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THE SCENE IS A SPELLBOUND
Mexico City in the Roaring Twenties. The characters are draft evaders,
social idealists, astrology-spouting vegetarians and artists seeking a
communal utopia. Here, fiestas rule, murals adorn the walls and measured
time is a laughable notion. The pursuit of beauty is paramounteven
the mules wear colorful serapes. Dante and Homer, popularized and
paperbacked by a progressive government, are read over coffee alongside
the morning paper.
In this bohemian setting, a young American woman reads and writes away
the days, supporting her Spanish studies at the local university by teaching
English. Her life looks idyllic. But there are complications.
Ella Goldberg Wolfe is living in exile, a fugitive from Americas
anti-Communist dragnet during the Red Scare after World War
I. One of her students is a Kremlin agent, whom she will later
provide with a false passport. A passionate partisan still in her 20s,
Wolfe eventually will rub shoulders with Trotsky in Mexico City, face
off with Stalin in Moscow and devote years to the Communist experiment,
then renounce it utterly and spend much of the rest of her life helping
chronicle its history. Along the way, she will befriend some of the 20th
centurys most colorful figures. And she will live to 103, the last
remnant of a historic upheaval and a fixture around Stanford.
Yet Ella Wolfes life has remained mostly unexamined, a footnote
to the well-documented stories of her husband and friends. Bertram Wolfe
helped write the 1919 manifesto that led to the establishment of Communist
parties in the United States. He first made a name for himself as an impassioned
advocate of the working class; laterafter the Soviet Unions
1939 pact with Nazi Germanyas the far lefts greatest critic;
and last as a historian who wrote the classic 1948 biography of Lenin,
Trotsky and Stalin, Three Who Made a Revolution. He became a senior
research fellow at the Hoover Institution in 1966.
Ella was no appendage. Born in the Ukraine in 1896, she moved with her
parents to Brooklyn around 1906; her marriage in 1917 didnt interrupt
her studies at Hunter College. While taking law courses at NYU, she worked
for socialist causes. Over the years, apart from her own political activity
and a career teaching Spanish literature in New York colleges and schools,
she helped Bertram with research and editing. After his death in 1977,
she spent 20 years organizing his papers and her own, housed in the Hoover
Archives.
Still, until she died in January 2000, Ella Wolfe was never a subject,
always a source, for biographers and historianscalled upon to shed
light on the male Communist leaders or her friend Frida Kahlo or the Red
Scare, as she did for the screenwriters of Warren Beattys Reds.
The longest reference to Ella in Bertram Wolfes autobiography,
A Life in Two Centuries (1981), which she saw through to its posthumous
publication, tells of her housewifelike service sewing money and documents
inside his coat when he feared deportation from Mexico.
But historys bit players often deserve a closer look. Hundreds of
Ella Wolfes archived letters and an oral history taped by Hoover
senior fellow Ramon Myers in 1982 offer the observations, insights and
worldview of a fascinating character. Above all, they reveal a bright,
energetic womans struggle for her own identity at a time when women
were breaking free of Victorian restraints but hadnt fully emerged
from mens shadows.
During the couples many sojourns in Mexico, Wolfe threw herself
into Party work. She recruited members; prepared reports for Jay Lovestone,
one of the American Communist Partys founders; launched an anti-imperialist
bulletin; served as a go-between for the Russian and Mexican Communists;
and wrote for the Party press and Communist newspapers in Mexico. Much
of the time she fended for herself, while Bertram traveled abroad on Party
business.
In a letter dated August 16, 1924, she wrote provocatively of her exploits
trying to locate dope on American imperialism in Mexico at
the request of Party member Scott Nearing. The only way to obtain
things here is by personal pull, she writes. The original
documents Nearing refers to are under lock and key in the Ministry of
Foreign Relations. The government will not give any permission, especially
at this time, to look at them. The only way is to make love to the man
who holds the keys. I am arranging an ambush for him. You see, I have
a pull with Señor Rafael Lopez, the Chief of the National Archives.
He has some good friends in Foreign Relations, and we shall work these
advantages for what theyre worth and watch for results.
In fact, Wolfe helped advance the anti-imperialist movement in Mexico.
