{"id":3960,"date":"1944-05-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"1944-05-01T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1944-vol-25-no-5\/"},"modified":"2023-12-04T15:01:30","modified_gmt":"2023-12-04T15:01:30","slug":"may-1944-vol-25-no-5","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1944-vol-25-no-5\/","title":{"rendered":"May 1944 &#8211; Vol. 25, No. 5 &#8211; What is British Empire?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Many people in many lands, including                     citizens of the Empire themselves, have been puzzled by the                     question: &#8220;What is the British Empire?&#8221; but those outside                     worry more about its status than do those inside. Empire people                     take it for granted that they belong to a strange complex                     agglomeration of states which has &#8220;just growed&#8221;, and they                     shrug off casually the absence of contract or constitution.<\/p>\n<p> This association of members has not pooled its possessions,                     it has no central management, no uniform system of money,                     no Empire bank, and no consolidated public debt. Its diversity                     of race, language, creed, custom, interest and outlook present                     at first glance a phenomenon verging upon the impossible.                     It has many kinds of riches: natural, developed and accumulated.                     Its hundreds of nations display every form, degree and age                     of human civilization and culture.<\/p>\n<p>People who have designated the British Empire as a unique                     family system of freely associated states, equal in status                     though not in stature, have not been far wrong. It has many                     characteristics of a family. Nations, after all, are composed                     of groups of human beings, and the characteristics of nations                     are akin to those of human beings. They are often dissatisfied                     with one another, but if anyone outside ventures on criticism                     of the family he finds that the quarrels are purely domestic.                     Family relationship is not a chance group of individuals;                     a family cannot be made by contract or convention or constitution,                     nor can a family be unmade by mere agreement. It is true that                     members of a family grow up and become able to shape the destinies                     of their own lives; and that is just what has occurred to                     many members of the British Empire family. But the family                     ties are still there, and they are all the stronger, perhaps,                     for being seen less in mature life. This relation of the members                     of the Empire to one another is not a mere analogy, but a                     living reality, and this part at least of the Empire story                     is easily understood. Settlers from England, Scotland, Wales                     and Ireland went to new lands, carrying with them certain                     common ideals, ideas, traditions and loyalties. These are                     the things which make up the character of a people, and upon                     these bases the overseas possessions developed their adolescence,                     with a feeling of increasing independence and self-reliance.                     Perhaps in that stage of their growth they over-emphasized                     self-assertion and status, while at the same time they                     were incapable of accepting the full responsibilities of autonomy.                     Today, they are in the third stage, characterized by adult                     willingness and ability to take responsibility, and a commensurate                     unwillingness to remain dependent.<\/p>\n<p>How the British Empire grew out of one status into another                     takes volumes to describe. When Nelson approached the battle                     of Trafalgar, the American Colonies had already declared their                     independence, and Britain&#8217;s dream of world influence seemed                     to be shattered forever. What are now the British Dominions                     were remote outposts inhabited by handfuls of pioneers, the                     British foothold in India was precarious, and the issue of                     the struggle between France and England trembled in the balance.                     What a striking contrast with the situation in 1940, when                     Britain stood alone in Europe against Germany and Italy. Those                     days of the evacuation from Dunkirk formed a critical period.                     &#8220;We have fully informed all the self-governing dominions,&#8221;                     said Prime Minister Winston Churchill to the British House                     of Commons, &#8220;and we have received from all Prime Ministers                     messages couched in the most moving terms, in which they endorse                     our decision and declare themselves ready to share our fortunes                     and persevere to the end.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>How did the Empire reach a stage where there was such a                     rallying of diverse and powerful nations behind a decision                     of the United Kingdom, which seemed to await invasion and                     destruction at a dictator&#8217;s whim? It was not by any route                     followed by great empires of the past. The British Empire                     of today is the outcome of evolution, and has developed great                     capacity to absorb shocks. Such an Empire could not be created                     by logic or planning, but only by a living political organism,                     capable of adapting itself to circumstances and possessing                     the flexibility needed for survival.