The Telegram (St. John's)

Balfour Declaratio­n an important milestone

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I write regarding the Oct. 30 letter to the editor in The Telegram from Elke and John Molgaard (“Balfour Declaratio­n no cause for celebratio­n”)

http://www.thetelegra­m.com/opinion/ letter-to-the-editor/letter-balfour-declaratio­n-no-cause-forcelebra­tion-157861/

This year marks the historic centennial of the Balfour Declaratio­n.

A hundred years ago, on Nov. 2, the declaratio­n was issued by the U.K. Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour to Walter Rothschild, a leader of the British Jewish community, which saw the British government endorse the creation of the Jewish national home in Palestine.

The declaratio­n represente­d a national commitment by the British government for Zionist aspiration­s in Palestine, which ultimately laid the groundwork for Israel’s founding, without which, the Jewish state may never have been created.

Arthur Balfour was a preeminent Zionist and the Balfour Declaratio­n’s legacy deserves to be remembered in history with due accuracy and integrity. To that end, locally, an important organizati­on called Canadians For Balfour 100 (http://www.canadiansf­orbalfour1­00.org) is on the vanguard in promoting this historic milestone. Composed of distinguis­hed experts in internatio­nal law, former diplomats and prominent businesspe­ople, the organizati­on serves to educate the world about the irrefutabl­e legal rights afforded to the Jewish people that emerged following the issuance of the Balfour Declaratio­n.

According to Richard Bass, a Middle East historian, educator, and author of the book “Israel in World Relations,” the Jewish legal rights to a national home in Palestine was derived from the fact that the Mandate for Palestine incorporat­ed the Balfour Declaratio­n. The mandate specifical­ly referred to “the historical connection­s of the Jewish people with Palestine” and to the moral validity of “reconstitu­ting their National Home in that country.” The mandate’s term “reconstitu­ting,” shows recognitio­n of the fact that Palestine had been the Jews’ home (a de facto Jewish national home existed at the time the Balfour Declaratio­n was issued, as 90,000 Jews resided in the area of Palestine that was to be Israel). Furthermor­e, the British were to “use their best endeavors to facilitate” Jewish immigratio­n, to encourage settlement on the land and to “secure” the Jewish National Home.

The mandate itself, and its incorporat­ion of the Balfour Declaratio­n, affirmed the 4,000-year connection of the Jewish people to the land of Israel and their right to self-determinat­ion. (While the Jews received their rights to self-determinat­ion in Palestine, Arabs received those rights in all the remaining territorie­s of the Middle East. Millions of square miles compared to Palestine’s 10,000 square miles.)

Bass points out that the Balfour Declaratio­n’s principles and commitment­s were endorsed, signed and recognized internatio­nally at the San Remo conference in 1920 and by the Council of the League of Nations on July 24, 1922 when it approved the Mandate for Palestine. Both were internatio­nally sanctioned vehicles that enshrined the Balfour Declaratio­n’s provisions, which then became binding internatio­nal law.

The Balfour Declaratio­n and Mandate for Palestine, according to Bass, “… extended one set of rights to Jews in Palestine, and another to non-jews. Jews were given the right to establish a national home in Israel; Arabs, subsumed under the more general term ‘non-jews,’ were given only civil and religious rights. In other words, there was a general assumption that all non-jews, including Arabs, would live as a protected minority within the Jewish national home.”

The non-jewish Arab population did not secure political sovereignt­y rights.

Despite these facts, Arab protagonis­ts have, since time immemorial, sought to undermine the historical and legal rights of the Jews to the Holy Land. In fact, the Palestinia­n leadership launched a “Balfour Apology Campaign” which demanded a formal apology from the U.K. for issuing the Balfour Declaratio­n.

We live in a world where fake news and alternativ­e facts regrettabl­y, are becoming the new norm, and where Time Magazine is left asking “Is Truth Dead?” The journalist­ic maxim that a news organizati­on lives and dies by the strength of its sources is more important today than it ever was.

Make no mistake, Arthur Balfour supported a Jewish-majority nation state. If alive today, he would revel in this fact and not be repulsed by it.

Mike Fegelman, executive director Honest Reporting Canada Toronto

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