Confidential Appendix
Prepared By The Commission For Use of Americans Only
Originally printed in Editor & Publisher,
V.55, No. 27, 2nd Section, December 2, 1922
NOTE: The URLs below are are the addresses
of the historical archive which contains these articles that
we now mirror on the CODOH site. - 5/28/98
http://raven.cc.ukans.edu/~kansite/ww_one/docs/kncr.htm The
Commission Report http://raven.cc.ukans.edu/~kansite/ww_one/docs/postkc.htm
Appendix of the Commission Report http://www.lib.byu.edu/~rdh/wwi/1918p.html
Post-1918
Documents (A subdirectory of the main archive)
Since the Commission was the American Section of a projected
international Commission on Mandates in the Turkish Empire,
it has seemed best to prepare the report in such form that copies
could be furnished to representatives of all the Allied Powers,
if that: were desired. The body of the report, therefore, though
trying squarely to face all the facts, has been written with
that possibility in mind.
At the same time there was material involving criticism of
our Allies, that: ought not to come into a report to be put
into their hands, and yet that the American Delegation to the
Peace Conference and our own State Department ought to have,
as involved in a complete statement of the case. That material
prepared by Dr. Lybyer has been gathered into this Confidential
Appendix.
The opportunity has also been taken to bring in some supplementary
discussions that treat with a little more detail certain important
aspects of our inquiry and so throw light on the broader bearings
of our report.
1. The Interference of the Occupying Governments
with the Commission's Inquiry
1. O. E. T. A. South-the British. In each area the
policy of the occupying government had a special effect upon
the course of the inquiry.
At Jerusalem and Jaffa the British military governors were
consulted in the preparation of the Commission's programs. At
the other places they prepared the entire program themselves.
No attempt was discerned to hinder any groups which desired
to meet the Commission, although there were a few complaints
as to restricting the size of the delegations. In one or two
cases it was necessary to request a governor to leave the room,
since it was the uniform rule to allow no officials (nor indeed
anyone besides the Commission, a delegation, and perhaps an
interpreter chosen by the delegation) to be present during interviews.
There was some evidence that attempts had been made to influence
opinion in favor of a British mandate, though with no great
amount of success. The "Moslem-Christian Committee" and the
officials of Jaffa. the Kadi of Jenin, and some groups of Acre,
were said to have been chosen by the occupying government and
were declared not to represent the people. Two or three military
governors seemed to have taken some action to procure votes
for Britain. Orders had been issued at Jaffa against declaring
for complete independence.
Evidence appeared of some French activity in this area, likewise
with little success. There was much enterprise on the part of
members of the Arab Government at Damascus. Such persons were
not hindered by the British authorities from moving about freely,
distributing printed forms and giving instruction according
to definite programs'
It may be remarked that a number of British officials, including
some at Jerusalem, were proceeding as though expecting that
Britain will remain permanently in control of Palestine. For
instance, they were planning for the growth of cities, the building
of roads and railways, and the construction of harbors. On the
other hand, some expressed a desire that America should come
as mandatory power. There was a general agreement that France
could come to the control of all Syria only with a great show
of force, and the probability of considerable fighting.
2. O. E. T. A. West-the French. It was too evident
that in all O. E. T. A. West, the French military governors
had worked with varying energy and success to obtain the reality
or at least the appearance of a desire of a French mandate.
Their propaganda, some of which they carried on directly, and
some through native officials and agents, took many forms.
The Commission saw inspired articles in the newspapers attempts
at browbeating and espionage, the hindrance by French soldiers
of the attempts of individuals and groups to reach the Commission,
and the ushering in of officials, manifestly unsuited to their
positions, freshly appointed in the room of others who had been
removed because they had declined to support a French mandate.
Authentic information came to hand of threats and bribes
and even imprisonment and banishment for the same purpose. The
management of the sessions at Tyre, Baabda, and Tripoli was
so bad as to be insulting to the intelligence and almost to
the dignity of the Commission, and was saved from this at other
places only by the greater intelligence and natural politeness
of some French officers who kept their methods out of sight.
Agents of Prince Feisal were also working in a limited way
in O. E. T. A. West, in support of the program of the Syrian
Congress at Damascus. There was no evidence of direct action
by the British in this territory. Perhaps there was an ulterior
motive in the special and somewhat conspicuous kindnesses which
they showed the Commission during these days.
3. O. E. T. A. East-the Arabs. In O. E. T. A. East
there were evidences of considerable pressure exerted by the
Government to secure the union of all elements upon the program.
