David Hayton
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Three Zionists
Samuel Alexander, Chaim Weizmann and Lewis Namier
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The University of Manchester was home to two prominent figures in the Zionist movement in the first half of the twentieth century: the chemist Chaim Weizmann, leader of the worldwide Zionist Organisation and first president of Israel; and the historian Lewis Namier, Weizmann’s close associate, and political secretary of the Zionist Organisation 1929–31. Their colleague, the philosopher Samuel Alexander, was sympathetic to the aims of Zionism but avoided direct involvement. This chapter explores the ways in which their Manchester experience informed and enabled their Zionism. While each man arrived with a political outlook already formed, interaction with Manchester’s influential Jewish community offered opportunities. For Weizmann, Manchester contacts were crucial in building a Zionist movement in England; Alexander worked behind the scenes; while the abrasive Namier, though alienating Manchester’s Jews, exploited the national influence of the Manchester Guardian to advance the cause.

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Manchester minds

A university history of ideas

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