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Simon Rocker

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

Analysis

Obligated to help the persecuted — by our history and our Judaism

September 9, 2015 16:39
European Jewish refugees wait to board boats to Palestine in 1944, while (below) Syrian and Iraqi refugees arrive in Lesbos by dinghy on Tuesday
4 min read

Never has the old adage about a picture speaking more than a thousand words rung truer than last week. It took the image of a drowned boy off the shores of Turkey to tip the political balance. Faced with a growing clamour to act, David Cameron relented and agreed to admit more Syrian refugees.

When the Prime Minister made his announcement on Monday, he invoked the precedent of the Kindertransport, the rescue of 10,000 Jewish children from Europe on the eve of the Second World War. A few days earlier Emeritus Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks had called for a "humanitarian gesture similar to the Kindertransport" in a plea for Britain to open its gates wider.

Even before the recent outburst of public compassion, the memory of Jewish experience was spurring other Jews to raise their voice on behalf of Syrian refugees. Back in January last year, the Jewish Council for Racial Equality delivered a petition to the government to be more generous in its intake. Outside Downing Street that day, Rabbi Jeremy Gordon of the New London Synagogue remarked: "If it wasn't for the welcome this country afforded my family, we would have been caught in the horrors of the Holocaust."

While only a small, though significant, minority of the community may be descended from survivors of the Shoah, many more of us know that if grandparents or great-grandparents had not migrated here from Eastern Europe, our families might have perished in the catastrophe that was to come.