Frances E. Newton
Frances Emily Newton (November 4, 1871–June 11, 1955) was an English missionary who lived and worked in Palestine from 1889[1] until 1938, the last 18 years of which saw the country under British rule.[2] She became Dame of Justice of the Venerable Order of Saint John in 1930, and was a member of the Palestine Women's Council, a consultative committee that advised the British, usually to no avail, on matters affecting women and children.[3] The journalist Owen Tweedy described her as, "comely but podgy—tall & masterful and with the hell of a temper and always having rows."[4]
She was a founding member and honorary secretary of the Palestine Information Centre, referred to by the British Arab News Bulletin as the "first office to put the Arab view before the British public."[5] Described by Norman Bentwich, the first Attorney-General of Mandatory Palestine, as "incurably anti-Jewish ... and a principal supporter of the Arab cause," she also founded the Anglo-Arab Friendship Committee in 1946, with the aim of opposing Zionism.[6]
Living on Mount Carmel in Haifa, Newton became known as someone willing to document acts of violence against Arabs suspected of opposing British rule.[7] She found herself in trouble in 1938 after publishing two pamphlets, Punitive Methods in Palestine, which accused the British of atrocities and was denounced in the House of Commons as "all lies,"[8] and Searchlight on Palestine; Fair Play or Terrorist Methods, which supported the 1936–1939 Arab revolt. The British issued an exclusion order and she was deported in October 1938.[9] When she died of a heart attack in 1955, a British official said she had, "the exterior of an English woman and the mind of a Palestinian."[4]
Early life and education
Newton was born in Mickleover Manor, near Derby, to Charles Edmund Newton, a banker, and his second wife, Mary Henrietta Moore. She and her several sisters were educated at home by a governess.[10]
Newton first visited Palestine in 1888 to see her stepsisters, Constance and Edith. Edith was a missionary with the Church Missionary Society (CMS), and within a year, Newton had signed up with the CMS as a volunteer, learning Arabic and travelling throughout Palestine and Jordan. Her mother died in 1893, leaving Newton sufficient funds to be able to volunteer indefinitely. She was trained in nursing and social work in Birmingham, and in missionary work at The Olives in Hampstead, the CMS training centre. She left for Jaffa on October 3, 1895.[10]
World War I
Newton volunteered to serve as a police officer in Leicester Square during the war, but instead she became the secretary of the Syria and Palestine Relief Fund, which had been set up by Rennie MacInnes, an Anglican bishop in Jerusalem. She represented the Fund on a committee with the Red Cross and the order of St John of Jerusalem, which led to her recognition by the latter as a lady of grace, and later as a dame of justice.[10]
She became acquainted with T. E. Lawrence and with King Faisal, the latter visiting her at her home on Mount Carmel.[10]
Activism
Jonathan Dimbleby writes that Newton was scrupulous in keeping notes of the cases she examined. On February 22, 1938, she visited the village of Igzim, near Haifa, which had undergone a collective punishment after the assassination of a British officer, a Squadron Leader Alderton. She wrote: "I entered many of the houses and can only say that the havoc which had been wrought was indescribable, and, unless seen with one's own eyes, unbelievable."[7]
In sixty houses, she found that doors had been torn from their hinges, mirrors smashed, cupboards emptied, furniture smashed to pieces, bedding and clothing soaked in olive oil. Nine hundred sheep and goats had been rounded up by British soldiers and taken to Haifa. The owners had to buy the animals back for eight shillings a head.[7]
A month later, the village's residents left after the British installed 40 police officers, requiring the villagers to pay the cost of their upkeep, which was 90 pounds a month. Rather than wait for the authorities to seize their possessions in lieu of payment, the villagers fled, some of them moving to shelters made of sacks under olive trees in nearby fields.[7]
Anti-Zionism
Newton was criticized for the virulence of her anti-Zionist activity, which stretched to publishing in 1946 a defence of Mohammad Amin al-Husayni, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, who had met Adolf Hitler in 1941. The pamphlet, The Truth about the Mufti, was published by the Anglo-Arab Friendship Society, which she controlled, and excused his collaboration with the Nazis. In her autobiography, Fifty Years in Palestine, Newton blamed the British for the Mufti's relationship with Hitler.[11]
Deportation
Newton exclusion order was issued under Regulation 15 of the Emergency Regulations Act, 1936, as amended by Defence (Amendment) regulations (No. 19), 1938. It was appealed in December 1939 but was upheld by the Chief Secretary of Palestine. Newton appealed again, pleading that her exclusion affected her ability to safeguard her business interests in the country, and the order was eventually lifted in September 1943.[12]
Death
Newton died in her sleep of a heart attack in 1955 at home in Flat 8, 9 Wilbraham Place, Chelsea. Her funeral was held at St Simon Zelotes church, Milner Street, Chelsea, followed by cremation at Putney Vale. She left 44,675 pounds and two shillings, a substantial sum at the time, all or most of which went to provide medical services for Palestinian refugees in Jordan.[13]
Works
- Fifty Years in Palestine. London: Coldharbour Press, Ltd. 1948.
- Palestine: Britain's honour at stake. 1947.
See also
Notes
- ↑ Williams, Walter T. Palestine is still a land of problems, The New York Times, May 13, 1921, published July 10, 1921.
- ↑ Tusan, Michelle. Review of Stockdale, Nancy L. Colonial Encounters among English and Palestinian Women, 1800-1948. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2007.
- ↑ Fleischmann, Ellen. The nation and its "new" women. p. 33.
- 1 2 Tweedy diary, May 4, 1927, St Anthony College, Oxford, Middle East Centre, cited in Brown 2009.
- ↑ Miller, Rory. Divided against Zion: anti-Zionist opposition in Britain to a Jewish state in Palestine, 1945-1948. Routledge, 2000, p. 11.
- ↑ Miller, Rory. British anti-Zionism then and now, first published in Covenant magazine, Volume 1, Issue 2, April 2007, Interdisciplinary Center, Herzliya, Israel.
- 1 2 3 4 Dimbleby, Jonathan. The Palestinians. Quartet Books, 1979, p. 76.
- ↑ For W. G. A. Ormsby-Gore's statement in the House of Commons, see Hansard 5C, 333, 24 March 1938, 80, cited in Brown 2009.
- ↑ Police report, Metropolitan Police, Special Branch, Scotland House, November 7, 1938, PRO, CO 733 372/11, cited in Fleischmann, Ellen. The nation and its "new" women. p. 237.
- 1 2 3 4 Brown, Clare. (2009) "Newton, Frances Emily," Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press.
- ↑ Karsh, Efraim. Israel: Israel's transition from community to state, Taylor & Francis 2000, p. 219.
- ↑ Karsh, Efraim. Israel: Israel's transition from community to state, Taylor & Francis 2000, footnote 40, p. 223.
- ↑ Probate, August 31, 1955, CGPLA Eng. & Wales, cited in Brown 2009.
Further reading
- Hughes, Matthew. The Banality of Brutality: British Armed Forces and the Repression of the Arab Revolt in Palestine, 1936–39, The English Historical Review, 2009, CXXIV(507):313-354.
- Stockdale, Nancy L. "Biblical Motherhood: English women and empire in Palestine, 1848-1948," Women's History Review, Volume 15, Issue 4 September 2006, pp. 561–569.