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Mosby

(19,101 posts)
Sun Oct 12, 2025, 03:42 PM 8 hrs ago

Four years after it was removed, London neighborhood restores antisemitism to list of hate crimes

(THIS IS THE JEWISH GROUP)

Four years after a borough of London removed antisemitism from an online list of forbidden hate crimes, mention of Jew-hatred has been restored to the controversial image, The Telegraph reports.

Since 2022, a poster for National Hate Crime Awareness Week in Tower Hamlets has been cropped to remove antisemitism from a list of prejudices that includes transphobia, Islamophobia, disablism, and other forms of prejudice.

Last week, after a councillor raised the issue, the image was altered to make the word antisemitism visible, The Telegraph says. Tower Hamlets admitted that the word had been cropped out, but denied it was intentional, the report says.

Times of Israel
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Four years after it was removed, London neighborhood restores antisemitism to list of hate crimes (Original Post) Mosby 8 hrs ago OP
I am sure it wasn't intentional nycbos 6 hrs ago #1
Borough where the anti-fascist Battle of Cable Street took place in 1934. lapucelle 6 hrs ago #2

lapucelle

(20,754 posts)
2. Borough where the anti-fascist Battle of Cable Street took place in 1934.
Sun Oct 12, 2025, 05:14 PM
6 hrs ago
Max Levitas became an East End hero when he was arrested in 1934, at the age of nineteen years old, for writing anti-Fascist slogans on Nelson’s Column in Trafalgar Square. “There were two of us, we did it at midnight and we wrote ‘All out on September 9th to fight Fascism,’ ‘Down with Fascism’ and ‘Fight Fascism,’ on Nelson’s Column in whitewash,” he told me, his eyes shining with pleasure, still fired up with ebullience at one hundred and two years of age, “And afterwards we went to Lyons Corner House to have something to eat and wash our hands, but when we had finished our tea we decided to go back to see how good it looked, and we got arrested – the police saw the paint on our shoes.”

On September 9th 1934, Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists, was due to speak at a rally in Hyde Park but – as Max was always happy to remind you – he was drowned out by the people of London who converged to express their contempt. It was both fortuitous and timely that the Times reprinted Max’s slogans on September 7th, two days before the rally, in the account of his appearance at Bow St Magistrates Court, thereby spreading the message.

Yet this event was merely the precursor to the confrontation with the Fascists that took place in the East End, two years later on 4th October 1936, that became known as the Battle of Cable St, and in which Max was proud to have played a part – a story he told as an inspirational example of social solidarity in the face of prejudice and hatred. And, as we sat in a quiet corner of the Whitechapel Library, watching the rain fall upon

Politics had always been personal for Max Levitas, based upon family experience of some of the ugliest events of the twentieth century. His father Harry fled from Lithuania and his mother Leah from Latvia in 1913, both escaping the anti-semitic pogroms of Tsarist Russia. They met in Dublin and married but, on the other side of Europe, Harry’s sister Sara was burnt to death along with fellow-villagers in the synagogue of Akmeyan, and Leah’s sister Rachel was killed with her family by the Nazis in Riga.

https://spitalfieldslife.com/2022/10/06/max-levitas-the-battle-of-cable-st-o-x/
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