Grossman ought to know. It was the Red-bating of the late ‘40s and
early ‘50s that drove this Harvard grad to make a life-altering decision
and leave America behind.
“It’s the same old trick everywhere and it works so often!” the Ivy
Leaguer said, warning “It is also a main concentration point of the
fascist element.”
A prime driver of the racial/religious intolerance roiling in America
today is the FOX News cable network that employs two luminaries in the
Blame-The-Other game: Glenn Beck, the broadcast agitator and Sarah
Palin, the political hustler/presidential aspirant.
While FOX hosts and guests regularly rail about ‘threats’ facing
America from Communism, a large advertiser on FOX is Wal-Mart, America’s
largest importer of goods from China, ironically the world’s largest
Communist country.
Beck, for example, routinely bashes persons he links to the alleged
Communists and socialists he claims are undermining America. Yet, Beck
doesn’t demand boycotts of Wal-Mart, though the giant retail firm helps
prop up the Communist government of China through purchases of
Chinese-produced goods averaging over $25-billion annually.
Neither does Beck – who recently staged a large rally at the Lincoln
Memorial in Washington, DC to restore “integrity” in America – demand
that his FOX employers stop accepting millions in ad revenue from that
commie-country supporting Wal-Mart.
During the 1950’s, top U.S. politicians – spearheaded by the infamous
Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy – argued that Americans had to
surrender their constitutional rights and liberties to ensure safety
from International Communism.
History now regards McCarthy and his ideological confederates as
shameless charlatans who stoked and manipulated public fear for their
own personal political gain…a claim many have also made of the
Bush/Cheney Administration, which four decades later fanned public fears
of Islamic terrorism for political gain.
McCarthy’s onslaughts ruined the innocent lives of thousands of
Americans, just as Bush-era political and legal attacks on alleged
terrorists or terrorist supporters have ruined innocent lives.
Earlier this year, ideological descendants of McCarthy on the Texas
School Board rammed through approval of public school curriculum changes
in that state so that the history taught to Texas schoolchildren now
claims that McCarthy was justified in his 1950s search for Communist
infiltration in America society – a gross rewriting of history that
academically abets intolerance.
The anti-Communist onslaught unleashed during the early 1950’s
ensnared Grossman, then a U.S. soldier stationed in Germany, driving him
to fateful decision that ultimately left him a man alienated from his
homeland for decades.
While many of Grossman’s Harvard classmates in the late 1940’s sought
elevation into the elite circles of power, he opted to find work in the
steel mills of Buffalo, NY, helping to organize workers there.
Grossman’s social-change activism before, during and after Harvard
included fights against American and European racism where allies often
included Communist groups.
Grossman, for example, worked against the U.S. government persecution of legendary black activist/actor/singer Paul Robeson.
American authorities had mounted an intense campaign to silence
Robeson, a Columbia Law School grad, fearful of his attacks on the
nation’s prevailing apartheid system. After first getting him
blacklisted from radio and from public performing venues in the US, the
government then revoked Robeson’s passport, blocking his ability to earn
income from performing in foreign countries, too. (A successful lawsuit
filed by Robeson to restore his passport ultimately strengthened the
passport and citizenship rights of all Americans.)
Grossman, drafted in 1951 during the Korean War, had to sign a
loyalty oath in which he denied belonging to any Communist-linked groups
before entering the Army.

Although the First Amendment grants Americans freedom of association
during the McCarthy era, and although membership in the Communist Party,
or association with the Party was not illegal, any association with
Communism became the basis for public ridicule, blacklisting and/or
economic ruin.
Senator Joe McCarthy
Army superiors discovered Grossman’s loyalty oath falsification in 1952 while he was stationed in Germany.
“I feared they would put me in jail for five years. This was the McCarthy-era. I went AWOL,” Grossman said.
Fearing imprisonment, Grossman fled the U.S. Army, swimming across
the Danube River, where he surrendered to the Soviet Army and eventually
came to live in East Germany, then known as the German Democratic
Republic (GDR).
Grossman married a German woman and they raised a family in what was then East Berlin.
Much of the time Grossman worked as a journalist, writing about the
US but also taking advantage of his special status as an American
defector to occasionally issue constructive criticism about the GDR.
“I tried to dispel a lot of the anti-U.S. propaganda. The U.S. is
certainly not heaven on earth but it’s not hell on earth either,” said
Grossman, who was and remains critical of the “awful” news media
coverage in the GDR and the United States.
Last year, in an article Grossman wrote assessing the 20th
Anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, he (apologizing for possibly
sounding like “the grouchy Grinch”) wondered why Anniversary-related
media accounts “never mentioned” that the GDR had no unemployment and
had free medical care.
Unemployment in Germany today exceeds seven percent and in sections
of the old GDR “unemployment can exceed 20%” according to the CIA’s
World Fact Book. Germany is the world’s fourth largest economy but its
unemployment rate exceeds that of third-place Japan (five percent) and
second-place China (4.3 percent) while besting the U.S. rate of 9.7
percent.
In the GDR “there were no homeless people. Today we have homelessness
in Berlin,” said Grossman, whose monthly rent for his Berlin apartment
soared from $113 to over $900 per month since the 1990 reunification.
Grossman’s 2009 article faulted media coverage for failing to note
the GDR’s anti-fascist foundation compared to “former Nazis” infused
into all layers of then West Germany from academia to courts, the
diplomatic corps, the military and police. His article did not
sugar-coat the GDR’s “many weaknesses” including its “stuffy,
intolerant” atmosphere.
The three main neo-Nazi parties in Germany today “have almost totally
consolidated into one, the National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD)
which has loose ties to the Freie Kameradschaften, which are basically
organizations of goon squads although they too try to present a better
public image,” said Grossman, who writes often about Neo-Nazi activities
in Germany.
The current Great Recession, spawned by greedy corporate and
financial industry excesses of the last two decades, has poured gas on
the flames of simmering animosity against immigrants in America and
Europe, Grossman said.
“In almost all European countries, just as in the USA, [immigrants]
have been attacked by the mass media in an all-too-often successful
attempt to split working people and increase hatred and to blame the
non-locals for economic troubles,” Grossman noted.
In Germany, Grossman said, a poor economy has fuelled intolerance
against Turks, Arabs, Afghanis and Africans, while in Italy intolerance
is directed against East Africans, Albanians and Rumanians. The targets
of hate are Central Asians in Russia, Moroccans in the Netherlands and
Gypsies in Hungary…”and of course Latinos and, as always, blacks in the
USA.”
Another parallel between America and Germany in Grossman’s view is
increasingly “rough-and-tough police and military measures” employed
against protestors’, particularly those deemed left-wing.
“The powers that be fear growing protests…So their methods are
tighter surveillance, control and when possible diversion against
minorities. This is important because all the economic woes of the
crisis are being loaded onto the weakest and poorest.”
Grossman didn’t return to the US until 1994, when he surrendered to
military authorities and received a general discharge – but no jail
time.
In 2003, the University of Massachusetts Press published Grossman’s
autobiography, “Crossing the River: A Memoir of the American Left, the
Cold War, and Life in East Germany.”
Living in the GDR, Grossman said, “I missed a lot of good fights like
the Civil Rights Movement and the anti-war movement during Vietnam.”