From Belsen to Gaza: The Promise (2011), British and British-Jewish Identity Emiliano Perra Department of History, University of Winchester, Winchester, UK Correspondence: Emiliano Perra, University of Winchester, Sparkford Road, Winchester SO22 4NR, UK Email:
[email protected] Emiliano Perra is Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Winchester. He is the author of Conflicts of Memory: The Reception of Holocaust Films and Television Programmes in the Italian Press, 1945 to the Present (2010). Perra’s work focuses on the memory and representation of genocide, and he is co-editor of the Journal of Perpetrator Research. This article discusses some of the issues raised by Peter Kosminsky’s miniseries The Promise (2011) and investigates the intense public responses it engendered in Britain. The first part of the article explores how the miniseries takes the lead from the paradigmatic British Holocaust memory of the liberation of Belsen to engage with issues of British national self-perception. Drawing on Paul Gilroy’s notion of ‘postimperial melancholia’, the article argues that The Promise explores important issues related to Britain’s past and present, in particular the lasting heritage of Empire. The second part of the article engages with the intense reception of the miniseries among opinion makers and the general public, with many critics seeing The Promise as aimed at delegitimising the State of Israel both historically and in relation to the present. In thus doing, the article will situate the debate within the broader context of discussions on the supposed relationship between anti-Zionism and the so-called “new anti- Semitism”, and more specifically discussion of the role of anti-Zionist Jews.