Friday, October 13, 1978 19 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Disraeli's 'Love Affair' With Victoria, Pride in Jewishness Benjamin Disraeli, the rakish aspirant to a dip- lomatic career, and Victoria the hypochondriac, the Great Queen who became a master of herself due to the influence of the flamboyant young man, had a "love af- fair." It became an historic episode, the young man be- came Great Britain's Prime Minister who acquired con- trol of the Suez Canal for his nation. The young Disraeli also Wad a love for the Judaism he inherited, although his father made him a Chris- tian just before he was to be Bar Mitzva. into the revered, magnifi- cent and almost mythical figure of her old age: the Doyenne of Sovereigns, the Great White Queen, the Shah-in-Shah Padshah, the Grandmama of Europe, Vic- toria Regina et Imperatrix." them) liked to think of him as a poor Jewish boy who, by virtue of his own brilliance, had overcome all obstacles to rise to the top. "The truth was more prosaic. Disraeli's origins were neither as romantic as he pretended nor as obscure as was some- times maintained. Both Isaac D'Israeli and Maria Basevi, when they mar- ried in 1802, were mem- bers of wealthy, talented and relatively distin- guished families; and their second child, Ben- jamin, was born, on 21 December 1804, into a prosperous middle-class These are among the home. He grew up in a many things related in comfortable, red-brick, "Victoria and Disraeli: white porticoed house The Making of a Roman- BENJAMIN DISRAELI near Gray's Inn, in Lon- tic Partnership" (Mac- (Lord Beaconsfield) don. Isaac D'Israeli was a millan) by Theo Aronson. About the Jewish heri- skeptical, mild-man- The love affair? The author, a noted historian,- tage of Disraeli and his love nered, bookish man; makes an interesting point for his Jewishness: His Maria was a prototype • father was the Jewish Jewish mother — happy about it, thus: "Was Victoria in love scholar, Isaac D'Israeli — to devote herself to her with Disraeli? Not, one im- note the difference in spel- home, her husband and agines, in the generally ac- ling — who had his seri con- her four children. verted. The author, Theo Aronson, relates the entire story: cepted sense of the term. Nor is the particular form taken by her love impor- "Just as Queen Vic- tant. What is important is its effect on her character toria always needed the and future development. support of a man, so did Disraeli, made the Queen Benjamin Disraeli de- feel, for the first time in pend on the love, many years, like a desirable encouragement and woman; a woman who was sympathy of women. 'A worth flirting with, and jok- female friend,' he once ing with, and buttering up. wrote, 'amiable, clever, Once again she felt herself and devoted, is a posses- to be the most important sion more valuable than person in someone's life. parks and palaces; and Her ego, as she basked in without such a muse, few the apparently whole- men can succeed in life, hearted attention of this none be content.' "Disraeli was at his best fascinating man, was given a tremendous fillip. She felt in female company, particu- appreciated, not so much for larly in the company of older women. For whether it her position, as for herself. "This had been Disraeli's be as a wife, a mistress or a supreme achievement for friend, Disraeli invariably Queen Victoria: this build- sought out women older ing up of her confidence than himself. They alone both as a monarch and a seemed capable of giving woman. By opening her him the uncritical affection eyes to the possibilities of and admiration his egotisti- her position, by bringing cal nature so ardently into flower her innate sense craved. In fact, they were of majesty, by boosting her more like mothers than self-assurance, Disraeli loves. If Queen Victoria transformed Victoria: spent much of her life in search of a father-figure, Without him, she could so easily have remained a re- Disraeli spent his in search cluse, becoming less popu- of a substitute for his lar, more neurotic and more mother. "Benjamin Disraeli, who lethargic by the year. had so much to say _about Whether the British everything else, had sur- monarchy could have sur- vived 25 more years of Vic- prisingly little to say about his mother. Quite clearly, toria's seclusion is doubtful. But by setting fire to her there was very little affec- tion, very little rapport be- imagination, by treating tween them. Of his father, her as a great queen and an attractive woman, Disraeli on the other hand, he was very fond. Both parents re-fashioned Victoria. " 'For today,' he had were of Italian-Jewish written to her on her 56th stock. His father, Isaac D'Is- birthday, 'which has raeli, was the son of a Ben- given to my country a jamin D'Israeli who had Sovereign whose reign, it emigrated to England from is my hope and ambition, Italy in the mid-eighteenth may rank with that of century. His mother, Maria Elizabeth, has also given Basevi, was the daughter of a Naphtali Basevi who had me, her humble, but cho- sen servant, a Mistress, likewise left Italy to settle whoni to serve is to in London. "In later years, Benjamin love.. ..' Disraeli was to glamorize "How could Queen Vic- his origins with much flow- toria possibly have resisted ery talk of descent from a such a call? "By this transforming of family of 'aristocratic' Spanish Jews who had set- the Widow of Windsor into tled in Venice; while others the Faery Queen, Disraeli (and Queen Victoria among enabled Victoria to develop "But, from the start al- most, the relationship be- tween the mother and her eldest son was unsatisfac- tory. Perhaps she felt closer to her only daughter, Sarah; perhaps she lavished more affection on her two younger, more dependable sons; perhaps she did not give Benjamin the admira- tion he felt he deserved. "For that he deserved admiration, Benjamin had no doubt whatsoever. Nor was his conceit entirely un- founded. In the first place, there were his good looks. Even in