<\/p>\n<p>All of today&#8217;s expansion is based upon development of the                     island kingdom of Great Britain, constituted by the union                     of the English and Scottish crowns in 1603, at a time when                     their combined population was seven million. In the last three                     centuries millions of people have gone out from those islands                     to overseas possessions. In some territories they have set                     up European states; in others they have established themselves                     as a ruling class, though greatly outnumbered by native peoples,                     while in still others they are few in number, and remain perhaps                     only temporarily as officials, managers, engineers or traders.                     Some parts of the Empire were acquired by traders who found                     uninhabited places; others accrued through European conquest,                     in which the possession of distant domains was a minor issue;                     in other cases, provinces were seized because their pacification                     was necessary to the safety of settlers or missionaries or                     trading companies; some were absorbed at request of their                     inhabitants, and others were appropriated because of their                     strategic value.<\/p>\n<p>There have not been lacking, in all periods, some who think                     it unnatural or unfair that so vast an empire should be &#8220;owned&#8221;                     by a small island. The Nazi leader whipped up enthusiasm for                     war in his nation by describing the British Empire as a system                     in which a mere 44 million people living in the British Isles                     own more than a quarter of the world&#8217;s territory. But ask                     any Canadian, Australian, New Zealander or South African how                     much of his country the United Kingdom owns and he will answer                     promptly: &#8220;Nothing at all&#8230;except our friendship.&#8221; Britain                     does not &#8220;own&#8221; Dominions, which are her political equals;                     she does not &#8220;own&#8221; India, which is steadily advancing toward                     independent sovereignty; she does not &#8220;own&#8221; the colonies,                     in relation to which she acts as a trustee. This combination                     of peoples in the British Empire is not controlled in her                     own interests by a mistress state. It is a fraternity of nations,                     at different stages of development, advancing in comradeship                     toward the highest degree of civilized freedom of which they                     are capable.<\/p>\n<p>What is it that keeps the Empire from falling apart under                     such pressure as has been put upon it? Free institutions are                     its life-blood, free co-operation is its instrument,                     and peace, security and progress are among its objects. These                     things stem from Magna Charta, signed five hundred and eighty                     years before the liberty-vaunting French Revolution.                     That rule of law, opposed to arbitrary power, is the foundation                     stone of the liberties of English-speaking peoples everywhere.<\/p>\n<p>For several centuries the Empire has been moving toward                     ever wider freedom, and in recent years two prime ministers                     from sections where race difficulties had raised their heads                     in other days were able to point with pride to great achievements.                     Sir Wilfrid Laurier, famous Canadian Prime Minister, declared:                     &#8220;Since the proud day of Rome there has been no title prouder                     than the title of one who can say, &#8216;I am a British citizen&#8217;,&#8221;                     and the Boer world-statesman, General Smuts, Prime Minister                     of South Africa, described the Commonwealth as &#8220;this great                     human experiment in political organization, this proudest                     political structure of time, this precedent and anticipation                     of what one hopes may be in store for human society in the                     years to come.&#8221; These men, versed in Empire affairs, saw strength                     and unity, whereas an outside critic who applied purely logical                     standards could see only the frailest of political structures.                     Countries thrive and develop in the Empire because they are                     not checked and distorted by forces of fear, insecurity and                     traditional antagonisms. As an example to the world, the Empire                     is not so significant of what Britishers are, as of what mankind                     can become.<\/p>\n<p>For convenience in analysis, the Empire may be divided into                     three parts. The great dominions are extensive but sparsely                     populated lands inhabited principally by people predominantly                     of British origin, and enjoying the widest possible kind of                     self-government. India is representative of the second                     group, consisting of lands of ancient civilization which had                     fallen into stagnation until they were awakened by contact                     with the restless energy of the west. Finally, there are lands                     inhabited by primitive or backward people not yet prepared                     to assume self-government. These take in every gradation                     of development, all moving toward the same high standards                     of government as Britain herself, though not necessarily the                     same form.<\/p>\n<h3>The United Kingdom<\/h3>\n<p>It is remarkable that an Empire so wide and strong should                     have stemmed from an island so small. Great Britain has only                     one-fifth of one per cent of the land area of the planet,                     with two and three-tenths per cent of the world&#8217;s population.                     The Empire created under this small head represents 27 per                     cent of the land and 23 per cent of the population of the                     world. Domination might have created, but it could never have                     retained, an empire so large. The British, who have wandered                     so widely over the earth&#8217;s surface, are a kindly-hearted                     folk, seeking peace and unable to hold hatred for long. Their                     tenacity, when they have to fight, is unbreakable, but when                     the fight is over they are ready to make friends. Even in                     the height of battle &#8211; and this is something for which they                     have been criticized &#8211; they are eager to make allowances for                     their enemy, and give him the benefit of every doubt. They                     have a peculiar sense of humour, one that delights in picking                     the bad spots in national and individual history to deride.                     