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The world is a better place because of my friend Max Levitas

Jeremy Corbyn writes about the Cable Street veteran, who died at 103 last week

November 8, 2018 11:05
Jeremy Corbyn (left) on stage with Max Levitas (second from the right)
2 min read

I have no doubt the world is a better place because of Max Levitas, my friend who died last week at the magnificent age of 103.

At the Battle of Cable Street in 1936 he, along with tens of thousands of others, stopped Britain’s fascists in their tracks. When Oswald Mosley, the leader of the British Union of Fascists, and 3,000 of his men attempted to march through a largely Jewish part of East London in a display of antisemitic intimidation, they were vastly outnumbered by a mass demonstration of resistance. 

Jewish groups, socialists, Communists, anarchists, trade unionists and others filled the streets. Many from the East End Irish community stood in solidarity with their Jewish neighbours, while others poured in from further afield, including my own mother, who remembered that day with pride for the rest of her life.

Max, then a tailor’s presser, ran messages for the organisers. As the police attempted to clear a path for Mosley to march, he saw Jewish tailors and Irish dockers building barricades to block the streets, while women in houses emptied chamber pots and scattered marbles on the ground to impede the police horses.