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How the Queen and King Charles left the antisemitism of their era behind

Whatever reservations some of us may have about the King's personal choices, his concern for the Jewish community is beyond doubt

September 14, 2022 16:50
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Britain's Prince Charles attends the funeral of former Israeli president and prime minister Shimon Peres at the Mount Herzl national cemetery in Jerusalem on September 30, 2016. World leaders including US President Barack Obama and Prince Charles were bidding farewell to Israeli ex-prime minister and Nobel Peace Prize winner Shimon Peres as his funeral began under massive security. / AFP / POOL / ABIR SULTAN (Photo credit should read ABIR SULTAN/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

Three days after the death of Queen Elizabeth, the novelist Rana Dasgupta, who met her on several occasions, shared on Facebook a series of notes from his diaries, a record of a human encounter with the person of the sovereign.

He writes of this rare woman with a novelist’s eye for observation. His memories of her are affectionate and sympathetic: as an “exceptional storyteller” who enchanted him with stories of listening in as a girl to her father’s fireside chat with Nehru.

Yet what worries him is a comment that seems to drop straight from that world of the 1930s aristocracy. In 2010, while receiving the Commonwealth Writers Prize at Buckingham Palace, The Queen tells him of her hosting a reception earlier that day for a Jewish community group.


“It was really very nice,” she tells Dasgupta. “Because, you know, the Jews can be so very difficult.”

In these days of mourning, so soon after the Queen’s death, such memories have the power to be incendiary. We do know that the Queen worked closely with many senior Jewish figures to whom she showed deep respect, several of whom have told far warmer stories to the JC of their campaigning work together.

And Dasgupta — a thoughtful, intricate observer of the world — balances his anecdote by quoting the Queen’s joy at the welcome Britain has been able to give to both Jews and other minorities, including his father.

As Dasgupta implies, the Queen was a production of an age and a class in which prejudice against Jews was endemic. We discover, with every passing year, more evidence of her uncle’s intimate investment in Nazism. The archives of the Windsors for this period remain tightly closed, with hints only occasionally leaking out that even her mother and father briefly sympathised with Edward VIII’s views. (The campaigning work of the author Andrew Lownie on this period has been essential.)

But what matters, of course, is that the House of Windsor chose another path. Whatever George VI may have tolerated at his brother’s cocktail parties, he became the monarch who confronted Hitler, his daughter beloved as the princess who fixed lorries in the fight against fascism.