This took the form for the more intelligent groups of the declaration
of the Syrian Congress at Damascus. For others, as the Circassians
and Bedouins, who appeared at Amman, a selection of simpler
and more easily comprehensible points from this program was
emphasized.
In that area in particular government agents tried hard to
persuade, cajole, or threaten all, Christians and Moslems alike,
into subscribing. No good evidence appeared anywhere of actual
violence, imprisonment, or banishment with a view to influencing
declarations before the Commission. The Emir Feisal had concluded
agreements with the Druses and the Greek Orthodox Christians,
as represented by their patriarch, in which these agreed to
support his government in return for a measure of autonomy and
promises of proper treatment. It is noteworthy that these agreements
involved a request for a British mandate, which the Druses and
the Greek Orthodox stood by while the Congress went over to
asking for an American mandate by preference.
Some British officers showed signs of disappointment at the
declaration in favor of the Americans as first choice. One of
them in consequence recommended to his government to decline
a mandate over Syria, and the Commission was informed that Mr.
Balfour sent a message to this effect, which General Allenby
conveyed to the Emir Feisal.
Evidence was presented that the Emir had tried immediately
before the arrival of the Commission in Damascus to secure the
support of certain councils for a request for a British mandate,
and that he had failed. While he stated personally to the Commission
that America and England are equally satisfactory to him it
may be that because of the benefits he has received and continues
to receive from England, and because of the better prospect
of a speedy larger Arab union if Syria and Mesopotamia and other
areas are under the same supervision, he prefers in his inmost
heart the mandate of Britain.
II. Summaries of Arguments Presented to the Commission
1. For and Against Zionism
The arguments in favor of Zionism as presented by its supporters
have often been stated and need not now be presented in detail.
The chief elements are that Palestine belonged once to the Jews,
and they were driven out by force; for two thousand years they
have been longing and praying to come back; while the Jews of
the world are now far too numerous to be collected in Palestine,
they are entitled to have somewhere a state which can be a refuge
to the oppressed among them, and an expression of their continuance
and unity; despite proposals at Paris there is persecution of
the Jews in Poland at the present moment, there is a prospect
of a disintegration of the Jews in western civilization and
their coalescence with the nations where they reside; they should
have an opportunity to restore their ancient language and culture
and preserve them in the old environment; there is no need of
displacing the present population, for with the afforestation,
modern methods of agriculture, utilization of water-power, reclamation
of waste lands, scientific irrigation and the like, the land
can contain several times its present number of inhabitants;
if some of the present population desire to sell their lands
they will receive a good price and there is plenty of room for
them in other Arab countries; the Jewish colonies have been
a great benefit to the native Arabs by teaching methods of agriculture,
improving sanitation and the like; the unfolding of the Zionistic
plan would bring great prosperity to all in the land, both present
population and immigrants.
The native Arabs and Christians, who so unitedly oppose Zionism,
urged the following principal considerations: The land is owned
and occupied by them; Arabs were there before the Jews came;
the Jews were immigrants, who treated the former inhabitants
with the greatest cruelty,[NOTE: This alludes to the
wars by the Children of Israel when they "possessed" the Land
of Promise] and who remained a comparatively short time; they
were unable to maintain control over the whole land or even
union among themselves; they were expelled by the Romans and
formed permanent residence elsewhere 2,000 years ago; the Arabs
conquered the land 1,300 years ago, and have remained ever since;
it is their actual home, and not merely a residence of long
ago; as Christians and Moslems, they can honor all the holy
places, whereas the Jews can honor only their own; the Jews
are a religion and not a nation; they will, if given control,
forbid the use of the Arabic language, the measure which caused
the break between the Young Turks and the Arabs; the Jewish
colonies have shown no benevolence to the Arabs in their neighborhood;
it is denied that their activities have influenced the Arabs
toward progress; the Jews have much money, education and shrewdness,
and will soon buy out and manoeuvre away the present inhabitants;
the Arabs are friendly toward the Jews long resident in the
land who use the Arabic language; they will resist to the uttermost
the immigration of foreign Jews and the establishment of a Jewish
government.
2. Arab Feeling Toward the French
While the Commission was prepared beforehand for some disinclination
toward France in Syria, the strength, universality and persistency
of anti-French feeling among practically all Moslems and non-Catholic
Christians (except a division of the Greek Orthodox), came as
a distinct surprise.
