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Tag: Cyprus

Yes, Comrade Bwana: The British Empire and the Labour Party

Yes, Comrade Bwana:  The British Empire and the Labour Party

 

Aden

Aden 1967
Aden, 1967.   Labour Government in London.
Street, Endless Furrow
A.G.Street, The Endless Furrow, 1934.

In 1947 a then popular English novelist, and farmer, A.G.Street (Farmer’s Glory, The Endless Furrow) wrote how it was that Britain came to have the largest Empire the World had ever known:

“Why were sailors from such a small nation so successful wherever they voyaged?  Largely because they did not set out with any idea of conquering the world…. In their travels they landed on strange shores, where in most cases they found a state of things that offended their ideas of what was fitting for human beings.  So they stayed and put it right, not so much because they wanted the job, but rather because they stumbled upon it, and felt it was up to them to do the right thing.  Thus, without deliberate design they founded a great empire overseas.” (1)

Livingston
The White Man’s Burden

So, according to A.G.Street, be careful where you berth your boat: you might come across people with disagreeable habits who your moral sensibility and sense of duty dictates that you and your countrymen and women spend years educating them and showing them the moral and spiritual way –  a.k.a The White Man’s Burden.

Intro the Colonies HMSO 1949
Introducing the Colonies (note the boat!), a booklet produced by the British Colonial Office,1949,  on the instructions of the Labour Government

The leading ‘thinkers’ of the British socialist Fabians in the late Victorian and Edwardian period – George Bernard Shaw, the Webbs and their like – believed that it would take years to bring these people with disagreeable habits up to scratch.  Some like Beatrice Webb thought it was an impossible mission, that many of the “native races” would never be able to run their own affairs (even though they had been managing in their own way for centuries, before the White Man arrived).

The attitude of British Fabians was also shared and supported by British Conservatives and Liberals.  In the early 1930s the local party chairman of the Conservative Duchess of Atholl’s constituency went further, advising her that democracy was not only unsuitable for ‘natives’ but also for nine tenths of the white races. (2)

The founding groups in the early twentieth century  (which included the Fabians) of the British Labour Party all agreed on the benefits of the British Empire for the British working classes, such as guaranteeing jobs in the Lancashire cotton mills, or providing cheap food for the toiling classes.  Before the First World War Beatrice Webb also saw the usefulness of the British Empire in mooting the idea of cleansing the slum areas in London and Manchester of their undesirable semi-criminal and idle lumpen proletariat by boating them out to the open spaces of the British Empire dominion Australia.  Frederick Engels the German Manchester factory owner and co-founder of Marxist ideology would have warmed to the idea: in the nineteenth century he had described the lumpen proletariat that he observed in the Manchester area as “scum”, and both Engels and Karl Marx (who coined the term lumpen proletariat) saw this social group as a hindrance to the advance of communism.

In the second Labour Government of 1929 Beatrice Webb’s husband Sydney was appointed by Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald as Colonial Secretary.  He echoed his wife’s views when he expressed his ministerial view that some of the subject colonial races would not be fit to govern themselves for at least a hundred years, mentioning, for instance the disenfranchised Empire subjects of Kenya.

Sidney Webb
Beatrice and Sidney Webb. 
Keir Hardie
Keir Hardie, Socialist and Christian lay preacher

The “internationalist” and leading member of the ILP (Independent Labour Party), and evangelical lay preacher, Keir Hardie , was one of the prime movers for the establishment of the British Labour Party.  Despite his enlightened reputation (support for the cause of India and woman’s suffrage, and opposed to the colour bar in South Africa)  he didn’t extend his internationalist or Christian outlook to Lithuanian workers, let alone – when it came down to it – the “native races” of the British Empire, who, disenfranchised, were digging out diamonds in South Africa, planting cotton in India,  picking tea in Ceylon (Sri Lanka) and cutting sugar cane in the West Indies.  His internationalism stopped at the English-Scottish border and the Port of Leith.

“Keir Hardie, in his evidence to the 1899 House of Commons Select Committee on emigration and immigration, argued that the Scots resented immigrants greatly and that they would want a total immigration ban. When it was pointed out to him that more people left Scotland than entered it, he replied:

‘It would be much better for Scotland if those 1,500 were compelled to remain there and let the foreigners be kept out… Dr Johnson said God made Scotland for Scotchmen, and I would keep it so.’   According to Hardie, the Lithuanian migrant workers in the mining industry had “filthy habits”, they lived off “garlic and oil”, and they were carriers of “the Black Death”.”

