New York, October 14,
20003 BEHIND THE HEADLINES What's
in a name? For Clark, clues to his Jewish
heritage By Ron Kampeas WASHINGTON,
Oct. 14 (JTA) -- Wesley
Clark likes to tell his Jewish cousins how
he wondered as a little boy why his middle
name, Kanne, was so unusual -- so unlike
the middle names his buddies had in Little
Rock, Ark. When he was a little older,
Clark's mother, Veneta Updegraf,
explained that Kanne was the family name
of his biological father. Updegraf had
moved from Chicago to her native Little
Rock when Benjamin Kanne died, and
she married Victor Clark, who
adopted Wesley. But
it wasn't until 1967, when he was 23, that
Clark found out that Kanne was far more
meaningful than most middle names:
Benjamin Kanne was a Kohen, a descendant
of the ancient Jewish priestly caste. Clark was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford
that year when, one evening, his wife said
a relative had called. His cousin, Barry Kanne, recalled the
story: "His wife told him, 'You got a call
from this Molly Friedman, who says she's
your cousin. Do you have Jewish roots?' He
says, 'I wasn't aware of any, but maybe.'
" The meeting
with Friedman led to contacts with
other Jewish family members, often
initiated by Clark, who would go on to
become a four-star general and, now, a
Democratic candidate for president.
Kanne described his first encounter
with Clark, which took place about
1990. "He was in Atlanta, and he called and
said we ought to get together," said
Kanne, whose wife is active in the Atlanta
Jewish community. "We had him for dinner
in our home." Their children -- Kanne's daughter,
April, and Clark's son, Wesley Jr. -- were
studying at Georgetown University's School
of Foreign Service, and they already had
been in touch. Kanne said Clark always was interested
in the family's Jewish roots and was
intrigued by the discovery that their
grandfather, Jacob Kanne, was marked as a
Kohen on his tombstone in Chicago. It's not clear why Clark told a
startled room of yeshiva students in 1999,
"I am the oldest son of the oldest son of
the oldest son -- at least five
generations, and they're all rabbis." Clark now says that statement was the
product of "bad information." Kanne says it's hard to place the
family's origins; immigration papers list
both Minsk and Pinsk. "The guys who
filled in the forms were not precise,"
he said, repeating an oft-heard plaint
about 19th- century immigration
officials. Kanne, an executive with an
Atlanta-area telecommunications company,
has made family genealogy a mission. He
has drawn up a chart tracing Clark's
Jewish heritage as far back as 1846. Clark's closest religious adviser is a
former Navy chaplain, Rabbi Arnold
Resnicoff, according to The Associated
Press. The candidate's statements have
been strongly pro-Israel, and he supported
the Oct. 5 Israeli air strike against a
suspected terrorist camp in Syria. Clark's supporters have used his Jewish
roots to tout his candidacy. Organizers of
a $2,000-a-plate fund- raiser last month
targeting New York Jews preceded the
invitations with a mass e-mail of an
earlier JTA story about Clark's Jewish
roots. Clark denies
using his heritage for political
advantage, saying he is hardly a
Johnny-come-lately to his Jewish past. "It was well acknowledged over time,"
Clark told The Associated Press. "There
was no sudden discovery." -
Website
dossier on the origins of
anti-Semitism
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