Farewell to a Gentleman and a Friend of Palestine 
Some reflections in memory of Ian Gilmour, Lord Gilmour of Craigmillar 

by Ian Buckley 

Let us begin with the authentic voice of the man himself, from one of his many 
elegant and incisive book reviews : 'There was no such thing as Palestinians,' 
maintained Golda Meir, who hailed from Milwaukee. Perhaps many of us feel that 
the present world situation offers no opportunity for humour, but wit is one 
weapon that effectively pierces the armour of absurdity.

Ian Gilmour was born in Scotland in 1926, and was therefore just old enough to 
serve at the end of World War II. This distinguished him from his future 
adversary Maggie Thatcher - who somehow managed to evade any form of national 
service - despite conscription for women having been introduced by the 
Churchill government in 1942. As a sensitive and civilised man he naturally 
disapproved of the gangster-like capitalism introduced under Ma Thatcher and 
since enthusiastically continued by her 'boys' Blair and Brown. Few have 
commented as persuasively on the subsequent brutal coarsening of British 
society as Ian Gilmour. 

And yet The Scotsman, just the sort of paper that Sir Ian would have read, had 
the temerity to refer to him as the 'wettest of the wets'. What does this silly 
phrase mean? That he didn't approve of the demolition of 25% of UK industry, 
including the closure of mines, shipyards and steel mills? Or that he was 
shocked by the return of beggars to the streets of English cities? As Ian noted 
in Dancing with Dogma : 'At the beginning of the war beggars vanished and were 
not seen for forty years. Then in the 1980s they reappeared on the streets of 
London.' 

His relative lack of success in worldly political terms was only to be 
expected, and indeed was itself a reflection of his strong principles. Ian 
Gilmour was not one to go running for favours to money barons and 
mega-corporations. 

Sir Ian's interest in the Middle East, and support for the Palestinian cause, 
dated back to 1967 when he was horrified by the conditions he saw in the West 
Bank refugee camps. He continued the commitment despite the ever-growing, 
indeed often grotesque media disinformation on the subject. The only slight 
criticism that one could make of Ian was that - rather like Edward Said - he 
was sometimes too gentlemanly towards the opposition. 

In his later years, Ian Gilmour was active in the campaign to free Samar and 
Jawad, even going to the length of standing surety for Samar. For those 
unfamiliar with the case, Jawad Botmeh and Samar Alami are two Palestinians 
accused of bombing the Israeli Embassy and Balfour House in North London during 
1994, despite a total lack of evidence. While the trial judge was good enough 
to admit that there was no evidence linking either defendant with the bombings, 
the jury convicted both of conspiracy to cause explosions, and Samar and Jawad 
were sentenced to 20 years in jail. Go figure, as they say. 

Since the days of the novelist Henry Fielding, British judges have been 
popularly recognised as bombastic, domineering and out of touch. We imagine a 
musty, robed figure exclaiming : 'Who are the Beatles?' Additionally, the 
ordinary, decent, tax-paying working drones on the jury - accustomed to 
believing what they are told by authority - could hardly be familiar with the 
concept of the 'false flag' attack. Yet that's more or less certainly what 
happened in '94, prefiguring the larger-scale events of seven years later. 

In the House of Lords, he was an eloquent opponent of war against Iraq. All has 
unfolded as he predicted, a descent into disaster and mayhem : "Over the Middle 
East, American hands are extremely dirty, and much of the grime will stick to 
Britain". 

Had we had more Ian Gilmours, and fewer plastic mechanical politicians who buzz 
along in the prevailing and fashionable direction, history would be different. 
Britain could have held out the hand of friendship to the Arab world, and I'm 
sure that any friendly gesture would have been returned. Hardly anyone else in 
British political life - still less American - would have made reference to the 
total destruction of 400 out of 500 Palestinian villages, a destruction so 
total that not a trace of them remains today. Why, he asked, did the West 
praise the oppressors, and blame the victims? This reasoning would be beyond 
the minions of New Labour, ignorant characters who probably think that the 
Nakba is a fancy London restaurant.

To Ian Gilmour, Money was not God, and life was more than a supermarket. The 
shabby, noxious, self-deluded world-view of his opponents has, however, largely 
prevailed, with results that are only too obvious. 

__________
At the same time, died his contemporary and a member of nobility, the eldest 
Palestinian statesman Dr Haidar Abdel Shafi, the last living PLO  founder, was 
also along with Edward Said and Mustapha Barghouti the founder of the 
Palestinian Alternative (al-Mubadara). Abdel Shafi was an enemy of Oslo 
agreements; not a friend of Arafat, objected to pointless "peace process" and 
to recognition of Israel. Though a "secular leader with strong Communist 
sympathies", his views actually coincided with those of Hamas. His departure 
concludes a chapter in modern history of Palestine. _._,_.___ 

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