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Why in the Middle East, a cartoon can be worth a thousands words

This visual guide to the Arab-Israeli conflict between 1917 and 1949 is enthralling

December 12, 2024 13:02
Sidney Strube, Daily Express, 20 June 1938
Visual aid: Sidney Strube, Daily Express cartoon, 20 June 1938
2 min read
Drawn to the Promised Land: A Cartoon History of Britain, Palestine and the Jews: 1917-1949
By Tim Benson
Halban Publishers, £14.99

The Israel-Palestine conflict has never been much of a laughing matter, and particularly since October 7 last year. So you might think a cartoon history charting the four decades of the British Mandate leading up to the birth of Israel in 1948 would not be a very inviting prospect.

You couldn’t be more wrong. Dr Tim Benson, a leading authority on political cartoons, has trawled the world’s archives to come up with this superbly researched book, the latest production from Peter and Martine Halban, who have contributed so much to Jewish publishing over almost four decades. The result is an enthralling collection which provides a fascinating visual guide to the shifting public perceptions of the Arab-Israeli conflict between 1917, when the Mandate was established, to 1949, with Israel still somewhat shakily established as a sovereign state.

Take the capture of Jerusalem by General Allenby in 1917, for instance, which provoked a euphoric reaction, with several cartoonists comparing the historic victory with those of the Crusades (as indeed did Allenby).