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Seeking Justice . . . Via Theater

Edward Bernstein is an engaging fellow: verbal, appealing, nice. And a lawyer. Retired. He quit work at age 62. “I wanted to play tennis.” Fourteen years ago. “I enjoyed being a lawyer very much. I made money at it, too.” Enough money to quit Central Park West and settle in Lenox. “But I retired earlier than I should,” he says. “I need to use my brain.” So he wrote a play, “The Trial of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.” We are sitting at an outside table in Jenifer Commons in Great Barrington where Aglet Theatre Company was rehearsing “Trial” last week. It’s a play about the consequences of politicians’ decisions. It’s a play about people called U-boats, German Jews, generally, who drifted in 1939, homeless, alone, sleeping under bridges and walking city streets, avoiding the notice of Nazis. It’s about “catchers,” usually their acquaintances, sometimes Jews themselves, who turned the U-boats in to the authorities. It’s a play about leaders among the Allies protecting, in the main, their own hides. It’s a play about Heaven and Hell. And about judgment. A few years ago Bernstein read a novel about this period and these events and concluded that FDR should be prosecuted for crimes against humanity. So Bernstein went ahead and conducted a prosecution of his own. As theater. “It is my view of the evidence,” Bernstein says. In the main, it is about Mandel, whose wife died because Roosevelt would not grant a shipful of European Jews on the German transatlantic liner St. Louis safe haven in the United States. Four neutral countries — Holland, Belgium, France and England, finally admitted them. But these desperate people were back in Europe and many of them died there. Like Mandel’s wife, in Buchenwald. So Mandel questions Roosevelt in Heaven’s court. Roosevelt, nearing reelection at the time, had figured “No country wanted to be flooded by Jews.” And so, Mandel argues, Roosevelt condemned his wife to death. The play started out as a one-act trial with clips from Edward R. Murrow’s reporting on Buchenwald and a cast of 30 characters. No one will produce a play with 30 people, writer/actor Andrew Joffe told Bernstein. And no one wants a research project on stage. So with advice from Joffe and from Nicki Wilson, founder of the New Stage Performing Arts Center in Pittsfield, he rewrote it as a two-act play. With 7 or 8 actors. “It had to be what happened to people,” Bernstein told me. And it is. “The Trial of Franklin Delano Roosevelt” runs Thursdays through Sundays, Sept.1-18, at the New Stage Performing Arts Center, 55 North St.For tickets, call 413-418-0999.

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