20. THE FIRST CHRISTIAN ZIONIST: BENJAMIN DISRAELI
Among the nationalisms that became such an important feature of European life
in the nineteenth century, none is more important that that of the Jews. Jewish
nationalism is a particularly complex variety that does not fit easily into the
category of the nationalisms either of the great, “historic” nations (Nationen) or of
the lesser, newer nationalities (Nationalitätchen) that grew up in reaction to the
former.1
Of course, Jewish nationalism of one kind had existed for thousands of years,
being closely linked with the religion, first, of the Old Testament and, later, after
their rejection of Christ, of the Talmud. But nineteenth-century Jewish nationalism
was of a different kind, being strongly influenced by the western varieties that
arose out of the French revolution. Its development was slow because it had to
contend with other currents of thought that also arose out of the revolution and
were particularly strong among the Jews: anti-nationalism or assimilationism, union
with the prevailing liberal-secular culture of the West, and violent rejection of that
same culture on the basis of the creed of the internationalist proletarian revolution. (In
a speech in the House of Commons in 1852 Disraeli spoke of the secret societies
aiming to destroy tradition, religion and property. And he said that at the head of
all of them stood people of the Jewish race…) Other factors making for the great
complexity of Jewish nationalism were: the lack of a territorial base or homeland,
the different conditions of Jews in different parts of Europe, and the different
relationships between the religion and the nation of the Jews in the different regions.
Jewish nationalism arose at least in part as a reaction to assimilationism. Since
1789 and the declaration of the rights of men, Jewish assimilation into European
life, which was achieved either through Christian baptism (the favoured route), or
through the sanitized version of Talmudism known as Reform Judaism, had
progressed rapidly, if unevenly, through Europe. It was furthest advanced in
Britain, where we see it triumphant in the careers of such men as the banker Lionel
Rothschild, the philanthropist Sir Moses Montefiore and the Tory party leader and
Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli. And yet the striking fact especially about these
men is their continued attraction to Israel: Montefiore financed Jewish colonies in
Palestine, and Disraeli travelled to Palestine and wrote a novel, Tancred, about the
return to Zion.
Disraeli is usually contrasted with his great parliamentary rival from the 1850s
to the 1880s – William Ewart Gladstone, leader of the Liberal Party. Both, writes
Tombs, were “highly unusual men by any standards. In some ways both were
characteristically but differently ‘Victorian’ – Gladstone in his agonized and
introspective religiosity, Disraeli in his romantic devotion to aristocratic leadership
and grandiose patriotism.”2
1
David Vital, A People Apart: The Jews in Europe, 1789-1939, Oxford University Press, 1999, p. 253.
2
Tombs, The English and their History, New York: Knopf, 2014, p. 504.
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“With his goatee beard, his dandified clothing, his profession as a writer of
novels (which he continued to publish during his tenure of office), and his often
frivolous wit, [Disraeli] hardly seemed cut out to lead a party of stolid gentry and
landowners. Part of his secret was that he had a firm belief in the virtues of the
aristocracy, strong-minded, independent, and not to be overawed by the mob;
indeed, he believed that Jews themselves were natural aristocrats. The architect of
the 1867 extension of the franchise, he was the founder of ‘Tory Democracy’,
turning the Conservatives into a modern political party in terms not only of
organization but also of ideology. On the death of Lord Palmerston in 1865, Disraeli
was quick to appropriate his mantle of patriotism for the Conservatives.” 3
“One of Disraeli’s most influential achievements,” writes the Jewish historian
Sebastian Sebag Montefiore, “was in creating an imperial ethos for the British
empire. He sang the virtues of imperium et libertas (empire and liberty), and he saw
Britain’s mission as not just to trade and establish colonial settlements, but also to
bring British civilization and values to the diverse peoples of its ever expanding
dominion…”4
In his early novels, such as Coningsby and Sybil, Disraeli showed himself to be a
passionate monarchist, a defender of the old aristocratic order based on the land
and an enemy of the contemporary worship of Mammon that produced such a
lamentable contrast between the “two nations” of England, the rich and the poor.
