A Passover Treat: Two Chapters of Hitler's Rise Perils Jewry; Palestine Partition Proposed (Exclusive in Michigan) Still out as president of the Zionist Organization, Chaim Weizmann devoted himself to science in Pal- estine, where he was about to establish his permanent home. Arabs were restless at the moment, and there was little peace in sight for Jews, for the persecu- tions had started in Germany. Dr.Weizmann continues his story. By CHAIM WEIZMANN ► First President of Israel VII Scientists and Others The year 1933, the year of Hitler's advent to power, marked the beginning . of the last frightful phase" in the greatest catastrophe that has ever befallen the Jewish people. , When I accepted the chairmanship of the Central Bureau for the Settlement of • German Jews, I had no particular qualifications for the work, But the need was so urgent, the human suf- fering so great, and the men and women who sought help so pathetic in the misfortune which had come over them like a tidal wave, that there could be no question of preparing oneself specifi- cally for the job. One just did the best he could. I felt it would be a great access of moral strength and a valuable source of technical knowledge if we could offer to the Hebrew University or to the Daniel Sieff Research Institute, Albert Einstein the physicist, James Franck of Goettingen; the mathematician Her- mann Weyl, the physicist Placzek, the chemist Wieg- ener, to mention but a few names. But somehow I failed to convince them. Some of them found homes in England, others in America. That was comprehen- sible, but there were other places—Turkey, for example —chosen in preference to Palestine which were utterly beyond me. I was in Palestine when the first stream of Ger- man immigrants came in. Here they were, these .Ger- man Jews, used to a regular and sheltered life, mostly in solid business or profession pursuits, altogether un- familiar with social earthquakes of this kind. They lack- ed the flexibility and adaptability of Russian and Polish Jews. Watching these people, one asked oneself: will they succeed? Will they be able to push new roots into the hard soil of Palestine? Or will they end their lives here in a sort of exile, forever bewailing the past and unable to reconcile themselves to the present? Remembering that scene, which is ever present in my mind, I think with pride and deep satisfaction of the transformation through which the German Jews have passed in Palestine, and of the distinguished contribution which they have made to the orderliness and general quality of our work. They exercised a great educational influence on the East European Jews, who still form a majority, and who were inclined to look down upon the newcomers. We founded for the Germans special types of subur- ban settlements, in which the family could devote itself • to the lighter kind of agricultural work, while the head of - the family was within easy distance of the city. Between the garden plot and the job, such as it was, a livelihood could be eked out, and in time the system yielded good results. In 1935 I returned to office as President of the World Zionist Organization and of the Jewish Agency. I did it reluctantly, after long and earnest pleading by my friends. I had got into the stride of my scientific work again, spending,more and more time in the labora- tory in the Sieff Institute, among my Palestinian colleagues. For several months in the latter part of 1934 and the beginning of 1935 my wife and I had lived in a little rented bungalow in Rehovoth, and we had begun to plan our home there. It was completed in 1937 and we settled down. I could not help thinking that very soon after taking office I would be faced with the same old troubles. I _would again be made the scapegoat for the• sins of the British government. Indeed I anticipated .a harder time than before 1931, for circumstances were becoming more ' and more unfavorable. . 1 1. 00 PCM' 71 1, ft lit L100 dig 1 the Ineffable Name, which is never pronounced in vain. By talking about it too much, by dragging it down to the level of the banal, yob desecrate that which should be approached only with reverence." During the entire period of the- rioting the Jews of Palestine exhibited moral discipline which won the admiration and respect of liberal people all over the world. The consistency with which this policy was maintained was the more remarkable when we. con- sider that violence paid political dividends to the Arabs. The Jews followed their tradition of moral_ discipline, the Palestine administration followed its tradition of bracketing Jews and Arabs "impartially" in the "dis- turbances." It looked very much like incitement of Jews to terrorism, and the human thing happened when a dis- sident Jewish minority, the Irgun Zvai Leumi, broke ranks at last in the summer of 1938; taking its cue from the Arabs and from the administration. But it was still a very small minority. The •Yishuv as a whole then as now, stood firm against terrorism. . The darkness of those years is relieved by the mem- ory of a strange and brilliant figure, Orde Wingate, who has sometimes been called -"the Lawrence of Judea." He won that title not only for his military exploits as the leader of the Jewish groupS which were organized against the Arab terrorist activity, but for his pas-. sionate sympathy with the highest ideals of Zionism. The Jews under his command were especially feared by the Arabs. Wingate used to tell me that when, at the head of a Jewish squad, he ambushed a group of raiders, he would hear a shout: "Run!" "These are not British soldiers! They are Jews!" I met Wingate and his beautiful young wife, Lorna, at Government House in Jerusalem. He came often to my house in Rehovoth, traveling alone in his little car, armed to the teeth. He had come to his Zionist