Operation Texas
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Operation Texas was an alleged undercover Covert operation, operation to relocate European Jews to Texas, USA, away from Nazi Persecution of Jews#Nazism, persecution, first reported in a 1989 Doctor of Philosophy, Ph.D. Thesis, dissertation by Louis Stanislaus Gomolak at the University of Texas at Austin titled ''Prologue: LBJ's foreign-affairs background, 1908-1948''. The following are some of the key arguments of the dissertation: * In 1938, Lyndon B. Johnson, then a Congressman and later the 36th President of the United States of America, worked covertly to establish a Asylum in the United States, refuge in Texas for European Jews fleeing Nazi Germany. Johnson helped hundreds of History of the Jews in Europe, European Jews enter Texas through Cuba, Mexico and South America. * In part, Johnson was influenced in his attitude towards the Jews by the religious beliefs that his family, especially his Grandparent, grandfather (Samuel Ealy Johnson Sr.), who was a member of the Christadelphians, Christadelphian church, shared with him. Christadelphians believe that the Jews are God's Jews as a chosen people#Chosenness in the Torah, chosen people, and LBJ's grandfather once said to him, "Take care of the Jews, God’s chosen people. Consider them your friends and help them any way you can." Various details of Gomolak's dissertation have been cited by other historians. In 2008, Larry Ben David began an online campaign to collect documentation to submit to Yad Vashem, the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Jerusalem to have LBJ awarded the title of Righteous Among the Nations, often referred to as a Righteous Gentile. Additional primary research on Operation Texas was done for a 1998 ''Houston Chronicle'' article and a 2016 article on the aish.com website. More recently, many of the arguments of Gomolak's thesis have been disputed following extensive research by Claudia Wilson Anderson, an archivist at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum. Although his research materials (e.g., written interview notes, interview recordings and primary documents not located in archives) could support his arguments, Gomolak has not made them available for external review.


References

{{Lyndon B. Johnson 1938 in American politics 1938 in international relations Jews and Judaism in Texas Jewish-American history Jewish emigration from Nazi Germany Lyndon B. Johnson Religion and politics