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Opinion

George, the greatest Zionist of his generation

January 21, 2016 14:20
Honoured by Prince Charles in 2011
2 min read

George, Lord Weidenfeld of Chelsea, was the greatest Zionist and British Jew of his generation. Anglo-Jewry benefited immeasurably by his support for our causes and his links with everyone who counted in politics, in the cultural world, in Europe and in Israel. He unashamedly used those links to further the projects he was devoted to, whether they were the raising of funds for Oxford, scholarships for international students, chairs in Israel Studies, the rescuing of Syrian refugees, the commissioning of new books for his outstanding firm Weidenfeld & Nicolson, opera and art. Failure did not enter his vocabulary.

To be invited to dinner in his Chelsea flat was not only a sign that one had arrived, but was also a valuable networking occasion - one had to sing for one's supper by participating in formal discussions around the table with a visiting statesman about the international topic of the day. These occasions usually ended with plans for a new project.

It is difficult to single out his most remarkable achievement. Perhaps it was as political adviser to Weizmann from the outset of the establishment of Israel. Maybe it was the transformation from penniless refugee in 1938 to journalist, publisher and member of society within 10 years. Or the dialogue he fostered between Germany and other European nations at meetings he organised: at a time when Germany was hardly regarded as respectable in European society he removed the stigma from interaction with the state, especially Jewish interaction.

There is also a claim for his fostering of new ventures in universities here and in Israel. My own college, St Anne's, is the home of his Visiting Professorship in Comparative European Literature (which brought Steiner, Gordimer and Eco to Oxford) and of the Oxford Professor of Israel Studies.