The Prince of Wales is a very nice chap who has shown himself to be a warm admirer and supporter of Jewish causes for many years.
Such is his respect for the community that he wears a bespoke royal(!) blue skull cap adorned with his three-feathers motif for religious events and in 2008 he and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall opened a Jewish community centre in Krakow, Poland.
Indeed the entire project – to which he made a "substantial contribution” - had been initiated by the Prince during a visit in 2002 when he met Holocaust survivors.
Further, his own friends include the historian, Simon Sebag Montefiore so it’s no wonder that he delivered a sparkling address at the recent dinner marking the 250th anniversary of the Board of Deputies – the umbrella organisation representing Anglo-Jewry.
But there was one awful gaping hole in all this:
There was not one single mention of Israel in a speech of 2216 words and which took about 17 minutes to deliver.
I’m not the only one to find this very hard to swallow.
As an expat Brit living in Israel I spend much time emphasising my strong allegiance to the U.K. and explaining how my loyalties are in no way divided but wholly fused.
Surely it was not a simple Foreign Office directive which stopped Prince Charles from referring to Israel? Granted, he made several references to historical Jerusalem but of modern Israel, not one jot.
His Royal Highness is not shy of controversy when it suits him. So it is my painful duty to advise him that by avoiding any mention of the State of Israel – where his paternal grandmother Princess Alice is buried and to which the BoD devotes much of its work - not only did he covertly obliterate the existence of a country to which the U.K. sends an Ambassador and with which it enjoys good trade links - but also the day-to-day lives of a proportion of its Jewish citizens who care deeply for Britain and love his dear mother to bits!
It is said that if you ignore someone – they will go away. Well, I may have left Northern England for Northern Israel but retain close links with cousins, friends and also a property. So I while I have left physically, I feel an integral part of British society.
Indeed, as I read and watch the daily news I view with mounting horror the sort of culture over which HRH will one day rule.
While Israeli society is by no means perfect there are many of its features which the U.K. could emulate just as in previous generations nascent Israel copied and integrated aspects of British law and customs.
So it’s about time that rather than pretending Israel has disappeared from the world map, members of the Royal Family instead challenge the traditional view and make a concerted effort to visit Israel.
I conclude by reproducing the text of Prince Charles’s speech:
Fifty-five years ago as Sir Winston Churchill concluded a speech here at the Guildhall, he is reputed to have turned to my Mother, who was to speak after him, and provided one of those examples of what happens when the microphone has inadvertently been left on… The entire gathering heard him say: “Poor you, it’s your turn now!”.
Well, now it is my turn, and I cannot tell you how touched and delighted my wife and I have been by the warmth of your welcome this
evening, nor by the honour you do me in asking me to speak at this immensely important and significant event to mark the 250th anniversary of the Board of Deputies.If you trace a time line through a quarter of a millennium you cannot help but feel the weight of history on your shoulders. Few settings can bear that weight more robustly than the Guildhall, itself inextricably linked with the history of our British Jewish community - though not always with happy outcomes.
Indeed this very room was the scene more than 430 years ago -of the trial of Rodrigo Lopes, the Jewish-born doctor of Queen Elizabeth I. History recalls that Lopes was falsely accused by those who were jealous of his influence at Court. He was tried here in this hall and sentenced to death. The Queen tried to avert his execution, but in vain. She was, though, able to achieve something almost unheard of after a treason trial. She gave the Lopes’ family the right to retain their property.
Later reigns were to see Jews welcomed to Britain from many lands: from Spain and Holland, Germany, the Balkans and Romania,
from Poland and the Baltic States, from Egypt, Yemen and Morocco, from Iran, Iraq and Bahrain and from South Africa and Zimbabwe.Incidentally, some time ago I met a family of British Jews of Lithuanian origin who told me how in about 1900 their forbears had bought tickets for New York, so were most surprised to be disembarked in Ireland. “Surely we can’t be in New York?” they said. “No, you bought tickets to New Cork,” came the reply. They had been tricked – but many of them ended up here in England.
And that incredibly diverse heritage has brought a deep and vibrant contribution from British Jews to every sphere of British life: in the arts, sciences and medicine, in trade and commerce.
British Jews play an immensely significant part in local and national government, in the House of Commons and in the House of Lords – where, if I may say so, the Chief Rabbi always provides a wise and steadying voice. The whole of British society has also benefitted from a great deal of Jewish philanthropy, for which so many have cause to be deeply grateful.
If there is anything to regret in all this, it is that the talents and contributions of our Jewish community are not – to my mind, at any rate – sufficiently well known by the public at large. They are certainly not sufficiently celebrated and that is why my wife and I wanted to come here this evening – to recognize excellence and celebrate it with you.