______________

“The first Independent Labour Party MP (Keir Hardie) blamed immigrants for driving down wages of Scottish workers and he accused them of stealing and being dirty.  In an article written for the journal The Miner in 1887, he criticised the owners of the local Glengarnock ironworks for using “Russian Poles”. He said: “What object they have in doing so is beyond human ken unless it is, as stated by a speaker at Irvine, to teach men how to live on garlic and oil, or introduce the Black Death, so as to get rid of the surplus labourers.” (2)

The German left revolutionaries Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels were blunt in their mid nineteenth century assessments about the native races of the world, whether in Africa or China: “savages” they called them.  They also regarded some of the European races – Slavs and Celts – as untermenschen, who were part of the problem, and not the solution, and in the case of the Celts believed they would need to perish in the Final Solution.  Even the French as a race were a bit suspect in their eyes, saved only by the fact that they had subjugated the “native races” in North Africa.  The race that met their ideal as torchbearers of the new communist movement (as determined by Marx’s crystal ball gazing which he labelled ‘historical materialism’) were their own race: the Germans.  Anglo Saxon and similar Aryan races were also considered by them as torchbearers for the reordering of the class world. (3)

 

Robert_Blatchford_0001
Robert Blatchford, author of Merrie England.

 

The attitude of Marx and Engels was a geological strata that ran through all socialists, whether Marxist revolutionary, 0r social democratic –  and usually Christian – socialist in the Western world.

Two left of centre Englishmen who unusually and fairly uniquely didn’t share this view of “native races” within the British Empire were Robert Blatchford (1851 – 1943)  and George Orwell (1903 – 1950).  And for different reasons the two also didn’t support the British Empire.  A third English socialist who went on to campaign for the rights of British Empire disenfranchised colonial “subjects” was Fenner Brockway,  another early member of the I.L.P. (1888 – 1988).

by Bassano, half-plate glass negative, 19 May 1930
Fenner Brockway, 1930.  Born in Calcutta, India, son of British Empire missionaries.

In general, the rest of the Labour Movement and the Labour Party into the early 1950s were positive about the British Empire, and had a low view of many of the Empire’s subjects.  Martin Pugh in his Speak for Britain!: A New History of the Labour Party (2010) mentions that the Smethwick Labour Club in the English Midlands was still operating a “colour bar” in 1964.

Orwell 1946
George Orwell, 1946.      Photo Vernon Richards.

George Orwell knew the British Empire from the inside.  Between 1923 and 1927 he was an Imperial Policeman in Burma (Myanmar).   His first published novel  Burmese Days (1934) and his two short pieces A Hanging (1931) and Shooting an Elephant (1936) takes a scalpel to the belly of British Imperialism.  In Burmese Days there are echoes of the near halugenic quality of  the Frenchman’s Louis Ferdinand Celine’s descriptions of being in French West Africa at a similar time just after the First World War, written in his Journey to the End of Night.

Like Robert Blatchford, who was in the British Army between 1871 and 1878, and rose to be a sergeant, George Orwell was often out of sympathy with his fellow socialists.  Both were independent thinkers.  In a July 1939 review of a now forgotten book Union Now by the American Clarence K. Streit, Orwell highlights bogus and hypocritical aspects of the  European democracies such as France and Britain rationalising their alignment against the totalitarianism of Nazism.

“In a prosperous country, above all in an imperialist country, left-wing politics are always partly humbug…… One threat to the Suez Canal and ‘anti-fascism’ and ‘defence of British interests’ are discovered to be identical……

Like everyone of his school of thought, Mr Streit has cooly lumped the huge British and French Empires – in essence nothing but mechanisms for exploiting cheap coloured labour – under the heading of democracies!…..

The British and French empires with their six hundred million disenfranchised human beings….

