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Michael Sherbourne the man who helped to free millions

Michael Sherbourne, who died last weekend, was a key figure in the campaign that supported Soviet Jews in their fight to escape an oppressive regime

June 26, 2014 11:30
Michael Sherbourne (left) was honoured by Natan Sharansky at Limmud last year

By

Colin Shindler,

Colin Shindler

3 min read

During the summer of 1970 while working as the political secretary of the World Union of Jewish Students, I received a telephone call from an irate caller who told me that the spelling of the organisation's name in Russian on its headed notepaper was incorrect.

I tried to explain that this was none of my doing, but the caller would have none of it and berated me for committing a crime against the sacred beauty of the Russian language.

This was my first encounter with Michael Sherbourne, the man who played a pivotal role in the UK campaign supporting Soviet Jews denied permission to emigrate. He it was who was credited with the first use of the English translation of otkaznik - "refusenik".

His passing last weekend at the age of 97 was recorded by the Jewish Agency chairman Natan Sharansky, himself a former refusenik, who remarked that Michael demonstrated how "one passionate individual, with no institutional position or backing, can have an impact on the course of history". Not a cliché, but a remarkable truth.