The Jewish Chronicle

Pacifists failed Vera’s Britain

- Oliver Kamm

VTestament of Youth maintained that the discovery of the Nazi death camps was being publicised by the Allies “partly, at least, in order to divert attention from the havoc produced in German cities by allied obliterati­on bombing”.

I found this reference some years ago in the standard work SemiDetach­ed Idealists: The British Peace Movement and Internatio­nal Relations, 1854-1945 by Martin Ceadel. Professor Ceadel is a sympatheti­c observer of the peace movement but a scrupulous historian who records unflinchin­gly this appalling remark.

I have no doubt of Brittain’s humanitari­an impulse and selfless work for peace; but the fact is that her politics were grievously mistaken in the face of Nazi tyranny and she lacked the self-critical faculties to acknowledg­e this. She thereby failed in an elementary test of judgment: the terrible violence inflicted on Germany’s civilian population, in a just war against barbarism, was not the moral equivalent of the systematic destructio­n of European Jewry. Not at all. Not even remotely.

That was where Britain’s peace movement, and its most famous exponent, ended up. There was, as George Orwell pointed out in 1941, some overlap in membership between the British peace movement and British fascism. Canon Stuart Morris, who served as chairman of the pacifist Peace Pledge Union (PPU), was simultaneo­usly a member of an openly pro-Nazi organisati­on in the 1930s called The Link.

As late as 1943, a virulent antisemite, the Marquess of Tavistock, won election to the PPU’s national council. In the pacifist journal Peace News, of October 30 1942, he explained Nazi aggression in Europe by invoking “the very serious provocatio­n which many Jews have given by their avarice and arrogance when exploiting Germany’s financial difficulti­es, by their associatio­ns with commercial­ised vice, and by their monopolisa­tion of certain profession­s”. (That, too, is quoted in Ceadel’s volume.)

I don’t claim Brittain was part of this sinister trend. I charge with her something different, and inherent in an absolutist pacifism: she was so alert to the imperfecti­ons, and even the crimes, of her own side that she was strikingly incapable of understand­ing the nature of real, remorseles­s evil. Her book, Seed of Chaos (1944) condemned the Allies’ obliterati­on bombing. When it was issued (under the title Stop Massacre Bombing) in the US, William Shirer — the journalist who wrote the classic The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich — charged her with repeating Nazi propaganda. Brittain’s campaignin­g marked a sad degenerati­on of a powerful moral witness. Recall that when you see the film.

Brittain was strikingly incapable of recognisin­g real evil

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