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Jan Smuts

Field Marshal Jan Christian Smuts, OM, CH, DTD, ED, PC, KC, FRS (24 May 1870 – 11 September 1950) was a South African statesman, military leader and philosopher.[1] In addition to holding various military and cabinet posts, he served as prime minister of the Union of South Africa from 1919 to 1924 and 1939 to 1948.

Jan Smuts
Smuts in 1947
2nd Prime Minister of South Africa
In office
5 September 1939 – 4 June 1948
MonarchGeorge VI
Governors-General
Preceded byJames Barry Munnik Hertzog
Succeeded byDaniel François Malan
In office
3 September 1919 – 30 June 1924
MonarchGeorge V
Governors-General
Preceded byLouis Botha
Succeeded byJames Barry Munnik Hertzog
Leader of the Opposition
In office
4 June 1948 – 11 September 1950
MonarchGeorge VI
Prime MinisterDaniel François Malan
Preceded byDaniel François Malan
Succeeded byJacobus Gideon Nel Strauss
Personal details
Born
Jan Christiaan[1] (or Christian) Smuts[2]

(1870-05-24)24 May 1870
Bovenplaats, Cape Colony
Died11 September 1950(1950-09-11) (aged 80)
Irene, Transvaal, Union of South Africa
NationalitySouth African
Political party
SpouseIsie Krige
Children6
Alma mater
ProfessionBarrister
Signature
Military service
AllegianceSouth African Republic
Union of South Africa
United Kingdom
RankField Marshal
CommandsSouth African Defence Forces

Smuts was born to Afrikaner parents in the British Cape Colony. He was educated at Victoria College, Stellenbosch before reading law at Christ's College, Cambridge on a scholarship. He was called to the bar at the Middle Temple in 1894 but returned home the following year. In the leadup to the Second Boer War, Smuts practised law in Pretoria, the capital of the South African Republic. He led the republic's delegation to the Bloemfontein Conference and served as an officer in a commando unit following the outbreak of war in 1899. In 1902, he played a key role in negotiating the Treaty of Vereeniging, which ended the war and resulted in the annexation of the South African Republic and Orange Free State into the British Empire. He subsequently helped negotiate self-government for the Transvaal Colony, becoming a cabinet minister under Louis Botha.

Smuts played a leading role in the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910, helping shape its constitution. He and Botha established the South African Party, with Botha becoming the union's first prime minister and Smuts holding multiple cabinet portfolios. As defence minister he was responsible for the Union Defence Force during the First World War. Smuts personally led troops in the East African campaign in 1916 and the following year joined the Imperial War Cabinet in London. He played a leading role at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919, advocating for the creation of the League of Nations and securing South African control over the former German South-West Africa.

In 1919, Smuts replaced Botha as prime minister, holding the office until the South African Party's defeat at the 1924 general election by J. B. M. Hertzog's National Party. He spent several years in academia, during which he coined the term "holism", before eventually re-entering politics as deputy prime minister in a coalition with Hertzog; in 1934 their parties subsequently merged to form the United Party. Smuts returned as prime minister in 1939, leading South Africa into the Second World War at the head of a pro-interventionist faction. He was appointed field marshal in 1941 and in 1945 signed the UN Charter, the only signer of the Treaty of Versailles to do so. His second term in office ended with the victory of his political opponents, the reconstituted National Party at the 1948 general election, with the new government beginning the implementation of apartheid.

Smuts was an internationalist who played a key role in establishing and defining the League of Nations, United Nations and Commonwealth of Nations. He was a white supremacist who supported racial segregation and opposed democratic non-white rule. At the end of his career he supported the Fagan Commission's recommendations.

Early life and education

 
Jacobus and Catharina Smuts, 1893

Smuts was born on 24 May 1870, at the family farm, Bovenplaats, near Malmesbury, in the Cape Colony. His parents, Jacobus Smuts and his wife Catharina, were prosperous, traditional Afrikaner farmers, long established and highly respected.[3]

As the second son of the family, rural custom dictated that Jan would remain working on the farm. In this system, typically only the first son was supported for a full, formal education. In 1882, when Jan was twelve, his elder brother died, and Jan was sent to school in his place. Jan attended the school in nearby Riebeek West. He made excellent progress despite his late start, and caught up with his contemporaries within four years. He was admitted to Victoria College, Stellenbosch, in 1886, at the age of sixteen.[4]

At Stellenbosch, he learned High Dutch, German, and Ancient Greek, and immersed himself in literature, the classics, and Bible studies. His deeply traditional upbringing and serious outlook led to social isolation from his peers. He made outstanding academic progress, graduating in 1891 with double first-class honours in Literature and Science. During his last years at Stellenbosch, Smuts began to cast off some of his shyness and reserve. At this time he met Isie Krige, whom he later married.[5]

On graduation from Victoria College, Smuts won the Ebden scholarship for overseas study. He decided to attend the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom to read law at Christ's College.[6] Smuts found it difficult to settle at Cambridge. He felt homesick and isolated by his age and different upbringing from the English undergraduates. Worries over money also contributed to his unhappiness, as his scholarship was insufficient to cover his university expenses. He confided these worries to Professor J. I. Marais, a friend from Victoria College. In reply, Professor Marais enclosed a cheque for a substantial sum, by way of loan, encouraging Smuts to let him know if he ever found himself in need again.[7] Thanks to Marais, Smuts's financial standing was secure. He gradually began to enter more into the social aspects of the university, although he retained a single-minded dedication to his studies.[8]

During this time in Cambridge, Smuts studied a diverse number of subjects in addition to law. He wrote a book, Walt Whitman: A Study in the Evolution of Personality. It was not published until 1973, after his death,[9] but it can be seen that Smuts in this book had already conceptualized his thinking for his later wide-ranging philosophy of holism.[10]

Smuts graduated in 1894 with a double first. Over the previous two years, he had received numerous academic prizes and accolades, including the coveted George Long prize in Roman Law and Jurisprudence.[11] One of his tutors, Professor Maitland, a leading figure among English legal historians, described Smuts as the most brilliant student he had ever met.[12] Lord Todd, the Master of Christ's College, said in 1970 that "in 500 years of the College's history, of all its members, past and present, three had been truly outstanding: John Milton, Charles Darwin and Jan Smuts."[13]

In December 1894, Smuts passed the examinations for the Inns of Court, entering the Middle Temple. His old Cambridge college, Christ's College, offered him a fellowship in Law. Smuts turned his back on a potentially distinguished legal future. By June 1895, he had returned to the Cape Colony, determined to make his future there.[14]

Career

Law and politics

 
Jan Smuts, as a young state attorney general in 1895

Smuts began to practise law in Cape Town, but his abrasive nature made him few friends. Finding little financial success in the law, he began to devote more and more of his time to politics and journalism, writing for the Cape Times. Smuts was intrigued by the prospect of a united South Africa, and joined the Afrikaner Bond. By good fortune, Smuts' father knew the leader of the group, Jan Hofmeyr. Hofmeyr in turn recommended Jan to Cecil Rhodes, who owned the De Beers mining company. In 1895, Smuts became an advocate and supporter of Rhodes.[15]

When Rhodes launched the Jameson Raid, in the summer of 1895–96, Smuts was outraged. Feeling betrayed by his employer, friend and political ally, he resigned from De Beers, and left political life. Instead he became state attorney in the capital of the South African Republic, Pretoria.[15]

After the Jameson Raid, relations between the British and the Afrikaners had deteriorated steadily. By 1898, war seemed imminent. Orange Free State President Martinus Steyn called for a peace conference at Bloemfontein to settle each side's grievances. With an intimate knowledge of the British, Smuts took control of the Transvaal delegation. Sir Alfred Milner, head of the British delegation, took exception to his dominance, and conflict between the two led to the collapse of the conference, consigning South Africa to war.[16]

Psychology

Smuts was the first South African to be internationally regarded as an important psychologist.[17] During Smuts’ undergraduate years at Cambridge University, he produced a manuscript in 1895 in which he analysed the personality of the famous American poet Walt Whitman.[17] Due to his manuscript being considered unviable, it was only published 23 years after his death in 1973. Smuts went on to produce his next manuscript, which he completed in 1910, entitled An Inquiry into the Whole. His manuscript was then revised in 1924 and published in 1926 with the title Holism and Evolution.[17][18]

Smuts had no interest in pursuing a career in psychology. [17] He considered psychology as "too impersonal to study great personalities",[17] and believed that the holistic tendency of the personality would be studied best through personology.[17] Smuts, however, never inquired further into the idea of personology due to him wanting to continue laying the foundation of the concept of holism. He never returned to either of the topics.[17]

Holism

Although the concept of holism has been discussed by many, the term holism in academic terminology was first introduced and publicly shared in print by Smuts in the early twentieth century.[19][17][18] Smuts was acknowledged for his contribution by getting the honour to write the first entry about the concept for the Encyclopaedia Britannica 1929 edition.[18][19] The Austrian medical doctor, founder of the school of Individual Psychology, and psychotherapist, Alfred Adler (1870–1937), also showed a great interest in Smuts' book. Adler requested permission from Smuts to have the book translated to German and published in Germany.[17]

Although Smuts' concept of holism is grounded in the natural sciences, he claimed that it has a relevance in philosophy, ethics, sociology, and psychology.[19] In Holism and Evolution, he argued that the concept of holism is "grounded in evolution and is also an ideal that guides human development and one's level of personality actualization."[18] Smuts stated in the book that "personality is the highest form of holism" (p. 292).[20]

Recognition from Adler

Adler later wrote a letter, dated 31 January 1931, where he stated that he recommended Smuts’ book to his students and followers. He referred to it as "the best preparation for the science of Individual Psychology".[17] After Smuts gave permission for the translation and publication of his book in Germany, it was translated by H. Minkowski and eventually published in 1938. During the Second World War, the books were destroyed after the Nazi government had removed it from circulation.[17] Adler and Smuts, however, continued their correspondence. In one of Adler’s letters dated 14 June 1931, he invited Smuts to be one of three judges of the best book on the history of wholeness with a reference to Individual Psychology.[17]


The Boer War

 
Jan Smuts and Boer guerrillas during the Second Boer War, c. 1901

On 11 October 1899 the Boer republics declared war and launched an offensive into the British-held Natal and Cape Colony areas, beginning the Second Boer War of 1899–1902. In the early stages of the conflict, Smuts served as Paul Kruger's eyes and ears in Pretoria, handling propaganda, logistics, communication with generals and diplomats, and anything else that was required. In the second phase of the war, from mid-1900, Smuts served under Koos de la Rey, who commanded 500 commandos in the Western Transvaal. Smuts excelled at hit-and-run warfare, and the unit evaded and harassed a British army forty times its size. President Paul Kruger and the deputation in Europe thought that there was good hope for their cause in the Cape Colony. They decided to send General de la Rey there to assume supreme command, but then decided to act more cautiously when they realised that General de la Rey could hardly be spared in the Western Transvaal. Consequently, Smuts was left with a small force of 300 men, while another 100 men followed him. By January 1902 the British scorched-earth policy left little grazing land. One hundred of the cavalry that had joined Smuts were therefore too weak to continue and so Smuts had to leave these men with General Kritzinger. Intelligence indicated that at this time Smuts had about 3,000 men.[21]

To end the conflict, Smuts sought to take a major target, the copper-mining town of Okiep in the present-day Northern Cape Province (April–May 1902). With a full assault impossible, Smuts packed a train full of explosives, and tried to push it downhill, into the town, in order to bring the enemy garrison to its knees. Although this failed, Smuts had proved his point: that he would stop at nothing to defeat his enemies. Norman Kemp Smith wrote that General Smuts read from Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason on the evening before the raid. Smith contended that this showed how Kant's critique can be a solace and a refuge, as well as a means to sharpen the wit.[22] Combined with the British failure to pacify the Transvaal, Smuts' success left the United Kingdom with no choice but to offer a ceasefire and a peace conference, to be held at Vereeniging.[21]

