This volume, the third in a series of James G. McDonald s edited
diaries and papers, covers his work from 1945, with the formation
of the Anglo-American Committee, through 1947, with the United
Nations' decision to partition Palestine between Jews and Arabs.
The "Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry Regarding the Problems of
European Jewry and Palestine" was a group charged with finding a
solution to the problem of European Jewish Refugees in the context
of the increasingly unstable British Mandate in Palestine. McDonald
s diaries and papers offer the most thorough personal account we
have of the Committee and the politics surrounding it. His diary is
part travelogue through the desolation of postwar Europe and a
Middle East being transformed by new Jewish settlements and growing
Arab intransigence. McDonald maintained discreet contact with
Zionist and moderate Arab leaders throughout the Committee s
hearings and deliberations. He was instrumental in the
recommendation that 100,000 Jewish refugees enter Palestine and won
President Truman s trust in order to counter attempts to nullify
the report s recommendations."
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