Ireland and the Last British
Crusade to Recapture Palestine
By Pat Walsh
ccun.org, May 8, 2008
Ninety years ago this month, on December 9th 1917, Jerusalem was
recaptured by Britain for Christendom. This event was treated in England
as the major event of the war. Lloyd George imposed a news embargo on
reporters until he could announce the news to the House of Commons (in
those days parliament was still important). To celebrate the
"liberation" of the Holy City from the Muslims after 730 years the bells
of Westminster Abbey rang for the first time in three years and they
were followed by thousands of others across England.
General Allenby, the liberator of Jerusalem, and a descendent of
Cromwell, declared in Jerusalem that the crusades were over. On hearing
him, the Arabs, who had been encouraged into fighting for the British
and who had seen them as liberators, walked away. And they have found
themselves walking ever since.
The great outpouring of Christian triumphalism produced by the capture
of Jerusalem was not confined to England. This is how The Irish News in
Belfast saw the culmination of the last Crusade in its editorial of
December 11th 1917:
“‘Fallen is thy throne, O Israel!’ The power of the Moslem in ‘the Land
of Promise’ has fallen at last: we may assume that with the entrance of
General Allenby’s troops to Jerusalem an end has practically been made
of Turkish rule over Palestine… When the Holy Land has been fully
rescued from Turkish domination, who will possess and administer it?
“Official statements regarding the re-colonisation of the country by the
scattered Jewish race have been made. Observers can discover no traces
of enthusiasm for the project amongst Hebrews themselves. As an idea,
nothing could be more sentimentally attractive; as a practical
proposition, we believe each child of Abraham would bestow a benison on
his brother who migrated from the lands of the Gentiles to the shores of
Lake Galilee and the slopes of Mount Olivet. Thus might the storied
little territory become once more ‘a land flowing with milk and honey’ -
greatly to the content of the descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob
who remained where they were.
“But an independent Jewish State cannot be established all at once, even
did all the Rothchilds lead all their compatriots back to Jerusalem. The
country must be ‘protected’ - in plain terms, annexed: a useful synonym
in dealing with Oriental transactions might be ‘Egyptised.’ And the
conquerors are, of course, the natural ‘protectors’ of the territory won
by force of arms. Such has been the rule and practice from before the
era of Moses and Joshua. We know all about it in Ireland. When the
objects of the campaign in Palestine and Mesopotamia have been
completely achieved, a solid ‘block’ of Asian territory will lie between
the Germans and the Indian Ocean. The Turks gave the Kaiser’s people a
free passage from Constantinople to the Persian Gulf. The new
occupants of Palestine and Mesopotamia will not be quite so
accommodating.
“No one has hinted as yet at the ultimate fate of Constantinople itself:
it was to have been the Czar’s property, but poor Nicholas would rest
satisfied with less nowadays. England, at all events, is carefully
building up a wall against German ‘aggression’ along a line on which
German eyes were cast covetously many years ago… There are really some
arguments against a precipitate disclosure of the Allies ’war aims’ :
one excellent reason for silence being that the Allies do not know how
much they can aim at with a prospect of getting it.”
It seems that by this time Ireland was completely in tune with British
Imperialist ambitions in the world and quite in unison with the
Christian fundamentalism of the Manse that accompanied it.
One of the major reasons why Britain entered the European war in August
1914 was to avail of the opportunity it presented to capture Mesopotamia
and Palestine from the Turks. Of course, there was a problem - Turkey
was not a combatant in the war at that time. It took a couple of months
for Britain to find a cassus bellum. But it did on November 5th, over an
obscure incident in the Black Sea, and the conquest of the Ottoman
territories was on.
Along with the conquest of the Ottoman territories there was another
project close to the heart of Liberal England. This was the project for
planting a Jewish colony in Palestine for British Imperial purposes.
There was, of course, a Zionist movement that also had the same
objective of establishing a national state. But the Jewish nationalists
did not have the power to realise it themselves in the region.
During the nineteenth century a Christian Zionist impulse developed
within the Nonconformist wing of Protestantism in England. Their Bible
reading bred a familiarity with, and imbued a strong interest in,
reviving the Holy Land and creating a new Jerusalem. There was a belief
encouraged by reading the Old Testament that a Second Coming of Christ
depended upon the return of the scattered Jews to the lands of their
ancestors. So what happened to the Holy Land mattered to Christian
fundamentalist England since great Messianic promises and millenarian
predictions depended upon it.