Of course, the Jewish contribution to our country is nothing new. The first Jewish knight, created by Queen Anne, was Sir Solomon de Medina. It was Sir Solomon who provided the supplies, including the food, that enabled the British Army under the Duke of Marlborough to win the decisive Battle of Blenheim – a vital turning point in the War of
Spanish Succession and a swift kick in the shins to Louis XIV’s aspirations.The great Prime Minister, Benjamin Disraeli, was baptized as a child, but he always regarded himself proudly as a Jew – and I loved the way he described himself to Queen Victoria as: “The blank page between the Old and the New Testaments!” I also loved his wonderful response to the insulting taunts of a Member of Parliament: “Yes, I am a Jew, but when the ancestors of The Right Honourable Gentleman were living as savages in an unknown island, mine were priests in the Temple of Solomon!”
Less militaristic than Sir Solomon, but no less effective, was Sir Moses Montefiore who was raised to the Baronetcy by my great-great-great grandmother, Queen Victoria. Interestingly, when she was a young girl, and her mother, The Duchess of Kent, used to take her down to Ramsgate, Sir Moses had a special key cut to give her access to his gardens nearby. Of course, you will know better than me, Ladies and Gentlemen, that Sir Moses was one of Vivian Wineman’s most distinguished predecessors as President of the Board of Deputies.
I can only say that Vivian will need a very great deal of energy if he is to beat Sir Moses’ incredible record of 39 years in the post! Of course, history remembers Sir Moses particularly for his daring intercession with the Tsar of Russia and the Sultan of Turkey to protect Jews in their dominions, not to mention similar exploits in Rome, Morocco and Romania – and seven trips to Jerusalem.
He so loved Jerusalem that he adopted it on his family crest and wrote it on all his belongings including his bed! He took a bit of Britain to Jerusalem – a Kentish windmill that
still stands there, known as the Montefiore windmill – and a bit of Jerusalem to Britain: he is buried in Jerusalem soil, in Ramsgate, in an exact replica of Rachel’s Tomb not far from Jerusalem and Bethlehem.Indeed, his appetite for travel – and by horse-drawn carriage at that! – seems to have been utterly unquenchable. That alone must have nearly killed him; though not as quickly as some may have thought….
He shares with Mark Twain the distinction of having read his own obituary, published a little precipitously by a local editor. Like Twain, his response was pithy and memorable: “Thank God to have been able to hear of the rumour and to read an account of the same with my own eyes, without using spectacles!”
Like Sir Moses, not only do I have some idea of the pleasures – if not the rigours! – of horse-drawn carriages, but I have also managed to
learn a little bit at first hand about Jewish communities around the world, about the problems they face, and then trying in a small way to make a bit of a difference for them.In 2002 I was deeply touched by a particular meeting I had with Holocaust survivors in Krakow. You will not need me to recall the long shadows that traverse that particular community, but what struck me – forcibly – was that, despite the passage of time since the Second World War, they still had nowhere to meet socially; to come together as a community to share stories and to pass wisdom between the generations. Well, not for nothing is my motto – “Ich Dien” (“I serve”) –
with, in parenthesis, “Nothing ventured, nothing gained!”I decided immediately to do what I could to encourage the building of a Jewish Community Centre, right in the heart of Krakow next to the synagogue. I cannot tell you, therefore, how proud my wife and I were when, six years later, we went back to Krakow (with the kind donors I had managed to corner!) to open that Jewish community centre, fixing a mezuzah to the entrance. And when we met again some of those same survivors. Today 1,000 Jewish and non-Jewish community members use the facilities for their social, educational and religious programmes.
Of course, this would not have been possible without the work of an organization for which I have the highest regard and respect – and, dare I say it, the greatest affection: World Jewish Relief. It is an organization that I have come to know rather well over the years. The
work it does for the Jewish community worldwide is worthy of the highest praise. World Jewish Relief has been working its incredible magic since that fateful year, 1933, when it helped those escaping from Nazi persecution to rebuild their lives in Britain.It was in 1933 that my father, then at school in Germany for a year, helped an older schoolboy who had been identified as Jew by the other boys and had been set upon and had his hair cut off. I shall always be proud of my father’s act of compassion. Ten years later, in 1943, when the Greek capital, Athens, was occupied during the Second World War, my father’s mother – my grandmother – Princess Alice, saved a Jewish family by taking them into her home and hiding them.
For many years afterwards, my grandmother told no-one about what she had done. Not even her family! She was quite a formidable lady and when the Gestapo began to suspect her, she simply pointed out that she was deaf and could not understand their questions!
Interestingly at the end of her life she wanted to be buried in Jerusalem, next to the aunt she adored, The Grand Duchess Elizabeth of Russia, who had been martyred by the Bolsheviks by being thrown down a Siberian mineshaft. I’ve never forgotten how when her daughters and others used to say “how on earth are we going to come and visit your grave?”, she’d say, “that’s all right, there’s a very good bus service from Athens.”
My grandmother’s story – and her courage – were one of the reasons that I wanted to be at the Kindertransport reunion in November 2008, to mark the seventieth anniversary of the British Government’s decision to bring those children to Britain. I met 500 of the 10,000 Jewish children brought to Britain in the months before the outbreak of the Second World War. It was, in every sense, a heroic decision by our Government and one which echoes through history as an example of compassion – of, simply, “doing the right thing.”