“Toryism,” he predicted, “will yet rise… to bring back strength to the Crown,
liberty to the subject, and to announce that power has only one duty: to secure the
social welfare of the PEOPLE.”5
Such a creed, combined with his Anglicanism (he was a baptized Jew from an
upper-middle-class family) might lead us to believe that Disraeli was trying, like so
many assimilated Jews, to distance himself as far as possible from his Jewish roots
and make himself out to be a High Tory Englishman. But this was only half true.
He once answered a taunt in parliament: “Yes, I am a Jew, and when the ancestors
of the Right Honourable Gentleman were living as savages in an unknown island,
mine were priests in the Temple of Solomon…” His novel Coningsby contains a
character, Sidonia, who is an almost exact copy of the real Lord Rothschild, whom
Disraeli greatly admired.6
In short, while Disraeli seemed to be an English imperialist, he was in reality a
Jewish anti-Gentile racist. For, as Constance de Rothschild wrote, “he believed
more in the compelling power of a common ancestry than in that of a common
faith. He said to me, as he has said over and over again in his novels, ‘All is race,
not religion – remember that.’”7
3
Evans, The Pursuit of Power. Europe 1815-1914, London: Penguin, 2017, p. 575.
4
Montefiore, Titans of History, pp. 357-358.
5
Disraeli, Sybil; in Sarah Bradford, Disraeli, London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1982, p. 136.
6
G. Edward Griffin, The Creature from Jekyll Island, Westlake, Ca.: American Media, 2010, p. 227.
7
Rothschild, in Bradford, op. cit., p. 186.
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It was extraordinary how a Jew could ascend to the leadership of the greatest
and proudest Gentile empire while not disguising his belief that he belonged to a
superior race that was not British. But in his very chutzpah there lay the secret of his
success among his peers, who disliked his Jewishness but admired his cleverness
and boldness. It was in 1847 that he first made this belief public, first in the third
novel of his trilogy, Tancred, published in March, and then in his famous speech
pleading Jewish emancipation in the Commons in December.
“Tancred,” writes Sarah Bradford, “which Disraeli began in 1845, the year in
which Peel’s Jewish Disabilities Bill had opened every municipal office to the Jews
(membership of Parliament still remaining closed to them), was Disraeli’s favourite
among his novels. It had originally been conceived as part of the Young England
plan, an examination of the state of the English Church as an instrument of moral
regeneration, but evolved into an exposition of the debt of gratitude which European
civilization, and the English Church in particular, owed to the Jews as the founders
of their religious faith. It was the expression of all his most deeply-felt convictions,
combining his feeling for Palestine and the East and his theory of the superiority of
the Jewish race with the revolt of the romantic against progress and scientific
materialism…
“… Disraeli’s hero, Tancred de Montacute, is young, rich and noble, heir to the
Duke of Bellamont. Serious and deeply religious, Tancred, disappointed by the
failure of the ‘mitred nullities’ of the Anglican Church to satisfy his spiritual needs,
conceives the idea of a pilgrimage to Jerusalem in search of redemption. He is
encouraged in this project by Sidonia, a thinly disguised London Rothschild, whose
City office, Sequin Court, and select dinner parties are minutely described. Sidonia
talks to Rothschild of ‘the spiritual hold which Asia has always had upon the North’,
recommending him to contact, Lara, prior of the Convent of Terra Santa in
Jerusalem, who is a descendant of an aristocratic Spanish Sephardic family and a
Nuevo Cristiano, or converted Jew. He compares Lara’s knowledge of the Old
(Jewish) faith with the New (Christian) learning of the English Church in a manner
extremely derogatory to the Anglican bishops, while introducing the main theme of
the book: ‘You see, he is master of the old as well as the new learning; this is very
important; they often explain each other. Your bishops here know nothing about
these things. How can they? A few centuries back they were tattooed savages.’
“This was hardly a tactful way of putting his argument to his English readers; but
when Disraeli gets Tancred to the East, his statements become even odder and, to his
Victorian Gentile audience, more offensive. Tancred visits Jerusalem and establishes
himself in Syria… He meets and falls in love with a beautiful Jewess named Eva,
whom Disraeli uses as a mouthpiece for his main message. ‘Half Christendom
worships a Jewess,’ Eva tells Tancred, ‘and the other half a Jew. Now let me ask you.
