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<h2> CHAPTER VII. — THE SHADOW OF THE PROBLEM </h2>
<p>A traveller sees the hundred branches of a tree long before he is near
enough to see its single and simple root; he generally sees the scattered
or sprawling suburbs of a town long before he has looked upon the temple
or the market-place. So far I have given impressions of the most motley
things merely as they came, in chronological and not in logical order; the
first flying vision of Islam as a sort of sea, with something both of the
equality and the emptiness and the grandeur of its purple seas of sand;
the first sharp silhouette of Jerusalem, like Mount St. Michael, lifting
above that merely Moslem flood a crag still crowned with the towers of the
Crusaders; the mere kaleidoscope of the streets, with little more than a
hint of the heraldic meaning of the colours; a merely personal impression
of a few of the leading figures whom I happened to meet first, and only
the faintest suggestion of the groups for which they stood. So far I have
not even tidied up my own first impressions of the place; far less
advanced a plan for tidying up the place itself.</p>
<p>In any case, to begin with, it is easy to be in far too much of a hurry
about tidying up. This has already been noted in the more obvious case, of
all that religious art that bewildered the tourist with its churches full
of flat and gilded ikons. Many a man has had the sensation of something as
full as a picture gallery and as futile as a lumber-room, merely by not
happening to know what is really of value, or especially in what way it is
really valued. An Armenian or a Syrian might write a report on his visit
to England, saying that our national and especially our naval heroes were
neglected, and left to the lowest dregs of the rabble; since the portraits
of Benbow and Nelson, when exhibited to the public, were painted on wood
by the crudest and most incompetent artists. He would not perhaps fully
appreciate the fine shade of social status and utility implied in a
public-house sign. He might not realise that the sign of Nelson could be
hung on high everywhere, because the reputation of Nelson was high
everywhere, not because it was low anywhere; that his bad portrait was
really a proof of his good name. Yet the too rapid reformer may easily
miss even the simple and superficial parallel between the wooden pictures
of admirals and the wooden pictures of angels. Still less will he
appreciate the intense spiritual atmosphere, that makes the real
difference between an ikon and an inn-sign, and makes the inns of England,
noble and national as they are, relatively the homes of Christian charity
but hardly a Christian faith. He can hardly bring himself to believe that
Syrians can be as fond of religion as Englishmen of beer.</p>
<p>Nobody can do justice to these cults who has not some sympathy with the
power of a mystical idea to transmute the meanest and most trivial objects
with a kind of magic. It is easy to talk of superstitiously attaching
importance to sticks and stones, but the whole poetry of life consists of
attaching importance to sticks and stones; and not only to those tall
sticks we call the trees or those large stones we call the mountains.
Anything that gives to the sticks of our own furniture, or the stones of
our own backyard, even a reflected or indirect divinity is good for the
dignity of life; and this is often achieved by the dedication of similar
and special things. At least we should desire to see the profane things
transfigured by the sacred, rather than the sacred disenchanted by the
profane; and it was a prophet walking on the walls of this mountain city,
who said that in his vision all the bowls should be as the bowls before
the altar, and on every pot in Jerusalem should be written Holy unto the
Lord.</p>
<p>Anyhow, this intensity about trifles is not always understood. Several
quite sympathetic Englishmen told me merely as a funny story (and God
forbid that I should deny that it is funny) the fact of the Armenians or
some such people having been allowed to suspend a string of lamps from a
Greek pillar by means of a nail, and their subsequent alarm when their
nail was washed by the owners of the pillar; a sort of symbol that their
nail had finally fallen into the hands of the enemy. It strikes us as odd
that a nail should be so valuable or so vivid to the imagination. And yet,
to men so close to Calvary, even nails are not entirely commonplace.</p>
<p>All this, regarding a decent delay and respect for religion or even for
