Jewish National Home In
Hearings Before The Committee On
Foreign Affairs
House of Representatives,
Seventy-eighth Congress, Second Session
on H. RES. 418 and H. Res. 419
Resolutions Relative to The
Jewish National Home in
8, 9, 15, and 16 February 1944
[Text along with Appendix of Documents Relating to the Jewish National Home in Palestine, Printed
for the use of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, United States Government Printing Office, Washington: 1944]
Rt. Hon. Winston Churchill
House of Commons,
********
I say quite frankly that I find this a melancholy occasion. Like my right hon. Friend the Member for Sparkbrook (Mr. Amery), I feel bound to vote against the proposals of His Majesty’s Government. As one intimately and responsibly concerned in the earlier stages of our Palestine policy, I could not stand by and feel solemn engagements into which Britain has entered before the world set aside for reasons of administrative convenience or – and it will be a vain hope – for the sake of a quiet life. Like my right hon. Friend, I should feel personally embarrassed in the most acute manner if I lent myself, by silence or inaction, to what I must regard as an act of repudiation. I can understand that others take a different view. There are many views which may be taken. Some may consider themselves less involved in the declarations of former Governments. Some may feel that the burden of keeping faith weighs upon them rather oppressively. Some may be pro-Arab and some may be anti-Semite. None of these motives offers me any means of escape because I was from the beginning a sincere advocate of the Balfour Declaration, and I have made repeated public statements to that effect.
It is often supposed that the Balfour Declaration was an ill-considered, sentimental act largely concerned with the right hon. Member for Carnarvon Boroughs (Mr. Lloyd George), for which the Conservative party had no real responsibility, and that, as the Secretary of State said yesterday, it was a thing done in the tumult of the War. But hardly any step was taken with greater deliberation and responsibility. I was glad to hear the account which my right hon. Friend the Member for Sparkbrook gave, derived from the days when he was working in the Secretariat of the War Cabinet, of the care and pains with which the whole field was explored at that time. Not only did the War Cabinet of those days take the decision, but all Cabinets of every party after the War, after examining it in the varying circumstances which have arisen, have endorsed the decision and taken the fullest responsibility for it. It was also endorsed in the most cordial and enthusiastic terms by many of the ablest Conservative Private Members who came into the House when a great Conservative majority arrived after the General Election at the end of 1918. It was endorsed from the very beginning by my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister.
I make him
my apologies for going back as far as 20 years, but when you are dealing with
matters which affect the history of two or three thousand years, there is no
reason why the continuity of opinion should not be displayed. My right hon. Friend, on
“The sympathy of the British Government with Zionist aspiration does not date from yesterday... My father was anxious to find such a territory within the limits of the British Constitution.... Today the opportunity has come. I have no hesitation in saying that were my father alive today he would be among the first to welcome it and to give it his hearty support.”
Then other members of the Government, most distinguished members who were then Private Members in the House – a brilliant crop, if I may say so, in their young first fresh fight – made a strong effort. The Dominion Secretary, quite a slim figure on the benches up here was heavily engaged. There were also the Minister of Health, the Home Secretary and, above all, the Prime Minister; and this is the memorial they sent us. I abridge it, but not in such a way as to alter its sense. I may in abridging it diminish its force, but its force is evident from the extract:
“We, the
undersigned, having cordially welcomed the historic Declaration made on
“that it
would use its best endeavors to facilitate the establishment of a Jewish
National Home in
Here was this statement which was made and which was put forward, and while I say I do not compare the responsibility of private Members with that exercised by Ministers of the Crown or by the head of the Government, nevertheless I think, when all is said and done, that the Zionists have a right to look to the Prime Minister to stand by them in the days of his power. They had a special right to look to him because he was not only giving effect to his own deep convictions, but was carrying forward the large conceptions of his father whose memory he reveres and whose renown he has revived. I was not a member to the War Cabinet in the days when this pledge was given. I was serving under it as a high functionary. That was the position of the Secretaries of State. I found myself in entire agreement with those sentiments so well expressed by the Prime Minister and his friends when they were sending in their memorial.
When I went to the Colonial Office it was in this spirit that I wrote this dispatch, under the authority of the Cabinet, which is quoted so much in the White Paper now before us. Great use is made of this dispatch of 1922 in the White Paper. It is sought to found the argument of the White Paper largely upon it. I stand by every word in those lengthy quotations which have been made from what I wrote. I would not alter a sentence after the 16 years that have passed, but I must say I think it rather misleading to quote so extensively from one part of the dispatch without indicating what was its main purpose. The particular paragraph would do little to cool down the ardor of the Zionist and little to reassure the apprehensions of the Arabs. The main purpose of the dispatch was clear. This is what I said in paragraph (1):
“His Majesty’s Government have no intention of repudiating the obligations into which they entered towards the Jewish people.”
I then
proceeded to say that the Government would refuse to discuss the future of
Last night
the Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs used a surprising
argument. He suggested that the
obligation to introduce self-governing institutions into
“The position is that His Majesty’s Government are bound by a pledge which is antecedent to the Covenant of the League of Nations, and they cannot allow a constitutional position to develop in a country for which they have accepted responsibility to the principal Allied Powers which may make it impracticable to carry into effect a solemn undertaking given by themselves and their Allies.”
There is much more to the same effect. It seems to me that the Under-Secretary of State had some reason to complain of the manner in which he had been briefed on this subject, because his argument was exactly contrary to the tenor of the dispatch from which the Government have quoted with a strong expression of approval and agreement wherever they have found it possible to assist their case.
