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Geoffrey Alderman

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Why anti-Zionists are racists

November 8, 2012 14:50
3 min read

Last week marked the 95th anniversary of the Balfour Declaration. This took the form of a letter, written on 2 November 1917 by Arthur Balfour to Walter (Lord) Rothschild. Balfour was then Foreign Secretary in Lloyd George’s wartime coalition government. Rothschild was an eccentric but well-respected zoologist who also happened to be the country’s richest Jew.

Authorised by Lloyd George’s cabinet, the letter asked Rothschild to inform the Zionist Federation of Great Britain that the British government viewed “with favour” the establishment in Palestine of “a national home for the Jewish people” and would do its best to facilitate this endeavour provided this did not involve anything prejudicial to “the civil and religious rights of non-Jewish communities in Palestine or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.”

It has been alleged that the Declaration was intended to garner American support for the British war effort against Germany. But the USA had declared war on Germany several months previously, partly as a result of German submarine activity against American shipping. It has also been said that the Balfour Declaration was part of a desperate attempt to keep Russia in the war against Germany. But the Bolshevik Revolution the previous month virtually guaranteed that Russia would make a separate, albeit humiliating, peace with Germany.

The idea has also been floated that the Declaration was a way of thanking the Manchester-based chemist Chaim Weizmann for his wartime work assisting in the manufacture of explosives. This is fanciful nonsense.