superstition, is obvious and has already been observed. But before leaving
it, we may note that the same argument cuts the other way; I mean that we
should not insolently impose our own ideas of what is picturesque any more
than our own ideas of what is practical. The aesthete is sometimes more of
a vandal than the vandal. The proposed reconstructions of Jerusalem have
been on the whole reasonable and sympathetic; but there is always a danger
from the activities, I might almost say the antics, of a sort of antiquary
who is more hasty than an anarchist. If the people of such places revolt
against their own limitations, we must have a reasonable respect for their
revolt, and we must not be impatient even with their impatience.</p>
<p>It is their town; they have to live in it, and not we. As they are the
only judges of whether their antiquities are really authorities, so they
are the only judges of whether their novelties are really necessities. As
I pointed out more than once to many of my friends in Jerusalem, we should
be very much annoyed if artistic visitors from Asia took similar liberties
in London. It would be bad enough if they proposed to conduct excavations
in Pimlico or Paddington, without much reference to the people who lived
there; but it would be worse if they began to relieve them of the mere
utilitarianism of Chelsea Bridge or Paddington Station. Suppose an
eloquent Abyssinian Christian were to hold up his hand and stop the
motor-omnibuses from going down Fleet Street on the ground that the
thoroughfare was sacred to the simpler locomotion of Dr. Johnson. We
should be pleased at the African's appreciation of Johnson; but our
pleasure would not be unmixed. Suppose when you or I are in the act of
stepping into a taxi-cab, an excitable Coptic Christian were to leap from
behind a lamp-post, and implore us to save the grand old growler or the
cab called the gondola of London. I admit and enjoy the poetry of the
hansom; I admit and enjoy the personality of the true cabman of the old
four-wheeler, upon whose massive manhood descended something of the
tremendous tradition of Tony Weller. But I am not so certain as I should
like to be, that I should at that moment enjoy the personality of the
Copt. For these reasons it seems really desirable, or at least defensible,
to defer any premature reconstruction of disputed things, and to begin
this book as a mere note-book or sketch-book of things as they are, or at
any rate as they appear. It was in this irregular order, and in this
illogical disproportion, that things did in fact appear to me, and it was
some time before I saw any real generalisation that would reduce my
impressions to order. I saw that the groups disagreed, and to some extent
why they disagreed, long before I could seriously consider anything on
which they would be likely to agree. I have therefore confined the first
section of this book to a mere series of such impressions, and left to the
last section a study of the problem and an attempt at the solution.
Between these two I have inserted a sort of sketch of what seemed to me
the determining historical events that make the problem what it is. Of
these I will only say for the moment that, whether by a coincidence or for
some deeper cause, I feel it myself to be a case of first thoughts being
best; and that some further study of history served rather to solidify
what had seemed merely a sort of vision. I might almost say that I fell in
love with Jerusalem at first sight; and the final impression, right or
wrong, served only to fix the fugitive fancy which had seen, in the snow
on the city, the white crown of a woman of Bethlehem.</p>
<p>But there is another cause for my being content for the moment, with this
mere chaos of contrasts. There is a very real reason for emphasising those
contrasts, and for shunning the temptation to shut our eyes to them even
considered as contrasts. It is necessary to insist that the contrasts are
not easy to turn into combinations; that the red robes of Rome and the
green scarves of Islam will not very easily fade into a dingy russet; that
the gold of Byzantium and the brass of Babylon will require a hot furnace
to melt them into any kind of amalgam. The reason for this is akin to what
has already been said about Jerusalem as a knot of realities. It is
especially a knot of popular realities. Although it is so small a place,
or rather because it is so small a place, it is a domain and a dominion
for the masses. Democracy is never quite democratic except when it is
quite direct; and it is never quite direct except when it is quite small.
