Reuben H. Markham

Reuben Henry Markham (February 21, 1887 - December 29, 1949) was a journalist for the Christian Science Monitor who wrote numerous books, including The Wave of the Past, which urged American intervention in World War II. After the war he published four works dealing with the Soviet takeover of Eastern Europe.

Reuben H. Markham
Reuben Markham in 1943
Born(1887-02-21)February 21, 1887
DiedDecember 29, 1949(1949-12-29) (aged 62)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationJournalist, author
Notable work
The Wave of the Past

Early Life

Reuben Markham was born on a farm in Smith County, Kansas on February 21, 1887. His grandfather, Reuben Fuller Markham, and his father, Lucius Markham, were both Congregational ministers. At 14, Reuben was sent to Washburn Academy in Topeka, where he also attended Washburn College, graduating in 1908, as valedictorian. The following year, he married Mary Gall, who had been the class salutatorian. Matriculating at Union Theological Seminary, Mr. Markham also received an M.A. in education from Columbia University. In 1912, Reuben too was ordained as a minister in the Congregational church.

Years in Bulgaria

That same year, Mr. and Mrs. Markham volunteered as missionary-educators for the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions in Samokov, Bulgaria, where the Board operated Western style Boys and Girls boarding schools on the same campus. Their three children, Eleonora, Helen and Jordan were born in Samokov.

In 1918, the Markhams returned to America across war-torn Europe,[2] in part to support the Congregational church's position that America not declare war on Bulgaria. Representing the American Board, Markham testified in front of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, which decided to recommend American neutrality towards Bulgaria.[3]

After completing his testimony, he joined a government sponsored YMCA mission to provide agricultural expertise to Russia, but was turned back in Murmansk in 1918 by the revolutionary Soviet government.[4] In order to finish the year of YMCA work, he assisted Russian prisoners of war in France.

Mr. Markham returned to Bulgaria in 1920, where in addition to his teaching, he began to edit the Mission’s publications, using them to criticize the Bulgarian regime’s treatment of workers and peasants after a military coup in 1923. He “was forced to resign (from the Mission) in 1925… as a result of his outspoken opposition to official persecution of the peasants."[5] Markham then started his own Bulgarian language newspaper, Svet, before it too was forced by the regime to shut down.[6]

Foreign Correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor

From 1927 until his death in 1949, Reuben Markham worked primarily as a journalist for the Christian Science Monitor. After joining the Monitor's staff in 1927,[7] he soon became correspondent for the Balkans. In 1931, he self-published Meet Bulgaria,[8] describing Bulgarian history, economics and culture.

In 1933, the Markhams moved from Sofia to Vienna, where Reuben became Central European correspondent. Here he was given several broader assignments as well. In 1935, he was sent to Ethiopia to cover the lead up to the Italian invasion. [9] The following year, he travelled to the Holy Land, where he combined stories on current conditions with Biblical events. He turned this work into the Bulgarian language book, “The Cradle of Humanity, Past and Present."[10] In 1938, Markham covered the Anschluss from Vienna, but afterwards moved his Monitor headquarters to Budapest.

Returning to the United States in June, 1939 for a lecture tour and a series of articles for the Monitor entitled “Rediscovering America,” the Markhams were caught by the outbreak of World War II and stayed in the country. For the next three years, he carried out assignments of feature articles about America, such as “Mr. Markham Goes to Washington,” and “Mr. Markham Polls the People.”[11]

World War II

In March, 1941, Reuben Markham weighed in on ‘the Great Debate’[12] over America’s entry into World War II, when he published The Wave of the Past,[13] his rebuttal to Anne Morrow Lindbergh’s no. 1, non-fiction, best seller The Wave of the Future. She called her book “a moral argument for isolationism."[14] In contrast, Markham argued that isolationism would lead to the loss of American freedom.[15] "In this issue, there are only two sides. No neutral course remains...he either opposes the onslaught of Hitlerism or supports it. If he makes no choice, that is a choice; if he takes no action, he is on Hitler's side; if he does not act, that is an act--for Hitler.... To prevent that will be our first step. Whatever it may cost, we shall take it."[16]

The Wave of the Past sold 70,000 copies in its first four months, making it too a best seller.[17] There were a total of 223,000 copies printed,[18][19] and it was mentioned by Eleanor Roosevelt in her daily column, My Day. "Another small book by an American who originally came from Kansas but has lived for many years in the Balkans is apparently inspired by Anne Lindbergh’s book, ‘The Wave of the Future.’ Mr. R.H. Markham writes ‘The Wave of the Past’ and insists ‘The past has its mark and the future has its mark. The one is slavery and the other is freedom.’ I think you will find both of these books of interest."(April 18, 1941)[20]