Before the conference, Smuts met Lord Kitchener at Kroonstad station, where they discussed the proposed terms of surrender. Smuts then took a leading role in the negotiations between the representatives from all of the commandos from the Orange Free State and the South African Republic (15–31 May 1902). Although he admitted that, from a purely military perspective, the war could continue, he stressed the importance of not sacrificing the Afrikaner people for that independence. He was very conscious that "more than 20,000 women and children have already died in the concentration camps of the enemy". He felt it would have been a crime to continue the war without the assurance of help from elsewhere and declared, "Comrades, we decided to stand to the bitter end. Let us now, like men, admit that that end has come for us, come in a more bitter shape than we ever thought."[23] His opinions were representative of the conference, which then voted by 54 to 6 in favour of peace. Representatives of the Governments met Lord Kitchener and at five minutes past eleven on 31 May 1902, the Acting State President of the South African Republic, Schalk Willem Burger signed the Treaty of Vereeniging, followed by the members of his government, Acting State President of the Orange Free State, Christiaan De Wet, and the members of his government.[24]

A British Transvaal

 
Jan Smuts around 1905
 
Jan Smuts, c. 1914

For all Smuts' exploits as a general and a negotiator, nothing could mask the fact that the Boers had been defeated. Lord Milner had full control of all South African affairs, and established an Anglophone elite, known as Milner's Kindergarten. As an Afrikaner, Smuts was excluded. Defeated but not deterred, in January 1905, he decided to join with the other former Transvaal generals to form a political party, Het Volk ('The People'),[25] to fight for the Afrikaner cause. Louis Botha was elected leader, and Smuts his deputy.[15]

When his term of office expired, Milner was replaced as High Commissioner by the more conciliatory Lord Selborne. Smuts saw an opportunity and pounced, urging Botha to persuade the Liberals to support Het Volk's cause. When the Conservative government under Arthur Balfour collapsed, in December 1905, the decision paid off. Smuts joined Botha in London, and sought to negotiate full self-government for the Transvaal within British South Africa. Using the thorny political issue of South Asian labourers ('coolies'), the South Africans convinced Prime Minister Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman and, with him, the cabinet and Parliament.[15]

Through 1906, Smuts worked on the new constitution for the Transvaal, and, in December 1906, elections were held for the Transvaal parliament. Despite being shy and reserved, unlike the showman Botha, Smuts won a comfortable victory in the Wonderboom constituency, near Pretoria. His victory was one of many, with Het Volk winning in a landslide and Botha forming the government. To reward his loyalty and efforts, Smuts was given two key cabinet positions: Colonial Secretary and Education Secretary.[26]

Smuts proved to be an effective leader, if unpopular. As Education Secretary, he had fights with the Dutch Reformed Church, of which he had once been a dedicated member, which demanded Calvinist teachings in schools. As Colonial Secretary, he opposed a movement for equal rights for South Asian workers, led by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi.[26]

During the years of Transvaal self-government, nobody could avoid the predominant political debate of the day: South African unification. Ever since the British victory in the war, it was an inevitability, but it remained up to the South Africans to decide what sort of country would be formed, and how it would be formed. Smuts favoured a unitary state, with power centralised in Pretoria, with English as the only official language, and with a more inclusive electorate. To impress upon his compatriots his vision, he called a constitutional convention in Durban, in October 1908.[27]

There, Smuts was up against a hard-talking Orange River Colony delegation, who refused every one of Smuts' demands. Smuts had successfully predicted this opposition, and their objections, and tailored his own ambitions appropriately. He allowed compromise on the location of the capital, on the official language, and on suffrage, but he refused to budge on the fundamental structure of government. As the convention drew into autumn, the Orange leaders began to see a final compromise as necessary to secure the concessions that Smuts had already made. They agreed to Smuts' draft South African constitution, which was duly ratified by the South African colonies. Smuts and Botha took the constitution to London, where it was passed by Parliament and given Royal Assent by King Edward VII in December 1909.[27]

The Old Boers

The Union of South Africa was born, and the Afrikaners held the key to political power, as the majority of the increasingly whites-only electorate. Although Botha was appointed prime minister of the new country, Smuts was given three key ministries: Interior, Mines, and Defence. Undeniably, Smuts was the second most powerful man in South Africa. To solidify their dominance of South African politics, the Afrikaners united to form the South African Party, a new pan-South African Afrikaner party.[28]

The harmony and co-operation soon ended. Smuts was criticised for his overarching powers, and the cabinet was reshuffled. Smuts lost Interior and Mines, but gained control of Finance. That was still too much for Smuts' opponents, who decried his possession of both Defence and Finance, two departments that were usually at loggerheads. At the 1913 South African Party conference, the Old Boers (Hertzog, Steyn, De Wet), called for Botha and Smuts to step down. The two narrowly survived a confidence vote, and the troublesome triumvirate stormed out, leaving the party for good.[29]

With the schism in internal party politics came a new threat to the mines that brought South Africa its wealth. A small-scale miners' dispute flared into a full-blown strike, and rioting broke out in Johannesburg after Smuts intervened heavy-handedly. After police shot dead twenty-one strikers, Smuts and Botha headed unaccompanied to Johannesburg to resolve the situation personally. Facing down threats to their own lives, they negotiated a cease-fire. But the cease-fire did not hold, and in 1914, a railway strike turned into a general strike. Threats of a revolution caused Smuts to declare martial law. He acted ruthlessly, deporting union leaders without trial and using Parliament to absolve him and the government of any blame retroactively. That was too much for the Old Boers, who set up their own National Party to fight the all-powerful Botha-Smuts partnership.[29]

First World War

 
The Imperial War Cabinet (1917) Jan Smuts is seated on the right
 
Generals Botha and Smuts at Versailles, July 1919

During the First World War, Smuts formed the Union Defence Force. His first task was to suppress the Maritz Rebellion, which was accomplished by November 1914. Next he and Louis Botha led the South African army into German South-West Africa and conquered it (see the South-West Africa Campaign for details). In 1916 General Smuts was put in charge of the conquest of German East Africa. Col (later BGen) J.H.V. Crowe commanded the artillery in East Africa under General Smuts and published an account of the campaign, General Smuts' Campaign in East Africa in 1918.[30] Smuts was promoted to temporary lieutenant general on 18 February 1916,[31] and to honorary lieutenant general for distinguished service in the field on 1 January 1917.[32]

Smuts' chief Intelligence officer, Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen, wrote very critically of his conduct of the campaign. He believed Horace Smith-Dorrien (who had saved the British Army during the retreat from Mons and was the original choice as commander in 1916) would have quickly defeated the Germans. In particular, Meinertzhagen thought that frontal attacks would have been decisive, and less costly than the flanking movements preferred by Smuts, which took longer, so that thousands of Imperial troops died of disease in the field. He wrote: "Smuts has cost Britain many hundreds of lives and many millions of pounds by his caution... Smuts was not an astute soldier; a brilliant statesman and politician but no soldier."[33] Meinertzhagen wrote these comments in October/November 1916, in the weeks after being relieved by Smuts due to symptoms of depression, and he was invalided back to England shortly thereafter.[34]

Early in 1917, Smuts left Africa and went to London, as he had been invited to join the Imperial War Cabinet and the War Policy Committee by David Lloyd George. Smuts initially recommended renewed Western Front attacks and a policy of attrition, lest with Russian commitment to the war wavering, France or Italy would be tempted to make a separate peace.[35] Lloyd George wanted a commander "of the dashing type" for the Middle East in succession to Murray, but Smuts refused the command (late May) unless promised resources for a decisive victory, and he agreed with Robertson that Western Front commitments did not justify a serious attempt to capture Jerusalem. Allenby was appointed instead.[36] Like other members of the War Cabinet, Smuts' commitment to Western Front efforts was shaken by Third Ypres.[37]

In 1917, following the German Gotha Raids, and lobbying by Viscount French, Smuts wrote a review of the British Air Services, which came to be called the Smuts Report. He was helped in large part in this by General Sir David Henderson who was seconded to him. This report led to the treatment of air as a separate force, which eventually became the Royal Air Force.[38][39]

By mid-January 1918, Lloyd George was toying with the idea of appointing Smuts Commander-in-Chief of all land and sea forces facing the Ottoman Empire, reporting directly to the War Cabinet rather than to Robertson.[40] Early in 1918, Smuts was sent to Egypt to confer with Allenby and Marshall, and prepare for major efforts in that theatre. Before his departure, alienated by Robertson's exaggerated estimates of the required reinforcements, he urged Robertson's removal. Allenby told Smuts of Robertson's private instructions (sent by hand of Walter Kirke, appointed by Robertson as Smuts' adviser) that there was no merit in any further advance. He worked with Smuts to draw up plans, using three reinforcement divisions from Mesopotamia, to reach Haifa by June and Damascus by the autumn, the speed of the advance limited by the need to lay fresh rail track. This was the foundation of Allenby's successful offensive later in the year.[41]

Like most British Empire political and military leaders in the First World War, Smuts thought the American Expeditionary Forces lacked the proper leadership and experience to be effective quickly. He supported the Anglo-French amalgamation policy towards the Americans. In particular, he had a low opinion of General John J. Pershing's leadership skills, so much so that he proposed to Lloyd George that Pershing be relieved of command and US forces be placed "under someone more confident, like [himself]". This did not endear him to the Americans once it was leaked.[42]

Statesman

 
Smuts in 1934

Smuts and Botha were key negotiators at the Paris Peace Conference. Both were in favour of reconciliation with Germany and limited reparations. Smuts was a key architect of the League of Nations through his correspondences with Woodrow Wilson, his work with the Imperial War Cabinet during the First World War and his book League of Nations: A Practical Suggestion.[43][44] According to Jacob Kripp, Smuts saw the League as necessary in unifying white internationalists and pacifying a race war through indirect rule by Europeans over non-whites and segregation.[44] Kripp states that the League of Nations mandates system reflected a compromise between Smuts's desire to annex non-white territories and Woodrow Wilson's principles of trusteeship.[44]

He was sent to Budapest to negotiate with Béla Kun's Hungarian Soviet Republic to withdraw from unrecognized territory, and the Hungarian Communist Party's refusal to meet him led to the conference's approval of a Czechoslovak-Romanian invasion and harsher terms in the Treaty of Trianon.[45] The Treaty of Versailles gave South Africa a Class C mandate over German South-West Africa (which later became Namibia), which was occupied from 1919 until withdrawal in 1990. At the same time, Australia was given a similar mandate over German New Guinea, which it held until 1975. Both Smuts and the Australian Prime Minister Billy Hughes feared the rising power of Japan in the post First World War world. When former German East Africa was divided into three mandated territories (Rwanda, Burundi, and Tanganyika) Smutsland was one of the proposed names for what became Tanganyika. Smuts, who had called for South African territorial expansion all the way to the River Zambesi since the late 19th century, was ultimately disappointed with the League awarding South-West Africa only a mandate status, as he had looked forward to formally incorporating the territory to South Africa.[46]

Smuts returned to South African politics after the conference. When Botha died in 1919, Smuts was elected prime minister, serving until a shocking defeat in 1924 at the hands of the National Party. After the death of the former American President Woodrow Wilson, Smuts was quoted as saying that: "Not Wilson, but humanity failed at Paris."[47]

While in Britain for an Imperial Conference in June 1921, Smuts went to Ireland and met Éamon de Valera to help broker an armistice and peace deal between the warring British and Irish nationalists. Smuts attempted to sell the concept of Ireland receiving Dominion status similar to that of Australia and South Africa.[48]

During his first premiership Smuts was involved in a number of controversies. The first was the Rand Revolt of March 1921, where aeroplanes were used to bomb white miners who were striking in opposition to proposals to allow non-whites to do more skilled and semi-skilled work previously reserved to whites only.[49] Smuts was accused of siding with the Rand Lords who wanted the removal of the colour bar in the hope that it would lower wage costs.[50] The white miners perpetrated acts of violence across the Rand, including murderous attacks on non-Europeans, conspicuously on African miners in their compounds, and this culminated in a general assault on the police.[51] Smuts declared martial law and suppressed the insurrection in three days – at a cost of 291 police and army deaths, and 396 civilians killed.[52] A Martial Law Commission was established which found that Smuts used larger forces than were strictly required, but had saved lives by doing so.[53]

The second was the Bulhoek Massacre of 24 May 1921, when at Bulhoek in the eastern Cape eight hundred South African policemen and soldiers armed with maxim machine guns and two field artillery guns killed 163 and wounded 129 members of an indigenous religious sect known as "Israelites" who had been armed with knobkerries, assegais and swords and who had refused to vacate land they regarded as holy to them.[54] Casualties on the government side at Bulhoek amounted to one trooper wounded and one horse killed.[55] Once again, there were charges of the unnecessary use of overwhelming force. However, no commission of enquiry was appointed.[56]

