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The forgotten Tory MP praised by Weizmann as a ‘precious friend’

Victor Cazelet was hailed by the Jewish leader for his embrace of Zionism and warnings of the dangers posed by Nazi regime

January 28, 2022 15:29
Victor Cazalet
5 min read

In August 1933, a young Conservative MP, Victor Cazalet, paid a visit with friends to Nazi Germany. 

A rising Tory star, he asked to visit the recently opened Dachau concentration camp. “Great fun. I visit the ‘concentration camp’,” Cazalet recorded in his diary. “It was not very interesting. Quite well run, no undue misery or discomfort.” Told by his hosts that most of the prisoners were communists, he went on: “If that is the case, then they can stay there for all I care.”

On his return to England, Cazalet noted that his friends Winston Churchill and Anthony Eden had launched “furious attacks on me for being pro-Nazi”.

While initially slow to grasp the threat posed by Hitler, Cazalet was, unlike some of his colleagues, no right-wing fellow-traveller or ardent appeaser of the Nazis. Nor, despite witnessing the horror of the trenches, was he an advocate of “peace at any price”.