So soon as a mob has grown large enough to have delegates it has grown
large enough to have despots; indeed the despots are often much the more
representative of the two. Now in a place so small as Jerusalem, what we
call the rank and file really counts. And it is generally true, in
religions especially, that the real enthusiasm or even fanaticism is to be
found in the rank and file. In all intense religions it is the poor who
are more religious and the rich who are more irreligious. It is certainly
so with the creeds and causes that come to a collision in Jerusalem. The
great Jewish population throughout the world did hail Mr. Balfour's
declaration with something almost of the tribal triumph they might have
shown when the Persian conqueror broke the Babylonian bondage. It was
rather the plutocratic princes of Jewry who long hung back and hesitated
about Zionism. The mass of Mahometans really are ready to combine against
the Zionists as they might have combined against the Crusades. It is
rather the responsible Mahometan leaders who will naturally be found more
moderate and diplomatic. This popular spirit may take a good or a bad
form; and a mob may cry out many things, right and wrong. But a mob cries
out "No Popery"; it does not cry out "Not so much Popery," still less
"Only a moderate admixture of Popery." It shouts "Three cheers for
Gladstone," it does not shout "A gradual and evolutionary social tendency
towards some ideal similar to that of Gladstone." It would find it quite a
difficult thing to shout; and it would find exactly the same difficulty
with all the advanced formulae about nationalisation and
internationalisation and class-conscious solidarity. No rabble could roar
at the top of its voice the collectivist formula of "The nationalisation
of all the means of production, distribution, and exchange." The mob of
Jerusalem is no exception to the rule, but rather an extreme example of
it. The mob of Jerusalem has cried some remarkable things in its time; but
they were not pedantic and they were not evasive. There was a day when it
cried a single word; "Crucify." It was a thing to darken the sun and rend
the veil of the temple; but there was no doubt about what it meant.</p>
<p>This is an age of minorities; of minorities powerful and predominant,
partly through the power of wealth and partly through the idolatry of
education. Their powers appeared in every crisis of the Great War, when a
small group of pacifists and internationalists, a microscopic minority in
every country, were yet constantly figuring as diplomatists and
intermediaries and men on whose attitude great issues might depend. A man
like Mr. Macdonald, not a workman nor a formal or real representative of
workmen, was followed everywhere by the limelight; while the millions of
workmen who worked and fought were out of focus and therefore looked like
a fog. Just as such figures give a fictitious impression of unity between
the crowds fighting for different flags and frontiers, so there are
similar figures giving a fictitious unity to the crowds following
different creeds. There are already Moslems who are Modernists; there have
always been a ruling class of Jews who are Materialists. Perhaps it would
be true to say about much of the philosophical controversy in Europe, that
many Jews tend to be Materialists, but all tend to be Monists, though the
best in the sense of being Monotheists. The worst are in a much grosser
sense materialists, and have motives very different from the dry idealism
of men like Mr. Macdonald, which is probably sincere enough in its way.
But with whatever motives, these intermediaries everywhere bridge the
chasm between creeds as they do the chasm between countries. Everywhere
they exalt the minority that is indifferent over the majority that is
interested. Just as they would make an international congress out of the
traitors of all nations, so they would make an ecumenical council out of
the heretics of all religions.</p>
<p>Mild constitutionalists in our own country often discuss the possibility
of a method of protecting the minority. If they will find any possible
method of protecting the majority, they will have found something
practically unknown to the modern world. The majority is always at a
disadvantage; the majority is difficult to idealise, because it is
difficult to imagine. The minority is generally idealised, sometimes by
its servants, always by itself. But my sympathies are generally, I
confess, with the impotent and even invisible majority. And my sympathies,
when I go beyond the things I myself believe, are with all the poor Jews
who do believe in Judaism and all the Mahometans who do believe in
Mahometanism, not to mention so obscure a crowd as the Christians who do
believe in Christianity. I feel I have more morally and even
intellectually in common with these people, and even the religions of
these people, than with the supercilious negations that make up the most
part of what is called enlightenment. It is these masses whom we ought to
consider everywhere; but it is especially these masses whom we must
consider in Jerusalem. And the reason is in the reality I have described;
that the place is like a Greek city or a medieval parish; it is
sufficiently small and simple to be a democracy. This is not a university
town full of philosophies; it is a Zion of the hundred sieges raging with
religions; not a place where resolutions can be voted and amended, but a
place where men can be crowned and crucified.</p>
<p>There is one small thing neglected in all our talk about
self-determination; and that is determination. There is a great deal more
difference than there is between most motions and amendments between the
things for which a democracy will vote and the things on which a democracy
is determined. You can take a vote among Jews and Christians and Moslems
about whether lamp-posts should be painted green or portraits of
politicians painted at all, and even their solid unanimity may be solid
indifference. Most of what is called self-determination is like that; but
there is no self-determination about it. The people are not determined.
