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Title: De Gaulle, Israel, and the Jews
Description: New York, Praeger, [1969]. orig. boards, dustwrapper. 23x14cm, 160 pp. Translated from the French by John Sturrock.. Top page-edge spotted. VG. In a turn & rubbed dustwrapper. ¶ The lives of Raymond Aron and Charles de Gaulle intersected at significant moments in twentieth-century history, though they differed on many issues during World War II and over the subsequent decades. Aron, for example, distinguished between the attitude and responsibility of the Vichy government and the French Nazi collaborators in Paris, unlike de Gaulle, who regarded anyone who obeyed Marshal Petain as a traitor. In the postwar period, Aron differed from de Gaulle on a number of issues, including Algeria. But the strongest direct criticism by Aron of de Gaulle's language and policy resulted after a 1967 press conference, where he referred to Jews as "an elite people, self-assured and domineering." It is this comment that led Aron to write DeGaulle, Israel and the Jews. Aron saw de Gaulle conflating the issues of Israel and that of French Jews, and the question of Israeli policy in 1967 and other times. He stressed the right of individuals to be, at the same time, French and Jewish, and raised the question of whether de Gaulle intended to deliver a message to the Jews in the Diaspora or simply wanted to attack those in Israel. While Aron did not accuse de Gaulle of anti-Semitism, he felt that for the first time in postwar Europe, a major leader had used language and ideas that lent respectability to anti-Semitism and made it legitimate" - Publisher's description.

Keywords: French Diplomatic History, Charles de Gaulle, Diplomacy, Political Politics, France, Israel, Middle East, Foreign Policy, Jews

Price: US$ 50.00 Seller: Expatriate Bookshop of Denmark
- Book number: BOOKS018662I