The third was the Bondelswarts Rebellion, in which Smuts supported the actions of the South African Administration in attacking the Bondelswarts in South West Africa. The mandatory administration moved to crush what they called a rebellion of 500 to 600 people, of which 200 were said to be armed (although only about 40 weapons were captured after the Bondelswarts were crushed).[57] Gysbert Hofmeyr, the Mandatory Administrator, organised 400 armed men, and sent in aircraft to bomb the Bondelswarts. Casualties included 100 Bondelswart deaths, including a few women and children.[58] A further 468 men were either wounded or taken prisoner.[59] South Africa's international reputation was tarnished. Ruth First, a South African anti-apartheid activist and scholar, describes the Bondelswarts shooting as "the Sharpeville of the 1920s".[60]

As a botanist, Smuts collected plants extensively over southern Africa. He went on several botanical expeditions in the 1920s and 1930s with John Hutchinson, former botanist-in-charge of the African section of the Herbarium of the Royal Botanic Gardens and taxonomist of note. Smuts was a keen mountaineer and supporter of mountaineering.[61] One of his favourite rambles was up Table Mountain along a route now known as Smuts' Track. In February 1923 he unveiled a memorial to members of the Mountain Club who had been killed in the First World War.[61]

In 1925, assessing Smuts's role in international affairs, African-American historian and Pan-Africanist W. E. B. Du Bois wrote in an article which would be incorporated into the pivotal Harlem Renaissance text The New Negro,

Jan Smuts is today, in his world aspects, the greatest protagonist of the white race. He is fighting to take control of Laurenço Marques from a nation that recognizes, even though it does not realize, the equality of black folk; he is fighting to keep India from political and social equality in the empire; he is fighting to insure the continued and eternal subordination of black to white in Africa; and he is fighting for peace and good will in a white Europe which can by union present a united front to the yellow, brown and black worlds. In all this he expresses bluntly, and yet not without finesse, what a powerful host of white folk believe but do not plainly say in Melbourne, New Orleans, San Francisco, Hongkong, Berlin, and London.[62][63]

In December 1934, Smuts told an audience at the Royal Institute of International Affairs that:

How can the inferiority complex which is obsessing and, I fear, poisoning the mind, and indeed the very soul of Germany, be removed? There is only one way and that is to recognise her complete equality of status with her fellows and to do so frankly, freely and unreservedly ... While one understands and sympathises with French fears, one cannot, but feel for Germany in the prison of inferiority in which she still remains sixteen years after the conclusion of the war. The continuance of the Versailles status is becoming an offence to the conscience of Europe and a danger to future peace ... Fair play, sportsmanship—indeed every standard of private and public life—calls for frank revision of the situation. Indeed ordinary prudence makes it imperative. Let us break these bonds and set the complexed-obsessed soul free in a decent human way and Europe will reap a rich reward in tranquility, security and returning prosperity.[64]

Though in his Rectorial Address delivered on 17 October 1934 at St Andrews University he states that:

The new Tyranny, disguised in attractive patriotic colours, is enticing youth everywhere into its service. Freedom must make a great counterstroke to save itself and our fair western civilisation. Once more the heroic call is coming to our youth. The fight for human freedom is indeed the supreme issue of the future, as it has always been.[65]

Second World War

 
Smuts, standing left, at the 1944 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference

After nine years in opposition and academia, Smuts returned as deputy prime minister in a 'grand coalition' government under J. B. M. Hertzog. When Hertzog advocated neutrality towards Nazi Germany in 1939, the coalition split and Hertzog's motion to remain out of the war was defeated in Parliament by a vote of 80 to 67. Governor-General Sir Patrick Duncan refused Hertzog's request to dissolve parliament for a general election on the issue. Hertzog resigned and Duncan invited Smuts, Hertzog's coalition partner, to form a government and become prime minister for the second time in order to lead the country into the Second World War on the side of the Allies.[66]

On 24 May 1941 Smuts was appointed a field marshal of the British Army.[67]

Smuts' importance to the Imperial war effort was emphasised by a quite audacious plan, proposed as early as 1940, to appoint Smuts as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, should Churchill die or otherwise become incapacitated during the war. This idea was put forward by Sir John Colville, Churchill's private secretary, to Queen Mary and then to George VI, both of whom warmed to the idea.[68]

In May 1945, he represented South Africa in San Francisco at the drafting of the United Nations Charter.[69] According to historian Mark Mazower, Smuts "did more than anyone to argue for, and help draft, the UN's stirring preamble."[70] Smuts saw the UN as key to protecting white imperial rule over Africa.[71] Also in 1945, he was mentioned by Halvdan Koht among seven candidates that were qualified for the Nobel Prize in Peace. However, he did not explicitly nominate any of them. The person actually nominated was Cordell Hull.[72]

Later life

 
Jan Smuts Museum library.

In domestic policy, a number of social security reforms were carried out during Smuts' second period in office as Prime Minister. Old-age pensions and disability grants were extended to 'Indians' and 'Africans' in 1944 and 1947 respectively, although there were differences in the level of grants paid out based on race. The Workmen's Compensation Act of 1941 "insured all employees irrespective of payment of the levy by employers and increased the number of diseases covered by the law," and the Unemployment Insurance Act of 1946 introduced unemployment insurance on a national scale, albeit with exclusions.[73]

Smuts continued to represent his country abroad. He was a leading guest at the 1947 wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. [74] At home, his preoccupation with the war had severe political repercussions in South Africa. Smuts' support of the war and his support for the Fagan Commission made him unpopular amongst the Afrikaner community and Daniel François Malan's pro-apartheid stance won the Reunited National Party the 1948 general election.[69]

In 1948, he was elected Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, becoming the first person from outside the United Kingdom to hold that position. He held the position until his death two years later.[75]

He accepted the appointment as Colonel-in-Chief of Regiment Westelike Provinsie as from 17 September 1948.[76]

In 1949, Smuts was bitterly opposed to the London Declaration which transformed British Commonwealth into the Commonwealth of Nations and made it possible for Republics (such as the newly independent India) to remain its members.[77][78] In the South African context, republicanism was mainly identified with Afrikaner Conservatism and with tighter racial segregation.[79]

Death

On 29 May 1950, a week after the public celebration of his eightieth birthday in Johannesburg and Pretoria, Jan Smuts suffered a coronary thrombosis. He died of a subsequent heart attack on his family farm of Doornkloof, Irene, near Pretoria, on 11 September 1950.[69]

Relations with Churchill

In 1899, Smuts interrogated the young Winston Churchill, who had been captured by Afrikaners during the Boer War, which was the first time they met. The next time was in 1906, while Smuts was leading a mission about South Africa's future to London before Churchill, then Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies. The British Cabinet shared Churchill's sympathetic view, which led to self-government within the year, followed by dominion status for the Union of South Africa in 1910. Their association continued in the First World War, when Lloyd George appointed Smuts, in 1917, to the war cabinet in which Churchill served as Munitions Minister. By then, both had formed a fast friendship that continued through Churchill's "wilderness years" and the Second World War, to Smuts's death. Lord Moran, Churchill's personal physician, wrote in his diary:

Smuts is the only man who has any influence with the PM; indeed, he is the only ally I have in pressing counsels of common sense on the PM. Smuts sees so clearly that Winston is irreplaceable, that he may make an effort to persuade him to be sensible.[80]

Churchill:

Smuts and I are like two old love-birds moulting together on a perch, but still able to peck.[80]

When Eden said at a meeting of the Chiefs of Staff (29 October 1942) that Montgomery's Middle East offensive was "petering out", after having some late night drinks with Churchill the previous night, Alanbrooke had told Churchill "fairly plainly" what he thought of Eden's ability to judge the tactical situation from a distance (Churchill was always impatient for his generals to attack at once). He was supported at the Chiefs of Staff meeting by Smuts.[81] Alanbrooke said he was fortunate to be supported by:

a flow of words from the mouth of that wonderful statesman. It was as if oil had been poured on the troubled waters. The temperamental film-stars returned to their tasks – peace reigned in the dove cot!

Views

Race and segregation

Smuts and his parties supported existing policies of racial discrimination in South Africa, taking a more moderate and ambiguous stance than the rival National Party, and he later endorsed the relatively liberal proposals of the Fagan Commission.[82][83]

At the Imperial Conference of 1925 Smuts stated:

If there was to be equal manhood suffrage over the Union, the whites would be swamped by the blacks. A distinction could not be made between Indians and Africans. They would be impelled by the inevitable force of logic to go the whole hog, and the result would be that not only would the whites be swamped in Natal by the Indians but the whites would be swamped all over South Africa by the blacks and the whole position for which the whites had striven for two hundred years or more now would be given up. So far as South Africa was concerned, therefore, it was a question of impossibility. For white South Africa it was not a question of dignity but a question of existence.[62][63]

Smuts was, for most of his political life, a vocal supporter of segregation of the races, and in 1929 he justified the erection of separate institutions for blacks and whites in tones prescient of the later practice of apartheid:

The old practice mixed up black with white in the same institutions, and nothing else was possible after the native institutions and traditions had been carelessly or deliberately destroyed. But in the new plan there will be what is called in South Africa "segregation"; two separate institutions for the two elements of the population living in their own separate areas. Separate institutions involve territorial segregation of the white and black. If they live mixed together it is not practicable to sort them out under separate institutions of their own. Institutional segregation carries with it territorial segregation.[84]

In general, Smuts' view of black Africans was patronising: he saw them as immature human beings who needed the guidance of whites, an attitude that reflected the common perceptions of most non-blacks in his lifetime. Of black Africans he stated that:

These children of nature have not the inner toughness and persistence of the European, not those social and moral incentives to progress which have built up European civilization in a comparatively short period.[84]

Although Gandhi and Smuts were adversaries in many ways, they had a mutual respect and even admiration for each other. Before Gandhi returned to India in 1914, he presented General Smuts with a pair of sandals (now held by Ditsong National Museum of Cultural History) made by Gandhi himself. In 1939, Smuts, then prime minister, wrote an essay for a commemorative work compiled for Gandhi's 70th birthday and returned the sandals with the following message: "I have worn these sandals for many a summer, even though I may feel that I am not worthy to stand in the shoes of so great a man."[85]

Smuts is often accused of being a politician who extolled the virtues of humanitarianism and liberalism abroad while failing to practise what he preached at home in South Africa. This was most clearly illustrated when India, in 1946, made a formal complaint in the UN concerning the legalised racial discrimination against Indians in South Africa. Appearing personally before the United Nations General Assembly, Smuts defended the policies of his government by fervently pleading that India's complaint was a matter of domestic jurisdiction. However, the General Assembly censured South Africa for its racial policies[86] and called upon the Smuts government to bring its treatment of the South African Indians in conformity with the basic principles of the United Nations Charter.[86][87]

At the same conference, the African National Congress President General Alfred Bitini Xuma along with delegates of the South African Indian Congress brought up the issue of the brutality of Smuts' police regime against the African Mine Workers' Strike earlier that year as well as the wider struggle for equality in South Africa.[88]

In 1948, he went further away from his previous views on segregation when supporting the recommendations of the Fagan Commission that Africans should be recognised as permanent residents of White South Africa, and not merely as temporary workers who belonged in the reserves.[82] This was in direct opposition to the policies of the National Party that wished to extend segregation and formalise it into apartheid. There is, however, no evidence that Smuts ever supported the idea of equal political rights for blacks and whites. Despite this, he did say:

The idea that the Natives must all be removed and confined in their own kraals is in my opinion the greatest nonsense I have ever heard.[89]

The Fagan Commission did not advocate the establishment of a non-racial democracy in South Africa, but rather wanted to liberalise influx controls of blacks into urban areas in order to facilitate the supply of black African labour to the South African industry. It also envisaged a relaxation of the pass laws that had restricted the movement of blacks in general.[90]

In the assessment of South African Cambridge professor Saul Dubow, "Smuts's views of freedom were always geared to securing the values of western Christian civilization. He was consistent, albeit more flexible than his political contemporaries, in his espousal of white supremacy."[91]

Holism and related academic work

While in academia, Smuts pioneered the concept of holism, which he defined as "[the] fundamental factor operative towards the creation of wholes in the universe" in his 1926 book, Holism and Evolution.[92][44] Smuts' formulation of holism has been linked with his political-military activity, especially his aspiration to create a league of nations. As one biographer said:

It had very much in common with his philosophy of life as subsequently developed and embodied in his Holism and Evolution. Small units must develop into bigger wholes, and they in their turn again must grow into larger and ever-larger structures without cessation. Advancement lay along that path. Thus the unification of the four provinces in the Union of South Africa, the idea of the British Commonwealth of Nations, and, finally, the great whole resulting from the combination of the peoples of the earth in a great league of nations were but a logical progression consistent with his philosophical tenets.[93]

Zionism

 
A 1944 painting of Smuts by William Timym in the Imperial War Museum

In 1943 Chaim Weizmann wrote to Smuts, detailing a plan to develop Britain's African colonies to compete with the United States. During his service as Premier, Smuts personally fundraised for multiple Zionist organisations.[94] His government granted de facto recognition to Israel on 24 May 1948.[95] However, Smuts was deputy prime minister when the Hertzog government in 1937 passed the Aliens Act that was aimed at preventing Jewish immigration to South Africa. The act was seen as a response to growing anti-Semitic sentiments among Afrikaners.[96]

Smuts lobbied against the White Paper of 1939,[97] and several streets and a kibbutz, Ramat Yohanan, in Israel are named after him.[95] He also wrote an epitaph for Weizmann, describing him as "the greatest Jew since Moses."[98] Smuts once said:

Great as are the changes wrought by this war, the great world war of justice and freedom, I doubt whether any of these changes surpass in interest the liberation of Palestine and its recognition as the Home of Israel.[99]

Legacy

One of his greatest international accomplishments was the establishment of the League of Nations, the exact design and implementation of which relied upon Smuts.[100] He later urged the formation of a new international organisation for peace – the United Nations. Smuts wrote the first draft of the preamble to the United Nations Charter, and was the only person to sign the charters of both the League of Nations and the UN. He sought to redefine the relationship between the United Kingdom and her colonies, helping to establish the British Commonwealth, as it was known at the time. This proved to be a two-way street; in 1946 the General Assembly requested the Smuts government to take measures to bring the treatment of Indians in South Africa into line with the provisions of the United Nations Charter.[86]

In 1932, the kibbutz Ramat Yohanan in Israel was named after him. Smuts was a vocal proponent of the creation of a Jewish state, and spoke out against the rising antisemitism of the 1930s.[101] A street in the Jerusalem suburb of German Colony and a boulevard in Tel Aviv are named in his honour.[102]

The international airport serving Johannesburg was known as Jan Smuts Airport from its construction in 1952 until 1994. In 1994, it was renamed to Johannesburg International Airport to remove any political connotations. In 2006, it was renamed again to its current name, OR Tambo International Airport, for the ANC politician Oliver Tambo.[103]

In 2004, Smuts was named by voters in a poll held by the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) as one of the top ten Greatest South Africans of all time. The final positions of the top ten were to be decided by a second round of voting but the programme was taken off the air owing to political controversy and Nelson Mandela was given the number one spot based on the first round of voting. In the first round, Field Marshal Smuts came ninth.[104]

Mount Smuts, a peak in the Canadian Rockies, is named after him.[105]

In August 2019, the South African Army Regiment Westelike Provinsie was renamed after Smuts as the General Jan Smuts Regiment.[106][107]

The Smuts House Museum at Smuts' home in Irene is dedicated to promoting his legacy.[108]

Orders, decorations and medals

Field Marshal Smuts was honoured with orders, decorations and medals from several countries.[109]

References

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Sources

Primary

  • Hancock, W.K.; van der Poel, J. (1966–1973). Selections from the Smuts' Papers, 1886–1950. Vol. 7.
  • Smuts, J.C. (1934). Freedom. Alexander Maclehose & Co. ASIN B006RIGNWS.
  • Smuts, J.C. (1940). The Folly of Neutrality – Speech by the prime Minister. Union Unity Truth Service.

Secondary

  • Alanbrooke, Field Marshal Lord (2001). War Diaries 1939–1945. Phoenix Press. ISBN 1-84212-526-5.
  • Beit-Hallahmi, Benjamin (1988). The Israeli Connection: Whom Israel Arms and Why. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1850430698.
  • Cameron, Trewhella (1994). Jan Smuts: An Illustrated Biography. Human & Rousseau. ISBN 978-0-798-13343-2.
  • Colville, John (2004). The Fringes of Power. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-84758-8.
  • Crafford, F.S. (1943). Jan Smuts: A Biography. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 1-4179-9290-5.
  • Crawford, Neta (2002). Argument and Change in World Politics: Ethics, Decolonization and Humanitarian Intervention. Cambridge University. ISBN 0-521-00279-6.
  • Crossman, R.H.S. (1960). A nation reborn;: A personal report on the roles played by Weizmann, Bevin and Ben-Gurion in the story of Israel. Atheneum Publishers. ASIN B0007DU0X2.
  • Crowe, J.H.V. (2009). General Smuts' Campaign in East Africa. Naval and Military Press. ISBN 978-1-843-42949-4.
  • Dugard, John (1973). The South West Africa/Namibia Dispute: Documents and Scholarly Writings on the Controversy Between South Africa and The United Nations. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-02614-4.
  • First, Ruth (1963). South West Africa. Penguin. ASIN B004F1QT50.
  • Gooch, John (2000). The Boer War: Direction, Experience and Image. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-714-65101-9.
  • Hancock, W.K. (1962). Smuts: 1. The Sanguine Years, 1870—1919. Cambridge University. ASIN B0006AY7U8.
  • Hancock, W.K. (1968). Smuts: 2. Fields of Force, 1919–1950. Cambridge University. ISBN 978-0-521-05188-0.
  • Heathcote, Tony (1999). The British Field Marshals 1736–1997. Leo Cooper. ISBN 0-85052-696-5.
  • Howe, Quincy (1949). A World History of Our Own Times. Simon and Schuster. ASIN B0011VZAL6.
  • Hunter, Jane (1987). Israeli Foreign Policy: South Africa and Central America. Spokesman Books. ISBN 978-0-851-24485-3.
  • Kee, Robert (1988). Munich. Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 978-0-241-12537-3.
  • Klieman, Aaron S. (1991). Recognition of Israel: An End & a New Beginning: An End and a New Beginning. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-824-07361-9.
  • Smuts, J.C. (1952). Jan Christian Smuts by his son. Cassell. ISBN 978-1-920-09129-3.
  • Spies, S.B.; Natrass, G. (1994). Jan Smuts: Memoirs of the Boer War. Jonathan Ball, Johannesburg. ISBN 978-1-868-42017-9.
  • Woodward, David R. (1998). Field Marshal Sir William Robertson. Praeger. ISBN 0-275-95422-6.