England is probably the only country in the world in which                     the one historical date everybody remembers is that of a great                     national defeat, 1066, while the dates of the Armada and of                     Waterloo are far less familiar.<\/p>\n<h3>The Dominions<\/h3>\n<p>The Empire&#8217;s prize puzzles, so far as the outsider is concerned,                     are the dominions. It is at Ottawa, not London, that the course                     and character of the Canadian people are shaped. Canada, Australia,                     New Zealand and South Africa control their own political and                     commercial systems. They are under no compulsion, even to                     remain in the Empire. They are part of and remain in it because                     they wish to do so, because the empire expresses the type                     of political society in which they desire to live. The Imperial                     Conference of 1926 had its findings embodied in the Statute                     of Westminster (1931), formally recognizing the United Kingdom                     and the Dominions to be &#8220;autonomous communities within the                     British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate one                     to another in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs,                     though united by a common allegiance to the Crown and freely                     associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The general effect of this statute was to render the parliaments                     of the several dominions formally supreme in their own jurisdictions,                     including the extra-territorial field, and thus to confirm                     them on a footing of equality with the parliament of the United                     Kingdom. The two outstanding features are: emphasis on the                     voluntary character of the relations between the Dominions,                     and the control given them of their external affairs.<\/p>\n<p>When the King visited this country he came as King of Canada.                     On his return to England he said: &#8220;In person, I presided over                     the Canadian Parliament, and assented to legislation; in person                     I received the credentials of the new Minister of Canada&#8217;s                     great and friendly neighbour, the United States; in person                     I signed the Trade Treaty between the two countries.&#8221; The                     King was not accompanied by his United Kingdom Ministers,                     because in Canada his First Minister is the Prime Minister                     of this Dominion.<\/p>\n<h3>Canada<\/h3>\n<p>Canada is a huge country. If it could be turned over, using                     the Maritime Provinces as a hinge, Canada would stretch across                     the Atlantic and cover the British Isles, France, Germany                     and part of Russia. It was conquered from the French in 1763,                     and the French inhabitants were treated with the greatest                     consideration. Their property was not impaired; religious                     freedom was established, the privileges and rights of the                     Roman Catholic Church were preserved, and the French laws                     and customs were not interfered with, except that English                     criminal law and trial by jury were introduced. When the Dominion                     was formed in 1867, the British North America Act continued                     preservation of the rights of the minority race. As an example,                     the composition of the Canadian House of Commons is based                     upon the population of Quebec, the French Canadian province.                     Both French and English are official languages, and there                     is no discrimination on racial grounds in any public elective                     or appointive office.<\/p>\n<p>How supreme each dominion is in the field of trade is indicated                     by Canada&#8217;s broadening business relations with the United                     States:<\/p>\n<table width=\"415\" border=\"1\" cellpadding=\"2\" cellspacing=\"0\" class=\"smltabletxt\">\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\"><\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" colspan=\"2\" align=\"center\"><em>British                         Empire<\/em><\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" colspan=\"2\" align=\"center\"><em>United States<\/em><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\"><\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\"><em>1886<\/em><\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\"><em>1932<\/em><\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\"><em>1886<\/em><\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\"><em>1932<\/em><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\"><\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" colspan=\"2\" align=\"center\"><em>per cent<\/em><\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" colspan=\"2\" align=\"center\"><em>per cent<\/em><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Canada&#8217;s total imports<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">43.15<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">25.55<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">44.61<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">60.79<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Canada&#8217;s total domestic exports<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">51.39<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">37.97<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">44.09<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">40.83<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<h3>Australia<\/h3>\n<p>Australia, isolated in the South Pacific, has had a different                     history. After various experiments in government, the Australian                     colonies were invited to draw up their own constitutions.                     