Friends of the French affirmed that it is due to German and
Turkish, succeeded by Arab and British propaganda, and that
it is not deep-seated. The Commission went to great pains in
testing these affirmations by questioning. Germans and Turks
did conduct a vigorous propaganda during the war against the
French, and against the other Allies as well. There was no evidence
found of direct propaganda by the British against the French,
and frequent denials were made that the Arabs had worked thus.
It was said several times that the French had themselves
conducted an anti-French propaganda by their actions since the
Armistice. On the other hand it was charged that some Arabs
were working against the French, and also against the British
and all foreigners. Friends of France say that the Moslems of
Syria resent the just punishment which the French gave them
in 1860, and their disposition to treat the native Christians
as fully equal to the Moslems an attitude which the British
do not take in Egypt and India.
Apart from the questions of process and recency, the anti-French
feeling does seem to be deep-rooted in a large proportion of
the Syrian population. This appears in an examination of the
principal reasons given by the Syrians for their opposition
to all French interference in their affairs. They say:
i. The French are enemies of religion, having none at home,
and supporting Roman Catholics abroad for purely political motives.
ii. They disapprove of the French attitude toward women.
iii. The French education is superficial and inferior in
character-building to the Anglo-Saxon. It leads to familiarity
with that kind of French literature which is irreligious and
immoral. The Moslems recognize that the time has come for the
education of their women, and they say that those who receive
French education tend to become uncontrollable.
iv. The French have not treated the natives as equals in
Algeria and Tunisia but have imposed differences in office holding
and in various civil rights. This argument was presented very
often and developed in some detail.
v. The French have shown a marked tendency to give an undue
proportion of offices, concessions, and the like, to the Christians
of Syria. Non-Catholics complain that the same discrimination
is shown in favor of Catholics and Maronites.
vi. By this discrimination, and by various intrigues since
the occupation, the French have increased the religious divisions
in Syria, which had been reduced greatly during the war. They
thus endanger the possibility of Syrian nationalism on a non-religious
basis.
vii. The French are inclined to a policy of colonization,
by which they wish to substitute the use of the French language
for native tongues, and make the people into Frenchmen. The
Syrians wish to preserve the use of the Arabic language, and
to retain their separateness. Furthermore, it is inherent in
this policy that the French would never leave Syria
viii. The French have lost so many men in the war that they
are unable to give needful protection or adequate administration.
This is illustrated by the few soldiers and the inferior type
of French officers and officials now in Syria. (Friends of the
French deny that-France lacks good officials, and blame the
French foreign office for choosing badly those who are sent
out. Again, while for the English the Eastern service is a career
and draws the best of the young men (for the French it seems
a kind of exile and the best prefer to remain at home). It was
affirmed that bribery and intrigue are worse in the French area
now than under the Turks.
ix. The French have suffered financially in the war to such
an extent that they have not the means to restore France itself
or to develop what possessions they have already. They cannot
therefore give Syria the financial and economic support she
needs.
x. The French are inclined toward financial exploitation
of subject areas, and would govern Syria not for its own development,
but for the profit of Frenchmen
It is not necessary here to try to estimate the measure of
truth that lies behind these statements. It is sufficient to
note that most of the Syrians believe substantially the whole
of this, and are therefore very strongly against French control
of the country.
Much feeling persists in connection with the execution of
Arabs by Jemal Pasha, and this acts against the French. Despite
the fact that France was intriguing with the Arabs against the
Turks before the Great War, the knowledge that M. Picot, upon
leaving his position as Consul in 1914, failed to secure his
correspondence, so that fatal evidence fell into Turkish hands,
has played into position so that France is held responsible
for the hangings. Every reference to the "Arab Martyrs," by
subscriptions for their orphans, exhibitions of these children,
meetings of the relatives-the "Unfortunate Syrians," now not
only strengthens the sentiment for Arab independence, but stirs
feeling against France.
3. The Request for an American Mandate
Four possibilities were seriously contemplated by the supporters
of a United Syria: Absolute independence, the mandate of Britain,
the mandate of France and the mandate of America. The only considerable
groups that favored division were those who supported a separate
Palestine for Zionism under Britain, and a separate Lebanon,
whether or not enlarged, under France in case the rest of Syria
is under another mandatary.
Only Jews supported the Zionistic scheme, except that a few
Christians were willing to entrust the question to the mandatory
power. The Jews are distinctly for Britain as mandatory power,
because of the Balfour declaration though many think if the
scheme goes ahead, American Jews will become its; chief promoters.
France is felt to be against it, and America indifferent.
