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The man still seeking justice a century after the Dreyfus Affair

Educationist George Whyte says minorites are suffering because the lessons of the French scandal haven't been learnt.

January 20, 2012 11:31
George Whyte, founder of the Dreyfus Society, says only four countries are tackling antisemitism: the US, Germany,  the Czech Republic and China

By

Gerald Jacobs,

Gerald Jacobs

6 min read

Writer, composer, art expert, educationist - George Whyte modestly concedes, when it is put to him, that he is a man of many parts, and adds: "All of them Jewish".

Indeed. This is a man who is Jewish to a degree of intensity rare outside strictly religious circles. And, although he grew up in an Orthodox home in Budapest in the early 1930s and maintains a loving interest in the scriptures to this day, it is not religious observance that drives him. What fuels Whyte's extraordinary energy and output is a burning sense of the injustices suffered by Jews throughout the centuries.

For him, this crystallises around two historical events: the Holocaust and, half a century earlier, the Dreyfus affair in France. Whyte, who lost 37 family members in the Shoah, was a small boy when he first learned about Alfred Dreyfus - the Jewish French army officer falsely convicted of treason in 1894 and forced to endure five years of bitter imprisonment on Devil's Island before clearing his name. "It was my birthday party," Whyte recalls, "when my father told me that I should never forget the name, 'Dreyfus'."

Rarely can a father's injunction have been so expansively obeyed. Not only has Whyte written an authoritative and scholarly book on the Dreyfus affair but, among many creative endeavours, he has also composed a number of musical works about it. While the book has been twice reprinted and sits in university libraries throughout the world, the musical works have been lavishly staged across continents.