By Henry Srebrnik, [Calgary] Jewish Free Press
This year marks the 100th
anniversary of the Jewish Legion.
The story of the Legion, officially the 38th,
39th and 40th Battalions of the British Royal Fusiliers,
began with two Russian-born Zionists, Vladimir Ze’ev Jabotinsky and Josef Trumpledor.
Jabotinsky, one of the leading Zionists in Russia
at the start of the war, went to Alexandria, Egypt in December 1914 as a war
correspondent for a Moscow liberal daily, Russkiya Vedomosti.
He found in Egypt thousands of foreign-born Jews deported
from Palestine by the Ottoman government, including Trumpeldor, a decorated
Russian veteran of the siege of Port Arthur, where he lost an arm, during the
Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905.
Working for the Zionist cause in Istanbul for
several years had convinced Jabotinsky that little could be expected from the
Ottoman Empire.
In March 1915, a delegation led by the two men was
received by British General Sir John G. Maxwell, where they presented a plan to
raise an infantry unit from these deportees to fight the Ottomans in
Palestine.
But the government opposed the use of Zionists in
the campaign in Palestine because the liberation of Palestine was not yet a
diplomatic goal.However, the ongoing Gallipoli campaign against the Turks
provided a solution: service against the Ottomans on a different battlefront.
So the Zion Mule Corps was formed, commanded by Lt.
Col. John H. Patterson, with Trumpeldor as the second in charge.
It fought at Gallipoli until the end of that
campaign, returning to Alexandria on Jan. 10, 1916. The unit was officially
disbanded on May 26.
Meanwhile, Jabotinsky, who had not been involved,
had gone to Britain to lobby the Jewish community for help with raising another
fighting unit.
Once the Zionist movement was behind the plan, it
gained momentum quickly. On August 23, 1917, when the British cabinet was
already preparing the Balfour Declaration, the formation of a Jewish regiment
was officially announced in the London Gazette.
Canadian Jews had first begun to hear of the idea
of a Jewish Legion in early 1916. Captain Isidore Freedman of Montreal, a
Jewish officer in the Canadian Army, called for a Jewish company to be created,
and on July 18, 1916, he raised an Infantry Reinforcement Draft Company.
It left for Britain in March of 1917, but was there
absorbed by the non-Jewish 23rd Reserve Battalion.
By the spring of 1918, however, Fort Edward in
Windsor, Nova Scotia, had become the site where the North American recruits of
the new Jewish Legion began their training.
Among the volunteers were two future Israeli prime
ministers, David Ben-Gurion and Levi Eshkol; the father of a third future prime
minister and Nobel laureate, Yitzhak Rabin; a future president of Israel,
Yitzhak Ben-Zvi; and the first Chief of Staff of the Israeli Defence Force,
Yaakov Dori.
Young recruit David Ben-Gurion arrived in Windsor
to train with the Jewish Legion on June 1, 1918.
He wrote to his wife Paula
that “Ben-Zvi is a real soldier already. His face is tanned from the sun, and I
can hardly recognize him.”
Ben-Gurion described the reception given the
Legionnaires in Windsor: “When our whole crowd goes into the YMCA you would
think it was a Jewish wedding. The boys dance and make merry, sing Jewish songs
and behave as if they were in the old country and not in Canada. It is as if it
is the non-Jews who are in the Galut here.
He later remarked that “In Windsor one of the great
dreams of my life -- to serve as a soldier in a Jewish Unit to fight for
the liberation of Israel (as we always called Palestine) became a reality, and
I will never forget Windsor, where I received my first training as a soldier,
and where I became a corporal.”
On July 1, 1918, as the town of Windsor celebrated
Dominion Day, the Jewish Legion trainees were invited to take part, and the
“Jewish flag” flew alongside the Canadian and British flags.
They were soon afterwards sent to the Middle East
to take part in the fight against the Ottomans in Palestine, with the promise
from the British government that an Allied victory would lead to the
establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people.
When the 38th Battalion arrived in
Palestine, it was immediately deployed to the Jordan Valley north of Jerusalem
to counter Ottoman attacks.
Besides various skirmishes, it, along with the 39th
Battalion, participated in the Battle of Megiddo in mid-September 1918, widely
considered one of the decisive victories on the Ottoman front.
With Hebrew as the language of command, and a
menorah with the Hebrew word “kadimah” (forward) as its insignia, the Legion
gave the symbolic appearance of an independent Jewish military presence
fighting with the Allied Powers to conquer Palestine.
The saga of the Canadian contribution to the Jewish
Legion, including some 400 volunteers, important and impressive in its own
right, was also another step in the road leading to unity in the Jewish
community.
There was a commemoration
of the centenary of the Canadian part of the story of the Jewish Legion at Fort
Edward National Historic Site in Windsor on Sept. 23, 2018. Its place in this
country’s Jewish history is secure.
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