Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Illustrations
- Archive sources
- Abbreviations
- 1 The making of an internationalist
- 2 The humanising of an intellectual
- 3 The discovery of Gandhi
- 4 Quaker interventions
- 5 The 1930s
- 6 The Second World War
- 7 To India with the Friends' Ambulance Unit
- 8 Campaigning in Britain and the USA
- 9 Indian independence and its aftermath
- 10 India and the quest for a sustainable world order
- Appendix: Fritz Berber in the Second World War
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - The 1930s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Illustrations
- Archive sources
- Abbreviations
- 1 The making of an internationalist
- 2 The humanising of an intellectual
- 3 The discovery of Gandhi
- 4 Quaker interventions
- 5 The 1930s
- 6 The Second World War
- 7 To India with the Friends' Ambulance Unit
- 8 Campaigning in Britain and the USA
- 9 Indian independence and its aftermath
- 10 India and the quest for a sustainable world order
- Appendix: Fritz Berber in the Second World War
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Fritz Berber and the Nazi revolution
The scale of the impending European crisis was in no way unforeseen. On 8 October 1931, Jan Christian Smuts – the Boer general who became a member of the Imperial War Cabinet in the First World War – delivered the Basil Hicks Lecture at the University of Sheffield. His subject was ‘the disarmed peace’. He pointed out that the armament situation that reached a climax in 1914 was unprecedented in history. This was the ‘armed peace’ that emerged after the Franco-Prussian war: 1871 marked the beginning of an ‘unstable equilibrium of peace maintained through great armies and navies always ready to take the field or go to sea at short notice’. Each nation spurred on the others, and in 1914 the situation passed out of the control of statesmen altogether. Following the war, Germany's forces were reduced to a minimum, and assurances given that her disarmament would be the first step towards a general disarmament. No such thing.
The armaments of the world are greater today than they were in 1914.… The present position involves an immense risk. It is a question whether the exceptional disarmament of Germany does not add to that risk. One-sided preparedness is even more dangerous than all-round preparedness. We dare not sit still and allow this perilous situation to drift.
Smuts' ambition was modest. He accepted that it would take a long time to wean nations from their trust in armaments.
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- Information
- Gandhi's InterpreterA Life of Horace Alexander, pp. 106 - 125Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2010