The Wave of the Past also states that "tyrants become world masters only when...men call...tyranny freedom."[21] Explaining how dictatorships distort reality by juxtaposing opposites, Markham wrote in an article at this time in the Monitor that “the multitudes are told that chains give freedom, that slavery is liberty, that war is peace, that the black resurging past is the future.”[22] These concepts and phrasing anticipate the Ministry of Truth's slogans: "WAR IS PEACE, SLAVERY IS FREEDOM, IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH" in George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four.[23]

Once the United States entered the war, Reuben Markham was able to participate in the national effort by joining the Office of War Information (OWI) as the Deputy Director for the Balkans. In February, 1944, he returned to Europe, spending much of his time at a listening station in Bari, Italy. There he saw a great deal of the Partisan movement led by Communist Joseph Tito, and came to think it would install a dictatorial regime if it were to come to power. He wrote: “I spent many months among Yugoslav partisans and saw Commissars exercise the absolute power of gauleiters.”[24]

As a result, "he was one of the first to perceive what was happening in Eastern Europe in 1944."[25] When British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Franklin D. Roosevelt threw their support to Tito, Markham believed it meant that the post-war Yugoslavia would become Communist, as might all of southeastern Europe.[26]

Unwilling to support this policy, Markham resigned from the government in October, 1944. The Director of OWI, Elmer Davis, explained, “Eventually, he came to the conclusion that American policy in dealing with the Balkan countries—the support of all elements, including the Communists, that were resisting the Germans—was mistaken....The event proved that the policy which was followed led to precisely the unfortunate results which he foresaw.”[27]

The Cold War

In 1945, after the war ended, the Monitor posted Markham to Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania where he wrote about Communist activities in Central and Southeastern Europe. The White House had also wanted to get him back into Eastern Europe, and once there, in addition to his journalism, he was able to send his findings directly to the President[28] through the State Department's Mission in Sofia, Bulgaria, reporting that "the majority of Bulgaria considers itself in totalitarian prison."[29] In June, 1946, he was expelled from Romania and denied entrance to other Communist controlled nations.[30] Shortly thereafter, on August 7, Markham met directly with President Truman at the White House.[31]

Markham was known for “his outspoken stand against communism,”[32] writing and lecturing to warn the United States of the dangers of totalitarian Communist rule.[33] He completed his book on Yugoslavia, Tito’s Imperial Communism, in 1947.[34] Writing about Yugoslavia was challenging, not only over the question of whether or not to support Tito, but also because of Yugoslavia's ethnic animosities, which exploded in the 1990s. Markham himself wrote, "Practically every point treated in this book is controversial...."[35] In its announcement of its publication, the University of North Carolina Press stated that this "book presents more fully than ever before the Serb point of view...." [36]

A second work describing events in Eastern Europe, Rumania Under the Soviet Yoke came out in 1949. The New York Times wrote that Reuben Markham's volume “presents the facts of Soviet Communism in Rumania in stirring and human terms.…By writing about one country (of Eastern Europe) in detail and with understanding, Markham has written about them all.”[37] In 1949, Markham also self published a pamphlet entitled Let Us Protestants Awake! that criticized Protestant church leaders who lent their support to Communist-led regimes in Europe.[38]

In May, 1949, Markham returned to government service on “the urgent insistence of Washington,”[39] in the newly created Central Intelligence Agency.[40][41] His primary responsibility was to edit a “series of pamphlets on the influence of Communism on the different phases of life in Eastern and Southeastern Europe.”[42] He met frequently with Eastern European exiles, collecting information on the most recent Communist activity in their countries. The day before he suffered his heart attack he completed editing “Communists Crush Churches in Eastern Europe,” the first in his projected series of booklets.

After his death on December 29, 1949, the Christian Science Monitor published an editorial about Reuben Markham entitled “Friend of Humanity" saying: “Moscow understood how devastatingly its pretended regard for the ‘little man,’ its ideological abstractions and its massive brutality were shown up by this humanitarian scholar’s genuine love of liberty and of his fellow men.”[43]

Legacy

Markham was "noted as a writer, lecturer, and author," according to the New York Times,[44] and for opposing dictatorships from his days in Bulgaria in the 1920s, to Nazi Germany, to the Soviet Union after World War II.[45] He had decades of experience in the Balkans[46] and used his pen to bring attention to these countries as they fell under Communist rule. Erwin Canham, the Monitor's longest serving editor, wrote that Markham’s “work stands almost alone in American journalism for its simplicity, integrity, and direct, personal knowledge."[47]

Publications

  • Bulgaria Today and Tomorrow, 1926
  • Meet Bulgaria, 1931
  • The Cradle of Humanity, Past and Present, 1937
  • The Wave of the Past, 1941
  • Tito's Imperial Communism, 1947
  • Let Us Protestants Awake!, 1949
  • Rumania Under the Soviet Yoke, 1949
  • Communists Crush Churches in Eastern Europe, 1950

