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Still marching, the Ajex heroes who defy time

The remembrance parade of Jewish ex-servicemen and women has become a unifying force in Anglo-Jewish culture

November 17, 2011 11:23
The Ajex parade at the Cenotaph. At its height, over 10,000 men and women participated each November.

By

Michael Freedland,

Michael Freedland

6 min read

It is not unknown for Jews to make up new words. It is part of the psyche of a people as rich in vocabulary as in history. But there is one four-letter word that is wonderfully redolent of service to the Anglo-Jewish community. It will not be found in any dictionary. It is frequently misspelt. But at this time of year, in particular, it should be on the lips of every thinking British Jew. The word is Ajex.

Ajex is the acronym for the Association of Jewish Ex-Servicemen and Women and this is going to be their weekend. More specifically, their Sunday. For at two o'clock on Sunday afternoon Ajex unveils its shop window. A thousand men and women, most of them war veterans, will march past the Cenotaph in Whitehall, doff their hats (many of them will be wearing the freshly brushed bowlers that only come out at this time of the year) as they pass the memorial, lay a wreath in the form of a Magen David and are inspected by a senior officer from one of the four services – the army, navy, RAF and marines.

Most important of all, they take part in an open-air service conducted by the Chief Rabbi and two or three other clergy - amazingly, the only time in the year when the Chief Rabbi is joined by a Progressive rabbi in a religious service.

Like the national Remembrance Day service, which takes place a week earlier at the same venue, the Ajex service is always accompanied by a military band - and by people (more last year than for several years) in the street, joining in a stirring rendition of Adon Olam.