views not under any personal influence or propaganda, but by the effect of Zionist literature on his deep and lifelong study of the Bible. He preached the doctrine that unless once forced to it, the Government would never do anything for us. The Palestine administration, in his opinion, con- sisted, almost without exception, of enemies of the Zionist movement. - In World War II Wingate received an appointment to India, where he organized his famous Chindits for the Burma campaign behind the Japanese lines. His achive- ment in this enterprise has become one of the war's legends. He was killed in -an airplane accident when he insisted on flying to an outpost in the jungle against the advice of the pilot. His death was an irreparable loss to the British Army, the Jewish cause and to my wife and -myself personally. • * * * , The question of partition of Palestine to provide a Jewish state when it first was advanced, provoked one of the most • violent controversies that had ever divided the Zionist movement. Dr. Weizmann pleaded for it at the Twentieth Zionist Congress at Basle in 1947. Despite opposition from American Zionists, orthodox Jewish groups and others, the Congress in- dicated its readiness to.explre the subject. _ • VIII The White Paper Britain's official offer of a\partition plan for Pal- estine was contained in a White Paper issued in July, 1947. The offer was accompanied by a series of interim administrative measures, "while the form of a scheme of partition is 'being worked out," which struck heavily at the Jewish National Home. They were the first steps toward the nullification of the Balfour Declaration; actually—thullification carne with the White Paper of 1939. It was the classic technique , of the step-by-step sellout of small nations. The same may be said of the St. James tripartite conference—British, Arabs Jews—which the govern- ment now proceeded to call. The reader must bear the period in mind. In October, 1938, the Sudetenland had been-handed over to Hitler as a result of the Mun- ich Conference; in March, 1939, Hitler annexed the rest of Czechoslovakia; and Mr. Chamberlain still believed, or pretended to believe, that by these concessions he was purchasing "peace in our time." What chance had the Jewish National Home with such a government, and what likelihood was there that commissions and Truman's Ex-Partner in Israel Riot and Partition Tha deterioration - of the international situation, the rise of Hitler Germany, the Ita16-Abyssinian war, the preliminaries to the civil war in Spain, injected new and disturbing elements into the Zionist picture. - France's indeCisivness • toWard Hitler, who was moving toward the Rhine.; England's indecisiveness toward Mussolini, - whoa was sending his warships through- the Suez Canal, tended to give the Arabs the impression that with the democracies force alone won concessions. In April, 1936, rioting broke out. in Palestine, and a new and unhappy chapter opened in Zionist history. The outbreaks were spo-radic at first. In the general spirit of the period, the government did not act decis- - ively. The Arabs gained the impression that they had in fact chosen the means and the moment well. They formed the Arab Higher Committee, headed by the Grand Milli, and called a general strike. In May, 1936, the British government decided to appoint a royal commission to "investigate the causes of unrest and alleged grievances of Arabi or Jews." - This was the now famous Peel Commission so-called • from its chairman, Earl Peel, by far the most distingu- ished and ablest of the investigatory bodies ever sent out to Palestine. • The subject of the partition of Palestine was first broached to me by this . commission at a session which ' was held in camera on Jan. 8, 1937. No colleague was with me. I was asked how the idea struck . me, and naturally answered that I could not tell on the spur of the moment, nor would I give my own impression ex- cept after consulation with my colleagues. Actually I felt that it held out great possibilities and hopes. Something new had • been born into the Zionist movement, something which could not be per- mitted to become a matter for crude slogans and angry controversy. I remember saying not long afterwards to a colleague, "A Jewish State, the idea of Jewish in- dependence in Palestine, even if only in part of Palestine 13 such a lofty thing that it ought to be treated - like - - —International Photo A former business partner of President Truman, EDDIE JACOBSON is shown with his wife visiting Israel's PRES- IDENT CHAIM WEIZMANN, in Tel Aviv. Weizmann is coming to the U. S. within a few weeks to be guest of honor at an affair held under auspices of New York Council of the American Committee for Weizmann In- stitute of Science. - 32—THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, April 8, 1948 ) ',atm. v eizrnann conferences would deflect it from its appeasement course? One day, when the conference was fairly advanced, I received a letter from the Colonial Office, addressed to me obviously by a clerical error. It was apparently meant for the members of the Arab delegation. There, in clear terms, was the outline of what was afterward to be the White Paper of -1939, submitted for Arab State of Palestine in five years; a liipited Jewish .im- migration during these five years -and none thereafter without Arab consent! I could scarcely believe my eyes. I happened to remeinber, when I had finiShed perusing the extraordinary document, that most of my Zionist friends were at a party only a few doors from mine. I went over, and we managed to get Malcolm. MacDonald to join us. A heated and extremely un- pleasant discussion ensued. MacDonald was very crest- fallen and stammered ineffective excuses, that the document did not represent the final view of - His Majesty's