Now I come to the gravamen of the case. I regret very much that the pledge of the Balfour Declaration, endorsed as it has been by successive Governments, and the conditions under which we obtained the Mandate, have both been violated by the Government’s proposals. There is much in this White Paper which is alien to the spirit of the Balfour Declaration, but I will not trouble about that. I select the one point upon which there is plainly a breach and repudiation of the Balfour Declaration – the provision that Jewish immigration can be stopped in five years’ time by the decision of an Arab majority. That is a plain breach of a solemn obligation. I am astonished that my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister, of all others, and at this moment above all others should have lent himself to this new and sudden default.
To whom was
the pledge of the Balfour Declaration made?
It was not made to the Jews of Palestine; it was not made to those who
were actually living in
“The Jewish people who have through centuries of dispersion and persecution patiently awaited the hour of its restoration to its ancestral home.”
Those were
the words. They were the people outside,
not the people in. It is not with the
Jews in
I entirely
accept the distinction between making a Jewish National Home in
“After the period of five years no further Jewish immigration will be permitted unless the Arabs of Palestine are prepared to acquiesce in it.”
Now, there is the breach; there is the violation of the pledge; there is the abandonment of the Balfour Declaration; there is the end of the vision, of the hope, of the dream. If you leave out those words this White Paper is no more than one of the several experiments and essays in Palestinian constitution-making which we have had of recent years, but put in those three lines and there is the crux, the peccant point, the breach, and we must have an answer to it.
My right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs may use his great legal ability. He is full of knowledge and power and ingenuity, but unless this can be answered, and repulsed, and repudiated, a very great slur rests upon British administration. It is said specifically on page 10 of the White Paper that Jewish immigration during the next five years will be at a rate which, if the economic absorptive capacity allows, will bring the population up to approximately one-third of the total population of the country. After that, the Arab majority, twice as numerous as the Jews, will have control, and all further Jewish immigration will be subject to their acquiescence, which is only another way of saying that it will be on sufferance. What is that but the destruction of the Balfour Declaration? What is that but a breach of faith? What is it but a one-sided denunciation – what is called in the jargon of the present time a unilateral denunciation – of an engagement?
There need
be no dispute about this phrase “economic absorptive capacity.” It represented
the intentions of the Government and their desire to carry out the Palestinian
Mandate in an efficient and in a prudent manner. As I am the author of the
phrase, perhaps I may be allowed to state that economic absorptive capacity was
never intended to rule without regard to any other consideration. It has always
rested with the Mandatory Power to vary the influx of the Jews in accordance
with what was best for
I cannot
feel that we have accorded to the Arab race unfair treatment after the support
which they gave us in the late War. The Palestinian Arabs, of course, were for
the most part fighting against us, but elsewhere over vast regions inhabited by
the Arabs independent Arab kingdoms and principalities have come into being
such as had never been known in Arab history before. Some have been established
by
I cannot
understand what are the credentials of the Government in this matter of
I cannot
understand why this course has been taken. I search around for the answer. The
first question one would ask oneself is foreshadowed in a reference made in the
speech by my hon. Friend, and is this: Is our condition so parlous and our
state so poor that we must, in our weakness, make this sacrifice of our
declared purpose? Although I have been very anxious that we should strengthen
our armaments and spread our alliances and so increase the force of our
position, I must say that I have not taken such a low view of the strength of
the British Empire or of the very many powerful countries who desire to walk in
association with us; but if the Government, with their superior knowledge of
the deficiencies in our armaments which have arisen during their stewardship,
really feel that we are too weak to carry out our obligations and wish to file
a petition in moral and physical bankruptcy, that is an argument which, however
ignominious, should certainly weigh with the House in these dangerous times.
But is it true? I do not believe it is true. I cannot believe that the task to
which we set our hand 20 years ago in
We must ask
ourselves another question, which arises out of this: Can we – and this is the
question – strength ourselves by this repudiation? Shall we relieve ourselves
by this repudiation? I should have thought that the plan put forward by the
Colonial Secretary in his White Paper, with its arid constitutional ideas and
safety catches at every point, and with vagueness overlaying it and through all
of it, combines, so far as one can understand it at present, the disadvantages
of all courses without the advantages of any. The triumphant Arabs have
rejected it. They are not going to put up with it. The despairing Jews will
resist it. What will the world think about it? What will our friends say? What
will be the opinion of the
What will
our potential enemies think? What will
those who have been stirring up these Arab agitators think? Will they not be encouraged by our confession
of recoil? Will they not be tempted to say: “They’re on the run again. This is
another
*****
It is hoped
to obtain five years of easement in
Some of us
hold that our safety at this juncture resides in being bold and strong. We argue that the reputation for fidelity of
execution, a strict execution, of public contracts, is a shield and buckler which
the
I warn the Conservative party – and some of my warnings have not, alas, been ill-founded – that by committing themselves to this lamentable act of default, they will cast our country, and all that it stands for, one more step downward in its fortunes, which step will later on have to be retrieved, as it will be retrieved, by additional hard exertions. That is why I say that upon the large aspect of this matter the policy which you think is a relief and an easement you will find afterwards you will have to retrieve, in suffering and greater exertions than those we are making.
I end upon
the
It is 10 years ago since my right hon. Friend used these stirring words:
“A great
responsibility will rest upon the Zionists, who, before long, will be
proceeding, with joy in their hearts, to the ancient seat of their people. Theirs will be the task to build up a new
prosperity and a new civilization in old
Well, they have answered his call. They have fulfilled his hopes. How can he find it in his heart to strike them this mortal blow?