As I told those gathered there that afternoon at the Jews’ Free School, I have tried my whole life to understand and reflect upon what they had to endure and to try to draw lessons from it.
If I may, Ladies and Gentlemen, I just want to recall and recognize the fact that in two World Wars British Jews made an outstanding contribution to the defence of our values and of our liberty, on land, at sea and in the air. Many thousands were killed in action, on all the War fronts. Jews also volunteered to be parachuted behind enemy lines, and to serve on the most dangerous of missions.
I know that my great uncle, Lord Mountbatten, was enormously proud of the Jewish airman, RAF Flight Sergeant Jack Nissenthall, a radar specialist. He knew that he would have to be shot by his own men if he was about to be captured, but he went ashore at Dieppe in 1942 to examine a crucial German radar station on the cliff top.
It is fashionable to say that “modern Britain” is a patchwork of many different faiths and many different communities. That is certainly
true, but I have always thought it a little misleading to suggest that it was ever any different! When our country has drawn strength from its diversity it has been literally world-beating.It is only when we have allowed difference to gnaw away at us or when we have tried to extinguish difference, as in the 15th and 16th centuries, that we have been weakened at home and abroad. So the importance of “Unity through Diversity” cannot be overstated. We do not all share the same faith, but we should not forget that we are linked by faith itself, sustaining and enriching our national life. In the various charitable initiatives I have tried to inspire or champion over the years, I have believed passionately that each faith, with its rich ethical and spiritual base, has a crucial part to play in promoting the harmonious tolerance that is the bedrock of our society.
Each faith, of course, draws on a profound belief in the sanctity of human life. I recall your own Jewish exhortation in the Book of Deuteronomy: ‘Choose life!’ I am also reminded of the welcome the Patriarch Abraham gave, so many thousands of years ago, to three strangers, running to meet them, and inviting them to rest at his home and strengthen themselves with his food. Kindness was the way of Abraham; the path, according to your fine tradition, to true spirituality.
Since as long ago as 1784 (and almost certainly earlier), I know that British Jews have been praying in their synagogue services for the well-being of the Royal Family.
In that year they prayed for the health and safety of ‘our most gracious Sovereign Lord, King George the Fourth and all the Royal Family.’ Today, my entire family is deeply touched that a prayer for the Royal Family remains an integral part of the synagogue service.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I can think of no better way of concluding than to recall the words of your Ethics of the Fathers: ‘On three things does the world stand: On justice, truth, and peace.’ As you look forward to the next quarter millennium of the Board of Deputies, let that lesson guide us in all we say and all we do.
msniw
2 comments:
Anit-semtism reigns supreme in the corridors of power...this is NOT surprising. Israel for some reason is not a nice word to utter what with the wave of revolutions sweeping the ME...one must not only be seen but heard NOT to utter that word - Israel. I personally find this all nauseating. Israel is a postage stamp sized property that all self appointed representatives of the ME and elsewhere want destroyed.The dear Prince is simply upholding tradition. :(
Why Did The Prince Of Wales Wipe Israel Off The Map? Well I suppose to mention Israel as a legitimate Jewish State might seem overly controversial and upset those who despise its very existence in their midst and were it not for the superb military competence of its people, the world would have experienced another attempt at genocide. Fully aware of this threat, Israel was forced to annex the territories she did, to be better able to defend itself.
If there is one word that negates the word “occupation” it is “genocide”, the very ambitions of countries which surround this tiny Jewish haven which is continuously kept on alert by the enemies which surround it and would implement its destruction and mass slaughter of its people were they not still smarting from the defeat of their previous attempts at genocide.
A balanced and logical view of Israel….
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4sX2KFjB7Y&feature=channel_video_title
Finally I leave you with the following quotes…..
“Of all the extreme fanaticism which plays havoc in man’s nature, there is not one as irrational as anti-Semitism. … If the Jews are rich [these fanatics] are victims of theft. If they are poor, they are victims of ridicule. If they take sides in a war, it is because they wish to take advantage from the spilling of non-Jewish blood. If they espouse peace, it is because they are scared by their natures or traitors. If the Jew dwells in a foreign land he is persecuted and expelled. If he wishes to return to his own land, he is prevented from doing so.”
- Lloyd George stated in 1923
"The uniqueness of anti-Semitism lies in the fact that no other people in the world have ever been charged simultaneously with alienation from society and with cosmopolitanism, with being capitalistic exploiters and also revolutionary communist advocators. The Jews were accused of having an imperious mentality, at the same time they're a people of the book. They're accused of being militant aggressors, at the same time as being cowardly pacifists. With being a Chosen people, and also having an inferior human nature. With both arrogance and timidity. With both extreme individualism and community adherence. With being guilty of the crucifixion of Jesus and at the same time held to account for the invention of christianity.
A speech about the irrationality of anti-Semitism by professor Michael Curtis, RutgersUniversity, 1987
Ludensian.
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