Government. that it was only a basis for dis- cussion, that everything could still be changed, that we should not take it so tragically— the usual twaddle In spite of the hopelessness of the I made arrangements to see Mr. Chamberlain. I pleaded with him once more to stay his hand. The Prime Minister of England sat before me like a marble statue. His expressionless eyes were fixed on - me, but he never said a word. I got no • response. - He was bent on his appeasement of the Arabs and nothing could change his mind. What he gained by it is now a matter of history. In the House of Commons Mr. Churchill delivered against the White Paper one of the greatest speeches' of his career. The whole debate, indeed went against the government. The most important figures in the house attacked the White Paper. The government answer, delivered by Malcolm MacDonald, was a clever piece of sophistry which could carry conviction only to those who were ignorant of the details of the Problem. It is worth recording that even in that atmosphere the government victory was extremely narrow. There were 268 votes in favor, 179 against, with 110 abstaining. As a rule the goy,. ernment obtained more than 400 votes for its measures. As I left the House with my friends, I could not help overhearing the remarks of several members to the effect that the Jews had been given a very raw deal. • The First War Years The paradox which was revealed with the opening of the war deepened with the passing of the months. In the fight against the Nazi monster no one could have been more fanatically eager to contribute tb the common cause- than the Jews. At the same time Eng- land, then the leader of the anti-Nazi 'coalition, was keeping the gates of Palestine closed against the un- happy thousands of men, women and children who were making the last desperate effort to reach the safety of the National Home. The coffin boats con- tinued to wander over the Mediterranean, unable to discharge their human cargoes. The pressure within Europe intensified. And yet we were determined to place all our man power, all our facilities in Palestine, at the disposal of England and her allies. What else was there for us to do? In 1940, I visited America, and found it in that strange prewar mood which it is now so difficult to recall. Pearl Harbor was still two years off. America was, so to speak, violently neutral, and making an extraordinary effort to live in the ordinary way. I spoke' at Zionist meetingi in NeW York, Baltimore, Chicago and Cleveland, seeking to call the attention of my fellow4ews to the doom hanging over European Jewry. I stressed our positive achievements in Palestine, and expressed the hope that the end -of the war would , bring with it the annulment of the White Paper and a 'new era of progress. All in all, this American trip, which lasted three months was not a satisfactory one. There was, however, one considerable gain to record. It was during this visit that I made the -closer acquaintance of two of the younger New England' Zionists, Dewey Stone and Harry Levine. Early in 1940 they added, to their general ZiOnist work, a special and sustained interest in the Sieff Research Institute at Rehovoth,. Palestine, and later they were• to take a leading part in the deVelop- ment of Weizmann' Institute of Science. - It was genuine relief to get back to the realities of. England where, if the truth was harsh, it was at least being faced. The symbol -of England's - awakening to reality was Chamberlain's retirement and. Churchill's assumption of office as Prime Minister. The illusions of "the phony war" were gone, and En-gland knew that, for a time at least, she would be standing alone. Our two boys were in active service. Benjy, the older one, was with his anti-aircraft artillery . group on the aerodrome in Kent. He had married in -1937,- Maidie Pomerans, who comes of an excellent family - of RuSsian Jewish origin living in Leicester,Midlands. ,Benjy and on, David, a bright Maidie have one child, our grands Spark,' almost too intelligent, who .must constantly be kept back in order that he may not .develop into a so- called prodigy. He fortunately does as well at games as in his studies, so there .is every chance that he will not develop into the. over-grown intellectual type with which we meet 'so often in modern Jewish society. Our younger son, Michael, became an officer in the air force, .arid he* devoted himself to his duties heart -and soul. He was a phy'sicist by training; deeply interested in aeronautics and electronics, but in spite of rep-eated. offers from researchstations of. the Ministry of Aviation, he insited on active service. (In February, 1942, Michael was lost in action.—Ed.) . _ I was appointed- honorary chemical advisor to the Ministry of Supply, headed by Mr. Herbert Mor ,. rison, and was given a little laboratory in London. The laboratory was conveniently located across Hyde Park, a few Minutes' walk from the Dorchester Hotel. I found it a great comfot in this time of personal and general stress to have a serious occupation _which absorbed a great deal of energy and attention, and gave one 'the feeling of making some sort of contribution -to the na.-;,- tional effort. Among other things we investigated the fermentation of molasses by mass irinoculation, the fer ;. meritation of wood and straw hydrolzates, and the prep aration of methy butinol and its tranformation products; escially isoprene. This last was of interest in view of the approaching rubber crisis: . - Next week, Dr. Weizmann will tell how Winston Churchill and President Roosevelt offered assistance during World War II to establish the Jewish National Home in Palestine. This is a 'serialization of parts of "Trial and Error, - by Chaim Weizmann, by Harper & Drothers. Copyright. 1949, by the Weizmann Fpundation.