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Not surprisingly, Einstein found solace in his work. He admitted to Hans Albert that focusing was difficult, but the attempt provided him the means<br />

to escape the painfully personal. “As long as I am able to work, I must not and will not complain, because work is the only thing that gives substance<br />

to life.” 48<br />

When he came to the office, he was “ashen with grief,” his collaborator Banesh Hoffmann noted, but he insisted on delving into their work each<br />

day. He needed it more than ever, he said. “At first his attempts to concentrate were pitiful,” Hoffmann recalled. “But he had known sorrow before<br />

and had learned that work was a precious antidote.” 49 Together they worked that month on two major papers: one that explored how the bending of<br />

light by the gravitational fields of galaxies could create “cosmic lenses” that would magnify distant stars, and another that explored the existence of<br />

gravitational waves. 50<br />

Max Born learned of Elsa’s death in a letter from Einstein in which it was mentioned almost as an afterthought in explaining why he had become<br />

less social. “I live like a bear in my cave, and really feel more at home than ever before in my eventful life,” he told his old friend. “This bearlike<br />

quality has been further enhanced by the death of my woman comrade, who was better with other people than I am.” Born later marveled at “the<br />

incidental way” in which Einstein broke the news of his wife’s death. “For all his kindness, sociability and love of humanity,” commented Born, “he<br />

was nevertheless totally detached from his environment and the human beings in it.” 51<br />

That was not entirely true. For a self-styled bear in a cave, Einstein attracted a clan wherever he went. Whether it was walking home from the<br />

Institute, puttering around 112 Mercer Street, or sharing summer cottages and Manhattan weekends with the Watters or Bucky families, Einstein<br />

was rarely alone, except when he trundled up to his study. He could keep an ironic detachment and retreat into his own reveries, but he was a true<br />

loner only in his own mind.<br />

After Elsa died, he still lived with Helen Dukas and his stepdaughter Margot, and soon thereafter his sister moved in. Maja had been living near<br />

Florence with her husband, Paul Winteler. But when Mussolini enacted laws in 1938 that withdrew resident status from all foreign Jews, Maja<br />

moved to Princeton on her own. Einstein, who loved her dearly and liked her immensely, was thrilled.<br />

Einstein also encouraged Hans Albert, now 33, to come to America, at least for a visit. Their relationship had been rocky, but Einstein had come<br />

to admire the diligence of his son’s engineering work, especially regarding the flow of rivers, a topic he had once studied himself. 52 He had also<br />

changed his mind and encouraged his son to have children, and he was now happy to have two young grandsons.<br />

In October 1937, Hans Albert arrived for a three-month stay. Einstein met him at the pier, where they posed for photographs, and Hans Albert<br />

playfully lit a long Dutch pipe he had brought his father. “My father would like me to come here with my family,” he said. “You know his wife died<br />

recently and he is all alone now.” 53<br />

During the visit, young and eager Peter Bucky offered to drive Hans Albert across America so that he could visit universities and seek positions<br />

as an engineering professor. The trip, which covered ten thousand miles, took them to Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, Iowa City, Knoxville, Vicksburg,<br />

Cleveland, Chicago, Detroit, and Indianapolis. 54 Einstein reported to Mileva Mari how much he had enjoyed being with their son. “He has such a<br />

great personality,” he wrote. “It is unfortunate that he has this wife, but what can you do if he’s happy?” 55<br />

Einstein had written Frieda a few months earlier and suggested that she not accompany her husband on the trip. 56 But with his affection for Hans<br />

Albert fully restored, Einstein urged both of them to return together the following year, with their two children, and stay in America. They did. Hans<br />

Albert found a job studying soil conservation at a U.S. Department of Agriculture extension station in Clemson, South Carolina, where he became<br />

an authority on alluvial transport by rivers. Displaying his father’s taste, he built a simple wooden house, reminiscent of that in Caputh, in nearby<br />

Greenville, where he applied for American citizenship in December 1938. 57<br />

While his father was becoming more connected to his Jewish heritage, Hans Albert became, under the influence of his wife, a Christian Scientist.<br />

The rejection of medical care, as sometimes entailed by that faith, had tragic results. A few months after their arrival, their 6-year-old son, Klaus,<br />

contracted diphtheria and died. He was buried at a tiny new cemetery in Greenville. “The deepest sorrow loving parents can experience has come<br />

upon you,” Einstein wrote in a condolence note. His relationship with his son became increasingly secure and even, at times, affectionate.<br />

During the five years that Hans Albert lived in South Carolina, before moving to Caltech and then Berkeley, Einstein would occasionally take the<br />

train down to visit. There they would discuss engineering puzzles that reminded Einstein of his days at the Swiss patent office. In the afternoon, he<br />

would sometimes wander the roads and forests, often in dreamy thought, spawning colorful anecdotes from astonished locals who helped him find<br />

his way home. 58<br />

Because he was a mental patient, Eduard was not allowed to immigrate to America. As his illness progressed, his face became bloated, his<br />

speech slow. Mari increasingly had trouble allowing him back home, so his stays in the institution became more prolonged. Her sister Zorka, who<br />

had come to help care for them, descended into her own hell. After their mother died, she became an alcoholic, accidentally burned all the family<br />

money, which had been hidden in an old stove, and died a recluse in 1938 on a straw-covered floor surrounded only by her cats. 59 Mari lived on,<br />

through it all, in increasing despair.<br />

Prewar Politics<br />

In retrospect, the rise of the Nazis created a fundamental moral challenge for America. At the time, however, this was not so clear. That was<br />

especially true in Princeton, which was a conservative town, and at its university, which harbored a surprising number of students who shared the<br />

amorphous anti-Semitic attitude found among some in their social class. A survey of incoming freshmen in 1938 produced a result that is now<br />

astonishing, and should have been back then as well: Adolf Hitler polled highest as the “greatest living person.” Albert Einstein was second. 60<br />

“Why do They Hate the Jews?” Einstein wrote in an article for the popular weekly Collier’s that year. He used the article not just to explore anti-<br />

Semitism but also to explain how the social creed inbred in most Jews, which he personally tried to live by, was part of a long and proud tradition.<br />

“The bond that has united the Jews for thousands of years and that unites them today is, above all, the democratic ideal of social justice coupled<br />

with the ideal of mutual aid and tolerance among all men.” 61<br />

His kinship with his fellow Jews, and his horror at the plight that was befalling them, plunged him into the effort for refugee relief. It was both a<br />

public and a private endeavor. He gave dozens of speeches for the cause, was feted at even more dinners, and even gave occasional violin<br />

recitals for the American Friends Service Committee or the United Jewish Appeal. One gimmick that organizers used was to have people write<br />

their checks to Einstein himself. He would then endorse them to the charity. The donor would thus have as a keepsake a cancelled check with<br />

Einstein’s autograph. 62 He also quietly backed scores of individuals who needed financial guarantees in order to emigrate, especially as the<br />

United States made it harder to get visas.<br />

Einstein also became a supporter of racial tolerance. When Marian Anderson, the black contralto, came to Princeton for a concert in 1937, the

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