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The day I had my own battle of Cable Street

As my assailant hit me, the thought occurred that this was not the first Jewish face to be punched at this location

August 7, 2024 12:59
wine in a woman hand GettyImages-1166405895
Rolling with the punches: our columnist's unwelcome confrontation on the site of the East End battle preceded his mother's 90th birthday
2 min read

You know how it is with out-of-body experiences; not so much as a déjà vu for decades and then two come in quick succession. How time slows in these heightened moments, although in the first not slow enough to avoid the fist that crashed into my face.

I had stopped my bike while cycling down Cable Street to read a text message. My assailant had taken the trouble to clamber over roadside bushes that separated the pavement and the cycle lane; me and him. His knuckles landed on my jaw and the corner of my mouth. As my disorientated head spun, the thought occurred that this was not the first Jewish face to be punched at this location.

Then the fear arrived. Fear of the violence, yes, but also that I would not acquit myself with the bravery of Jews who had fought on this spot in 1936. Theirs is a high bar. You can limbo under mine.

Time slowed again a few days later while I was giving a speech at the mother’s 90th birthday party, for which we had invited family and friends and booked a room overlooking the Thames at Greenwich.