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We should see our ancestors’ faces in those fleeing Taliban

Dominic Raab and Priti Patel, whose own forebears fled persecution and found refuge in Britain, should have taken much quicker action to help save the Afghans at risk of death

August 26, 2021 17:30
Priti Patel GettyImages-1234267784
Britain's Home Secretary Priti Patel (C) attends the dedication ceremony of the new national UK Police Memorial at the National Memorial Arboretum in Alrewas, central England, on July 28, 2021. - The 12-metre high brass memorial designed by architect Walter Jack commemorates the courage and sacrifice of members of the UK Police service. Since the establishment of the Bow Street Runners in 1749, almost 5,000 police officers and staff have died on duty, 1,500 from acts of violence. (Photo by Christopher Furlong / POOL / AFP) (Photo by CHRISTOPHER FURLONG/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

A few weeks ago, I stood in the synagogue at the Jewish museum in Manchester’s Cheetham Hill, close to where my great-grandmother Betsy Paymer made her home in rooms above a glazier’s shop. Betsy had fled from Skoudas, in what is now Lithuania, to escape the pogroms of Tsarist Russia. The anti-Jewish terror shocked civilised Europe. It drove two million Russian Jews to seek asylum in the US, Britain and the rest of Europe. It is worth remembering, however, that the vicious spasms of the late Russian empire were nothing compared to what was to follow. Racist gangs murdered about 40 Jews in the 1880s when Betsy fled along with Henry Cohen, the man who was to become her husband and my great-grandfather. In the sustained anti-Jewish persecution of 1903-1906, they took 2,000 lives.

One can imagine the politicians who turn their eyes from the disaster in Syria today and — trust me — will soon turn from the Afghan disaster wondering why Britain had to pick up the pieces. Couldn’t Jews have found another part of the Russian empire to live in?

My family would have been wiped out if a Britain we had no claim on refused to give us sanctuary. They might just have survived the First World War and Russian Revolution. But in the summer of 1941, the invading Nazis and local collaborators tortured Skoudas’s Jews in the local sports hall, led them into the fields, shot them and threw their bodies into a pit. There are no Jews in Skoudas today.

When I returned to work, my phone buzzed with contacts trying to find journalists who would help persuade Dominic Raab to stir himself and help save today’s victims of terror.

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