As regards the Lebanon the official Maronites and Catholics
who support a separation scheme are undoubtedly sincere. Not
only have they many sentimental ties toward France, but they
realize that no other Power than France will support them in
their privileged situation.
Many of their followers, especially those who have personal
ties with the United States, would rather have the United States
than France. Those outside the Lebanon area who are undoubtedly
for France as a mandatory power are comparatively few. They
include most of the Catholics of every description, and a section
of the Greek Orthodox who would have been for a Russian mandate
had Russia not collapsed. The latter group prefer France to
Britain but there was evidence that many of them would prefer
America to France, if there were a certainty of acceptance.
In all Syria surprising few, aside from the Druses, declared
for Britain as first choice-not nearly so many as for France.
The fact is that Britain and America were classed together,
with a distinct preference for America, but both were greatly
preferred to France. The Jews and the majority of the Greek
Orthodox and some of the Protestants, were for Britain. The
great majority of the Moslems were for Britain as second choice.
Most of those who made Britain their first choice were for America
as second choice. Practically no one was for America or England
as first choice and France as second choice.
Practically all of the Moslems, who number about four-fifths
of the population of Syria, are for America as their first choice.
It is true that there was little direct expression of this in
Palestine, since after their first declarations at Jaffa, the
question of choice of mandate was held up and referred to Damascus.
Possibly this was done under instructions from the Emir Feisal,
who may have been trying to hold the field for Britain. If so,
the evidence of sincere declaration for America is all the stronger,
since the Congress reached unanimity for America.
As for the Christians, while comparatively few declared directly
for America as first choice-only a part of the Protestants and
Syrian Orthodox and Armenians-they were bound by old ties and
recent agreements to declare for Britain or France, but a large
proportion mentioned America as second choice, and 2 stated
that they would welcome her while there were abundant assurances
that an American mandate would be satisfactory to practically
all.
The members of the Commission can entertain no doubt of the
genuineness of the desire for the United States as mandatory
power, in view of the countless earnest appeals, both by individuals
and groups, and of the manifest enthusiasm shown on many occasions,
in spite of the Commission's discouragement of demonstrations
and avoidance of every form of ostentation. It was furthermore
always possible to ask why a group or individual objected to
France or England, but not to ask why a group failed to declare
for the United States. It is of course, also a fact that France,
and only less openly England, were making bids for the mandate,
while the United States was not.
The principal reasons advanced for desiring an American mandate
were as follows:
i. Confidence in President Wilson as mainly responsible for
the freedom of Syria, and as championing the rights of small
and oppressed peoples.
ii. Gratitude to America for relief of the starving and naked.
Thanks to President Wilson and America was expressed in a thousand
forms and with the greatest emotion, independently of the desire
as regards a mandate.
iii. The feeling that America came into the war for no selfish
reason, and could be trusted to take care of a small people
in an unselfish way.
iv. The knowledge that America is not a colonizing power,
seeking to govern for the advantage of its own people, and to
exploit the governed. The examples of s Cuba and the Philippines
were frequently cited.
v. The feeling that America can be relied upon to withdraw
from the country when her work is done, which is the case with
no other power. The experience of Cuba was contrasted with that
of Egypt and Algeria.
vi. The feeling that America is rich, and abundantly able
to advance the means for the desirable speedy development of
the country economically.
vii. A hearty approval of and desire for the extension of
American education in the country. England has done little educationally
for Syria. While France has done much, she seeks to denationalize
the native peoples and make Frenchmen of them. America, especially
through the Syrian Protestant College, has taught Syrian nationalism.
The American training and the Anglo-Saxon literature and civilization,
are regarded as morally superior to the French.
viii. A conviction that America will be absolutely fair and
just as between the different religions and sects. France would
be expected to favor Christians especially Roman Catholics,
and England to favor Moslems.
ix. America is abundantly supplied with trained men, from
whom experts can be supplied in "various branches of science,
industry, administration, and, above all, education."
x. The Americans are "lovers of humanity."
Many British officials, not excepting General Allenby, think
the best solution to be an American mandate over the whole of
Syria. England might be very glad to get out of the difficulties
of the situation in this way. As for France, she cannot desire
to take the whole of Syria, when so much of it is utterly averse
to her. She also may ultimately conclude that the best way out
is complete withdrawal. This would, perhaps not hurt her pride
seriously if at the same time England were to withdraw and if
her special pre-war relationships be scrupulously continued.
III. Special Discussions
1. French Feeling Toward the British
[NOTE: It should not be overlooked that the first
serious rift in Anglo-French relations since the war occurred
over Syria. It has since grown to a chasm that threatens to
engulf world peace; but the beginning was in the Near East.]