There was nothing ridiculous in the belief and desire that Imperial
power could be used to bring about an end to history and the Second
Coming. And some Irish Catholics like Tom Kettle and Francis Ledwidge
began to see things in similar fashion as they sacrificed themselves to
the cause.
There was another factor that exerted a gravitational pull on England
from the Holy Land. Since the break with Rome the English Church had
lacked a spiritual home. The Catholic Church had rebuilt the spiritual
home of Christianity in Rome but when Henry VIII made himself pope of
the English he had to be content with Canterbury.
The more English Protestants read their bibles the more they yearned for
their own spiritual home - in the original holy places of Judea and
Samaria. And what could be more of a riposte to Rome than to expose its
spiritual inauthenticity by trumping it with the original article.
Christian Zionism worked its way into the political classes of the
British State as the Nonconformists came to political power and it
became part of the political culture of Liberal England despite the fact
that Darwinism seemed to undermine the religious impulse toward the end
of the century.
Under the influence of Herbert Sidebotham, a prominent Liberal
journalist, and CP Scott, the influential editor of The Manchester
Guardian, there developed a Manchester school of Christian Zionism. The
leaders of Jewish nationalism in England, Dr. Weizmann and Harry Sacher,
were from Manchester themselves and the city became the hub for an
Imperial Zionist project.
The proposed Jewish colony in Palestine was a British construction
designed as a foundation for Imperial hegemony and as another buffer
state between India and potential enemies. It would end forever the
scheme of a Berlin to Baghdad railway and frustrate any designs the new
potential rival, France, might have in the region.
The Balfour Declaration was issued in 1917 as Jerusalem was about to be
captured for the Empire. Lloyd George, the Prime Minister who authorised
it, was raised by an uncle, a lay preacher in a millenarian Baptist
Church, and “was brought up in a school where there was taught far more
about the history of the Jews than the history of my own land”.
In 1903, when an ordinary Member of Parliament, he had drawn up a Jewish
Colonisation Scheme for Theodor Herzl, the founder of the Zionist
movement. The colony was meant for British East Africa but by 1917 the
real thing was possible.
The Prime Minister was not alone. Of the ten men who had formed his War
Cabinet at one time or another seven had come from Nonconformist
families. Three were the sons or grandsons of Evangelical preachers.
They all had a close acquaintance with the Old Testament and the people
of the book.
The memoirs of Major Vivian Gilbert were published in 1923 under the
title of The Romance of the Last Crusade - With Allenby to Jerusalem.
They open with a piece about King Richard the Lionheart and Sir Brian de
Gurnay riding away from Jerusalem after their failure to capture the
city:
“In the heart of Sir Brian de Gurnay was the thought of another and a
Last Crusade that for all time should wrest the Holy Places from the
Infidel” (p.1)
Chapter XII of Major Gilbert’s book is called When Prophecies Come True
and is about the capture of the Holy City:
“At last Jerusalem was in our hands! In all ten crusades organised and
equipped to free the Holy City, only two were really successful, - the
first led by Godfrey de Bouillon, and the last under Edmund Allenby…
then at last we found ourselves inside the walls themselves - the first
British troops to march through the Holy City!… I recalled a quaint hymn
I read many years ago. It was written by Saint Augustine, or founded on
words of his, and was passed from mouth to mouth in the middle ages to
encourage recruiting for the Crusades… As I rode through Jerusalem the
words were on my lips… We were proud that Jerusalem after languishing
for over four hundred years under the Turkish yoke should be free at
last… But above all, we had a great and abiding faith in God, Whose
mercy had granted us this victory… to free the Holy Land forever, to
bring peace and happiness to a people who had been oppressed too long!”
(pp.171-77)
As the British advanced towards Jerusalem many of them began to see
themselves as taking part in the last Crusade. All the Christian
fundamentalism imbued in English gentlemen by their Biblical education
in the Public Schools came flooding out in a great surge. They had
reconquered the Holy Land for Christendom after 700 years of Moslem
occupation. And what would the Holy City and the New Jerusalem be
without the Jews?
Irish nationalism came into political alliance with the English
Nonconformists in the Liberal/Home Rule movement and they came into
military alliance with them in 1914. By 1917 the Redmondites had become
a mere mouthpiece for British Imperial interests and they uttered no
criticism of what was going on about them. And, of course, John Dillon
was a personal friend and confidant of the leading Liberal Zionist CP
Scott. So the Devlinite Irish News saw nothing wrong in the plantation,
ethnic cleansing and partition that was planned for Palestine despite
“knowing all about it in Ireland”.
Pat Walsh
Irish Political Review
First published on December 2007