Which do you think should be the superior race, the worshipped or the
worshippers?’ Disraeli goes even further, for not only do Christians owe a debt of
gratitude to the Jews as the forerunners of their religion, but if the Jews had not
crucified Christ there would be no Christianity. He aims his argument at a
specifically British audience: ‘Vast as is the obligation of the whole human family to
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the Hebrew race, there is no portion of the modern population as indebted to them
as the British people.’
“As the book progresses Disraeli’s arguments become even more mystical and
confusing. He introduces an odd supernatural figure, the Angel of Arabia, who
accords Tancred a visionary interview on Mount Sinai. The Angel, in Disraelian
fashion, blames the sickness of human society on the atheistic influence of the French
Revolution…
“…The Angel, Tancred and the author are anti-Progress. In a famous passage that
was to rouse The Times to fury, Disraeli declares: ‘And yet some flat-nosed Frank, full
of bustle and puffed up with self-conceit (a race spawned perhaps in the morasses of
some Northern forest hardly yet cleared) talks of Progress! Progress to what, and
from where? Arid empires shriveled into deserts, amid the wrecks of great cities, a
single column or obelisk of which nations import for the prime adornment of their
mud-built capitals, amid arts forgotten, commerce annihilated, fragmentary
literatures, and by populations destroyed, the European talks of progress, because
by an ingenious application of some scientific acquirements, he has established a
society which has mistaken comfort for civilization.’ Tancred’s cure for the ‘fever of
progress’ is to ‘work out a great religious truth on the Persian and Mesopotamian
plains’, and by revivifying Asia to regenerate Europe.
“Disraeli, carried away by the onrush of his feelings and wild ideas, simply backs
away when faced with the necessity of producing some solution to Tancred’s vague
plans for revivifying Europe… [He] had conceived the love between Eva and
Tancred as a symbol of his most important message, the synthesis between Judaism
and Christianity; but in the end he finds even this impossible to carry through…
“… The Times… reproved Disraeli for writing a novel with a message: ‘It is a
bastard kind of writing – that of fiction “with a purpose”, … the “unsubstantial” aim
of “converting the whole world back to Judaism”.’ The reviewer ridiculed this
notion by pointing out the anxiety of contemporary Jewry to approximate itself ever
more nearly to Gentile society, with particular reference to the Rothschilds: ‘Whilst
Mr. Disraeli eloquently discourses of a speedy return to Jerusalem, Sidonia buys a
noble estate in Bucks, and Sidonia’s first cousin is high-sheriff of the county. So
anxious, indeed, are the Hebrews generally to return to the Holy Land as a distinct
race, that they petition Parliament for all the privileges of British citizens… During
the last ten years the Western Jew has travelled faster and farther from Jerusalem
than he journeyed during ten centuries before.’…
“Disraeli was not deterred by the public reaction to Tancred; he was to repeat his
arguments in the debate on Jewish Disabilities on 16 December. The background to
the bill was the election, in August of that year, of Disraeli’s friend, Baron Lionel de
Rothschild, as Liberal candidate for the City of London. As a Jew, Baron Lionel had
felt unable to take the oath requiring a member of Parliament to swear ‘on the true
faith of a Christian’ and was therefore debarred from taking his seat…
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“[Disraeli’s] argument… aimed at removing Christian scruples by pointing out
that Judaism and Christianity were practically synonymous, that Judaism was the
foundation of Christianity.
“’The Jews,’ Disraeli began, ‘are persons who acknowledge the same God as the
Christian people of this realm. They acknowledge the same divine revelation as
yourselves.’ No doubt many of the listening squires did not greatly like the idea of
their Anglican faith being equated with that of ‘the Ikys and Abys’, but worse was to
come. They should be grateful, Disraeli told them, because ‘They [the Jews] are,
humanly speaking, the authors of your religion. They unquestionably those to
whom you are indebted for no inconsiderable portion of your known religion, and
for the whole of your divine knowledge.’ At this point the first outraged cries of
‘Oh!’ broke out, but Disraeli only warmed to his theme. ‘Every Gentleman here,’ he
told the astonished House, ‘does profess the Jewish religion, and believes in Moses
and the Prophets’, a statement that provoked a chorus of angry cries.