You cannot take a vote when the people are determined. You accept a vote,
or something very much more obvious than a vote.</p>
<p>Now it may be that in Jerusalem there is not one people but rather three
or four; but each is a real people, having its public opinion, its public
policy, its flag and almost, as I have said, its frontier. It is not a
question of persuading weak and wavering voters, at a vague parliamentary
election, to vote on the other side for a change, to choose afresh between
two middle-class gentlemen, who look exactly alike and only differ on a
question about which nobody knows or cares anything. It is a question of
contrasts that will almost certainly remain contrasts, except under the
flood of some spiritual conversion which cannot be foreseen and certainly
cannot be enforced. We cannot enrol these people under our religion,
because we have not got one. We can enrol them under our government, and
if we are obliged to do that, the obvious essential is that like Roman
rule before Christianity, or the English rule in India it should profess
to be impartial if only by being irreligious. That is why I willingly set
down for the moment only the first impressions of a stranger in a strange
country. It is because our first safety is in seeing that it is a strange
country; and our present preliminary peril that we may fall into the habit
of thinking it a familiar country. It does no harm to put the facts in a
fashion that seems disconnected; for the first fact of all is that they
are disconnected. And the first danger of all is that we may allow some
international nonsense or newspaper cant to imply that they are connected
when they are not. It does no harm, at any rate to start with, to state
the differences as irreconcilable. For the first and most unfamiliar fact
the English have to learn in this strange land is that differences can be
irreconcilable. And again the chief danger is that they may be persuaded
that the wordy compromises of Western politics can reconcile them; that
such abysses can be filled up with rubbish, or such chasms bridged with
cobwebs. For we have created in England a sort of compromise which may up
to a certain point be workable in England; though there are signs that
even in England that point is approaching or is past. But in any case we
could only do with that compromise as we could do without conscription;
because an accident had made us insular and even provincial. So in India
where we have treated the peoples as different from ourselves and from
each other we have at least partly succeeded. So in Ireland, where we have
tried to make them agree with us and each other, we have made one
never-ending nightmare.</p>
<p>We can no more subject the world to the English compromise than to the
English climate; and both are things of incalculable cloud and twilight.
We have grown used to a habit of calling things by the wrong names and
supporting them by the wrong arguments; and even doing the right thing for
the wrong cause. We have party governments which consist of people who
pretend to agree when they really disagree. We have party debates which
consist of people who pretend to disagree when they really agree. We have
whole parties named after things they no longer support, or things they
would never dream of proposing. We have a mass of meaningless
parliamentary ceremonials that are no longer even symbolic; the rule by
which a parliamentarian possesses a constituency but not a surname; or the
rule by which he becomes a minister in order to cease to be a member. All
this would seem the most superstitious and idolatrous mummery to the
simple worshippers in the shrines of Jerusalem. You may think what they
say fantastic, or what they mean fanatical, but they do not say one thing
and mean another. The Greek may or may not have a right to say he is
Orthodox, but he means that he is Orthodox; in a very different sense from
that in which a man supporting a new Home Rule Bill means that he is
Unionist. A Moslem would stop the sale of strong drink because he is a
Moslem. But he is not quite so muddleheaded as to profess to stop it
because he is a Liberal, and a particular supporter of the party of
liberty. Even in England indeed it will generally be found that there is
something more clear and rational about the terms of theology than those
of politics and popular science. A man has at least a more logical notion
of what he means when he calls himself an Anglo-Catholic than when he
calls himself an Anglo-Saxon. But the old Jew with the drooping ringlets,
shuffling in and out of the little black booths of Jerusalem, would not
condescend to say he is a child of anything like the Anglo-Saxon race. He
does not say he is a child of the Aramaico-Semitic race. He says he is a
child of the Chosen Race, brought with thunder and with miracles and with
mighty battles out of the land of Egypt and out of the house of bondage.
