Hero of
the Battle of Waterloo, & twice British
Prime Minister:
Arthur
Wellesely, the Duke of Wellington (1769
- 1852)
On April 28, 1828, the Duke of
Wellington, then Prime Minister of
Britain, said
during a debate on the removal of the
words "on the true faith
of a Christian, in the
presence of God" in
the oath taken before a man could sit
and vote in Parliament:
I shall
oppose the
omission of
the words.
... the
admission of
the Jews (to
parliament)
would be
disliked by
the
country."
On August 1, 1833, the Duke of
Wellington (then just a Member of
Parliament,
part of the Tory opposition to the Whig
Government) said the following in a
Parliamentary debate on the Jewish
Civil Disabilities Repeal Bill:
I cannot advise
the Sovereign on
the throne to
sanction a law
to admit them
(Jews) to seats
in this House
and the other
House of
Parliament, and
to all the
rights and
privileges
enjoyed by
Christians. ...
I see no ground
whatever for
passing the
Bill; and shall,
therefore, vote
against it.
In
1853, a year after his death, a
biography of the Duke of Wellington was
published by British journalist Jocquim
Stocqueler. In which he wrote:
Upon the
discussion of
the Jewish
disabilities,
his Grace
vehemently
opposed the
admission of
Jews to seats in
Parliament. He
deemed it
indispensable
that, in a
Christian
legislature none
but Christians
should be
permitted to
sit—a doctrine
which he
maintained to
the last hour
of his
existence.
In
1899, 47 years after the Duke of
Wellington's death, British journalist
and
politician Arnold White,
who'd been in the service of
wealthy Jews, wrote
in his book The
Modern Jew, about the
cause of the Duke's antisemitism:
In the
(Russian)
wars with
the Turks
the Jews
were accused
of having
perfidiously
supplied the
enemy with
iron
artillery, a
charge which
strangely
enough was
repeated by
Wellington
three
centuries
later. To
the end of
his life the
Iron Duke
barely
tolerated
the Jews
because he
believed
that Jewish
financiers
resident in
England had
furnished
Napoleon
with
ordnance
which was
used against
the English,
The
5th Duke of Wellington, the
great-grandson of the first Duke, blamed
the September 3, 1939, British
declaration of war on Germany on:
"the anti-appeasers and the
fucking Jews."