Churchill's Promised Land: Zionism and Statecraft (A New Republic Book)
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| Churchill's Promised Land: Zionism and Statecraft (A New Republic Book) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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This book is the first to explore fully the role that Zionism played in the political thought of Winston Churchill. Michael Makovsky traces the development of Churchill’s positions toward Zionism from the period leading up to the First World War through his final years as prime minister in the 1950s. Setting Churchill’s attitudes toward Zionism within the context of his overall worldview as well as within the context of twentieth-century British diplomacy, Makovsky offers a unique contribution to our understanding of Churchill. Moving chronologically, the book looks at Churchill’s career within the context of several major themes: his own worldview and political strategies, his understanding of British imperial interests, the moral impact of the Holocaust, his commitment to ideals of civilization, and his historical sentimentalism. While Churchill was largely sympathetic to the Jews and to the Zionist impulse, he was not without inconsistencies in his views and policies over the years. Makovsky’s book illuminates key aspects of Middle Eastern history; Zionist history; and British political, imperial, and diplomatic history; and further helps us understand one of the pivotal figures of the twentieth century. |
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| 10-30-07 | 5 | 14\15 |
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In this well written and perfectly documented account the story of Churchill's relationship to Zionism is layed out through Churchill's own political rise and his own worldview. Zionism was to Churchill a positive element in the world. Churchill had been an early admirer of the Jews for their tenacity and their survival over the cneturies. With the advent of Zionism he became a supporter of this movement because he saw it as a meaningful challenge to Communism. With the rise of Nazism he saw that the threat to Jewish existence in Europe could be releived through Jewish migration to Palestine.
Churchill was a phenomenal character and his relationship with Zionism is one of the most interesting stories regarding his long life. This book exists alongside other discussions of the same material such as Martin Gilbert's Churchill and the Jews: A Lifelong Friendship but this book is fascinating for orienting Zionism vis-a-vis Churchill's own worldview and for providing a well written, fast paced discussion of the interplay between the two. Seth J. Frantzman (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-12 11:34:19 EST)
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