Further reading

External links

Political offices
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smuts, field, marshal, christian, smuts, 1870, september, 1950, south, african, statesman, military, leader, philosopher, addition, holding, various, military, cabinet, posts, served, prime, minister, union, south, africa, from, 1919, 1924, 1939, 1948, field, . Field Marshal Jan Christian Smuts OM CH DTD ED PC KC FRS 24 May 1870 11 September 1950 was a South African statesman military leader and philosopher 1 In addition to holding various military and cabinet posts he served as prime minister of the Union of South Africa from 1919 to 1924 and 1939 to 1948 Field Marshal The Right HonourableJan SmutsOM CH DTD ED KC FRSSmuts in 19472nd Prime Minister of South AfricaIn office 5 September 1939 4 June 1948MonarchGeorge VIGovernors GeneralSir Patrick DuncanNicolaas Jacobus de WetGideon Brand van ZylPreceded byJames Barry Munnik HertzogSucceeded byDaniel Francois MalanIn office 3 September 1919 30 June 1924MonarchGeorge VGovernors General1st Earl of BuxtonPrince Arthur of Connaught1st Earl of AthlonePreceded byLouis BothaSucceeded byJames Barry Munnik HertzogLeader of the OppositionIn office 4 June 1948 11 September 1950MonarchGeorge VIPrime MinisterDaniel Francois MalanPreceded byDaniel Francois MalanSucceeded byJacobus Gideon Nel StraussPersonal detailsBornJan Christiaan 1 or Christian Smuts 2 1870 05 24 24 May 1870Bovenplaats Cape ColonyDied11 September 1950 1950 09 11 aged 80 Irene Transvaal Union of South AfricaNationalitySouth AfricanPolitical partySouth African PartyUnited PartySpouseIsie KrigeChildren6Alma materVictoria College StellenboschChrist s College CambridgeMiddle TempleProfessionBarristerSignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceSouth African RepublicUnion of South AfricaUnited KingdomRankField MarshalCommandsSouth African Defence ForcesSmuts was born to Afrikaner parents in the British Cape Colony He was educated at Victoria College Stellenbosch before reading law at Christ s College Cambridge on a scholarship He was called to the bar at the Middle Temple in 1894 but returned home the following year In the leadup to the Second Boer War Smuts practised law in Pretoria the capital of the South African Republic He led the republic s delegation to the Bloemfontein Conference and served as an officer in a commando unit following the outbreak of war in 1899 In 1902 he played a key role in negotiating the Treaty of Vereeniging which ended the war and resulted in the annexation of the South African Republic and Orange Free State into the British Empire He subsequently helped negotiate self government for the Transvaal Colony becoming a cabinet minister under Louis Botha Smuts played a leading role in the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910 helping shape its constitution He and Botha established the South African Party with Botha becoming the union s first prime minister and Smuts holding multiple cabinet portfolios As defence minister he was responsible for the Union Defence Force during the First World War Smuts personally led troops in the East African campaign in 1916 and the following year joined the Imperial War Cabinet in London He played a leading role at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 advocating for the creation of the League of Nations and securing South African control over the former German South West Africa In 1919 Smuts replaced Botha as prime minister holding the office until the South African Party s defeat at the 1924 general election by J B M Hertzog s National Party He spent several years in academia during which he coined the term holism before eventually re entering politics as deputy prime minister in a coalition with Hertzog in 1934 their parties subsequently merged to form the United Party Smuts returned as prime minister in 1939 leading South Africa into the Second World War at the head of a pro interventionist faction He was appointed field marshal in 1941 and in 1945 signed the UN Charter the only signer of the Treaty of Versailles to do so His second term in office ended with the victory of his political opponents the reconstituted National Party at the 1948 general election with the new government beginning the implementation of apartheid Smuts was an internationalist who played a key role in establishing and defining the League of Nations United Nations and Commonwealth of Nations He was a white supremacist who supported racial segregation and opposed democratic non white rule At the end of his career he supported the Fagan Commission s recommendations Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Law and politics 2 2 Psychology 2 3 The Boer War 2 4 A British Transvaal 2 5 The Old Boers 2 6 First World War 2 7 Statesman 2 8 Second World War 3 Later life 4 Death 5 Relations with Churchill 6 Views 6 1 Race and segregation 6 2 Holism and related academic work 6 3 Zionism 7 Legacy 7 1 Orders decorations and medals 8 References 9 Sources 9 1 Primary 9 2 Secondary 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education EditMain article Early life of Jan Smuts Jacobus and Catharina Smuts 1893 Smuts was born on 24 May 1870 at the family farm Bovenplaats near Malmesbury in the Cape Colony His parents Jacobus Smuts and his wife Catharina were prosperous traditional Afrikaner farmers long established and highly respected 3 As the second son of the family rural custom dictated that Jan would remain working on the farm In this system typically only the first son was supported for a full formal education In 1882 when Jan was twelve his elder brother died and Jan was sent to school in his place Jan attended the school in nearby Riebeek West He made excellent progress despite his late start and caught up with his contemporaries within four years He was admitted to Victoria College Stellenbosch in 1886 at the age of sixteen 4 At Stellenbosch he learned High Dutch German and Ancient Greek and immersed himself in literature the classics and Bible studies His deeply traditional upbringing and serious outlook led to social isolation from his peers He made outstanding academic progress graduating in 1891 with double first class honours in Literature and Science During his last years at Stellenbosch Smuts began to cast off some of his shyness and reserve At this time he met Isie Krige whom he later married 5 On graduation from Victoria College Smuts won the Ebden scholarship for overseas study He decided to attend the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom to read law at Christ s College 6 Smuts found it difficult to settle at Cambridge He felt homesick and isolated by his age and different upbringing from the English undergraduates Worries over money also contributed to his unhappiness as his scholarship was insufficient to cover his university expenses He confided these worries to Professor J I Marais a friend from Victoria College In reply Professor Marais enclosed a cheque for a substantial sum by way of loan encouraging Smuts to let him know if he ever found himself in need again 7 Thanks to Marais Smuts s financial standing was secure He gradually began to enter more into the social aspects of the university although he retained a single minded dedication to his studies 8 During this time in Cambridge Smuts studied a diverse number of subjects in addition to law He wrote a book Walt Whitman A Study in the Evolution of Personality It was not published until 1973 after his death 9 but it can be seen that Smuts in this book had already conceptualized his thinking for his later wide ranging philosophy of holism 10 Smuts graduated in 1894 with a double first Over the previous two years he had received numerous academic prizes and accolades including the coveted George Long prize in Roman Law and Jurisprudence 11 One of his tutors Professor Maitland a leading figure among English legal historians described Smuts as the most brilliant student he had ever met 12 Lord Todd the Master of Christ s College said in 1970 that in 500 years of the College s history of all its members past and present three had been truly outstanding John Milton Charles Darwin and Jan Smuts 13 In December 1894 Smuts passed the examinations for the Inns of Court entering the Middle Temple His old Cambridge college Christ s College offered him a fellowship in Law Smuts turned his back on a potentially distinguished legal future By June 1895 he had returned to the Cape Colony determined to make his future there 14 Career EditLaw and politics Edit Jan Smuts as a young state attorney general in 1895Main article Jan Smuts in the South African Republic Smuts began to practise law in Cape Town but his abrasive nature made him few friends Finding little financial success in the law he began to devote more and more of his time to politics and journalism writing for the Cape Times Smuts was intrigued by the prospect of a united South Africa and joined the Afrikaner Bond By good fortune Smuts father knew the leader of the group Jan Hofmeyr Hofmeyr in turn recommended Jan to Cecil Rhodes who owned the De Beers mining company In 1895 Smuts became an advocate and supporter of Rhodes 15 When Rhodes launched the Jameson Raid in the summer of 1895 96 Smuts was outraged Feeling betrayed by his employer friend and political ally he resigned from De Beers and left political life Instead he became state attorney in the capital of the South African Republic Pretoria 15 After the Jameson Raid relations between the British and the Afrikaners had deteriorated steadily By 1898 war seemed imminent Orange Free State President Martinus Steyn called for a peace conference at Bloemfontein to settle each side s grievances With an intimate knowledge of the British Smuts took control of the Transvaal delegation Sir Alfred Milner head of the British delegation took exception to his dominance and conflict between the two led to the collapse of the conference consigning South Africa to war 16 Psychology Edit Smuts was the first South African to be internationally regarded as an important psychologist 17 During Smuts undergraduate years at Cambridge University he produced a manuscript in 1895 in which he analysed the personality of the famous American poet Walt Whitman 17 Due to his manuscript being considered unviable it was only published 23 years after his death in 1973 Smuts went on to produce his next manuscript which he completed in 1910 entitled An Inquiry into the Whole His manuscript was then revised in 1924 and published in 1926 with the title Holism and Evolution 17 18 Smuts had no interest in pursuing a career in psychology 17 He considered psychology as too impersonal to study great personalities 17 and believed that the holistic tendency of the personality would be studied best through personology 17 Smuts however never inquired further into the idea of personology due to him wanting to continue laying the foundation of the concept of holism He never returned to either of the topics 17 HolismAlthough the concept of holism has been discussed by many the term holism in academic terminology was first introduced and publicly shared in print by Smuts in the early twentieth century 19 17 18 Smuts was acknowledged for his contribution by getting the honour to write the first entry about the concept for the Encyclopaedia Britannica 1929 edition 18 19 The Austrian medical doctor founder of the school of Individual Psychology and psychotherapist Alfred Adler 1870 1937 also showed a great interest in Smuts book Adler requested permission from Smuts to have the book translated to German and published in Germany 17 Although Smuts concept of holism is grounded in the natural sciences he claimed that it has a relevance in philosophy ethics sociology and psychology 19 In Holism and Evolution he argued that the concept of holism is grounded in evolution and is also an ideal that guides human development and one s level of personality actualization 18 Smuts stated in the book that personality is the highest form of holism p 292 20 Recognition from AdlerAdler later wrote a letter dated 31 January 1931 where he stated that he recommended Smuts book to his students and followers He referred to it as the best preparation for the science of Individual Psychology 17 After Smuts gave permission for the translation and publication of his book in Germany it was translated by H Minkowski and eventually published in 1938 During the Second World War the books were destroyed after the Nazi government had removed it from circulation 17 Adler and Smuts however continued their correspondence In one of Adler s letters dated 14 June 1931 he invited Smuts to be one of three judges of the best book on the history of wholeness with a reference to Individual Psychology 17 The Boer War Edit See also Military history of South Africa Main article Jan Smuts in the Boer War Jan Smuts and Boer guerrillas during the Second Boer War c 1901 On 11 October 1899 the Boer republics declared war and launched an offensive into the British held Natal and Cape Colony areas beginning the Second Boer War of 1899 1902 In the early stages of the conflict Smuts served as Paul Kruger s eyes and ears in Pretoria handling propaganda logistics communication with generals and diplomats and anything else that was required In the second phase of the war from mid 1900 Smuts served under Koos de la Rey who commanded 500 commandos in the Western Transvaal Smuts excelled at hit and run warfare and the unit evaded and harassed a British army forty times its size President Paul Kruger and the deputation in Europe thought that there was good hope for their cause in the Cape Colony They decided to send General de la Rey there to assume supreme command but then decided to act more cautiously when they realised that General de la Rey could hardly be spared in the Western Transvaal Consequently Smuts was left with a small force of 300 men while another 100 men followed him By January 1902 the British scorched earth policy left little grazing land One hundred of the cavalry that had joined Smuts were therefore too weak to continue and so Smuts had to leave these men with General Kritzinger Intelligence indicated that at this time Smuts had about 3 000 men 21 To end the conflict Smuts sought to take a major target the copper mining town of Okiep in the present day Northern Cape Province April May 1902 With a full assault impossible Smuts packed a train full of explosives and tried to push it downhill into the town in order to bring the enemy garrison to its knees Although this failed Smuts had proved his point that he would stop at nothing to defeat his enemies Norman Kemp Smith wrote that General Smuts read from Immanuel Kant s Critique of Pure Reason on the evening before the raid Smith contended that this showed how Kant s critique can be a solace and a refuge as well as a means to sharpen the wit 22 Combined with the British failure to pacify the Transvaal Smuts success left the United Kingdom with no choice but to offer a ceasefire and a peace conference to be held at Vereeniging 21 Before the conference Smuts met Lord Kitchener at Kroonstad station where they discussed the proposed terms of surrender Smuts then took a leading role in the negotiations between the representatives from all of the commandos from the Orange Free State and the South African Republic 15 31 May 1902 Although he admitted that from a purely military perspective the war could continue he stressed the importance of not sacrificing the Afrikaner people for that independence He was very conscious that more than 20 000 women and children have already died in the concentration camps of the enemy He felt it would have been a crime to continue the war without the assurance of help from elsewhere and declared Comrades we decided to stand to the bitter end Let us now like men admit that that end has come for us come in a more bitter shape than we ever thought 23 His opinions were representative of the conference which then voted by 54 to 6 in favour of peace Representatives of the Governments met Lord Kitchener and at five minutes past eleven on 