At critical junctures, she often served as the diplomatic liaison between
the American and Mexican Communist parties, as well as a valued source
of inside information gleaned from her contacts.
Later, she accompanied Bertram to Moscow, where he was a delegate to the
Sixth Congress of the Communist International in 1928. After a stormy
dispute with Stalin over what he considered the American Partys
too-democratic policies, Bertram fell out with the Soviets. Two years
later, Ella quit the Party herself rather than denounce her husband as
a traitor. But the two did not renounce communist ideals until 1939. A
passage she wrote in 1924 sets forth the critical distinction: My
communism is much more of a faith, a religion if you will, than a rational
striving.
For all her organizational zeal, Wolfe didnt lose sight of the common
laborer whose plight inspired her politics. In one letter to Lovestone
from Mexico, she told of an eight-day trip to an Indian village:
I had the feeling that I had gone back four centuries. . . . You
can see the broad sombrero and a colorful serape (blanket) following
the overburdened donkeys . . . from before sunrise until late into the
night. . . . The class that suffers most are the servants, especially
in the small villages, where they work without end for two to three pesos
a monththat is from one to two dollars. They are absolutely enslaved.
And I see no hope for the Mexican revolutionsthey are struggles
for personal power. They have done nothing for the people in whose name
they are fought. Until Mexico develops industrially and lays the foundation
for a true workers organization that can struggle and fight from
the point of view of classesand not mere personalitiesI see
no hope for the Mexico Indian.
Wolfes letters to Lovestone also expressed her frustration with
the sexism of the times, displayed even by the Party and Lovestone himself.
On one occasion, he wrote of his surprise at her facility in Spanish:
To tell you the truth, I was not surprised that Bert is doing well
in his new venture. Its just like him to swallow up languages. Yet,
I did not think that you were so ravenously inclined in that direction.
However, under Berts inspiration you can do anything and everything
very well. I am not kidding about it either.
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| MEXICO CITY: The Wolfes joined an international
bohemian crowd. |
SALAD DAYS: The Wolfes kept ahead of
police during the Red Scare after World War I by moving from city
to city. |
SAN FRANCISCO: Ella sits on left. |
Her reaction was sharp. The worldeven
our radical worldseems to feel that when a woman marries she is
completely lostthat whatever charm or ability she may have had before
marriage upon marriage either disappears or is attributed to the husband.
Curiously enough I feel that my personality has remained unchanged. Influencedyes,
modified, perhaps, but at bottom the same. Do you think I am studying
because Bert wants me to? Do you think I love books because Bert reads?
Do you think my mastery of Spanish is due to Berts acquisition of
a large vocabulary of Spanish? As a matter of fact (unbelievable as it
may sound to you), everybody here says I speak Spanish better than Bert
does. And you never suspected that I had any such capacity.
Back in New York in 1928, Ella railed against the treatment of women by
the Lovestone faction of the American Communists. They are looked
upon and treated as fourth class citizens, although I consider the native
ability of most of them at least on the same level as the native ability
of some of the mediocre peacocks strutting about 14th Street. I consider
you [Lovestone] completely responsible; for you are the one who sets that
tone and mode. The women of our group . . . are given no opportunity for
growth and development. On the contrary, should they show some special
aptitude, they are squashed.
Wolfe may have been reacting to more than the sting of sexism, for some
of her correspondence with Lovestone suggested she had deeper feelings
than friendship toward this charismatic figure. She called him her dear
blond beast. She took his offhand comments as personal insults and
defended herself with disproportionate rage. But whatever feelings she
had, the letters indicate that Wolfe and Lovestone respected each others
intelligence and enjoyed verbal sparring. Like the Wolfes, Lovestone turned
against Communism, working behind the scenes with the AFL-CIO and CIA
during the Cold War.
Wolfe took it upon herself to lend a common touch to both Lovestones
and her husbands writings, which she often thought assumed too much
political and historical knowledge on the part of readers. In her interviews
with Myers, she described poring over the rough drafts of all Bertrams
books. I would say, You know, Bert, no man on the street would
understand this unless you cut this up, or whatever. And then he
would have a tantrum every time. . . . two or three days later, he would
correct it and bring it back for another reading. . . . I found that very
interesting.
