Two Views of Palestine
in 1897: What a Difference a Century Makes
By Davis Bitton
Events
in Israel and among the Palestinians
fill the newspapers. Murderous attacks by terrorists are followed by military
retaliation. The hope of two peaceful countries living side by side and having
good relations with each other is pursued, but today such a solution seems
easier to imagine than to achieve.
Talking heads and guest authorities discuss the
issues on radio and television, news and feature articles proliferate in the
newspapers and magazines, and books analyze and describe different aspects
of the problem. One thing is sure: there is no shortage of information.
A little more than a century ago, with no radio
and no television, with no historians and political scientists claiming expertise
in Middle East affairs, the situation was patently different.
Those in Utah who were interested in the subject could read articles in the
national newspapers. They could also attend lectures delivered by those who
had been to what was then called simply Palestine.
One such lecturer was Madame Mountford. On April
6, 1897, she lectured in the Tabernacle on "Village Life in Palestine."
The next night her subject was "The Bedouins of the Desert," and
the third night she spoke on "The Life of Jacob." Who was this imposing
lady? I use the adjective after looking at a photograph of the lecturer decked
out in costume.
Lydia Mary Olive Mamreoff von Finkelstein was
born and reared in Jerusalem. She
claimed descent from Melchizedek and the Davidic line on her mother's side
and from Ephraim on her father's. Officially the family was Episcopalian,
but they associated with Muslims and Jews as well as Christians. Lydia attended an English-speaking
Catholic school.
Riding the crest of a wave of public interest,
she took to the lecture circuit and, dressed in native costume, lectured on
the customs and history of Palestine. Her lecture tours took her to England, Australia,
New Zealand, Ceylon (as Sri Lanka
was then called), and India. In India she met and married Charles E. Mountford.
Continuing her triumphal tour, she lectured at various cities in the United
States. Among the places booked to hear her
in 1897 was Salt Lake City.
A side drama not known to the public was the
close friendship that developed between Madame Mountford and Church president
Wilford Woodruff. Rumor had it that she was secretly sealed to President Woodruff.
That seems farfetched. Thomas Alexander, Woodruff's biographer, after examining
the evidence, concludes that the relationship was one of friendship and mutual
admiration. But she was invited to speak at general conference, and it is
a matter of record that in 1920, three years after her death, she was vicariously
sealed to Wilford Woodruff.
About two months after Madame Mountford's lectures,
on June 4, 1897, Andrew Jenson returned to Salt Lake City after a two-year absence. He had
traveled 60,000 miles, visiting British Columbia, Hawaii,
Fiji, Samoa, Tonga, New Zealand,
the Society Island, Australia, Ceylon,
Egypt, Syria, Palestine, Italy,
France, Great Britain,
Denmark, Norway,
Sweden, Germany,
Switzerland, and Holland. After sailing north through the Red Sea
and continuing through the Suez Canal, Jenson arrived in Beirut
and there made contact with the American consul. Jenson arranged with a muleteer
for a 25-day guided tour through Syria
and Palestine, but the muleteer backed
out because of having to cross a corner where a Druze rebellion was taking
place.
Jenson was not to be stopped. After taking a
train to Damascus and back, he sailed along the coast
from Beirut to Haifa. In Haifa he discovered a family of Latter-day Saints
living with a colony of German immigrants. Twenty-five people had been baptized
in Palestine since 1886, but of these,
ten had emigrated and four died. Some of the others had scattered to live
in places like Jaffa, Alexandria, and Malta. In the German cemetery, Andrew Jenson visited
the graves of Utah elders John A.
Clark and Adolph Haag.
Jenson took a 28-mile carriage ride to Nazareth
and there found lodging in a hotel kept by a German. With Baedeker's guide
in his hand, he walked six miles to Mount Tabor and then continued by foot
to Tiberias on the Sea of Galilee-another 25 miles. Although he was in good
physical condition, Jenson decided against further walking.
There were constant demands for bakshish (money).
In making hotel arrangements, when he explained that he was a missionary without
much money, the Arab host responded: "A missionary without much money,
that certainly sounds strange, for missionaries in this country are always
supposed to have plenty of money." "Had I told him that I was a
banker or merchant without much money I believe he would have been less surprised,"
Jenson wrote.
"And who can blame him," Jensen added,
"for the priests and pastors, missionaries and colporters of the various
so-called Christian denominations in Palestine are considered the best paid people in the land. They generally
live in pompous style and in elegant houses, having lots of native servants
to wait on them — all on the strength of the liberal donations which pious
Christians in Europe and America are contributing toward the relief of the
'poor, suffering Jews.'" When Jenson explained to the hotel owner that
he was a missionary traveling at his own expense, he was given a reduced charge.
At Tiberias, sitting alone atop the ruined walls
of an ancient city, Jenson tried to imagine the days of Jesus. "There
are no Prophets and Apostles in this land now," he wrote. "The voice
of inspired men has not been heard for many generations, save on a few occasions
when Elders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have
visited Palestine, and then they have had no real opportunity of teaching
the people the gospel in its purity."
Jenson's mind drifted back to Utah.
"I felt truly thankful to the God of Israel that I could think of some
other country, where another Jordan connects a living lake with a dead sea,
far away beyond the broad expanse of the 'great sea' and the Atlantic Ocean,
where the inspired teachings of Prophets and Apostles are now heard, and where
the ordinances of the everlasting gospel are being taught and administered
in the same manner and by the same divine authority as they were eighteen
hundred years ago, around the beautiful waters of Galilee."
Continuing on to Jerusalem, Jenson found a city of some 60,000,
about half of whom were Jews. Their number had recently risen following persecutions
of Jews in Romania and
Russia.
Jenson met with a group of religious Americans, mostly from Chicago, who were trying to live the perfect life, and he met poverty-stricken
William T. Brown, who identified himself as a Whitmerite Mormon.
The
years ahead witnessed important landmarks. In January 1898, Georges Clemenceau
published a long article by Emile Zola entitled "J'accuse!" Zola
was defending the Jewish military officer Dreyfus, who had been falsely accused
of spying for Germany, convicted on forged evidence, and sent
to Devil's Island.
The Dreyfus Affair kept France in turmoil for several
years. Zola's influential article, reprinted as a pamphlet, led to anti-Semitic
riots in Nantes, Nancy, Rennes, Bordeaux, Tournon, Montpellier, Marseilles,
Toulouse, Angers, Le
Havre, and Orleans. Not confined
to France by any means,
toxic anti-Semitism reached its climax in Germany during the Holocaust. Sadly, we receive
almost daily reminders that the virus of intolerance is alive and well.
The first Zionist Congress met at Basel
in 1897. At the second Zionist Congress, in 1898, the delegates, dressed
in fashionable evening clothes paid for by Theodore Herzl, gathered in an
opening plenary session while a full orchestra played the stirring tones of
Wagner's Tannhauser overture. Ironically, Wagner was an outspoken anti-Semite.
The world's Jews were by no means united on the idea of establishing a national
homeland. In fact, many were in strident opposition. But the idea persisted.
In 1917, the Balfour Declaration promised a homeland
in Palestine for Europe's Jews. In
1948, the State of Israel was created and almost immediately granted recognition
by the United Nations — thanks in large part to the energetic efforts of a
modern Cyrus, U.S. President
Harry S. Truman. (The Cyrus comparison was spelled out in a BYU Studies article
by Michael Benson.) In 1989, the Brigham Young University
Jerusalem Center was dedicated
by President Howard W. Hunter.
Much has happened since 1897. What the future
holds historians cannot tell us, but the scriptural prophecies leave no doubt
that momentous events lie ahead.