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Marcus Dysch

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Marcus Dysch,

Marcus Dysch

Opinion

David Cameron's premiership was a golden era for Britain's Jews

July 13, 2016 08:41
David Cameron
3 min read

It was an ovation unlike any I had heard before, or since, for a politician.

When David Cameron walked off the podium at the Holocaust Educational Trust dinner in September 2013, the applause was thunderous.

The great-great-grandson of Emile Levita, a German-Jewish émigré banker who came to Britain in 1871, had sown the seeds for what will inevitably come to be seen as the stand-out Jewish legacy of his six years as Prime Minister.

In that speech, Mr Cameron, who leaves Downing Street today, had launched his national Holocaust Commission, a cross-party, multi-faith group aimed at securing the future of Shoah education in Britain for generations to come.

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