002, the very morning Irv Rubin was to
appear in court, he took a disposable
razor and began slashing his throat, then hurled himself over a perch or
balcony, falling 18 feet
on to a concrete surface. Now, isn't that just a bit
interesting and coincidental.
We all know that Irv was a high profile
prisoner. We all know that a lot of
people wanted Irv Rubin dead, many of which had the same motives. When Irv's
attorneys and his
wife demanded a full and independent investigation of what
occurred that fateful day in prison, the FBI responded that they interviewed
15 witnesses who swore that Irv's injuries were self-inflicted. And who, pray
tell, did they interview?? Other inmates and prison
guards. So much for
highly credible witnesses who come complete with stellar references. Pillars
of our community, men of the highest
moral character!! Who does the FBI
think they're talking to? And to add insult on top of injury, when the
Federal Bureau of Prisons
was asked to turn over the videotapes of what
occurred, they flatly stated that no videotapes existed. Now, isn't that
interesting???
In a prison where you can't walk two feet without having
yourself filmed, suddenly they did not have video cameras or tapes, at that
particular moment when this happened.
Please know that the legacy of Irv Rubin will not be that of a man who
attempted
suicide and succeeded. Not as long as we all have a voice to speak,
a pen to write with and feet to demonstrate with.
Irv Rubin
was above all my good and close friend for over 20 years. I first
met Irv in the late 1970s when he visited New York City on JDL business.
I'll
always remember his warmth, his passion and zeal for his people, his complete
and utter devotion to JDL and his sincere and
heartfelt sensitivity to Jewish
suffering. I knew a man who did not possess any fear of his enemies and
believe me, they were quite
numerous and also very vocal. Whether they be
Nazis, skinheads, Holocaust Revisionists, the KKK, the former Soviet Union,
Arab
terrorists and even some elements of the Jewish establishment, Irv never
cowered in fear, Irv never retreated from his righteous position,
Irv stood
firm and stared his enemies in the face. That was Irv Rubin.
A man who only feared G-d and not man. A man who never
batted an eyelash
about getting in the middle of a confrontation with all sorts of white
supremacists, who never showed any ambivalence
about bringing issues before a
court of law and using the court and legal system to fight battles, a man who
was indeed a lonely voice
in the wilderness, shouting out the truth despite
vehement condemnations from the Jewish establishment. A man whose legacy will
be the
complete and total embodiment of the concept Irv held so dear to his
heart. That of Ahavat Israel. Love of the Jewish people, love of the
land of
Israel, love of the G-d of Israel.
Irv was a proud Zionist, even when Vanessa Redgrave called him a "Zionist
hoodlum". Irv was a proud Jew even when the Nazis threatened to make him in
to a lampshade. That was Irv Rubin.
And most of
all, I'll always remember the places Irv and I demonstrated for
Jewish causes together. Whether it be San Francisco in 1984, protesting
Jesse
Jackson's prominent role at the Democratic convention after he called Jews
"Hymies" and embraced Yassir Arafat or whether it be
in Teaneck, NJ
protesting a Jew hating City College professor, or whether it be in Oslo,
Norway protesting the suicidal Israeli-Arab
peace plan, Irv Rubin was there.
Today is a dark day in Jewish history. Today we lost a true Jewish hero. A
giant among men, a
larger than life figure that will remain in our hearts and
minds forever. Please G-d, Jewish history will record all the noble deeds of
Irv Rubin. If our children will ask us to describe the concept of Ahavat
Israel, if our children will ask us to describe the true
meaning of Jewish
activism, if they will ask us about the heroes of our people, we need only to
point to the living legacy of Irv
Rubin. A man who exemplified true
"intestinal fortitude" as he would say. Guts, bravery, courage, devotion and
unbounding love of his
people, his family, his friends. That was Irv Rubin.
I'll miss my good friend Irv, who always referred to me as his "other
sister". I'll miss his visits to me in Brooklyn and my visits to him in Los
Angeles. I'll miss our long and sometimes heated long
distance telephone
conversations. I'll miss his loving and caring nature, but most of all I
mourn the loss of a beloved husband and
father, and I mourn the loss for the
Jewish people, a people who has lost the last of the great Jewish warriors.
Goodbye my
friend, Irv. You are sorely, sorely missed. Until we meet again,
let's keep those two famous words on our lips, "NEVER AGAIN".
May
your precious neshoma have an aliya in Gan Eden and may your special soul
be bound for eternal life. Your friend, Fern