The Welland Tribune

Balfour Declaratio­n began 100-year Mideast struggle

- GWYNNE DYER

One hundred years ago next week, in the midst of the First World War, the British government sent a letter known as the Balfour Declaratio­n that led, three decades later, to the creation of the state of Israel.

The letter was officially sent to Lord Walter Rothschild, the head of Britain’s Zionist Federation, by the British foreign secretary, Lord Balfour, on Nov. 2, 1917. However, the initial draft was actually written months earlier by Rothschild and Chaim Weizmann, president of the World Zionist Organizati­on, at Balfour’s request.

The key sentence said: “His Majesty’s Government view with favour the establishm­ent in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievemen­t of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing nonJewish communitie­s in Palestine or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.”

Why would the British waste their time on such a peripheral matter at a time when they feared they were losing the war? The main (though unspoken) reason was probably that Britain was running out of credit, and many members of the government believed that the Jews controlled the banks.

It wasn’t actually true, and the one Jew in the British war cabinet, Edwin Montagu, wrote a memorandum on “the Anti-Semitism of the Present (British) Government.” But a number of cabinet members were devout Christians who took the Old Testament almost literally.

France had already issued a vaguer declaratio­n of support for a Jewish state in Palestine five months previously, and Britain feared that Germany was also about to do so.

So the Balfour Declaratio­n was published, and the hundred-year struggle for the control of Palestine began.

Initially the territory included all of the Ottoman province of Palestine, which was then in the process of being conquered by British troops. But Lebanon, north along the Mediterran­ean coast from presentday Israel, was given to France in the peace settlement.

Then in 1921 Winston Churchill, newly appointed as the colonial secretary, called a conference in Cairo which decided that the territory east of the Jordan river would be turned into an Arab kingdom called Transjorda­n (later just Jordan), and Jewish settlement was forbidden there. He privately called those who attended the conference “the Forty Thieves,” which seems about right.

But most Zionists thought the change was only temporary, or were aware how hard it would be to achieve a Jewish majority even in the territory that remained, where there were only 94,000 Jews at the time. Israel controls all of this remaining territory today, but even now the population is half Arab if you count the Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

It’s still questionab­le whether a fully independen­t Jewish state would have ever come to pass in the Middle East if the Holocaust had not endowed it with a flood of Jewish immigrants fleeing the Holocaust or its aftermath. It was also the Holocaust that turned opinion in the great powers, including the Soviet Union, decisively in its favour, and enabled the United Nations resolution that legitimize­d the state of Israel in 1948.

But it’s very unlikely that Israel would exist without the initial impetus given to the Zionist project by the Balfour Declaratio­n. It’s amazing what a few determined men can do if they are in the right place at the right time. Gwynne Dyer is an independen­t journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

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