31 May 1902 the Acting State President of the South African Republic Schalk Willem Burger signed the Treaty of Vereeniging followed by the members of his government Acting State President of the Orange Free State Christiaan De Wet and the members of his government 24 A British Transvaal Edit Main article Jan Smuts and a British Transvaal Jan Smuts around 1905 Jan Smuts c 1914 For all Smuts exploits as a general and a negotiator nothing could mask the fact that the Boers had been defeated Lord Milner had full control of all South African affairs and established an Anglophone elite known as Milner s Kindergarten As an Afrikaner Smuts was excluded Defeated but not deterred in January 1905 he decided to join with the other former Transvaal generals to form a political party Het Volk The People 25 to fight for the Afrikaner cause Louis Botha was elected leader and Smuts his deputy 15 When his term of office expired Milner was replaced as High Commissioner by the more conciliatory Lord Selborne Smuts saw an opportunity and pounced urging Botha to persuade the Liberals to support Het Volk s cause When the Conservative government under Arthur Balfour collapsed in December 1905 the decision paid off Smuts joined Botha in London and sought to negotiate full self government for the Transvaal within British South Africa Using the thorny political issue of South Asian labourers coolies the South Africans convinced Prime Minister Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman and with him the cabinet and Parliament 15 Through 1906 Smuts worked on the new constitution for the Transvaal and in December 1906 elections were held for the Transvaal parliament Despite being shy and reserved unlike the showman Botha Smuts won a comfortable victory in the Wonderboom constituency near Pretoria His victory was one of many with Het Volk winning in a landslide and Botha forming the government To reward his loyalty and efforts Smuts was given two key cabinet positions Colonial Secretary and Education Secretary 26 Smuts proved to be an effective leader if unpopular As Education Secretary he had fights with the Dutch Reformed Church of which he had once been a dedicated member which demanded Calvinist teachings in schools As Colonial Secretary he opposed a movement for equal rights for South Asian workers led by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi 26 During the years of Transvaal self government nobody could avoid the predominant political debate of the day South African unification Ever since the British victory in the war it was an inevitability but it remained up to the South Africans to decide what sort of country would be formed and how it would be formed Smuts favoured a unitary state with power centralised in Pretoria with English as the only official language and with a more inclusive electorate To impress upon his compatriots his vision he called a constitutional convention in Durban in October 1908 27 There Smuts was up against a hard talking Orange River Colony delegation who refused every one of Smuts demands Smuts had successfully predicted this opposition and their objections and tailored his own ambitions appropriately He allowed compromise on the location of the capital on the official language and on suffrage but he refused to budge on the fundamental structure of government As the convention drew into autumn the Orange leaders began to see a final compromise as necessary to secure the concessions that Smuts had already made They agreed to Smuts draft South African constitution which was duly ratified by the South African colonies Smuts and Botha took the constitution to London where it was passed by Parliament and given Royal Assent by King Edward VII in December 1909 27 The Old Boers Edit Main article Jan Smuts and the Old Boers The Union of South Africa was born and the Afrikaners held the key to political power as the majority of the increasingly whites only electorate Although Botha was appointed prime minister of the new country Smuts was given three key ministries Interior Mines and Defence Undeniably Smuts was the second most powerful man in South Africa To solidify their dominance of South African politics the Afrikaners united to form the South African Party a new pan South African Afrikaner party 28 The harmony and co operation soon ended Smuts was criticised for his overarching powers and the cabinet was reshuffled Smuts lost Interior and Mines but gained control of Finance That was still too much for Smuts opponents who decried his possession of both Defence and Finance two departments that were usually at loggerheads At the 1913 South African Party conference the Old Boers Hertzog Steyn De Wet called for Botha and Smuts to step down The two narrowly survived a confidence vote and the troublesome triumvirate stormed out leaving the party for good 29 With the schism in internal party politics came a new threat to the mines that brought South Africa its wealth A small scale miners dispute flared into a full blown strike and rioting broke out in Johannesburg after Smuts intervened heavy handedly After police shot dead twenty one strikers Smuts and Botha headed unaccompanied to Johannesburg to resolve the situation personally Facing down threats to their own lives they negotiated a cease fire But the cease fire did not hold and in 1914 a railway strike turned into a general strike Threats of a revolution caused Smuts to declare martial law He acted ruthlessly deporting union leaders without trial and using Parliament to absolve him and the government of any blame retroactively That was too much for the Old Boers who set up their own National Party to fight the all powerful Botha Smuts partnership 29 First World War Edit The Imperial War Cabinet 1917 Jan Smuts is seated on the right Generals Botha and Smuts at Versailles July 1919 During the First World War Smuts formed the Union Defence Force His first task was to suppress the Maritz Rebellion which was accomplished by November 1914 Next he and Louis Botha led the South African army into German South West Africa and conquered it see the South West Africa Campaign for details In 1916 General Smuts was put in charge of the conquest of German East Africa Col later BGen J H V Crowe commanded the artillery in East Africa under General Smuts and published an account of the campaign General Smuts Campaign in East Africa in 1918 30 Smuts was promoted to temporary lieutenant general on 18 February 1916 31 and to honorary lieutenant general for distinguished service in the field on 1 January 1917 32 Smuts chief Intelligence officer Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen wrote very critically of his conduct of the campaign He believed Horace Smith Dorrien who had saved the British Army during the retreat from Mons and was the original choice as commander in 1916 would have quickly defeated the Germans In particular Meinertzhagen thought that frontal attacks would have been decisive and less costly than the flanking movements preferred by Smuts which took longer so that thousands of Imperial troops died of disease in the field He wrote Smuts has cost Britain many hundreds of lives and many millions of pounds by his caution Smuts was not an astute soldier a brilliant statesman and politician but no soldier 33 Meinertzhagen wrote these comments in October November 1916 in the weeks after being relieved by Smuts due to symptoms of depression and he was invalided back to England shortly thereafter 34 Early in 1917 Smuts left Africa and went to London as he had been invited to join the Imperial War Cabinet and the War Policy Committee by David Lloyd George Smuts initially recommended renewed Western Front attacks and a policy of attrition lest with Russian commitment to the war wavering France or Italy would be tempted to make a separate peace 35 Lloyd George wanted a commander of the dashing type for the Middle East in succession to Murray but Smuts refused the command late May unless promised resources for a decisive victory and he agreed with Robertson that Western Front commitments did not justify a serious attempt to capture Jerusalem Allenby was appointed instead 36 Like other members of the War Cabinet Smuts commitment to Western Front efforts was shaken by Third Ypres 37 In 1917 following the German Gotha Raids and lobbying by Viscount French Smuts wrote a review of the British Air Services which came to be called the Smuts Report He was helped in large part in this by General Sir David Henderson who was seconded to him This report led to the treatment of air as a separate force which eventually became the Royal Air Force 38 39 By mid January 1918 Lloyd George was toying with the idea of appointing Smuts Commander in Chief of all land and sea forces facing the Ottoman Empire reporting directly to the War Cabinet rather than to Robertson 40 Early in 1918 Smuts was sent to Egypt to confer with Allenby and Marshall and prepare for major efforts in that theatre Before his departure alienated by Robertson s exaggerated estimates of the required reinforcements he urged Robertson s removal Allenby told Smuts of Robertson s private instructions sent by hand of Walter Kirke appointed by Robertson as Smuts adviser that there was no merit in any further advance He worked with Smuts to draw up plans using three reinforcement divisions from Mesopotamia to reach Haifa by June and Damascus by the autumn the speed of the advance limited by the need to lay fresh rail track This was the foundation of Allenby s successful offensive later in the year 41 Like most British Empire political and military leaders in the First World War Smuts thought the American Expeditionary Forces lacked the proper leadership and experience to be effective quickly He supported the Anglo French amalgamation policy towards the Americans In particular he had a low opinion of General John J Pershing s leadership skills so much so that he proposed to Lloyd George that Pershing be relieved of command and US forces be placed under someone more confident like himself This did not endear him to the Americans once it was leaked 42 Statesman Edit Smuts in 1934 Smuts and Botha were key negotiators at the Paris Peace Conference Both were in favour of reconciliation with Germany and limited reparations Smuts was a key architect of the League of Nations through his correspondences with Woodrow Wilson his work with the Imperial War Cabinet during the First World War and his book League of Nations A Practical Suggestion 43 44 According to Jacob Kripp Smuts saw the League as necessary in unifying white internationalists and pacifying a race war through indirect rule by Europeans over non whites and segregation 44 Kripp states that the League of Nations mandates system reflected a compromise between Smuts s desire to annex non white territories and Woodrow Wilson s principles of trusteeship 44 He was sent to Budapest to negotiate with Bela Kun s Hungarian Soviet Republic to withdraw from unrecognized territory and the Hungarian Communist Party s refusal to meet him led to the conference s approval of a Czechoslovak Romanian invasion and harsher terms in the Treaty of Trianon 45 The Treaty of Versailles gave South Africa a Class C mandate over German South West Africa which later became Namibia which was occupied from 1919 until withdrawal in 1990 At the same time Australia was given a similar mandate over German New Guinea which it held until 1975 Both Smuts and the Australian Prime Minister Billy Hughes feared the rising power of Japan in the post First World War world When former German East Africa was divided into three mandated territories Rwanda Burundi and Tanganyika Smutsland was one of the proposed names for what became Tanganyika Smuts who had called for South African territorial expansion all the way to the River Zambesi since the late 19th century was ultimately disappointed with the League awarding South West Africa only a mandate status as he had looked forward to formally incorporating the territory to South Africa 46 Smuts returned to South African politics after the conference When Botha died in 1919 Smuts was elected prime minister serving until a shocking defeat in 1924 at the hands of the National Party After the death of the former American President Woodrow Wilson Smuts was quoted as saying that Not Wilson but humanity failed at Paris 47 While in Britain for an Imperial Conference in June 1921 Smuts went to Ireland and met Eamon de Valera to help broker an armistice and peace deal between the warring British and Irish nationalists Smuts attempted to sell the concept of Ireland receiving Dominion status similar to that of Australia and South Africa 48 During his first premiership Smuts was involved in a number of controversies The first was the Rand Revolt of March 1921 where aeroplanes were used to bomb white miners who were striking in opposition to proposals to allow non whites to do more skilled and semi skilled work previously reserved to whites only 49 Smuts was accused of siding with the Rand Lords who wanted the removal of the colour bar in the hope that it would lower wage costs 50 The white miners perpetrated acts of violence across the Rand including murderous attacks on non Europeans conspicuously on African miners in their compounds and this culminated in a general assault on the police 51 Smuts declared martial law and suppressed the insurrection in three days at a cost of 291 police and army deaths and 396 civilians killed 52 A Martial Law Commission was established which found that Smuts used larger forces than were strictly required but had saved lives by doing so 53 The second was the Bulhoek Massacre of 24 May 1921 when at Bulhoek in the eastern Cape eight hundred South African policemen and soldiers armed with maxim machine guns and two field artillery guns killed 163 and wounded 129 members of an indigenous religious sect known as Israelites who had been armed with knobkerries assegais and swords and who had refused to vacate land they regarded as holy to them 54 Casualties on the government side at Bulhoek amounted to one trooper wounded and one horse killed 55 Once again there were charges of the unnecessary use of overwhelming force However no commission of enquiry was appointed 56 The third was the Bondelswarts Rebellion in which Smuts supported the actions of the South African Administration in attacking the Bondelswarts in South West Africa The mandatory administration moved to crush what they called a rebellion of 500 to 600 people of which 200 were said to be armed although only about 40 weapons were captured after the Bondelswarts were crushed 57 Gysbert Hofmeyr the Mandatory Administrator organised 400 armed men and sent in aircraft to bomb the Bondelswarts Casualties included 100 Bondelswart deaths including a few women and children 58 A further 468 men were either wounded or taken prisoner 59 South Africa s international reputation was tarnished Ruth First a South African anti apartheid activist and scholar describes the Bondelswarts shooting as the Sharpeville of the 1920s 60 As a botanist Smuts collected plants extensively over southern Africa He went on several botanical expeditions in the 1920s and 1930s with John Hutchinson former botanist in charge of the African section of the Herbarium of the Royal Botanic Gardens and taxonomist of note Smuts was a keen mountaineer and supporter of mountaineering 61 One of his favourite rambles was up Table Mountain along a route now known as Smuts Track In February 1923 he unveiled a memorial to members of the Mountain Club who had been killed in the First World War 61 In 1925 assessing Smuts s role in international affairs African American historian and Pan Africanist W E B Du Bois wrote in an article which would be incorporated into the pivotal Harlem Renaissance text The New Negro Jan Smuts is today in his world aspects the greatest protagonist of the white race He is fighting to take control of Laurenco Marques from a nation that recognizes even though it does not realize the equality of black folk he is fighting to keep India from political and social equality in