What's new

Still seeking peace in Jerusalem 100 years since Britain’s victory

Solomon2

BANNED
Joined
Dec 12, 2008
Messages
19,475
Reaction score
-37
Country
United States
Location
United States
thestar.com.svg

Still seeking peace in Jerusalem 100 years since Britain’s victory
The forced departure of the Ottomans and the arrival of the British did indeed reconfigure the Middle East by unleashing a dynamic process whose peaceful resolution — as we have been reminded of yet again last week — remains stubbornly elusive in our own time.


afp_uz8de.jpg.size.custom.crop.1086x774.jpg

Palestinians scuffle with Israeli forces at Damascus Gate in Jerusalem's Old City on Friday.Palestinians clashed with Israeli security forces after calls for a "day of rage" as U.S. President Donald Trump's declaration of Jerusalem as Israel's capital sent shockwaves through the region for a second day. (THOMAS COEX / AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

By BRAD FAUGHT Opinion
Sun., Dec. 10, 2017

Exactly 100 years have passed since the British won control of Jerusalem during the First World War by defeating the Ottoman Turks and thereby altering profoundly the modern history of the fabled holy city.

The victory that came on Dec. 9, 1917 was achieved under the command of the stentorian Gen. Edmund Allenby, and when he strode into Jerusalem two days later (accompanied by T.E. Lawrence “of Arabia”) he did so as liberator.

The British Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, had declared that he wanted Allenby to win Jerusalem by Christmas as a “present” for the war-weary British people. And this he did, setting off widespread celebrations, especially amongst those who saw the victory as evidence of Britain’s stated commitment to the establishment of a new Jewish national homeland in a wholly reconfigured Middle East.

Defeating the Ottomans was the main precondition for such a reconfiguration, although in so doing the British completed an about-face in their long-time support of the Ottoman Empire as a bulwark against regional Russian expansionism.

The earlier courting of the Turkish sultan by imperial Germany in its late 19th century bid to exert influence in the Middle East had forced a sea-change in Britain’s policy concerning the old so-called “Eastern Question.”

The much-publicized sight of Germany’s Kaiser Wilhelm II mounted on horseback and parading regally into Jerusalem in 1898 had left the British with no illusions as to the direction in which he was taking his increasingly robust and militaristic country. By the time war came in 1914 the Germans and Ottomans were allies, which meant that ultimately their joint defeat was necessarily key to Britain’s military strategy.

Four years later, therefore, 400 years of Ottoman imperial rule in the Middle East came to an end and in its place was put that of the victorious Anglo-French allies. Great change was portended. Both the Jews and the multifarious Arabs assumed they would now each be able to achieve national status.

The British, for their part, had promised as much to certain of the Arabs in 1915, and then to the Jews more broadly through the Balfour Declaration of two years later.


All parties, from the Great Powers — at least initially — to Prince Feisal, the acknowledged leader of the Arabs, to Chaim Weizmann, the indefatigable head of the Zionist Organization, believed the vacuum created by the fall of the Ottomans could, and should, be filled by a number of new states to be formed on the national principle.

Inspired by the great Victorian British Prime Minister, William Ewart Gladstone, American President Woodrow Wilson had made, of course, this principle a key part of his idealistic “Fourteen Points” for creating a new postwar and postimperial world order.

And so, when General Allenby chose to simply walk — in clear contradistinction to what the Kaiser had done 19 years before — through Jerusalem’s Jaffa Gate on Dec. 11, 1917, he did so carrying the hopes and dreams of both Jews and Arabs, who yearned to belong to their own modern nation-state.

In the 100 years that have followed, years of triumph as well as duplicity, war, terror, and chronic unrest, the nationalist dream has been realized by many, though not by all, of the region’s inhabitants.

The forced departure of the Ottomans and the arrival of the British did indeed reconfigure the Middle East by unleashing a dynamic process whose peaceful resolution — as we have been reminded of yet again last week — remains stubbornly elusive in our own time.

As Prince Feisal wrote to Felix Frankfurter, a contemporary American Zionist, a member of the U.S. delegation at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, and a future Supreme Court justice: “We are working together for a reformed and revived Middle East, and our two movements complete one another …. Indeed, I think that neither can be a real success without the other.”

Prescient and ironic words still, a century later in 2017.


Brad Faught is professor of history and global studies at Tyndale University College and senior fellow, Massey College, University of Toronto. He is currently writing the book Allenby: Making the Modern Middle East.
 
.
Jerusalem is, today, a far better city because of the defeat of the Ottomans. Imagine how much chaos and destruction there would be if it were, instead, a prize being contested by a half-dozen splinter sects of Islam.....
 
.
Looks like most people in region want to go back to old system:pop:
Things are not working as planned
 
.
Back
Top Bottom