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| SCENES FROM A LIFE: Hoover Institution
archivists cite Wolfe's inconsistency about dates as "part of
her charm." Ella sits second from right; Bert stands behind her. |
HANGING OUT: The couple vacations on
Cape Cod in 1941. |
IT'S A SNAP: Ella in Mexico City. |
Ella Wolfes social life was as active as
her politics. In Mexico City in the 1920s, the Wolfes became staunch members
of the bohemian crowd and grew popular for their Friday night dinner parties.
Soon the two were hiking lava-pocked mountains with the muralist Diego
Rivera, who always walked with sketchbook in tow. It was the beginning
of a lifelong friendship. In 1939, Bertrams biography Diego Rivera:
His Life and Times was published.
In her oral history, Wolfe described to Ramon Myers a telling scene at
the painters studio. Shed discovered a box of unopened letters
and offered to look at them for Rivera. Listen, Ramon, I opened
those 75 letters which had been lying there for several years. Each one
of them had a checkfor $500, $1,000, $2,000checks that people
had sent in for things theyd purchased. That was really something!
The couple also came to know Riveras second wife, the fiery Frida
Kahlo. An unlikely bond formed between Ella and the sensual, bisexual,
foul-mouthed painter, whose numerous paramours included Leon Trotsky.
Perhaps it was a shared lust for the beautiful that drew the two women
together. When each of them had a near-fatal experience, neither thought
first of her health. Que precioso [How beautiful!], cried
a hemorrhaging Kahlo after a miscarriage, as she was wheeled to a basement
operating room and saw a kaleidoscope of colored pipes above. Wolfe, recounting
a traffic accident that left her lying on the ground with 30 shards of
glass piercing her lungs, said to Myers: I looked at the sky, and
it was the most beautiful blue sky in June, and I said to myself, What
a shame to die on a day like this.
Whatever cemented their friendship, it survived the communication lapses
that mar less hardy relationships. Until Kahlos death in 1954, Wolfe
was a confidante, as Kahlos correspondence, also housed in the Hoover
Archives, shows.
Beautiful Ella, Kahlo wrote in 1934, I dont know
why I feel such a relief by telling you what is happening to me. Maybe
it is because you love me a little and so I take advantage to unload on
you a bit of the burden on my shoulders . . . . Write to me, beautiful,
and tell me what you have been doing, how you are, and when you are coming
so you can take away Chicuas bad mood. . . .
Overshadowed by her husband in politics and letters, Ella Wolfe finally
found her own place in the field of Spanish literaturea love discovered
in Mexico. She told Myers about her first visit to the Mexico City library,
where she and Bertram discovered hundreds of books and manuscripts piled
every which way behind a large Chinese screen. When they asked the librarian
about them, she replied that they had been brought to Mexico by Cortez
and his men, and the librarians simply hadnt had a chance to catalog
them yet. Wolfe was captivated by that response and by a culture
and a civilization where time has stood still. In June 1923, she
wrote Lovestone: The university courses [she was taking in Mexico]
have opened up fields of rich treasures. Her socialist compassion
for the common laborer and her love of Spanish letters came together in
her postgraduate work at Columbia University in the 1940s, when she discovered
Argentinian literature, with its heroic depiction of the peasant class.
Wolfe seemed proudest of her teaching yearsSpanish literature at
Columbia, Hunter College and New York City public schools and English
to foreign students at the citys Rand School of Social Science.
That was my province, she told Myers. I loved what I
was doing . . .[teaching] the love of excellence and truth and integrity
. . . you had a feeling that you were doing the best that you could.
Still, Ella Wolfes voluminous correspondence suggests an unfulfilled
potential. Her niece, Beth Rubino, says that Ellas pride and
joy was Bert . . . what gave her value was Berts value but
concedes things might have been different in a different era. I
tend to believe that, if he had died earlier, she would have pursued more
of her independence. It probably was fear that she as Ella Wolfe would
not have succeeded.
Indeed, when Ramon Myers asked Wolfe if there would ever be a project
to publish her papers, she seemed dumbfounded. After a moment of silence,
the 86-year-old laughed awkwardly and said, They have no importance,
really.
Jeanene Harlick
is a former Hoover Institution research assistant now writing for the
Santa Cruz (Calif.) Sentinel.
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