the empire he is fighting to insure the continued and eternal subordination of black to white in Africa and he is fighting for peace and good will in a white Europe which can by union present a united front to the yellow brown and black worlds In all this he expresses bluntly and yet not without finesse what a powerful host of white folk believe but do not plainly say in Melbourne New Orleans San Francisco Hongkong Berlin and London 62 63 In December 1934 Smuts told an audience at the Royal Institute of International Affairs that How can the inferiority complex which is obsessing and I fear poisoning the mind and indeed the very soul of Germany be removed There is only one way and that is to recognise her complete equality of status with her fellows and to do so frankly freely and unreservedly While one understands and sympathises with French fears one cannot but feel for Germany in the prison of inferiority in which she still remains sixteen years after the conclusion of the war The continuance of the Versailles status is becoming an offence to the conscience of Europe and a danger to future peace Fair play sportsmanship indeed every standard of private and public life calls for frank revision of the situation Indeed ordinary prudence makes it imperative Let us break these bonds and set the complexed obsessed soul free in a decent human way and Europe will reap a rich reward in tranquility security and returning prosperity 64 Though in his Rectorial Address delivered on 17 October 1934 at St Andrews University he states that The new Tyranny disguised in attractive patriotic colours is enticing youth everywhere into its service Freedom must make a great counterstroke to save itself and our fair western civilisation Once more the heroic call is coming to our youth The fight for human freedom is indeed the supreme issue of the future as it has always been 65 Second World War Edit Smuts standing left at the 1944 Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference After nine years in opposition and academia Smuts returned as deputy prime minister in a grand coalition government under J B M Hertzog When Hertzog advocated neutrality towards Nazi Germany in 1939 the coalition split and Hertzog s motion to remain out of the war was defeated in Parliament by a vote of 80 to 67 Governor General Sir Patrick Duncan refused Hertzog s request to dissolve parliament for a general election on the issue Hertzog resigned and Duncan invited Smuts Hertzog s coalition partner to form a government and become prime minister for the second time in order to lead the country into the Second World War on the side of the Allies 66 On 24 May 1941 Smuts was appointed a field marshal of the British Army 67 Smuts importance to the Imperial war effort was emphasised by a quite audacious plan proposed as early as 1940 to appoint Smuts as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom should Churchill die or otherwise become incapacitated during the war This idea was put forward by Sir John Colville Churchill s private secretary to Queen Mary and then to George VI both of whom warmed to the idea 68 In May 1945 he represented South Africa in San Francisco at the drafting of the United Nations Charter 69 According to historian Mark Mazower Smuts did more than anyone to argue for and help draft the UN s stirring preamble 70 Smuts saw the UN as key to protecting white imperial rule over Africa 71 Also in 1945 he was mentioned by Halvdan Koht among seven candidates that were qualified for the Nobel Prize in Peace However he did not explicitly nominate any of them The person actually nominated was Cordell Hull 72 Later life Edit Smuts House Irene Pretoria Jan Smuts Museum library In domestic policy a number of social security reforms were carried out during Smuts second period in office as Prime Minister Old age pensions and disability grants were extended to Indians and Africans in 1944 and 1947 respectively although there were differences in the level of grants paid out based on race The Workmen s Compensation Act of 1941 insured all employees irrespective of payment of the levy by employers and increased the number of diseases covered by the law and the Unemployment Insurance Act of 1946 introduced unemployment insurance on a national scale albeit with exclusions 73 Smuts continued to represent his country abroad He was a leading guest at the 1947 wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Philip Duke of Edinburgh 74 At home his preoccupation with the war had severe political repercussions in South Africa Smuts support of the war and his support for the Fagan Commission made him unpopular amongst the Afrikaner community and Daniel Francois Malan s pro apartheid stance won the Reunited National Party the 1948 general election 69 In 1948 he was elected Chancellor of the University of Cambridge becoming the first person from outside the United Kingdom to hold that position He held the position until his death two years later 75 He accepted the appointment as Colonel in Chief of Regiment Westelike Provinsie as from 17 September 1948 76 In 1949 Smuts was bitterly opposed to the London Declaration which transformed British Commonwealth into the Commonwealth of Nations and made it possible for Republics such as the newly independent India to remain its members 77 78 In the South African context republicanism was mainly identified with Afrikaner Conservatism and with tighter racial segregation 79 Death EditOn 29 May 1950 a week after the public celebration of his eightieth birthday in Johannesburg and Pretoria Jan Smuts suffered a coronary thrombosis He died of a subsequent heart attack on his family farm of Doornkloof Irene near Pretoria on 11 September 1950 69 Relations with Churchill EditIn 1899 Smuts interrogated the young Winston Churchill who had been captured by Afrikaners during the Boer War which was the first time they met The next time was in 1906 while Smuts was leading a mission about South Africa s future to London before Churchill then Under Secretary of State for the Colonies The British Cabinet shared Churchill s sympathetic view which led to self government within the year followed by dominion status for the Union of South Africa in 1910 Their association continued in the First World War when Lloyd George appointed Smuts in 1917 to the war cabinet in which Churchill served as Munitions Minister By then both had formed a fast friendship that continued through Churchill s wilderness years and the Second World War to Smuts s death Lord Moran Churchill s personal physician wrote in his diary Smuts is the only man who has any influence with the PM indeed he is the only ally I have in pressing counsels of common sense on the PM Smuts sees so clearly that Winston is irreplaceable that he may make an effort to persuade him to be sensible 80 Churchill Smuts and I are like two old love birds moulting together on a perch but still able to peck 80 When Eden said at a meeting of the Chiefs of Staff 29 October 1942 that Montgomery s Middle East offensive was petering out after having some late night drinks with Churchill the previous night Alanbrooke had told Churchill fairly plainly what he thought of Eden s ability to judge the tactical situation from a distance Churchill was always impatient for his generals to attack at once He was supported at the Chiefs of Staff meeting by Smuts 81 Alanbrooke said he was fortunate to be supported by a flow of words from the mouth of that wonderful statesman It was as if oil had been poured on the troubled waters The temperamental film stars returned to their tasks peace reigned in the dove cot Views EditRace and segregation Edit Smuts and his parties supported existing policies of racial discrimination in South Africa taking a more moderate and ambiguous stance than the rival National Party and he later endorsed the relatively liberal proposals of the Fagan Commission 82 83 At the Imperial Conference of 1925 Smuts stated If there was to be equal manhood suffrage over the Union the whites would be swamped by the blacks A distinction could not be made between Indians and Africans They would be impelled by the inevitable force of logic to go the whole hog and the result would be that not only would the whites be swamped in Natal by the Indians but the whites would be swamped all over South Africa by the blacks and the whole position for which the whites had striven for two hundred years or more now would be given up So far as South Africa was concerned therefore it was a question of impossibility For white South Africa it was not a question of dignity but a question of existence 62 63 Smuts was for most of his political life a vocal supporter of segregation of the races and in 1929 he justified the erection of separate institutions for blacks and whites in tones prescient of the later practice of apartheid The old practice mixed up black with white in the same institutions and nothing else was possible after the native institutions and traditions had been carelessly or deliberately destroyed But in the new plan there will be what is called in South Africa segregation two separate institutions for the two elements of the population living in their own separate areas Separate institutions involve territorial segregation of the white and black If they live mixed together it is not practicable to sort them out under separate institutions of their own Institutional segregation carries with it territorial segregation 84 In general Smuts view of black Africans was patronising he saw them as immature human beings who needed the guidance of whites an attitude that reflected the common perceptions of most non blacks in his lifetime Of black Africans he stated that These children of nature have not the inner toughness and persistence of the European not those social and moral incentives to progress which have built up European civilization in a comparatively short period 84 Although Gandhi and Smuts were adversaries in many ways they had a mutual respect and even admiration for each other Before Gandhi returned to India in 1914 he presented General Smuts with a pair of sandals now held by Ditsong National Museum of Cultural History made by Gandhi himself In 1939 Smuts then prime minister wrote an essay for a commemorative work compiled for Gandhi s 70th birthday and returned the sandals with the following message I have worn these sandals for many a summer even though I may feel that I am not worthy to stand in the shoes of so great a man 85 Smuts is often accused of being a politician who extolled the virtues of humanitarianism and liberalism abroad while failing to practise what he preached at home in South Africa This was most clearly illustrated when India in 1946 made a formal complaint in the UN concerning the legalised racial discrimination against Indians in South Africa Appearing personally before the United Nations General Assembly Smuts defended the policies of his government by fervently pleading that India s complaint was a matter of domestic jurisdiction However the General Assembly censured South Africa for its racial policies 86 and called upon the Smuts government to bring its treatment of the South African Indians in conformity with the basic principles of the United Nations Charter 86 87 At the same conference the African National Congress President General Alfred Bitini Xuma along with delegates of the South African Indian Congress brought up the issue of the brutality of Smuts police regime against the African Mine Workers Strike earlier that year as well as the wider struggle for equality in South Africa 88 In 1948 he went further away from his previous views on segregation when supporting the recommendations of the Fagan Commission that Africans should be recognised as permanent residents of White South Africa and not merely as temporary workers who belonged in the reserves 82 This was in direct opposition to the policies of the National Party that wished to extend segregation and formalise it into apartheid There is however no evidence that Smuts ever supported the idea of equal political rights for blacks and whites Despite this he did say The idea that the Natives must all be removed and confined in their own kraals is in my opinion the greatest nonsense I have ever heard 89 The Fagan Commission did not advocate the establishment of a non racial democracy in South Africa but rather wanted to liberalise influx controls of blacks into urban areas in order to facilitate the supply of black African labour to the South African industry It also envisaged a relaxation of the pass laws that had restricted the movement of blacks in general 90 In the assessment of South African Cambridge professor Saul Dubow Smuts s views of freedom were always geared to securing the values of western Christian civilization He was consistent albeit more flexible than his political contemporaries in his espousal of white supremacy 91 Holism and related academic work Edit Main articles Holism and Holism and Evolution While in academia Smuts pioneered the concept of holism which he defined as the fundamental factor operative towards the creation of wholes in the universe in his 1926 book Holism and Evolution 92 44 Smuts formulation of holism has been linked with his political military activity especially his aspiration to create a league of nations As one biographer said It had very much in common with his philosophy of life as subsequently developed and embodied in his Holism and Evolution Small units must develop into bigger wholes and they in their turn again must grow into larger and ever larger structures without cessation Advancement lay along that path Thus the unification of the four provinces in the Union of South Africa the idea of the British Commonwealth of Nations and finally the great whole resulting from the combination of the peoples of the earth in a great league of nations were but a logical progression consistent with his philosophical tenets 93 Zionism Edit A 1944 painting of Smuts by William Timym in the Imperial War Museum In 1943 Chaim Weizmann wrote to Smuts detailing a plan to develop Britain s African colonies to compete with the United States During his service as Premier Smuts personally fundraised for multiple Zionist organisations 94 His government granted de facto recognition to Israel on 24 May 1948 95 However Smuts was deputy prime minister when the Hertzog government in 1937 passed the Aliens Act that was aimed at preventing Jewish immigration to South Africa The act was seen as a response to growing anti Semitic sentiments among Afrikaners 96 Smuts lobbied against the White Paper of 1939 97 and several streets and a kibbutz Ramat Yohanan in Israel are named after him 95 He also wrote an epitaph for Weizmann describing him as the greatest Jew since Moses 98 Smuts once said Great as are the changes wrought by this war the great world war of justice and freedom I doubt whether any of these changes surpass in interest the liberation of Palestine and its recognition as the Home of Israel 99 Legacy Edit Statue in Parliament Square London by Jacob Epstein One of his greatest international accomplishments was the establishment of the League of Nations the exact design and implementation of which relied upon Smuts 100 He later urged the formation of a new international organisation for peace the United Nations Smuts wrote the first draft of the preamble to the United Nations Charter and was the only person to sign the charters of both the League of Nations and the UN He sought to redefine the relationship between the United Kingdom and her colonies helping to establish the British Commonwealth as it was known at the time This proved to be a two way street in 1946 the General Assembly requested the Smuts government to take measures to bring the treatment of Indians in South Africa into line with the provisions of the United Nations Charter 86 In 1932 the kibbutz Ramat Yohanan in Israel was named after him Smuts was a vocal proponent of the creation of a Jewish state and spoke out against the rising antisemitism of the 1930s 101 A street in the