<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h2>
<div class="center"><span class="smcap">The First Judæans.</span></div>
<p>Nothing but a sense of the duty which I owed
to my officers and men induced me to continue
serving in such a hostile atmosphere after the armistice
had been declared.</p>
<p>We suffered, but we suffered in silence, and just
"carried on."</p>
<p>In the midst of our tribulations we, however, scored
a decided triumph, for the year-old decision of the War
Office was at last announced by the local Staff that we
had won a special name, viz., the Judæans, and that
H.M. the King had sanctioned the Menorah as a special
badge for the Battalion.</p>
<p>The withholding of this information from us for a full
year could not have been an oversight, for I had
repeatedly written to ask if the War Office had not
sanctioned this name and badge for the Battalion, but
received no reply. I can only presume that the object
of G.H.Q. in withholding this information, which would
have brought prestige to the Jews, was that they had
hoped to get the Battalion disbanded and abolished so
that it might never have the gratification of knowing that
the Imperial Authorities considered that the Jewish<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</SPAN></span>
Battalion had distinguished itself, and was therefore
entitled to the special name and badge promised in 1917
by Lord Derby when Secretary of State for War.</p>
<p>Just after we had received this good news, I was
gladdened by receiving from the Council of Jews at
Jerusalem a beautifully illuminated parchment scroll,
thanking me for the stand I had made in upholding the
ideals expressed in the Balfour Declaration, and for
having led the Jewish Battalions successfully in the great
struggle which resulted in the "Crown of Victory."</p>
<p>Yet one more triumph was in store for the 1st
Judæans, for, in the beginning of December, 1919,
orders came from the War Office that it was to be retained
to garrison Palestine, and that the 39th and 40th
Battalions were to be amalgamated with it.</p>
<p>It was a great satisfaction to me to learn that it was
to be retained, for a time at least, as a unit of the British
Army, and that it was to be officially known as the
First Judæans Battalion.</p>
<p>I now felt that my work was done and I could chant
my "Nunc Dimittis." I had seen my child weather
the storms which had beaten so fiercely about it, and in
the end specially chosen to garrison its own Home Land.</p>
<p>A permanent force of Judæans in Palestine is an
essentially sound measure from every point of view.</p>
<p>World Jewry would, I am sure, be willing to take the
entire cost of the maintenance of this Force on its own
shoulders; the money spent on it would be well invested,
for it would be the training centre of Palestinian volunteers.
Such a training would instil a sense of responsibility,
and enable young Jewry the more readily to follow<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</SPAN></span>
steadfastly in the simple but sublime footsteps of their
heroic forefathers.</p>
<p>As soon as I got back to England, I had an interview
with the Adjutant-General at the War Office, and requested
that the savage sentences passed on the young
Americans at Belah should be revised. Although the
Adjutant-General was most sympathetic, he could not,
at the moment, see his way to interfere, so I then wrote
to the Prime Minister to let him know that these
American soldiers had been very harshly treated and
were still imprisoned in the Citadel at Cairo. I pointed
out that it was hardly sound policy to offend a powerful
ally by inflicting such a barbarous sentence on men who
had come over the seas as volunteers to help us in the
Great War. I therefore begged him to have their case
investigated.</p>
<p>The result of this letter was that the men were speedily
released and went back to their homes in the United
States.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</SPAN></span></p>
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