They based their drafts upon the system of government in the                     mother country, and the six colonies started on their career                     as free and self-governing states in 1855. It was not                     until the opening of this century that they found their way                     into a federal system, and became the Commonwealth of Australia.                     Much of Australia&#8217;s trade and other contact has been with                     Great Britain, and it was not until this war that the influence                     of the United States was felt in the far-off dominion.<\/p>\n<h3>New Zealand<\/h3>\n<p>Only a few square miles larger than the United Kingdom,                     New Zealand is the most isolated country in the world. It                     is 6,000 miles from Chile, its nearest eastern neighbour,                     and 1,200 miles from Australia on the west; the first land                     mass to the north is Siberia, and the first point of contact                     southward is the south pole. Its founders left Britain with                     the deliberate intention of building a new Britain overseas,                     and there is no part of the Empire more British-minded.                     New Zealand had no desire for autonomy, but joined in the                     Westminster formula to preserve unanimity among the dominions.                     In January this year Australia and New Zealand signed a pact                     safeguarding British Commonwealth interests in the South Pacific.<\/p>\n<h3>Africa<\/h3>\n<p>Africa is the scene of most interesting experiments in various                     kinds of government. The dominion called the Union of South                     Africa occupies the southern part of the continent, and embraces                     Dutch, British and natives. Cape Colony was acquired by Britain                     through purchase in 1814, when there were about 30,000 Dutch                     settlers within its confines. These were slaveholders on a                     large scale, and when the emancipation of slaves was proclaimed                     by Britain twenty years later the Boers moved out to the north                     and east. They dispossessed the Kaffirs, driving them into                     the hinterland or forcing them into slavery, and attempted                     to set up Bible Commonwealths, ruled by the principles of                     the Old Testament. The clash of national ideologies went on                     until 1901, and it was 1910 before the provinces became united.                     The Union of South Africa is now co-operating with the                     home government in great experiments in various forms of government                     in tropical Africa.<\/p>\n<h3>Newfoundland<\/h3>\n<p>Newfoundland, sixteenth in size amid the islands of the                     world, became England&#8217;s oldest colony by John Cabot&#8217;s discovery                     in 1497, and was granted responsible government in 1855. Talk                     of uniting Newfoundland with the Canadian federation has cropped                     up intermittently, the most recent occasion being 1933, when                     financial difficulties forced Newfoundland to suspend its                     status as a Dominion, and place itself under government of                     a Royal Commission. Distance, tradition and diversity of ideas                     make an early fusion improbable.<\/p>\n<h3>Eire<\/h3>\n<p>Eire, the official name of the Irish Free State set up under                     Act of the British Parliament in 1922, was given status equal                     to the other dominions. Its decision to stand aside from the                     present war is a drastic demonstration of the reality of independent                     nationhood which dominion status confers. Every dominion was                     free to decide for itself whether it should fight or not,                     and four of them lined up immediately with Great Britain.                     Eire decided to remain neutral, and though this neutrality                     exposed Britain to great dangers, no one has ever made the                     slightest attempt to bring Eire into the struggle against                     her own will. Only as the invasion of Europe approached was                     it necessary to draw a cordon around this neutral state, to                     prevent the leakage of information to Axis powers. In foregoing                     the use of Eire ports, whose availability would have helped                     so much to combat the U-boats, Britain showed a devoted                     loyalty to the principle of freedom seldom equalled in the                     world&#8217;s history.<\/p>\n<h3>India<\/h3>\n<p>Next in order after the dominions comes the Empire of India,                     about which not a great deal need be written because India                     formed the topic of discussion in this Letter last December.                     British governments have sought for some years to prepare                     India for self-government. The Indian people can gain                     their freedom either as a dominion inside the British Commonwealth,                     or, if they prefer it, as an independent nation outside. The                     whole Empire hopes that just as the Crown helped to unify                     different races in Canada and South Africa, and to symbolize                     the unity of Great Britain and the Dominions, in the same                     way it may bridge the gulf between Hindus and Moslems, the                     India of the provinces and the India of the Princes, and form                     a rallying point around which all discordant elements of race,                     religion and language may form a union.<\/p>\n<h3>The Crown<\/h3>\n<p>Following this brief review of some features of the Empire                     it is pertinent to discuss what holds it all together. The                     Empire is an association of people, as well as of countries.                     There are spiritual, psychological and intellectual forces                     pulling them together despite their differences of race, language,                     religion, literature, law, climate and economic influences.                     