It is evident that the French feel resentment toward the
British as not having played a fair game in the Syrian area.
Without going into historical details, the Sykes-Picot agreement
provided that France should have ownership or influence in a
large area, including Damascus and Cilicia, and extending to
Sivas and Harpoot, while England should be in a similar position
toward the former Turkish area southeast of this. At the present
moment France is threatened with the loss of all her sphere,
while England complacently holds all that was then assigned
to her, and extends her influence toward much of the rest.
America, by showing interest in Armenia, and even by the
sending of the Commission on Mandates to Syria, seems to the
French to be an accomplice of England in despoiling France.
The French feel that the English took advantage of their dire
necessity, by reason of which they were obliged to keep practically
all of their men in France, to occupy more than a due share
of Syria and to seduce the affection of the Arabs.
They also resent the payment by the English to the Emir Feisal
of a large monthly subsidy, which they claim covers a multitude
of bribes, and enables the British to stand off and show clean
hands while Arab agents do dirty work in their interest. They
feel that in arming the Arabs the British are again working
against the French. They claim further that the British are
more or less directly responsible for the undeniably strong
anti-French feeling shown by practically a]l the Moslem and
non-Catholic Christian elements of Syria. They feel that Britain
has been unable to resist the desire to connect Egypt with Mesopotamia
under one control as a bulwark of India, and as a new field
for profitable commercial exploitation.
It cannot be denied that some of the French contentions are
difficult of refutation, and that the whole situation is such
that British honor would seem cleaner if Britain were to withdraw
wholly from Syria. Yet the aversion of the people to France,
however it may have arisen, is so great and deep-seated that
England cannot leave Syria to France without seeming to abandon
her friends to their enemies, a process which would probably
react strongly in Egypt and elsewhere in the Moslem world. There
is good reason for the position of many Englishmen, who are
strongly desirous that America should take the whole situation
off their hands, including with the French and Arab entanglements
the promises to Zionism.
2. French "Rights"
The denial in the "Damascus Program" that the French have
"rights" anywhere in Syria leads to an inquiry into the bases
on which such rights might be claimed.[NOTE: France was
given, and now holds, a man date over Syria, Including Damascus.
She held Cilicia for a time, but surrendered it to the Nationalist
Turks.] In brief, there have been in Syria Roman Catholic missionary
workers, using principally the French language, for several
centuries. These have developed an extensive system of churches,
schools and monasteries. France has had commercial relations
and small groups of resident citizens since the Middle Ages.
French has long been the principal western language used in
Syria. France has taken a special interest in the Maronites,
and intervened on their behalf in the Lebanon in 1860.
None of these relationships, however give the least "right"
to claim territory or mandatory control. Otherwise, it could
be held that America, through her missionary work and business
relationships, had acquired a measure of political rights in
India, China, South America and Syria itself. France herself
could claim all of Turkey with nearly the same justification.
It would compromise all the missionary work in the world
if the doctrine were admitted that such work established political
claims. No doubt the French have acquired many personal relationships
and sentimental attachments. But there is no reason why any
tie that France has had with Syria in the past should be severed
or even weakened under the control of another mandatory power,
or in an independent Syria.
3. The "Greater Lebanon"
The latest policy pushed by the French in the Lebanon region
contemplates complete separation of the country from Tyre to
Tripoli, as far inland as the crest of the Anti-Lebanon, to
be given to France in case the remainder of Syria should go
to another mandatory power. Such a plan is objectionable for
many reasons:
i. It is apparently contrary to the wish of the majority
of the people m the area itself.
ii. The Syrians outside the area are so opposed to the plan
as to be inclined to make war rather than accept it.
iii. If put into effect by overwhelming force a state of
settled equilibrium could probably never be attained, because
of such questions as the just control of "Hollow Syria," where
the Christians by their own figures own 65 per cent of the property,
but have only 40 per cent of the population: the water supply
of Homs which comes from territory claimed for the "Greater
Lebanon"; the commercial access to the sea of the regions of
Damascus and Aleppo. In short, the land is too small, and too
intimately connected, to be capable of satisfactory division.
iv. The separation off of the Greater Lebanon, especially
if accompanied by a separation off of Palestine, would intensify
the religious differences in Syria, which it is most desirable
to diminish in favor of the growth of national feeling. The
tendency would be for Christian Syrians to concentrate in the
Lebanon Jews in Palestine, and Moslem Syrians in the remainder
of the country.
v. The government in each area would countenance and probably
conduct intrigue in the other regions.
vi. The three areas would be implicitly hostile, and must
either carry heavy burdens of armament against each other or
be protected at great expense by the mandatory powers.
vii. The mandatory powers would themselves be in danger of
hostility over the questions which would inevitably arise between
the portions of a country and a people thus unnaturally severed.
