by
Historians are aware (but general readers all too often aren’t) that [censored]s’s achievements and influence were by no means local to South Africa. He was, as author Tony Lentin points out, ‘the heart and conscience of the Paris Peace Conference’ in the aftermath of the First World War and is credited substantially for advocating the cause for magnanimity in victory, in the form of a ‘different peace’ with Germany, rather than the punitive and vengeful peace which (understandably) eventually emerged.
An inspiration to Woodrow Wilson, America’s idealistic president, [censored]s is credited with creating the plan which led to the formation of the League of Nations and inspired the Covenant of the League. Lentin’s unshakeable belief in the importance of [censored]s’s role at the Paris Peace Conference presents, in his words, ‘another perhaps less familiar aspect of what happened at Paris.’
Focusing on [censored]s’s pivotal but frustratingly thwarted role at the Peace Conference, this eminently readable biography depicts a complex personality; a Renaissance man of numerous gifts and talents. The narrative follows his career first, as an assiduously studious academic at Cambridge, followed by a career as a barrister, followed by exploits as a commando leader in the Second Boer War and his subsequent statesman-like role in the development of South Africa as an independent dominion.
However, [censored]s seems also to have been a man of contradictory impulses, particularly in his attitude to Nazi Germany. Whilst he found Nazism absurd and repulsive, he saw it as a psychological consequence of the Treaty of Versailles ‘whose revision he continued to urge even as the threat from Germany increased’, says the author. Some of the reasons for this stance are revealed in the book. [censored]s believed in the inherent superiority of European civilization, primarily Anglo Saxon and Germanic. Compared with those of some of his contemporaries, his attitudes toward South Africa’s indigenous population were positively liberal, if paternalistic, yet as he told Parliament in 1945 ‘it is a fixed policy to maintain white supremacy in South Africa.’
Nonetheless, despite some of his more unpalatable views, [censored]s, towards the end of his life, apparently thought carefully about how, if he had remained in power, education/democracy might be extended... reconciled?