The one tangible link is the Crown. It is more profound than                     profit-making, self-interest, and trade. It symbolizes                     for all the diversity of peoples, the sharing of common ideals,                     love of freedom in its highest sense, and the pursuit of peace.<\/p>\n<p>Yet the position and power of the Crown is one of the most                     difficult features of the organization of the Empire to explain.                     In the course of political development the Crown has been                     shorn of most of its prerogatives, but never did it stand                     for more than it does today. The parliamentary institutions                     of the Commonwealth are the guarantee of democratic strength,                     and it is a tremendous stabilizing influence to have at the                     head of the state a man who is independent of, and outside,                     politics. The coronation in 1937 itself was of great political                     and psychological importance. Broadcast for the first time,                     the ceremony was a vast family rededication to the high purposes                     the Empire serves in the world. The important feature about                     the coronation oath is its emphasis on the self-determining                     qualities appertaining to the parts of the Empire. In the                     sphere of government the Sovereign acts only upon the advice                     of his constitutional advisers. In Great Britain, these advisers                     are responsible to the Parliament of the United Kingdom; in                     Canada the Ministry is responsible to the Canadian Parliament,                     and similarly in all the self-governing Dominions. In                     regard to the parts of the Empire which are not self-governing,                     or insofar as they are not self-governing, the King acts                     upon the advice of his British Ministers, whose decisions                     and proposals are arrived at after consultation with responsible                     bodies and persons in the territories affected. Here is no                     spider-web of contractual relations. The Empire is held                     in no parchment bonds or hard steel shackles. It is the unique                     relation of the Crown to all the self-governing Dominions                     which makes possible their full equality of status, and which                     enables other member states to advance toward self-government                     as rapidly as they show their capacity for it, without any                     violent constitutional change.<\/p>\n<p>It seems difficult for non-Britishers to understand                     that the Empire functions without a constitution, parliament,                     cabinet, central defence force, or other executive authority.                     All powers affecting them have been transferred to territories                     as they matured, and of these powers there are three which                     have never been decentralized in any other state in the world&#8217;s                     history: framing tariffs, controlling immigration, and creating                     and maintaining navies. While some other nations have thrown                     away the hard-won progress of generations, yielding to                     inside or outside power all effective voice in their government,                     the Empire countries have gone on expanding their individual                     rights, with fullest concurrence of Great Britain. This British                     conception of the social contract of government, developed                     by many generations with painstaking effort, much debate,                     much trial and error, and some conflict, is not fixed, but                     is being improved continuously. Of relatively recent origin                     are the conferences, where Empire representatives meet to                     exchange ideas. These conferences are an expression of the                     policy of &#8220;consultative co-operation&#8221; among the King&#8217;s                     ministers, by which the Empire handles its concerns and co-ordinates                     its action. It cannot be emphasized too strongly that an Imperial                     Conference is not a parliament, but only a round-table                     meeting. It has no executive power of its own. Its reports                     can be implemented only by the separate and independent action                     of the participating governments.<\/p>\n<p>These Empire Conferences are irregularly-spaced affairs,                     and in the intervals the Secretary of State for the Dominions                     in London is responsible for maintaining constant communication                     between the nations. The High Commissioners of the Dominions                     in London and the United Kingdom High Commissioners in the                     Dominions have close contact with the various governments.                     No important step with relation to external affairs is taken                     by the United Kingdom without consulting the Dominion Governments.<\/p>\n<p>(<em>Next month&#8217;s Letter will continue discussion of the                     British Empire with special attention to the colonies, Empire                     trade, and the post-war prospects of Empire and world                     co-operation<\/em>.)<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[24],"class_list":["post-3960","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-24"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v26.7 (Yoast SEO v26.8) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>May 1944 - Vol. 25, No. 5 - What is British Empire? - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1944-vol-25-no-5\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"May 1944 - Vol. 25, No. 5 - What is British Empire? - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Many people in many lands, including citizens of the Empire themselves, have been puzzled by the question: &#8220;What is the British Empire?&#8221; but those outside worry more about its status than do those inside. 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