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How we should celebrate the 200th anniversary of Balfour

The past 100 years have been historic; now for the next 100 years

November 1, 2017 11:11
Chaim Weizmann
3 min read

This week sees the 100th anniversary of the Balfour Declaration which, as I’m sure you’ll agree, is a pretty important part of Jewish, Israeli, and British history. I am humbled to be the Chairman of the ZF today, the original recipients of this eponymous document, and am proud to see how enthusiastically the community has taken to celebrating this milestone and standing up for the legacy of Zionism.

Despite the ongoing communal concerns about antisemitism in the UK, we should take a moment to acknowledge the freedom we have to conduct those celebrations.  The official Balfour Centenary Dinner, which I am also privileged to chair, will be celebrated in London on Thursday, the actual anniversary, by the Prime Ministers of both Britain and Israel. It is a pronounced illustration of widespread acceptance that this important piece of joint British and Israeli history will not go quietly into the night, but publicly and loudly recognised as a milestone.

When my ZF predecessor, Chaim Weizmann, originally decided to set in motion the train of events that would culminate in the Declaration, he could scarcely have imagined that a century later the commemoration of the letter he had procured would be so visible, his achievement recognised as so momentous.

Then again, he could scarcely have imagined any of what would happen over the next 100 years. The re-born Jewish-majority state in its ancient homeland triumphed against a multitude of enemies - and has not just survived but thrived in an otherwise inhospitable environment. Few people at the time would have credited the idea that these marginalised, scattered peoples could form a nation of their own.