Jerusalem suburb of German Colony and a boulevard in Tel Aviv are named in his honour 102 The international airport serving Johannesburg was known as Jan Smuts Airport from its construction in 1952 until 1994 In 1994 it was renamed to Johannesburg International Airport to remove any political connotations In 2006 it was renamed again to its current name OR Tambo International Airport for the ANC politician Oliver Tambo 103 In 2004 Smuts was named by voters in a poll held by the South African Broadcasting Corporation SABC as one of the top ten Greatest South Africans of all time The final positions of the top ten were to be decided by a second round of voting but the programme was taken off the air owing to political controversy and Nelson Mandela was given the number one spot based on the first round of voting In the first round Field Marshal Smuts came ninth 104 Mount Smuts a peak in the Canadian Rockies is named after him 105 In August 2019 the South African Army Regiment Westelike Provinsie was renamed after Smuts as the General Jan Smuts Regiment 106 107 The Smuts House Museum at Smuts home in Irene is dedicated to promoting his legacy 108 Orders decorations and medals Edit Field Marshal Smuts was honoured with orders decorations and medals from several countries 109 South Africa Africa Service Medal Dekoratie voor Trouwe Dienst Efficiency Decoration Medalje voor de Anglo Boere Oorlog Union of South Africa Commemoration Medal Victory MedalUnited Kingdom 1914 15 Star 1939 1945 Star Africa Star British War Medal Defence Medal France and Germany Star Italy Star King George V Silver Jubilee Medal King George VI Coronation Medal Order of Merit Order of the Companions of Honour War Medal 1939 1945 Belgium Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold II 1946 Grand Cross of the Order of the African Star 1948 Grand Officer of the Order of Leopold 1917 Croix de Guerre 1917 Denmark King Christian X s Liberty Medal 1947 Egypt Grand Cross of the Order of Muhammad Ali 1947 France Commander of the Legion of Honour 1917 Greece Grand Cross of the Order of the Redeemer 1949 Gold Cross of Valour 1943 Netherlands Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion 1946 Portugal Grand Cross of the Order of the Tower and Sword 1945 United States European African Middle Eastern Campaign MedalReferences Edit a b Root Waverley 1952 Jan Christian Smuts 1870 1950 Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society 8 21 271 73 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1952 0017 JSTOR 768812 S2CID 202575333 Great Contemporaries Jan Christian Smuts The Churchill Project 1 December 2017 Retrieved 18 May 2021 Cameron p 9 Hancock Smuts 1 The Sanguine Years 1870 1919 p 19 Smuts 1952 p 19 Smuts Jan Christian SMTS891JC A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Letter from Marais to Smuts 8 August 1892 Hancock et al 1966 73 vol 1 p 25 Hancock Smuts 1 The Sanguine Years 1870 1919 p 11 Jan C Smuts Walt Whitman a Study in the Evolution of Personality Wayne State University Press 1973 Hancock Smuts 1 The Sanguine Years 1870 1919 p 28 Smuts 1952 p 23 Letter from Maitland to Smuts 15 June 1894 Hancock et al 1966 73 vol 1 pp 33 34 Jan Smuts Memoirs of the Boer War 1994 Introduction p 19 Smuts 1952 p 24 a b c d Heathcote p 264 Hancock Smuts 1 The Sanguine Years p 89 a b c d e f g h i j k l Nicholas Lionel 3 August 2014 A history of South African SA Psychology Universitas Psychologica 13 5 1983 doi 10 11144 Javeriana upsy13 5 hsap a b c d Valsiner Jaan 2017 Striving for the Whole Creating Theoretical Syntheses First ed London ISBN 9781315130354 a b c du Plessis Guy 28 October 2021 Jan Smuts Influence on Philosophy and Psychology ILLUMINATION Smuts Jan Christiaan 1973 Holism and evolution Westport Conn Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0837165561 a b Durban Branch November 1998 News Sheet No 285 South African Military History Society Retrieved 17 May 2013 Smith Norman Kemp A Commentary to Kant s Critique of Pure Reason Project Gutenberg Hancock WK and van der Poel J eds Selections from the Smuts Papers 1886 1950 p 532 Gooch p 97 Williams Basil 1946 Botha Smuts And South Africa Hodder And Stoughton pp 52 53 Retrieved 14 October 2010 a b General Jan Christiaan Smuts South African History On line Retrieved 17 May 2013 a b Formation of the Union of South Africa Salem Press Archived from the original on 13 August 2013 Retrieved 17 May 2013 Meredith Martin Diamonds Gold and War New York Public Affairs 2007 pp 380 381 a b Old Resentments Return Retrieved 27 May 2013 Crowe JHV General Smuts Campaign in East Africa No 29477 The London Gazette Supplement 15 February 1916 p 1791 No 29886 The London Gazette Supplement 29 December 1916 p 15 Army Diary Oliver and Boyd 1960 p 205 Garfield Brian The Meinertzhagen Mystery The Life and Legend of a Colossal Fraud Potomac Books Washington 2007 ISBN 978 1597971607 p 119 Woodward 1998 pp 132 4 Woodward 1998 pp 155 7 Woodward 1998 pp 148 9 Sir David Henderson Lions Led By Donkeys Centre for First World War Studies University of Birmingham Retrieved 26 July 2007 Barrass Malcolm Lieutenant General Sir David Henderson Air of Authority A History of RAF Organisation Retrieved 26 July 2007 Woodward 1998 p 164 Woodward 1998 pp 165 8 Farwell Byron 1999 Over There The United States in the Great War 1917 1918 Norton ISBN 9780393046984 Smuts Jan 1918 League of Nations A Practical Suggestion Hodder and Stoughton a b c d Kripp Jacob 2022 The Creative Advance Must Be Defended Miscegenation Metaphysics and Race War in Jan Smuts s Vision of the League of Nations American Political Science Review 116 3 940 953 doi 10 1017 S0003055421001362 ISSN 0003 0554 S2CID 244938442 Steiner Zara 2005 The lights that failed European international history 1919 1933 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 151881 2 OCLC 86068902 Dugard p 38 Howe p 74 Smuts 1952 p 252 Hancock Smuts 2 The Fields of Force 1919 1950 p 63 88 Hancock Smuts 2 The Fields of Force 1919 1950 p 69 Hancock Smuts 2 The Fields of Force 1919 1950 p 83 Hancock Smuts 2 The Fields of Force 1919 1950 p 84 Hancock Smuts 2 The Fields of Force 1919 1950 p 84 Hancock Smuts 2 The Fields of Force 1919 1950 p 89 Hancock Smuts 2 The Fields of Force 1919 1950 p 89 Hancock Smuts 2 The Fields of Force 1919 1950 p 99 Crawford 2002 p 276 Crawford 2002 p 276 Crawford 2002 p 276 First 1963 p 101 a b Imperial ecology environmental order in the British Empire 1895 1945 Peder Anker Publisher Harvard University Press 2001 ISBN 0 674 00595 3 a b Du Bois W E Burghardt April 1 1925 Worlds of Color Foreign Affairs Vol 3 no 3 ISSN 0015 7120 a b DuBois W E B 1925 The Negro Mind Reaches Out In Locke Alain LeRoy ed The New Negro An Interpretation 1927 ed Albert and Charles Boni p 385 LCCN 25025228 OCLC 639696145 Kee p 54 Smuts 1934 pp 28 29 J B M Hertzog prime minister of South Africa Britannica Retrieved 10 August 2017 No 35172 The London Gazette Supplement 23 May 1941 p 3004 Colville pp 269 271 a b c Heathcote p 266 Mazower Mark 2013 No Enchanted Palace The End of Empire and the Ideological Origins of the United Nations Princeton University Press p 9 ISBN 978 0 691 15795 5 Mazower Mark 2013 No Enchanted Palace The End of Empire and the Ideological Origins of the United Nations Princeton University Press pp 20 21 ISBN 978 0 691 15795 5 Record from The Nomination Database for the Nobel Prize in Peace 1901 1956 Nobel Foundation Archived from the original on 8 October 2014 Retrieved 14 May 2010 Social assistance in South Africa Its potential impact on poverty PDF Retrieved 26 February 2016 Seating plan for the Ball Supper Room Royal Collection Retrieved 17 May 2013 Chancellors of the University of Cambridge British History Online Retrieved on 30 July 2012 Union Defence Force Order No 4114 5 July 1949 Colville Sir John 2004 The Fringes of Power London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 1 84212 626 1 1949 1999 Fifty Years of a Renewing Commonwealth The Round Table 88 350 1 27 April 1999 doi 10 1080 003585399108072 Muller 1975 p 508 a b Coutenay Paul H Great Contemporaries Jan Christian Smuts The Churchill Project Hillsdale College 1 December 2007 Alanbrooke 2001 pp 335 336 a b Jan Christiaan Smuts South African History Online Sahistory org za Archived from the original on 21 April 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Meredith Martin In the name of apartheid South Africa in the postwar period 1st U S ed New York Harper amp Row 1988 a b Race Segregation In South Africa New Policies and Factors in Race Problems PDF Journal of Heredity Oxford Journals 1930 p 21 5 225 233 ISSN 0022 1503 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Following the footsteps of a great man Sunday Times Archived from the original on 9 January 2009 Retrieved 30 April 2006 a b c United Nations General Assembly Resolution A RES 44 I PDF United Nations General Assembly 8 December 1946 Archived from the original PDF on 26 September 2012 Retrieved 7 June 2011 Unverified article attributed to the Delhi News Chronicle South African Communist Party 25 September 1949 Retrieved 1 May 2010 R E Press The miners strike of 1946 Anc org za Archived from the original on 8 April 2009 Retrieved 1 May 2010 General Jan Christiaan Smuts South African History Online 2015 Retrieved 21 September 2015 Fagan Commission and Report Africanhistory about com 26 May 1948 Archived from the original on 10 October 2011 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Dubow Saul H January 2008 Smuts the United Nations and the Rhetoric of Race and Rights Journal of Contemporary History 43 1 45 74 doi 10 1177 0022009407084557 ISSN 0022 0094 JSTOR 30036489 S2CID 154627008 Smuts J C 1927 Holism and evolution Ripol Klassik ISBN 978 5 87111 227 4 Crafford p 140 Hunter pp 21 22 a b Beit Hallahmi pp 109 111 South Africa The Great Depression and the 1930s Countrystudies us Retrieved 1 May 2010 Crossman p 76 Lockyer Norman Nature digitized 5 February 2007 Nature Publishing Group Klieman p 16 Crafford p 141 Jewish American Year Book 5695 PDF Jewish Publication Society of America 1934 Retrieved 12 August 2006 Jan Smuts given honor where honor was due The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 21 November 2021 The History of OR Tambo International Airport Retrieved 17 May 2013 SA se gewildste is Nelson Mandela Archived from the original on 6 October 2011 Retrieved 17 May 2013 Place names of Alberta Ottawa 1928 hdl 2027 mdp 39015070267029 New Reserve Force unit names defenceWeb 7 August 2019 Retrieved 28 June 2021 Renaming process has resulted in an Army structure that truly represents SA www iol co za Retrieved 28 June 2021 Smuts House www smutshouse co za Retrieved 30 June 2021 Alexander E G M Barron G K B and Bateman A J 1985 South African Orders Decorations and Medals photograph page 109 Sources EditPrimary Edit Hancock W K van der Poel J 1966 1973 Selections from the Smuts Papers 1886 1950 Vol 7 Smuts J C 1934 Freedom Alexander Maclehose amp Co ASIN B006RIGNWS Smuts J C 1940 The Folly of Neutrality Speech by the prime Minister Union Unity Truth Service Secondary Edit Alanbrooke Field Marshal Lord 2001 War Diaries 1939 1945 Phoenix Press ISBN 1 84212 526 5 Beit Hallahmi Benjamin 1988 The Israeli Connection Whom Israel Arms and Why I B Tauris ISBN 978 1850430698 Cameron Trewhella 1994 Jan Smuts An Illustrated Biography Human amp Rousseau ISBN 978 0 798 13343 2 Colville John 2004 The Fringes of Power Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 84758 8 Crafford F S 1943 Jan Smuts A Biography Kessinger Publishing ISBN 1 4179 9290 5 Crawford Neta 2002 Argument and Change in World Politics Ethics Decolonization and Humanitarian Intervention Cambridge University ISBN 0 521 00279 6 Crossman R H S 1960 A nation reborn A personal report on the roles played by Weizmann Bevin and Ben Gurion in the story of Israel Atheneum Publishers ASIN B0007DU0X2 Crowe J H V 2009 General Smuts Campaign in East Africa Naval and Military Press ISBN 978 1 843 42949 4 Dugard John 1973 The South West Africa Namibia Dispute Documents and Scholarly Writings on the Controversy Between South Africa and The United Nations University of California Press ISBN 0 520 02614 4 First Ruth 1963 South West Africa Penguin ASIN B004F1QT50 Gooch John 2000 The Boer War Direction Experience and Image Routledge ISBN 978 0 714 65101 9 Hancock W K 1962 Smuts 1 The Sanguine Years 1870 1919 Cambridge University ASIN B0006AY7U8 Hancock W K 1968 Smuts 2 Fields of Force 1919 1950 Cambridge University ISBN 978 0 521 05188 0 Heathcote Tony 1999 The British Field Marshals 1736 1997 Leo Cooper ISBN 0 85052 696 5 Howe Quincy 1949 A World History of Our Own Times Simon and Schuster ASIN B0011VZAL6 Hunter Jane 1987 Israeli Foreign Policy South Africa and Central America Spokesman Books ISBN 978 0 851 24485 3 Kee Robert 1988 Munich Hamish Hamilton ISBN 978 0 241 12537 3 Klieman Aaron S 1991 Recognition of Israel An End amp a New Beginning An End and a New Beginning Routledge ISBN 978 0 824 07361 9 Smuts J C 1952 Jan Christian Smuts by his son Cassell ISBN 978 1 920 09129 3 Spies S B Natrass G 1994 Jan Smuts Memoirs of the Boer War Jonathan Ball Johannesburg ISBN 978 1 868 42017 9 Woodward David R 1998 Field Marshal Sir William Robertson Praeger ISBN 0 275 95422 6 Further reading EditArmstrong H C 1939 Grey Steel A Study of Arrogance Penguin ASIN B00087SNP4 Friedman Bernard 1975 Smuts A Reappraisal Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 0 049 20045 6 Geyser Ockert 2002 Jan Smuts and His International Contemporaries Covos Day Books ISBN 978 1 919 87410 4 Hutchinson John 1946 A Botanist in Southern Africa PR Gawthorn Ltd ASIN B0010PNVVO Ingham Kenneth 1986 Jan Christian Smuts The Conscience of a South African Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 43997 2 Katz David Brock 2022 General Jan Smuts and his First World War in Africa 1914 1917 Casemate Publishers ISBN 978 1 63624 017 6 Lentin Antony 2010 General Smuts South Africa Haus ISBN 978 1 905791 82 8 Millin Sarah 1936 General Smuts Vol 2 Faber amp Faber ASIN B0006AN8PS External links EditJan Smuts at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Works by Jan Smuts at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Jan Smuts at Internet Archive Revisiting Urban African Policy and the Reforms of the Smuts Government 1939 48 by Gary Baines Africa And Some World Problems by Jan Smuts at archive org Holism And Evolution by Jan Smuts The White man s task by Jan Smuts Newspaper clippings about Jan Smuts in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPolitical officesPreceded byNew office Minister for the Interior1910 1912 Succeeded byAbraham FischerPreceded byNew office Minister for Defence first time 1910 1920 Succeeded byHendrik MentzPreceded byHenry Charles Hull Minister for Finance1912 1915 Succeeded bySir David Pieter de Villiers GraaffPreceded byLouis Botha Prime Minister first time 1919 1924 Succeeded byJames Barry Munnik HertzogPreceded byOswald Pirow Minister for Justice1933 1939 Succeeded byColin Fraser SteynPreceded byJames Barry Munnik Hertzog Prime Minister second time 1939 1948 Succeeded byDaniel Francois MalanPreceded byOswald Pirow Minister for Defence second time 1939 1948 Succeeded byFrans ErasmusPreceded byJames Barry Munnik Hertzog Minister for Foreign Affairs1939 1948 Succeeded byDaniel Francois MalanParty political officesPreceded byLouis Botha Leader of the South African Party1919 1934 Merged into United Party Preceded byJames Barry Munnik Hertzog Leader of the United Party1939 1950 Succeeded byJacobus Gideon Nel StraussAcademic officesPreceded bySir Wilfred Grenfell Rector of the University of St Andrews1931 1934 Succeeded byGuglielmo MarconiPreceded byThe Prince of Waleslater becameKing Edward VIII Chancellor of the University of Cape Town1936 1950 Succeeded byAlbert van der Sandt CentlivresPreceded byStanley Baldwin Chancellor of the University of Cambridge1948 1950 Succeeded byThe Lord Tedder Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jan Smuts amp oldid 1159352476, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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