![]() |
| Flynn and Rush as Einstein, young and old |
Not so long ago, if you asked anyone in the
world to name a famous scientist, he or she would respond with a single person:
Albert Einstein. The physicist who developed the theory of general relativity
(captured by a simple equation—E=MC²) was well known and loved in his later
years as much for his gentle humor and his pacifist philosophy as for his groundbreaking
theories. In fact, he was so well known his name had become synonymous with
genius.
Of course, overturning the accepted Newtonian
laws of gravity and physics as Einstein did earned him nothing but enmity in
the beginning. Acceptance came much slower than we’d like to believe. The conservative
academic world condemned him at first, especially because there was no
experimental way to prove his theory (at least until astronomers observing the
effect of gravity on light during a solar eclipse provided the needed observations).
Worse, a determined number of his German
colleagues worked hard to deny his theories based solely on a single aspect of
his character: the fact that he was Jewish. Led by one man in particular,
physicist Philipp Lenar (who later headed the Nazi physics program), this group
denied Einstein the Nobel prize for his work year after year, carrying out a publishing
war throughout the 1920s and early 1930s to discredit Einstein’s theories.
All of this has been part of the fascinating
story told in the National Geographic channel’s GENIUS series, just wrapping up
now. The series stars Johnny Flynn as the scientist as a struggling young man
and Geoffrey Rush as the more familiar figure with the wild hair and eccentric
habits.
Those of us who are science geeks may know
parts of this story—that the young genius did poorly in school and was denied a
teaching position at universities in Berlin or Zurich (both places in which he’d
studied); that he was forced to take a position as a patents clerk to support
his family. What I didn’t know about was the tragedy of his early marriage to a
brilliant, but unstable fellow student, his dalliances with other women, and
the fact that he came up with his major theories (of photo-electrics, molecular
motion and relativity) before age 23 and spent the rest of his life trying to
expand them to create a unified field theory of physics.
The most recent episode, set in turbulent
pre-Nazi Germany, struck close to home. The Nazi Party, not yet in power but
growing in strength, was making life difficult for Jews in all walks of life,
but particularly at the higher levels of academia, business and professional
circles. After Einstein himself was attacked on the street by armed “brownshirts,”
he made the difficult decision to emigrate to the United States.
But though he had a longstanding job offer
from Princeton University, the process of entering the U.S.was not easy. He was
called into an interview with American Consul General Raymond Geist at the U.S. Embassy, on
orders of Director J. Edgar Hoover. Hoover wanted to know if Einstein was a
member of the Communist Party. Or a Socialist. Or a Zionist. Or had any of the
people who had attended his lectures belonged to these organizations.
At first Einstein was angry and defiant. But
his wife, Elsa, was a calming influence. And, gradually, he began to connect
with his interviewer. Geist was basically a decent man, someone who joined the U.S. government in the first place “to be of service.” The scientist, a man of conscience,
helped the agent see that in order to be of service, he must help innocent
people escape a truly horrific situation—the oncoming Nazi holocaust.
Despite Geist’s positive recommendation, Hoover
was determined to keep Einstein out of America due to his reputation as an
advocate for the Jewish cause. He denied the scientist’s visa application. But “somehow”
the U.S. press got wind of Einstein’s plight, and the public forced the
government to reverse the decision. (Geist, it turns out, had a permanent
change of heart. A note at the end of the episode indicated that he personally
was responsible for approving 50,000 applications for visas from beleaguered
German Jews, saving them from the gas chambers.)
I could only wonder what might happen if a Muslim
man of Einstein’s genius were to apply for a U.S. visa today from Syria or
Iraq. Would there be a Raymond Geist to help him? And would that man be there
for his new country later in an hour of desperate need, as Einstein was at the
Manhattan Project?
We think of Albert Einstein as our own
beloved scientist. But in truth we adopted him, just as we have adopted so many
others who have enriched this country and the world.
Cheers, Donna
