Page 234 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 234

212                   GERTRUDE BELL
                  final contact with American Zionists to tell you what I have often
                  been able to say to Dr Weizmann in the past. We feel that the
                  Arabs and Jews arc cousins in race, have suffered similar oppression
                  at the hands of powers stronger than themselves ... We Arabs,
                  especially the educated among us, look with the deepest sympathy
                  on the Zionist movement... We will wish the Jews a hearty
                  welcome here ... People less informed and less responsible than
                  our  leaders and yours ignoring the need for co-operation of the
                  Arabs and Zionists, have been trying to exploit the local difficul­
                  ties that must necessarily arise in Palestine in the early stages of
                  our movements ... Faisal.’
                    It was but one remarkable event in very strange and indetermin­
                  ate proceedings. The representatives of the Allied Powers eventu­
                  ally decided to postpone decisions on matters of self-determination
                  and appointed an International Commission instead. Wilson
                  had returned to an Iraq which was dangerously disturbed and
                  which had no adequate means to deal with large-scale violence.
                  He held his job reluctantly, having insisted from the moment he
                  took over that he was diere in an ‘acting’ capacity only until Sir
                  Percy could leave Tehran and resume his authority. Cox on the
                  other hand was not too keen to return and in August 1919 wrote
                  to Wilson: ‘As I have told you the only reason which would tempt
                  me back to Mespot would be the prospect of handing the job
                  over to you.’
                    Gertrude made a leisurely way back accompanied by her maid
                  Marie Delacre who had waited for her at Sloane Street and
                  Rounton during the war years. She called on Clayton and Milne
                  Cheetham, then in charge of the virtually defunct Arab Bureau.
                  She also had another meeting with Meinertzhagen who had re­
                  turned to Cairo from Paris, though Allenby was shordy to give
                  him marching orders. Faisal — already called by his supporters
                  ‘King of Syria’— was at that moment in London. The Syrian
                  question was still in the melting pot and France took up an in-
                  creas ingly equivocal position. All the pretenders to power in the
                  Arab lands passed to and fro and Gertrude met many of them as
                  she and Clayton made a tour of the Levant and Palestine. They
                  talked to Storrs, Governor of Jerusalem after Allenby’s occupation
                  in direct succession to Pontius Pilate. And they met innumerable
                  refugees, Galicians, Jews, Arabs, Iraqis, Turkish deserters. Perhaps
                  the most important of these homeless wanderers from the point of
                  view of post-war Iraq was the omnipresent Sayid Talib, finally re-
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