“’Where is your Christianity, if you do not believe in their Judaism?’ Disraeli
asked them. He went on: ‘On every sacred day, you read to the people the exploits of
Jewish heroes, the proofs of Jewish devotion, the brilliant annals of past Jewish
magnificence. The Christian Church has covered every kingdom with sacred
buildings, and over every altar… we find the tables of the Jewish law. Every Sunday
– every Lord’s day – if you wish to express feelings of praise and thanksgiving to the
Most High, or if you wish to find expressions of solace in grief, you find both in the
words of the Jewish poets.’
“No doubt most of Disraeli’s hearers thought he was going too far, and stirred
uncomfortably in their seats. When, however, he prepared to launch into yet another
paragraph on the same theme, ‘… every man in the early ages of the Church, by
whose power, or zeal, or genius, the Christian faith was propagated, was a Jew,’ the
dissidents in the House lost patience and shouted him down. ‘Interruption’ Hansard
notes flatly.
“At this, Disraeli too lost patience. He rounded on his tormentors, telling them in
so many words that much of their concern for the safeguarding of Christianity was
humbug, and that the real reason for their opposition to admitting the Jews was pure
anti-Semitic prejudice: ‘If one could suppose that the arguments we have heard…
are the only arguments that influence the decision of this question, it would be
impossible to conceive what is the reason of the Jews not being admitted to full
participation in the rights and duties of a Christian legislature. In exact proportion to
your faith ought to be your wish to do this great act of national justice… But you are
influenced by the darkest superstitions of the darkest ages that ever existed in this
country. It is this feeling that has been kept out of this debate; indeed that has been
kept secret in yourselves… and that is unknowingly influencing you.’
“He ended defiantly: ‘I, whatever may be the consequences – must speak what I
feel. I cannot sit in this House with any misconception of my opinion on the subject.
Whatever may be the consequences on the seat I hold… I cannot, for one, give a vote
which is not in deference to what I believe to be the true principles of religion. Yes, it
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is as a Christian that I will not take upon me the awful responsibility of excluding
from the Legislature those who are of the religion in the bosom of which my Lord
and Saviour was born.’”8
It is difficult to know at whom to be more amazed – at the audacity of Disraeli in
telling the highest assembly of perhaps the most powerful Christian nation on earth
(which included bishops of the Anglican church) that all the greatest Christians were
in fact Jews, and that Christianity was merely a variety of Judaism, or the ignorance
of the English, who in essence bought the argument, eventually passed the Bill
(Lionel Rothschild became MP for the City in 1858) and from then on acted as the
main protectors of the Jews and Judaism on the stage of world history! This confirms
Keble’s charge in his Assize Sermon of 1833 that “under the guise of charity and
toleration we are come almost to this pass: that no difference, in matters of faith, is to
disqualify for our approbation and confidence, whether in public or domestic life.”
Ignored, it would seem, by everyone in this debate was the fundamental fact that
Judaism since Annas and Caiaphas was not the religion of the great saints of the Old
Testament, that Christ was killed by the Jews, that the Jews had taken His blood
upon themselves, and that the Talmud, the contemporary Jews’ real “Bible”,
expressed the most vituperative hatred of both Christ and Christians.
Disraeli’s speech was a sign of the times, a sign that the Jews had now truly
broken through the barrier of anti-Semitism to reach the highest positions in the
western world, the top of the “greasy pole” (Disraeli’s phrase), where, as Tombs
writes, he believed himself “himself destined to wield British power, ‘to sway the
race that sways the world in an epic global chess game for world civilization against
the forces of revolution, nationalism, militarism and pan-Slav imperialism.’” 9
But the speech also showed that the Jews would unfailingly use their position to
advance the interests of their race, whether baptised or unbaptised. In other words, if we
were to judge from the behaviour of the Rothschilds and Montefiores and Disraelis,
at any rate, the Jews would never be fully assimilated. For, as Disraeli himself said: “All
is race, not religion – remember that…”
January 19 / February 1, 2022.
8
Bradford, op. cit., pp. 179-184.
9
Tombs, op. cit., p. 505.
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