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Book review: Perlzweig: Pioneer of British Zionism

a series of interviews reveals the author's uncle

March 10, 2019 16:05
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Perlzweig: Pioneer of British Zionism by David Caute

Maurice Perlzweig was one of the great names of Jewish diplomacy during the inter-war and post-war periods. When he died in New York in 1985, a lonely, forgotten figure, police had to break into his apartment where they discovered a large number of books, newspapers, pamphlets — ephemera from the tragedies of the 20th century. Yet he had appeared on the cover of Time magazine in the early 1940s. In Perlzweig: Pioneer of British Zionism (Vallentine Mitchell, £40), his nephew, the academic and writer, David Caute, has attempted to reclaim him for today’s generation by editing a series of interviews, given by Perlzweig to Columbia University in 1981.

Perlzweig’s father was a chazan at a synagogue in Finsbury Park. He himself broke away from Orthodoxy, becoming a minister at St John’s Liberal in 1924 and then moving to Alyth Gardens Reform in 1938. A wunderkind at the universities of Cambridge and London, Perlzweig’s talents were recognised by Claude Montefiore, doyen of Liberal Judaism. Montefiore cultivated the young graduate despite Perlzweig’s passionate adherence to Zionism (at that time, the Liberal Synagogue prayer book omitted any mention of “Zion” and Montefiore was convinced of “the evil of Zionism”). As Perlzweig recalls in this book, to define yourself as a Zionist in polite circles was the equivalent of being “a believer in a flat earth”.

Perlzweig was also an early member of the Labour party, yet he was highly critical of the Fabian Sydney Webb, the Colonial Secretary in 1930 and author of the Passfield White Paper that castigated the “Zionist experiment” in Palestine.