In 1929 George Lansbury became a member of the second Labour government in Great Britain.
As the most senior surviving minister after the electoral defeat of 1931 he
became Leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the Opposition.
George Lansbury served as Chairman of the No More War
Movement. Dick Sheppard, founder of the
Peace Pledge Union, of which Lansbury was President at the time of his death,
called him 'Public Pacifist Number One'.
In June 1933, George Lansbury, as leader of the Labour Party, made this message to voters at the Fulham East by election, “I would close every recruiting station, disband the Army and disarm the Air Force. I would abolish the whole dreadful equipment of war and say to the world: "Do your worst."
Lansbury's
deep Christian pacifist convictions were absolute. In 1933, Labour was essentially a
pacifist party. Under his leadership, the British Labour Party suffered the
shock of facing the reality of Hitler.
By
the end of 1937 it had become a party that believed in armed deterrence, a
party that urged collective security through the League of Nations and a party
that bitterly opposed Neville Chamberlain's policy of appeasement.
A
coherent case for pacifism as policy is so much harder to make after the
knowledge of the Holocaust and the realization of the true nature of those you
try to appease.
Like
today, the appeal of pacifism in the early 1930s, was founded on its abhorrence
of war. In their case it was the echoes of the Great War that still resounded
in Britain. Today, it is the memory of World War Two, and experiences with more
recent unsuccessful wars against Islamic terrorism. Both resulted in a
delusional appeasement to, in the words of Winston Churchill, feed the
crocodile in order that it eats you last.
Lansbury's
greatest electoral achievement came in the 1933 Fulham East by-election, a few
months after Hitler's election. It was fought on a peace ticket following
Germany's withdrawal from the League of Nations. There was a massive swing to
Labour in Britain.
It
was that by-election which helped to convince Stanley Baldwin, who had taken up
many of the duties of an ailing Prime Minister, that there could be no public
support for rearmament, leading Churchill to include his famous diary index
indictment of "Baldwin, Stanley, admits putting party before country."
Lansbury
was an accidental leader, like Attlee after him, who had office thrust upon
him.
The
Peace Pledge Union loudly supported Lansbury. It pursued peace and appeasement
well beyond Munich.
Along
with the British Union of Fascists, with which it, incredibly, formed an
alliance on this issue, its Peace Newspaper became prominent in arguing that
German territorial demands were reasonable and should be conceded peacefully. This
has echoes in today’s European parliamentary demands for Israel to cede
critical territory to a rejectionist Palestinian leadership in search of peace.
The
PPU took this well beyond advocating giving Hitler the Sudetenland at Munich.
Lansbury met
with Hitler. He prepared a memorandum for Hitler to read which ended with the
words, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”
Hitler played this elderly pacifist like a fool.
Lansbury gushed with enthusiasm after his meeting. “Hitler treated the interview very seriously. I think he really wants
peace.”
We hear similar
statements by left-wing parliamentarians when talking about Mahmoud Abbas.
About Mussolini,
Lansbury told people on his return from his meeting with Hitler, that “the cynics might say that Signor Mussolini’s assurances
might be to ‘cod’ a silly old man but I prefer to take people at their face
value.”
Sadly, European politicians
make the same mistake in taking Mahmoud Abbas at face value by listening to
what he tells them in English rather than what he is telling his own people in
their own language, a la Hitler. In both cases, truth lies in the indoctrination
of their people rather than deluding naïve politicians desirous of believing the
unbelievable.
Lansbury had the nerve
to visit Prague and the Czech Prime Minister who was under tremendous pressure
exerted by Britain’s Chamberlain, France’s Deladier, and, of course, from
Mussolini and Hitler to surrender land for peace, basically to acquiesce in the
destruction of his country. This is hauntingly akin to the pressure being
exerted on Israel today by politicians to surrender territory to an undefined
Palestine.
Lansbury did it with a firm sense of pacifistic altruism that reflects
current rationale for the intense pressure on Israel. He cabled Prime Minister Benes with the
following words,
“The world’s peace is dependent on you accepting
further sacrifices and giving away before the further demands, backed by the
threat of force…”
This message resonates today with the unilateral pressure on Israel.
Lansbury was the sort of person who believes he is so right that he was willing
to sacrifice another country for his convictions, and no force of reason and
reality could prevent him from throwing his entire weight into a cause that
would jeodardize, first and foremost, another nation’s security and
self-determination.
Doesn’t that sound all too familiar? Doesn't it represent today’s
misguided politicians ignorant, or denial, of the real character and ambitions
of a devious Palestinian movement?
It took the aftermath of Munich and Hitler’s deception with regard to
Czechoslovakia to make Britain aware of the shame of Chamberlain and the
embarrassment of Lansbury. It took the awful awareness of the Holocaust to
understand the horror of what this political mistake wrought of the Jews of
Europe.
Just as delusional British politicians dismissed Hitler’s “Mein Kampf” then so do they ignore both the Hamas and PLO Charters which are as
equally anti-Semitic in their threatening language as the Nazi best-seller.
In his old age Lansbury admitted, “It may be that I have been too believing, that I
should be more skeptical.”
This is the advice I would give to European parliamentarians who are
rushing to welcome a Palestinian state, for altruistic reasons, without first
checking the reality of the monster they are likely to create.
Try not to be too believing and become more skeptical of Palestinian
leaders and Palestinian intent.
Barry Shaw is the author of “Israel Reclaiming the Narrative.” www.israelnarrative.com He is also a Knesset Forum member on Israel’s
legitimacy.
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