A plan which would add to the Greater Lebanon the remainder
of O. E. T. A. West, extending from Tripoli to Alexandretta,
and give the whole to France, and at the same time give the
interior to Britain, would intensify all the above difficulties,
and would besides cut off Aleppo and western Mesopotamia from
access to the sea.
4. The Emir Feisal's Position
Unless the attempt be made to rule Syria as a conquered country,
or unless the experiment of republican government be tried in
the old land, the obvious plan is that the Emir Feisal should
be head of the State, Third son of the Sheriff of Mecca, Hussein,
who was recognized during the war as King of the Hejaz, the
Emir Feisal led the Arabs in co-operation with the Allies against
the Turks, and entered Damascus in triumph. He spent several
months in Paris, and returned a few weeks before the arrival
of the Commission. He had agreed with Clemenceau to labor at
allaying the Arab feeling against the French, but believing
after a time that the French were playing false with him, he
ceased his efforts. Shortly before the arrival of the Commission
in Damascus, he endeavored to obtain declarations in favor of
a British mandate. He assured the Commission that he will be
pleased with either Britain or America as mandatory power.
The British Government has been advancing money to his government
for a long time, and at present allows it $750,000 per month
(£150,000) Of this Feisal draws about $200,000 per month for
his personal expenses, staff, propaganda agents, etc. The balance
is spent on the administration and the army of 7,000 and gendarmerie
of 4,500, in supplement to the inadequate receipts from taxation.
The estimate was made that the Prince could manage under
settled conditions with a salary of $125,000 per year, and that
after a few years the country could carry itself by taxation,
maintaining a very small army. This does not allow for carrying
a portion of the Ottoman debt, nor for large expenditure on
needed public improvements.
The present attachment of the population to Prince Feisal
varies in the different regions. Not many Christians declared
themselves positively in favor of him. Some others said he is
a good man, with bad advisers. Others fear him because of his
membership in a powerful Moslem family. The Moslems of Palestine
made almost no declarations in his favor. It was said that if
he would come to Palestine, all Arabs would be enthusiastically
for him. In all the O. E. T. A. East, and among the Moslems
of the West, he was asked for, often with enthusiasm. An exception
was found in some Moslems of the North, who said they do not
know him.
Emir Feisal gave the impression of being kindly, gentle,
and wise. Whatever be the case previously, he has had during
the past two years in the desert and at Damascus and Paris an
excellent political education. He desires the friendly co-operation
of the Moslems and Christians of Syria, and wishes to promote
the education of Moslem women. Some say that he is not as strong
as the men around him, but he gave the impression of being able
to maintain his leadership. He promises well as a constitutional
monarch, who could work amicably in coordination with a mandatory
power.
It should be provided in case he remain the head of the Syrian
state, that he renounce all rights of inheritance of the crown
of the Hejaz, otherwise serious complications might arise in
the future.
5. The "Rights of Minorities"
One clause in the Damascus program promises full recognition
of the "rights of minorities'' in the Syrian constitution. On
account of the evident fears of many Christians, based on the
policy of massacre that has been employed so often in Turkey,
the Commissioners took pains to inquire of many Moslem groups
what they propose to do to ensure the rights of the smaller
sections of the population. The answer was sometimes given,
logically enough, that there would be no minorities, since all
would be absolutely equal in the new state. But ordinarily,
the promise was made of constitutional guarantees.
There was discussion in the Damascus Congress of a proposal
to grant Moslems one-half of the seats in the future legislative
assembly while the other half would be distributed among the
rest of the population. What method might be used in apportioning
seats to different groups and sects, as the Druses, Maronites,
Shiites, Nusairiyeh, Ismailians Turks, Jews, Greek Orthodox,
Greek Catholics, etc., was not discussed; the mere enumeration
suggests the difficulty of the problem.
Mention has been made already of the agreements made by Prince
Feisal with the Druses and the Greek Orthodox. He promised in
return for the Greek Orthodox support that he would govern under
seven conditions:
(I) He would rule in the fear of God without despotism.
(2) He would establish constitutional government.
(3) He would respect all religions.
(4) Equal rights should be enjoyed by all.
