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Scholarship, scandal and satire

Gerald Jacobs reports on the first Cliveden Literary Festival

November 7, 2017 12:25
Lord Rothschild with a copy of the Balfour Declaration
2 min read

It was quite a sight. Lined-up on a temporary rostrum in Cliveden’s “Great Hall” to discuss the Balfour Declaration of November 2, 1917 were Jacob Rothschild, Simon Sebag Montefiore, Simon Schama and Howard Jacobson, flanked by John Singer Sargent’s portrait of Nancy Astor, the house’s former chatelaine.

This was painted a decade before Balfour’s momentous missive and, recalling Nancy Astor’s unwelcoming attitude towards Jews, gave an ironic touch to the occasion.

The “declaration”, contained in a modest note from Arthur James Balfour to Walter, Lord Rothschild — a copy of which was placed on every audience member’s seat — facilitated “the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people”. The pervasive “anti-Zionism” that these days bedevils that “national home” was rousingly rebutted by the panel, as they reminded us of the continuous, centuries-old Jewish presence there.

Schama sympathetically addressed the Arab cause as well as summarising generations of antisemitism, showing how the primitive Blood Libel lived on into the 20th century, notoriously in the appalling prosecution of Mendel Beilis by the Russian state, no less, in 1913, on the usual, beyond-preposterous charge of murdering a gentile to obtain blood to make matzahs.