Awards

  • Distinguished Service Award, Washburn University Alumni Association, 1949[48]

References

  1. "Reuben Henry Markham". Find a grave. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  2. "Kansans Who Have Spent Last Six Years in Bulgaria". Topeka Daily Capital. April 25, 1918.
  3. Hall, William (1938). Puritans in the Balkans. Sofia: Studia Historico-Philologica Serdicensia. p. 262.
  4. Copeland, Jeffrey (2018). The YMCA at War. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 110.
  5. "Obituary". New York Times. December 31, 1949.
  6. Canham, Erwin (1958). The Commitment to Freedom. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. p. 346.
  7. Canham, Erwin (1958). The Commitment to Freedom. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. p. 346.
  8. Markham, Reuben (1931). Meet Bulgaria. Sofia, Bulgaria: The Author.
  9. "Two Mules and Saddles". Mary Baker Eddy Library. March 2017. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
  10. Markham, Reuben (1937). Past and Present: Cradle of Humanity. Sofia: Author.
  11. Canham, Erwin (1958). The Commitment to Freedom. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. p. 347.
  12. "The Great Debate". National WWII Museum. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
  13. Markham, Reuben (1941). The Wave of the Past. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press.
  14. Olson, Lynne (2013). Those Angry Days. New York: Random House. p. xvi, 243, 245.
  15. Singal, Daniel. From Victorian to Modernist Thought in the South, 1919-1945. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. p. 295.
  16. Markham, Reuben (1941). The Wave of the Past. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. p. 54,55.
  17. Singal, Daniel. From Victorian to Modernist Thought in the South, 1919-1945. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. p. 295.
  18. Markham, Reuben (1941). The Wave of the Past (Third Printing ed.). Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.
  19. "Press Sells 100,000 Copies of Markham Book". The Chapel Hill Weekly. April 11, 1941.
  20. Roosevelt, Eleanor. "My Day". The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Digital Edition. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  21. Markham, Reuben (1941). The Wave of the Past. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 7.
  22. Markham, Reuben (March 1, 1941). "The World Looks to America". The Christian Science Monitor.
  23. Orwell, George (1949). Nineteen Eighty-Four. p. 4.
  24. Markham, Reuben (July 21, 1945). "The Night Swallowed Them Up". The New Leader.
  25. Page, John (Fall 1962). "Never a Neutralist in the Struggle Between Imperfect Right and Absolute Wrong". American Bulgarian Review. XII (2): 25.
  26. Markham, Reuben (1949). Rumania Under the Soviet Yoke. Boston: Meador Publishing Co. p. 174, 175.
  27. Canham, Erwin (1958). Commitment to Freedom. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. p. 347.
  28. "Obituary". Washington Post. December 31, 1949.
  29. "Foreign Relations of the United States, Diplomatic Papers". Office of the Historian State Department. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
  30. "Obituary". New York Herald Tribune. December 31, 1949.
  31. "Daily Appointments, August 7, 1946". Harry S. Truman Library & Museum. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  32. "Obituary". Washington Star. December 31, 1949.
  33. Lehrman, Hal (Spring 1962). "Markham Honored as Educator, Journalist and Public Figure". American Bulgarian Review. XII (1): 22.
  34. Markham, Reuben (1947). Tito's Imperial Communism. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press.
  35. Markham, Reuben (1947). Tito's Imperial Communism. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. preface, vii.
  36. University of North Carolina Press. Summer Releases, 1947
  37. Ebon, Martin (May 1, 1949). "The Rumanians and Soviet Policy: Rumania Under the Soviet Yoke". New York Times.
  38. Markham, Reuben (1949). Let Us Protestants Awake!. 18 Fairfield St., Boston 16, Mass.: Author.CS1 maint: location (link)
  39. Lehrman, Hal (Spring 1962). "Markham Honored as Educator, Journalist and Public Figure". American Bulgarian Review. XII (1): 22.
  40. Lulushi, Albert (2014). Operation Valuable Fiend. Arcade Publishing Co. p. Chapter 4.
  41. "Memorandum, Oct. 4, 1949" (PDF). BGFIEND OPERATIONS. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  42. Markham, Reuben (1950). Communists Crush Churches in Eastern Europe. Boston: Meador Publishing Co. p. Back Cover.
  43. "Editorial". The Christian Science Monitor. December 31, 1949.
  44. "Obituary". New York Times (December 31, 1949).
  45. Page, John (Fall 1962). "Never a Neutralist in the Struggle Between Imperfect Right and Absolute Wrong". American Bulgarian Review. XII (2): 25.
  46. Barrett, Edward (Spring 1962). "RHM Could Have No Boss, But His Own Conscience". American Bulgarian Review. XII (1): 24.
  47. Canham, Erwin (1958). The Commitment to Freedom. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. p. 349–350.
  48. "Past Alumni Award Honorees". Washburn University Alumni Association. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
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