boyhood, Benjamin Disraeli's appearance was striking. He might have been born British but his ancestry was obvious: he looked like an Italian Jew. His hair was black, glossy, curly; his skin was sallow, his eyes were dark, his nose was hooked. Among his flaxen-haired, pink- cheeked and blue-eyed schoolmates, he was very much the odd-man-out. "There was something un-English too, about his manner. Here he seemed rather more Italian than Jewish: Disraeli was proud, vain, flashy, quick- tempered, extravagant, emotional, warm-hearted. He was also a good deal brighter than his contem- poraries: quick-witted, in- quisitive, eager to learn and anxious to shine. The boy was determined, not only to dazzle in company but to make his mark in the world. "How he would do this, he was not yet certain. All roads lay open to him, bar one. This was a career in Parliament. The parliamentary oath could be taken only by Christians. It did not mat- ter if one were of the Jewish race; one could not be of the Jewish faith. Not until 1858 would this bar be removed. "But before Benjamin turned 13 (and before even he could have had any am- bitions to enter Parliament) the barrier disappeared. In March 1817 his father — the skull-capped, scholarly, retiring Isaac D'Isareli — quarrelled and broke with the local congregation, and with active Judaism. Al- though he did not convert to Christianity, he was talked into have his children bap- tized into the Church of England. From now on Ben- jamin Disraeli would be a practicing, if not very con- vinced, Christian." It is in the review of Dis- raeli's acclamation of his Jewish heritage while being a Christian that the author introduces the important question of the attack on the disfranchisement of Jews from membership in the House of Commons because they would not take the Christian oath that the is- sue, crediting Disraeli with courage, is thus related: "Dizzy's stand on Jewish questions caused embar- rassment and distrust. In his three-volume novel, "rancred,' published in 1847, Disraeli set out some highly unorthodox views on Judaism and Christianity. To Disraeli, Christianity was the logical and highest development of Judaism. A Christian, he maintained, was simply a completed Jew. It was, perhaps, the most convenient way of ex- plaining away how he — who was so proud of his `aristocratic' Jewish ances- try — had converted to the Christian faith. "While Dizzy's bizarre theory had been confined to the perfervid pages of 'Tancred,' no one had much minded. But in 1847 Baron Lionel- de Rothschild was elected Liberal member for the City of London. As a practicing Jew, he could hardly take the par- liamentary path 'on the true faith of a Christian.' Lord John Russell, the Whig Prime Minister, therefore introduced a motion by which the civil disabilities on Jews would be removed. "To his credit, Disraeli spoke out in its favor. He need not have done so. He could simply have sat mum. He was a Christian, trying hard to win the Conserva- tive leadership by present- ing himself as a respectable, dependable, ordinary English country gentleman. Rothschild, moreover, was a Liberal: why should Dis- raeli make an effort to get him a seat in the House? "But he did. He did so, however, by putting for- ward his extraordinary thesis. Had he championed Rothschild from an accepted liberal standpoint — that of religious toleration — he would have been under- stood but Dizzy treated the House to all his high-flown theories about Christians being nothing more than completed Jews. "The 'infallible throne of Rome,' he reminded them, had been established by a Jew. It was as a Christian, he argued, that he could not take upon himself 'the awful responsibility of excluding from the legisla- ture those who are of the religion in the bosom of which my Lord and Savior was born.' "By his own followers — those rows of stolid country gentlemen — Dizzy's speech was con- sidered highly objection- able. "The Jewish question was to concern Parliament for the next 10 years. Each time a Jewish Emancipation Bill was passed by the Com- mons, it was rejected by the Lords. Not until 1858 would the matter be resolved. And throughout his long period, Disraeli would give it his if unequivocal, outlandishly-reasoned, support. "Such, however, was the force of Disraeli's personal- ity (and so lacking was he in any competitors) that he was able to overcome all reservations on the part of his colleagues." IBM Typewriters Selectric, etc. $ 400 Add 'n Type 862-1300 342-7800 PAY 7 - STAY 71 II 1 SUPER VALUE AT FLORIDA'S FAVORITE SPA ROOM RATE INCLUDES 3 ,upervised meals daily A D A dietician Golf (3 times weekly- $15) Free dail ■ , massage Tennis (day & night) -Million dollar health spas for men & women - Yoga and water exercise classes - A M & P M snacks - Nightly Entertainment - Dancing - Shows - Bingo - Movies and MORE 27* AND UP MAIN BUILDING RATES For Information, Reservations & Color Brochure CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-327-7510 LARRY PASKOW'S MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA 33141 Main Building rates average as low as S29.27 per day ( 10 of 65 rooms) per person (dbl. occ based on an 11-day slay). Special Rates for Bayside Tower Suites and Poolside Lanais (to Dec. 6. 19781. PEARL SCISSORS BUCKLES UNLIMITED 1-2-3 SALE FRONT BUY 1 $9 BELT RACK ONLY BUY 2 BUCKLES SAVE $3 ON COMBINATION NO OTHER SPECIALS APPLY ON THIS SALE BUCKLES PEARL SCISSORS 16,, EACH 3 FOR $10 THE BUCKLE LADY" WHOLESALE TO STORES, SHOPS AND DEALERS LARGEST BUCKLE DISPLAY IN MICHIGAN s nip s 2240 COOLIDGE 5 131.16. N. OF 11 MILE BERKLEY, MI 48072 MONDAY thru SATURDAY 10-6—FREE PARKING 545-6885 FULL TIME PROTECTION FROM MARV CHECK • Burglary • Vandalism _ • Fire • Personal Attack At A Price You Can Afford NC3 IFONE Automatically Notifies within seconds Police Dept. & Fire Dept. Central Office Hidden Wire installatio. You Won't Know We've Been There emergency reporting system with 24 hr. protection AMERICAN PROTECTIVE ALARM INC. 838-7008