@Alvares
le révérend William E. Blackstone (1841 – 1935), a peut-être lancé la
création de l’organisation sioniste au États-Unis, mais le sionisme tel qu’il apparut n’est pas juif mais bien
davantage anglais et chrétien ! sa date de création se situant
vers 1838, made in UK ... quand Blackstone n’était pas encore né
« Disraeli ... appartenait toutefois au même parti que
Shaftesbury*, avec qui il a entretenu une relation étroite dès
les années 1860. » Scholmo Sand
« A land without a people for a people without a land » ...
"and the Jews ...will probably return in yet greater numbers,
and become once more the husbandmen of Judaea and Galilee."
(et les Juifs ... y retourneront probablement encore en grand
nombre, et deviendront une fois de plus les fermiers de Judée et
de Galilée !)
* Anthony Ashley Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury
Religion and Jewish Restorationism (voir : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Ashley-Cooper,_7th_Earl_of_Shaftesbury#Religion_and_Jewish_Restorationism
)
Lord Shaftesbury’s « Memorandum to Protestant Monarchs of
Europe for the restoration of the Jews to Palestine »,
published in the Colonial Times, in 1841
Shaftesbury was a student of Edward Bickersteth and together they
became prominent advocates of Christian Zionism in
Britain.[33][34] Shaftesbury was an early proponent of the Restoration
of the Jews to the Holy Land [ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Zionism_in_the_United_Kingdom
], providing the first proposal by a major politician to resettle
Jews in Palestine. The conquest of Greater Syria in 1831 by
Muhammad Ali of Egypt changed the conditions under which European
power politics operated in the Near East. As a consequence of that
shift, Shaftesbury was able to help persuade Foreign Minister
Palmerston to send a British consul to Jerusalem in 1838. A
committed Christian and a loyal Englishman, Shaftesbury argued
for a Jewish return because of what he saw as the political and
economic advantages to England and because he believed that it
was God’s will. In January 1839, Shaftesbury published
an article in the Quarterly Review, which although initially
commenting on the 1838 Letters on Egypt, Edom and the Holy
Land (1838) by Lord Lindsay, provided the first proposal
by a major politician to resettle Jews in Palestine
:[35][36]
>
The soil and climate of Palestine are singularly adapted to the
growth of produce required for the exigencies of Great Britain ;
the finest cotton may be obtained in almost unlimited abundance ;
silk and madder are the staple of the country, and olive oil is
now, as it ever was, the very fatness of the land. Capital and
skill are alone required : the presence of a British officer, and
the increased security of property which his presence will confer,
may invite them from these islands to the cultivation of Palestine
; and the Jews’, who will betake themselves to agriculture
in no other land, having found, in the English consul, a mediator
between their people and the Pacha, will probably return in
yet greater numbers, and become once more the husbandmen of
Judaea and Galilee. [37]
<
The lead-up to the Crimean War (1854), like the military
expansionism of Muhammad Ali two decades earlier, signalled an
opening for realignments in the Near East. In July 1853,
Shaftesbury wrote to Prime Minister Aberdeen that Greater Syria
was “a country without a nation” in need of “a nation
without a country... Is there such a thing ? To be sure there
is, the ancient and rightful lords of the soil, the Jews !"
In his diary that year he wrote “these vast and fertile
regions will soon be without a ruler, without a known and
acknowledged power to claim dominion. The territory must be
assigned to some one or other... There is a country without a
nation ; and God now in his wisdom and mercy, directs us to a
nation without a country.« [38][39] This is commonly
cited as an early use of the phrase, »A land without a people
for a people without a land" * by which Shaftesbury was
echoing another British proponent of the restoration of the Jews
to Israel, (Dr Alexander Keith.)
Bust of Anthony Ashley-Cooper, by F. Winter, 1886. In the
collection of Dorset County museum, Dorchester.
Shaftesbury was President of the British and Foreign Bible Society
(BFBS) from 1851 until his death in 1885. He wrote, of the Bible
Society, « Of all Societies this is nearest to my heart... Bible
Society has always been a watchword in our house. » He was also
president of the Evangelical Alliance for some time.[2]
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_land_without_a_people_for_a_people_without_a _land
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