(5) Public security should he guaranteed for all; the private
carrying of rifles should be prevented.
(6) Public instruction should be equal; Greek Orthodox schools
should be on the same basis as Moslem schools.
(7) No one should hold office because of family or influence,
but only because fitted for the place.
These conditions are superior in form from the standpoint
of a modern state to the Turkish system of recognizing a certain
measure of autonomy and self-government in various religious
groups, thus perpetuating differences and making concessions
which later become privileges and the source of friction. It
would be better to aim at one system of education, wherein certain
hours each week should be set aside for religious instruction
under special teachers for each group, than to have several
state-supported school systems. But these are details for future
adjustment. Suffice it to say that great readiness was shown
by the majority group to provide adequately for the protection
and rights of the other groups, and it remains only to bring
this purpose into action.
It is desirable to bear in mind that the Moslem and Druse
minority in the Lebanon is also in need of protection, and that
in the event of a Jewish majority in Palestine, Moslems and
Christians would need protection there. A former governor of
the Lebanon stated that a large part of his work was given to
watching lest the Maronites and other Christians infringe the
rights of the Moslems and Druses.
6. "Complete Independence"
One item in the Damascus program deserves special attention,
as going below the problem of a mandate, namely the request
for "complete independence." The protest against the application
to Syria of Article 22 of the Covenant is closely related to
this. The feeling that the Syrians are in at least as advanced
a condition as were the different Balkan States when their independence
was arranged for was present in the first Moslems whom the Commission
met in Syria, and the same note was sounded everywhere by some
of the delegations. The groups which were inclined to support
this view in an extreme form were Bedouins, villagers of the
south and east, and some of the younger Moslem men. The Syrian
Union Party declared in this direction, and the few but prominent
men and women related to the "Arab Martyrs"-the men who were
executed by Jemal Pasha for intrigues against the Turkish government-were
very emphatic against any form of relationship to another nation,
the Syrian Union Party ask that the League of Nations guarantee
the independence and the Constitution of Syria. The declaration
was made that when Syrians now abroad return, there will be
a sufficiency of educated and trained men to govern the country
well.
On the other hand, a large proportion of the learned men
and of others from the older and wiser among the Moslems, recognized
fully that some form of mandatory control is necessary, since
the Syrians have long been in subjection few of them are educated,
and the country is poor and backward in its development. The
Christians, and most other non-Moslem groups, are unanimous
in the belief that a strong mandate is necessary for a considerable
time, because they do not feel confidence in an Arab government,
which in a country four-fifths Moslem might be too favorable
to the majority.
The nations in forming the League have pronounced in the
Covenant that Syria should be under mandatory control. The Commission
did not find reason to recommend modification of this decision
but abundant cause for holding it to be just. The failure of
the Young Turkish attempt to conduct a self-governing state
in which Moslems and Christians should be equal makes it especially
desirable that the new Syrian state should in its first years
be watched closely, since it has the additional difficulty to
be overcome of emergence from subjection
The 4th Article of the "Damascus Program" provides for the
possibility of a mandate, defining it "as equivalent to the
rendering of economical and technical assistance that does not
prejudice our complete independence." Here also the restriction
may be too great. The mandatory power should have a real control
over the administration, so as to eliminate as far as possible
corruption, waste, inertia, serious errors of judgment, etc.
In spite of all that was said in favor of complete independence,
it is altogether probable that either America or Britain would
be allowed without resistance as much control as the Council
of the League of Nations judges to be wise. In fact, assurance
was given on very high authority that the demand for complete
independence is to an extent artificial, being in part motivated
by the fear of a French mandate, and in part by apprehension
of the conversion of mandatory control into permanent possession.
If adequate assurances be had against both these possibilities,
the objectors to a mandate, limited so as to secure its exercise
in the interests of Syria, will be reduced to a small and impotent
group. In time when all things are ready, a true and lasting
"complete independence" can be awarded by the League of Nations.
7. Syrian Nationalism, Pan-Arabism, and Pan-lslamism
The programs presented to the Commission by all the Moslems
and about two-thirds of the Christians of Syria were nationalistic;
that is to say, they called for a United Syria under a democratic
constitution, making no distinctions on the basis of religion.
In response to repeated questions in many places, it was steadily
affirmed by the Moslems that they had no desire whatever for
Moslem privilege in the government, nor for political union
with the Arabs of the Hejaz, whom they felt to be in another
state of civilization. They asked regularly for the independence
of Mesopotamia, and a few of them hoped for some form of political
union with that area. A few asked for the independence of all
Arab countries.