In other words, he says something that means something, and something that
he really means. One of the white Dominicans or brown Franciscans, from
the great monasteries of the Holy City, may or may not be right in
maintaining that a Papacy is necessary to the unity of Christendom. But he
does not pass his life in proving that the Papacy is not a Papacy, as many
of our liberal constitutionalists pass it in proving that the Monarchy is
not a Monarchy. The Greek priests spend an hour on what seems to the
sceptic mere meaningless formalities of the preparation of the Mass. But
they would not spend a minute if they were themselves sceptics and thought
them meaningless formalities, as most modern people do think of the
formalities about Black Rod or the Bar of the House. They would be far
less ritualistic than we are, if they cared as little for the Mass as we
do for the Mace. Hence it is necessary for us to realise that these rude
and simple worshippers, of all the different forms of worship, really
would be bewildered by the ritual dances and elaborate ceremonial antics
of John Bull, as by the superstitious forms and almost supernatural
incantations of most of what we call plain English.</p>
<p>Now I take it we retain enough realism and common sense not to wish to
transfer these complicated conventions and compromises to a land of such
ruthless logic and such rending divisions. We may hope to reproduce our
laws, we do not want to reproduce our legal fictions. We do not want to
insist on everybody referring to Mr. Peter or Mr. Paul, as the honourable
member for Waddy Walleh; because a retiring Parliamentarian has to become
Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds, we shall not insist on a retiring
Palestinian official becoming Steward of the Moabitic Hundreds. But yet in
much more subtle and more dangerous ways we are making that very mistake.
We are transferring the fictions and even the hypocrisies of our own
insular institutions from a place where they can be tolerated to a place
where they will be torn in pieces. I have confined myself hitherto to
descriptions and not to criticisms, to stating the elements of the problem
rather than attempting as yet to solve it; because I think the danger is
rather that we shall underrate the difficulties than overdo the
description; that we shall too easily deny the problem rather than that we
shall too severely criticise the solution. But I would conclude this
chapter with one practical criticism which seems to me to follow directly
from all that is said here of our legal fictions and local anomalies. One
thing at least has been done by our own Government, which is entirely
according to the ritual or routine of our own Parliament. It is a
parliament of Pooh Bah, where anybody may be Lord High Everything Else. It
is a parliament of Alice in Wonderland, where the name of a thing is
different from what it is called, and even from what its name is called.
It is death and destruction to send out these fictions into a foreign
daylight, where they will be seen as things and not theories. And knowing
all this, I cannot conceive the reason, or even the meaning, of sending
out Sir Herbert Samuel as the British representative in Palestine.</p>
<p>I have heard it supported as an interesting experiment in Zionism. I have
heard it denounced as a craven concession to Zionism. I think it is quite
obviously a flat and violent contradiction to Zionism. Zionism, as I have
always understood it, and indeed as I have always defended it, consists in
maintaining that it would be better for all parties if Israel had the
dignity and distinctive responsibility of a separate nation; and that this
should be effected, if possible, or so far as possible, by giving the Jews
a national home, preferably in Palestine. But where is Sir Herbert
Samuel's national home? If it is in Palestine he cannot go there as a
representative of England. If it is in England, he is so far a living
proof that a Jew does not need a national home in Palestine. If there is
any point in the Zionist argument at all, you have chosen precisely the
wrong man and sent him to precisely the wrong country. You have asserted
not the independence but the dependence of Israel, and yet you have
ratified the worst insinuations about the dependence of Christendom. In
reason you could not more strongly state that Palestine does not belong to
the Jews, than by sending a Jew to claim it for the English. And yet in
practice, of course, all the Anti-Semites will say he is claiming it for
the Jews. You combine all possible disadvantages of all possible courses
of action; you run all the risks of the hard Zionist adventure, while
actually denying the high Zionist ideal. You make a Jew admit he is not a
Jew but an Englishman; even while you allow all his enemies to revile him
because he is not an Englishman but a Jew.</p>
<p>Now this sort of confusion or compromise is as local as a London fog. A
London fog is tolerable in London, indeed I think it is very enjoyable in
London. There is a beauty in that brown twilight as well as in the clear
skies of the Orient and the South. But it is simply horribly dangerous for
a Londoner to carry his cloud of fog about with him, in the crystalline
air about the crags of Zion, or under the terrible stars of the desert.
