Moe Berg
(1902 - 1972)
Moe Bergs life proves the adage that "truth
is often stranger than fiction." One of the best educated, intellectually
accomplished and patriotic Jewish athletes in the history of American
sports, Berg got his start in baseball in 1906, at the age of four,
playing catch with the beat policeman in front of his fathers
Newark, NJ, pharmacy. Berg became an excellent linguist while an undergraduate
student at Princeton University, where he studied Latin, Greek, French,
Spanish, Italian, German and Sanskrit. He began his career as a spy
on a hospital roof in Japan (more about that later).
After graduating from high school at the top of his class, Moe went
to Princeton, an unusual accomplishment for a poor Jewish boy in the
1920s. He became the star shortstop of the college baseball team, graduated
magna cum laude and was offered a teaching post in Princetons
Department of Romance Languages. Wanting to study experimental phonetics
at the Sorbonne but unable to afford graduate study overseas, Berg accepted
a contract to play shortstop for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Moes hitting
was below par and he was sent to the minors after the 1924 season. It
was Moe who inspired a professional scout to coin the immortal baseball
phrase, "Good field, no hit." One teammate said, "Moe,
I dont care how many of them college degrees you got, they aint
learned you to hit that curve ball no better than the rest of us."
Berg returned to the majors in 1926 with the Chicago
White Sox. At the same time, he attended Columbia Law School. Despite
his hectic schedule, the brilliant Berg managed to finish second in
his class at Columbia. That year, the White Sox asked him to play catcher,
a position that took advantage of his strong arm and intelligence. Casey
Stengel compared Bergs defensive skills to the immortal Bill Dickey.
Moe hit .287 in 1929 and received votes for Most Valuable Player but
in 1930 he seriously injured his knee, ending his career as a full-time
player. He played as a reserve for three more teams until he retired
in 1939.
In 1934, Berg toured Japan with a group of major league all-stars,
including Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. Still respected as a linguist, Moe
was invited to lecture at Meiji University, where he delivered an eloquent
speech in Japanese. Apparently, before the trip, the U.S. government
had recruited Berg as a spy. While at a Tokyo hospital ostensibly visiting
an American mother who had just given birth, he sneaked onto the roof
and took photos of the city. Pilots reportedly later used the photos
during bombing raids in World War II.
As a Jew wanting to fight Nazism,
Berg volunteered to serve when America entered the war
in 1941. He was asked to become a Goodwill Ambassador
to Latin America. Before he left on his ambassadorial
mission, Berg made a radio broadcast to the Japanese
people over the radio in which, to quote his biographers
Harold and Meir Ribalow, "In fluent Japanese, he
pleaded at length, as a friend of the Japanese
people, for the Japanese to avoid a war you
cannot win." The Ribalows report, "Bergs
address was so effective that several Japanese confirmed
afterwards they had wept while listening."
After his stint in Latin America, Moe returned to the U.S. to work
for the Office of Strategic Services, forerunner to the Central Intelligence
Agency. He parachuted into Yugoslavia and, after meeting Tito, suggested
that the U.S. back him rather than his Serbian rival. Despite the fact
that he was not a scientist, Berg was next assigned to help determine
how close Germany was to developing an atomic bomb. In a few weeks studying
textbooks, Berg taught himself a great deal about nuclear physics. Traveling
through Europe, Berg discovered that a factory in Norway was producing
an atomic bomb component for the Nazis and Allied planes bombed it.
Berg then learned that the Nazis had an atomic research center at Duisberg,
Germany, and it too was bombed.
Incognito, Berg managed to lure the leading German atomic physicist,
Werner Heisenberg, to Switzerland to give a lecture on quantum theory.
At a dinner afterwards, Berg heard Heisenberg imply that Germany was
behind the U.S. in bomb development. President Roosevelt greeted Bergs
report warmly. At great risk as a Jew, Berg spent parts of 1944 and
1945 in Germany, helping arrange for the capture of several prominent
German atomic scientists by U.S. troops before the Russians got them.
At wars end, Berg was offered the Medal of Merit, the highest
award given to civilian in the war effort, but he modestly declined
it. Moe lived out a quiet life in Newark, where he died at age 70.
Some of Bergs friends felt he
squandered what could have been a brilliant career in
law or academics to play baseball. His brother observed
that "all [baseball] ever did was make him happy."
His teammate Ted Lyons said, "A lot of people tried
to tell him what to do with his life and brain and he
retreated from this . . . He was different because he
was different. He made up for all the bores of the world.
And he did it softly, stepping on no one."
Sources: American
Jewish Historical Society
Photo: THE OSS IN ITALY 1942-1945. A Personal Memoir. MAX CORVO. 1990 Praeger. The picture has the caption Moe Berg, sent by Donovan on a special scientific mission, standing at Piazza del Palio in Siena on the day the city fell to Algerian Goumiers, June 2, 1944. |