Available Formats
The British Left and Zionism: History of a Divorce
By (Author) Paul Kelemen
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
4th September 2012
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
320.54095694
Hardback
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The changes and divisions on the left over the Israel-Palestine conflict forms the central theme of this archive based study. While the Labour Party's supported establishing a Jewish state in Palestine, as a modernising force, the communist movement opposed it, on the grounds that it facilitated imperial influence in the Middle East. In 1947, however, the British Communist Party rallied to the Zionist cause, leaving the Palestinian cause with no effective protagonists in Britain. The left's sympathy, at the time, was overwhelmingly with the Israeli state, considering its establishment a recompense to the Jewish people for the Holocaust. It was only after the 1967 Arab-Israeli War and Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, that the new left in Britain began to articulate a critical attitude to Israel and support for Palestinian nationalism. It is a perspective which has gradually gained ground in the political mainstream. -- .
"Paul Keleman provides many answers in this revelatory and investigative book."
I found it profoundly illuminating.
an excellent job in tracing the development of the approach to Zionism on the Left in Britain and his work deserves to be widely read
'invaluable'
It is not often that a book can be classed as indispensable to an understanding of Zionism - the ideology of the movement that established the Israeli state - and its relationship to the left and the labour movement. But The British left and Zionism is one.
Tony Greenstein, Weekly Worker, 24th March 2019
Paul Kelemen is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Manchester