The Commissioners often asked the question of Moslems, whether
they considered the Gliphate to be at Stamboul or at Mecca.
With very few exceptions they replied that it belongs now to
King Hussein in Mecca. One or two said that it belongs still
to the Turkish Sultan, and cannot be changed except by an agreement
of all the Moslems in the world. All affirmed that King Hussein
is in no sense their political head, but only their religious
head. Prayers are said in his name, and certain seals for public
documents bear his name.
Certain Christians, on the other hand, affirmed that the
sentiment of Syrian Nationalism is new and feeble, and that
the expressions of it made before the Commission gave a false
impression. They claimed that the Christians who adhere to this
view do so as making a desperate effort to live on good terms
with the Moslem majority, and that the Moslems much prefer a
pan-Arabic or Pan-Islamic scheme, and would quickly abandon
Syrian nationalism if they saw a chance for the success of either
of these ideas. It would seem safe to assume that those who
speak for themselves strike nearer the truth than others who
assume to speak for them. Nevertheless, it is worth while to
give consideration to the criticism.
Pan-Arabism [NOTE: This is the portentous programme
set forth in the Turkish Nationalist Pact. It would apparently
eliminate both France and Great Britain from the confines of
the former Ottoman Empire] in a narrower sense would unite under
one independent government the Arab-speaking portions of the
former Turkish Empire. This would not necessarily be a theoretic
Moslem state, though the large majority would belong to the
different Moslem sects. It is hard to see how such a federated
state, with its territory largely desert and lacking a center
and speedy communications, could be more of a danger to the
world than the Turkey of which it formed a part.
In a larger sense Pan-Arabism would wish to add also the
Arab-speaking belt across North Africa. Since this is held by
three great powers, each of whom has a larger population and
infinitely greater resources than the Pan-Arab area contains,
its accomplishment against their will is a mere dream.
Pan-Islamism in a narrow sense would re-establish one government
in the former Turkish Empire by agreement of the two Moslem
groups of north and south, the Turks and the Arabs. The Commission
found no sign of a desire for the re-establishment of the rule
of Turkey over the Arabs. One former deputy in the Turkish Parliament
did indeed suggest that an Ottoman prince might be chosen as
king of Syria, but this was an individual opinion. On the other
hand, there were many expressions of joy and ,thankfulness because
of the end of Turkish rule. If there is any thought of a federation
of Arabs with Turks, or of a political union of any sort, the
Commission saw no trace of it. Still less was here any sign
of movement toward the realization of a larger Pan-Islamic idea.
The Turks had some thought of this early in the war, but it
disappeared in favor of a Pan-Turanian idea on a racial or linguistic
rather than a religious basis, from the time when Jemal Pasha
hanged the leaders of the Syrian Arabs.
One may conjure up the picture of an attempt at restoring
the Saracen Empire, by the stages of Syrian, Arabian and Mesopotamian
independence, followed by federal union in a strong conquering
state, which would then become imperialistic in the directions
of Persia, Armenia, Turkey and North Africa; but the Commission
discerned no trace of such a notion, nor is it practically conceivable
under present world conditions.
If the European civilization has sufficient wisdom to avoid
further extensive self-destruction, it can with the greatest
ease control the Moslem world, it is not necessary for those
who labor to establish the League of Nations to contemplate
the opposite possibility.
The fundamental question in this connection, and, indeed,
in several other great immediate problems, is the basal attitude
of the Christians toward the Moslem world: Shall this be friendly
or hostile? In the war now ending, Christian governments gave
their Moslem allies promises of fair treatment and full rights.
Now the Moslems of Syria offer their hands to their non-Moslem
fellow-citizens with the promise of putting religious separation
out of sight. Shall they be taken at their word? Or shall they
be told: We do not believe what you say; we do not trust you,
we think it best to break our word with you, so that you may
not have the opportunity to break your word with us?
The western world is already committed to the attempt to
live in peace and friendship with the Moslem peoples, and to
manage governments in such a way as to separate politics from
religion. Syria offers an excellent opportunity to establish
a state where members of the three great monotheistic religions
can live together in harmony; because it is a country of one
language which has long had freedom of movement and of business
relations through being unified under the Turkish rule. Since
now the majority declare for nationalism, independent of religion,
it is necessary only to hold them to this view through mandatory
control until they shall have established the method and practice
of it. Dangers may readily arise from unwise and unfaithful
dealings with this people, but there is great hope of peace
and progress if they be handled frankly and loyally.
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