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Oliver Kamm

ByOliver Kamm, Oliver Kamm

Opinion

Chesterton defence that doesn't stand up

October 10, 2013 13:53
2 min read

Antisemitism is an evil, not a writerly idiosyncrasy. That’s a mere truism. It needs to be stated, however, because the Catholic Church is examining the case for canonising G K Chesterton, author of the Father Brown detective stories.

I argued on this page last month that Chesterton, a Catholic convert and prolific Christian apologist, was an unsuitable candidate for sainthood. His writings express hoary prejudices about the Jews’ purportedly alien character.

Since then, Geoffrey Alderman in this newspaper and a JC leading article have also condemned the notion of canonising Chesterton. Even so, as my colleague Ruth Gledhill has since reported in The Times, the Bishop of Northampton, the Right Rev Peter Doyle, has appointed a priest, Canon John Udris, to assess the facts relevant to opening a “cause” for Chesterton.

I can give Canon Udris one fact that disposes of a pillar of the case argued by Chesterton’s supporters. The American Chesterton Society, among many other advocates of the cause, vigorously maintains that the Wiener Library in London, the invaluable archive on the Holocaust, has exonerated Chesterton from the charge of antisemitism. You will find the same assertion in the Wikipedia page about Chesterton.