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They did their bit - the story of three centuries of heroism

From Trafalgar to Helmand province, Jews have a distinguished record of service in the British armed forces

November 15, 2012 15:15
The Zion Mule Corps, the forerunner of the Jewish Legion, fought at Gallipoli in 1915, where their commanding officer described them as “fearless ”

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

4 min read

Sadly, there are not many Jews who fought in the Second World War who are still able to march. But those who can will be polishing their medals to parade down Whitehall on Sunday, in honour of their comrades who fell in the 1939-45 conflict and those before and since.

If last year's attendance at the annual Association of Jewish ex-Servicemen and Women (Ajex) parade is a guide, there could be around 800 veterans at the ceremony, the numbers bolstered by those who have served since 1945. However, if all those Jews who fought for their country in two world wars were still able to attend, there would be enough people to fill Wembley stadium - with another 15,000 spilling out on to the pitch.

Those who have researched the subject of Jewish involvement in the armed forces all agree that the contribution has been disproportionate to the numbers in the community. It is a long history of courage under fire that dates back to a time before Jews could even officially serve the Crown in the military. Captain Alexander Schomberg, who had to convert to Anglicanism to join up, captured the Heights of Abraham from the French in the battle for Quebec while skippering the frigate Diana, in 1759. There is also an account of Jewish men who served on the HMS Victory with Nelson and there were Jews at Waterloo, the Crimea and more than 3,000 fighting in the Boer War.

But it was in the First World War that British Jews served their country en masse. In excess of 55,000 volunteered or were conscripted, and, in this most savage of conflicts, a large number lost their lives. Five also won Victoria Crosses, the first of whom was Frank Alexander de Pass, who was killed in 1914 while attempting to take an enemy trench for the second time.