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The Jewish Chronicle

The birth of the Zion Mule Corps

It was imperative to have a Jewish military force which would fight alongside the British in World War I, writes Colin Shindler

October 30, 2014 15:46
Admired: Some of the Muleteers who fought in Turley and helped to transform the reputation of Jewish fighters during the First World War

ByColin Shindler, Colin Shindler

5 min read

One hundred years ago today, Turkey entered World War I on the side of the Kaiser's Germany. Within days, Russia, France and Britain all declared war on 'the sick man of Europe'. This event was probably far more important for Jewish national interests than the outbreak of hostilities between Britain and Germany in August 1914.

In early November 1914, the Prime Minister, Herbert Asquith, in a speech at the Lord Mayor's banquet, told his audience that the Turkish government's decision had 'rung the death-knell of Ottoman dominion, not only in Europe but in Asia'. The Jewish Chronicle noted this prescient remark and immediately asked 'what is to be the fate of Palestine?' It surmised that Jews displaced by the conflict might subsequently find new homes in Palestine. By January 1915 the British cabinet minister, Herbert Samuel, had submitted a memorandum to his colleagues which advocated a Jewish presence in Palestine while Chaim Weizmann of Manchester University was busily canvassing British politicians to support the Zionist experiment.

The British had unofficially ruled Egypt for decades and it was clear that an expeditionary force would sooner or later invade Palestine to fight the Turks. It was imperative, therefore, to have a Jewish military force which would fight alongside the British.

The idea of a Jewish battalion in 1914 was mooted even before Turkey entered the war, but the prospect divided British Jews. In 1861 a Jewish Rifle Volunteer Corps had been formed in London's East End. It lasted only a few months. One continuing Jewish fear was that any whiff of separatism would stir antisemitic prejudice. After all, The Times in December 1914 had blamed Turkish "crypto-Jews" for taking their country to war. They had been bribed by Germany, it was said, into betraying "a faith not their own".