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RT : 17 Jan, 2018
Winston Churchill: Hero, racist, and imperialist
“The truth is rarely pure and never simple.” So said Oscar Wilde
and so describes the life and legacy of Britain’s most famous and
revered leader, Winston Churchill, a political giant who wore his racism
and imperialism proudly.
New Churchill movie: history or hagiography?
In
the wake of the release of the Hollywood biopic on Churchill, ‘Darkest
Hour,’ which is attracting rave reviews and features Gary Oldman as
Churchill and Kristin Scott Thomas as his long-suffering wife
Clementine, a raft of articles on the man and his legacy has been
produced, confirming that his place in history remains the subject of
dispute and conjecture over half a century after his death in 1965.
‘Darkest
Hour’ focuses on the period of Churchill’s life for which he is most
famous, when as prime minister he led Britain during the darkest period
in its history after the military disaster of Dunkirk in May 1940.
Prior
to his ascension to the role of the nation’s prime minister, Churchill
had spent years on the backbenches as a lone Cassandra, warning of the
threat posed by Hitler. As far back as 1932, after returning to Britain
from a trip to Germany, he addressed the House of Commons thus: “All
these bands of Teutonic youths, marching through the streets and roads
of Germany, with the light of desire in their eyes to suffer for their
Fatherland, are not looking for status. They are looking for weapons.”
At
the end of May 1940, with Hitler’s panzers at the Channel ports of
northern France, it would have come as small comfort to know that he had
been proven right, and the bulk of a British political establishment in
which Nazi sympathies ran deep throughout the 1930s was proven wrong.
The
movie depicts the seminal struggle that took place between Churchill
and those within his cabinet, led by the country’s Foreign Secretary
Lord Halifax (played by Stephen Dillane), who believed there was no
prospect of defeating the Germans militarily after Dunkirk, and who were
adamant that the country should now seek terms with the Nazi dictator
with the objective of saving the empire.
Churchill, as history
reveals, saw things differently. This is powerfully depicted in the film
when, exasperated at Halifax’s repeated urgings that the time had come
to negotiate, he slams his desk and bellows, “When will the lesson be learned? You cannot reason with a tiger when your head is in its mouth!”
The ugly side of Churchill’s legacy
But, if 1940 was
Churchill’s finest hour, there were countless hours of ignominy and
mendacity in his life too, which his legion of fawning admirers have
done their utmost to elide in favor of the legend.
Winston Spencer
Churchill, born in 1874, was a scion of class privilege in a British
society suffering the dead weight of aristocracy in the late 19th
century. From a young age he was captivated by war and military life,
developing a Nietzschean attachment to conflict as the testing ground of
so-called manly virtues of courage, honor and discipline. He
experienced war up close, when as a young army officer he saw combat in
India, Sudan and on the Western Front during the First World War.
This
sets him apart from contemporary British ‘war leaders,’ the likes of
Tony Blair and David Cameron, who’ve sent British military forces into
combat with the objective of establishing their own Churchillian legacy,
resulting in disaster.
The ugly side of Churchill’s legacy is, as
averred in the opening paragraph, the racism and imperialism that
underpinned his worldview. His belief in racial hierarchy was outlined
in the testimony he gave to the Peel Commission
in 1937, which was established to investigate the 1936 Arab revolt
against the influx of European Jewish settlers to Palestine with the
connivance of the British.
When asked about the rights of the indigenous people in Palestine, Churchill refused to accept that they had any: “I
do not admit, for example, that a great wrong has been done to the Red
Indians of America or the Black people of Australia. I do not admit that
wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a
higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race, to put it in that way, has
come in and taken their place.”
Years previously, as
Britain’s secretary for war, Churchill had championed the use chemical
weapons to put down rebellion in India and Iraq, writing in a memo, “I am strongly in favor of using poisoned gas against uncivilized tribes.” He was also responsible
for the use of chemical weapons in Russia in 1919 with the aim, in
conjunction with various other imperialist powers, of crushing the
Russian Revolution.
During the Second World War, Churchill’s disdain for non-white European peoples was laid bare with his culpability in the deaths of three million men, women and children in the Bengal Famine of 1943.
Despite
the starvation that had swept through this blighted province of India,
Churchill ordered the diversion of desperately needed food from India to
Europe. The fact
that the 70,000 tons of food exported by the British from India in the
first seven months of 1943 would have kept 400,000 people alive for a
year is a chilling one. “I hate Indians,” Britain’s most venerated prime minister is said to have told one of his underlings. “They are a beastly people with a beastly religion.”
Veneration and vilification in equal measure
The veneration
accorded Winston Churchill for his leadership of a country on its knees
after the military disaster of Dunkirk in 1940 must be weighed in the
balance against his disgusting racism and fanatical imperialism. And
though Churchill’s defiance of Hitler and his Nazi war machine was
important, it should be pointed out that Hitler’s military and strategic
priority had never been war with Britain.
On the contrary, the
fascist dictator was an admirer of the British empire, which he sought
to emulate in Eastern Europe with the colonization and plunder of large
swathes of Russia. As William L. Shirer writes in his landmark work,
‘The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich,’ after the fall of France,
convinced that Britain would see sense and seek peace terms, Hitler
expressed “his admiration of the British empire and [was] stressing
the necessity for its existence. All he wanted from London, he said, was
a free hand on the continent.”
The answer to the question of
who Winston Churchill was can never be answered in a movie made with
the purpose of reinforcing the reverence in which he is held in the
West. Born with the blood of the English aristocracy running through his
veins, he was a man for whom the world was divided between racially and
culturally superior white European peoples and non-white Europeans
fated to occupy the role of latter day Helots.
Ivan Maisky, Soviet
ambassador to London between 1932 and 1943, captured the contradictions
that defined Churchill, when in his voluminous diaries he noted, “For all his seriousness, Churchill is a rather amusing man!”
Churchill the great wartime leader or Churchill the racist and imperialist? The simple answer is that he was both.
= = =
John Wight has written for newspapers and websites
across the world, including the Independent, Morning Star, Huffington
Post, Counterpunch, London Progressive Journal, and Foreign Policy
Journal. He is also a regular commentator on RT and BBC Radio. John is
currently working on a book exploring the role of the West in the Arab
Spring.
You can follow him on Twitter @JohnWight1
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