After Herzl's death, the Zionist movement languished, with only a small bureau of Herzl's followers remaining in
Vienna. On the other side of the
English Channel, Greenberg edited
The Jewish Chronicle and took vital steps to secure its future as the sole voice of the British Jewish community, assisted by
Jacobus Kann,
Joseph Cowen, and
Leopold Kessler. Prior to 1914,
The Jewish Chronicle had been unrestrained in its criticism of the
Russian Empire, because of the ill-treatment the Jews had endured. Greenberg even expressed the view in an editorial that Britain should join Austria and Germany in a war against Russia. But once Germany violated Belgian neutrality, Greenberg had to abandon Russian Jewry, and claimed that Britain should join Russia in a war against Austria/Germany.
The Jewish Chronicle placed a placard outside its London offices reiterating that "England has been all she could be to the Jews; the Jews will be all they can to England." In a similar vein, on 4 September 1914, the newspaper argued "From the Russian people Jews have never experienced anything but the deepest sympathy, and with the Russian people they have ever felt on mutually agreeable terms." Early in 1915, Greenberg and Zangwill lobbied the Foreign Office vigorously opposing Weizmann's World View of a Zionist homeland. More for the fears of failure, and bourgeois retrenchment they calculated the friction with Arab tensions would produce years of conflict. Greenberg disliked the communality of global Judaism. "The Zionist Organization was foreign and was almost entirely controlled from alien-enemy countries." Greenberg expressed the fears of the middle-classes of the destructive influence of militarism. The path according to Greenberg was construed to be assimilationist. In 1916, America remained neutral. Britain was virtually exhausted. A new front had to be opened. The
Allies first decided to attack Turkey, but that operation was a disaster. Then the British decided they would invade the Turkish colonies and promise the Arabs home rule. Col.
T. E. Lawrence played a key part and the British used Egypt as their base to invade
Iraq,
Syria and
Palestine, Palestine being put in the trusted hands of General
Edmund Allenby. Still the Americans were neutral. While in Russia, there had been a revolution that had removed the hated Czar and seen
Lenin and his
Bolsheviks take control. American opinion turned against Britain, and the Americans were even considering entering the war on the side of Germany. At this point, Weizmann made an interesting discovery: he found it was possible to extract
acetate, needed to produce
dynamite, from
chestnuts. As the British war effort was almost at a standstill for the lack of acetate, Weizmann's discovery assumed capital importance. The Prime Minister,
David Lloyd George, is said to have offered Weizmann anything to show his gratitude. According to legend, Weizmann is said to have replied: "All I want is a homeland for my people". Greenberg, at the same time, was asked: "What can we do to bring American opinion back to supporting Britain?". Greenberg answered: "Give the Jewish people the homeland they have been dreaming of for 2,000 years!". They also asked Greenberg what to do to win back Russian opinion and got the same reply. Greenberg was present at an important meeting with Sir
Mark Sykes on Sunday 28 January 1917, when the government unequivocally backed military action. Just as Allenby's army set out from Cairo to conquer Palestine, the British Government issued a statement by the
Foreign Secretary,
Arthur Balfour, offering a Jewish national home in Palestine. After the
Balfour Declaration of 1917, Greenberg still kept on sniping at Weizmann, writing, for example, that Weizmann should have demanded "a Jewish state" rather than a mere "national home" and complaining that Palestine meant "both sides of the Jordan river". That row only ended when Greenberg died in 1931. Greenberg did not live to see the declaration of independent Israel. Greenberg had long subscribed to the intellectual Zionist Theory that Jews were naturally homeless people, perpetually in search of salvation. This came in the form of Britain's promise of assistance, but anti-Zionist moderates suffered from the different parameters to the revolutionaries.
Lucien Wolf and the Conjoint Committee had tried to limit damage to their cause, but a statement in
The Times of 24 May 1917 revealed the extent of the split in Jewry about Zionist ambitions.
Lord Walter Rothschild and Zionist leader,
Chaim Weizmann quickly issued rebuttals, that did harm to
The Jewish Chronicles claim to be a voice for
Anglo-Jewry. Greenberg remained a moderating influence, but the Great War changed forever relations within British Jewry. Jibes that he was adopting an English-style manifesto commitment were designs upon integrity. The public debate amongst obsessive secrecy crystallized nationalism, militarism, and the launch of a regiment abroad. == Delayed burial ==