There men see differences with almost unnatural clearness, and call things
by savagely simple names. We in England may consider all sorts of aspects
of a man like Sir Herbert Samuel; we may consider him as a Liberal, or a
friend of the Fabian Socialists, or a cadet of one of the great financial
houses, or a Member of Parliament who is supposed to represent certain
miners in Yorkshire, or in twenty other more or less impersonal ways. But
the people in Palestine will see only one aspect, and it will be a very
personal aspect indeed. For the enthusiastic Moslems he will simply be a
Jew; for the enthusiastic Zionists he will not really be a Zionist. For
them he will always be the type of Jew who would be willing to remain in
London, and who is ready to represent Westminster. Meanwhile, for the
masses of Moslems and Christians, he will only be the aggravation in
practice of the very thing of which he is the denial in theory. He will
not mean that Palestine is not surrendered to the Jews, but only that
England is. Now I have nothing as yet to do with the truth of that
suggestion; I merely give it as an example of the violent and unexpected
reactions we shall produce if we thrust our own unrealities amid the
red-hot realities of the Near East; it is like pushing a snow man into a
furnace. I have no objection to a snow man as a part of our own Christmas
festivities; indeed, as has already been suggested, I think such
festivities a great glory of English life. But I have seen the snow
melting in the steep places about Jerusalem; and I know what a cataract it
could feed.</p>
<p>As I considered these things a deepening disquiet possessed me, and my
thoughts were far away from where I stood. After all, the English did not
indulge in this doubling of parts and muddling of mistaken identity in
their real and unique success in India. They may have been wrong or right
but they were realistic about Moslems and Hindoos; they did not say
Moslems were Hindoos, or send a highly intelligent Hindoo from Oxford to
rule Moslems as an Englishman. They may not have cared for things like the
ideal of Zionism; but they understood the common sense of Zionism, the
desirability of distinguishing between entirely different things. But I
remembered that of late their tact had often failed them even in their
chief success in India; and that every hour brought worse and wilder news
of their failure in Ireland. I remembered that in the Early Victorian
time, against the advice only of the wisest and subtlest of the Early
Victorians, we had tied ourselves to the triumphant progress of industrial
capitalism; and that progress had now come to a crisis and what might well
be a crash. And now, on the top of all, our fine patriotic tradition of
foreign policy seemed to be doing these irrational and random things. A
sort of fear took hold of me; and it was not for the Holy Land that I
feared.</p>
<p>A cold wave went over me, like that unreasonable change and chill with
which a man far from home fancies his house has been burned down, or that
those dear to him are dead. For one horrible moment at least I wondered if
we had come to the end of compromise and comfortable nonsense, and if at
last the successful stupidity of England would topple over like the
successful wickedness of Prussia; because God is not mocked by the denial
of reason any more than the denial of justice. And I fancied the very
crowds of Jerusalem retorted on me words spoken to them long ago; that a
great voice crying of old along the Via Dolorosa was rolled back on me
like thunder from the mountains; and that all those alien faces are turned
against us to-day, bidding us weep not for them, who have faith and
clarity and a purpose, but weep for ourselves and for our children.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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