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The Balfour Declaration: The Origins of the Arab-Israeli conflict

Home fires burning

September 16, 2010 10:24
Arthur Balfour

ByVernon Bogdanor, Vernon Bogdanor

2 min read

By Jonathan Schneer
Bloomsbury, £25

On December 2 1917, in the midst of the First World War, a meeting was held in the London Opera House in Kingsway. The hall, designed to hold 2,700 people, was filled to capacity.

The opening speech was made by Lord Rothschild, who told his audience that "we are met on the most momentous occasion in the history of Judaism for the last eighteen hundred years… We are here to return thanks to His Majesty's Government for a declaration which marked an epoch - for the first time since the dispersion, the Jewish people have received their proper status by the declaration of one of the great powers".

Lord Rothschild was referring of course to the Balfour Declaration, named after the Foreign Secretary and former Conservative Prime Minister, Arthur Balfour. The Declaration, published one month earlier, on November 9 1917, had stated that the British government viewed "with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people" pledging to "use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object."