……. What we always forget is that the overwhelming bulk of the British proletariat does not live in Britain, but in Asia and Africa.”  (4)

__________________________

RAAFAvroLincolnMalaya1950
Royal Australian Airforce Avro Lincoln bombing Insurgent targets in the Malayan jungle, 1950.   Labour Government in power in London.
Malaya George V1
At the start of the Malayan ‘Emergency’ Queen Elizabeth II’s Dad was the Head Honcho

________________

“Some talk about the Empire and Imperialism as if it were something to decry and something to be ashamed of.  It is a great thing to be the inheritors of an Empire like ours … great in territory, great in potential wealth. … If we can only realise and use that potential wealth we can destroy thereby poverty, we can remove and destroy ignorance.” – Suffragette leader and I.L.P member Emmeline Pankhurst.

There was nothing “potential” about the wealth being generated within the British Empire, whether before the First World War or after the Second World war. The wealth was there. The Labour Government of Clement Attlee (1945 – 1951)  used conscripted troops to maintain the status quo in Malaya, and maintain the output of valuable tin and rubber.  Seemingly the Malayan War was termed an “Emergency” at the request of owners of tin mines and rubber plantations.  That way they could claim any losses with insurers Lloyds in London, whereas their claims would be null and void if the country was officially at war.  This manoeuvre seems to have acted as a template also for Kenya, Cyprus and Aden, for instance.

Uganda

mau-mau-captives-007
Mau Mau suspects, Kenya.

 

Cyprus 2

 

Cypress Emergency
Cyprus

Malaya Liz

Malaya Emergency
Malaya

 

Liz Aden Stamp

 

Aden-1967-8
Aden

 

The quote above from the leading suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst about using the wealth of the British Empire to destroy poverty and remove ignorance is, without knowing the context in which she was speaking, ambivalent.  Did she mean destroying poverty through cheap food and goods imported for the British working classes from the Empire?  And in removing ignorance, was she referring to the natives of the Empire?  There were many white Christian evangelists sweating under the Tropical skies of the British Empire who were precisely doing that: working on morally and spiritually uplifting the native.  Fenner Brockway’s parents worked as missionaries in India, and sent the young Fenner to a Missionary Boarding School in England. Did his missionary parents, bracing their shoulders for the weight of the White Man’s (and Woman’s Burden) know that Christianity first came to the Indian sub-continent when their European antecedents were still pagans?

Missionary and evangelical zeal were to be found everywhere, including within the Labour Party.  Besides Labour Party founder Keir Hardy, prominent Labour and Coop activist, and later Labour minister, and Minister within Churchill’s coalition wartime government A.V.Alexander remained an active protestant evangelist to the end of his life in 1965.

For him the benefits of the British Empire was mitigating the poverty and removing the ignorance of the British working class, through cheap food and welfare provision.  This view was shared by trade unions leaders,  later to be Labour Government ministers, such as Jimmy Thomas and Ernest Bevin.  There was nothing unusual in their views within the Labour Party and Trade Union movement.

When the Labour Party was overwhelmingly returned to power in 1945 there had been nothing in its Election Manifesto about introducing self-government in the colonies, with the exception of India.  It is said that Ernest Bevin, Foreign Secretary in the Labour Government, justified this by saying the loss of the colonies would mean falling living standards for British people. (The post war Labour Government  saddled a near bankrupt nation with the secret development and massive spending on an atomic bomb, which meant imposing rationing of bread, never rationed during the siege economy caused by the Second World War.)

 

List of Colonies876
The list of British Empire Colonies run by the Labour Government in 1949. From Introducing the Colonies, Colonial Office/HMSO 1949.

In general it was only in the early 1950s that some in the Labour Party would start to think about, and agree with Fenner Brockway’s views on disenfranchised British subjects.  There were, and had been other voices, of course:

Attitudes to Africa879 copy
Attitude to Africa by W.Arthur Lewis, Michael Scott, Martin Wight & Colin Legum.  Penguin Books, 1951.

In 1954  along with others, Fenner Brockway founded the British based Movement for Colonial Freedom .

But of course the work of freeing the “native subjects” was done by themselves.

African protest880

In the 1950s period of the Labour Party being in opposition, under their leader Hugh Gaitskell, it is difficult to get an idea of whether the Party had started to move, in terms of official Party policies, to the acceptance of self-determination for disenfranchised British colonial subjects.  Most of the histories of that Labour Party period concentrate on the wrangles over the Clause Four nationalisation commitment, and unilateral nuclear disarmament, and their failure to win the 1959 General Election.

gaitskill878_edited-1
Labour Party opposition leader Hugh Gaitskell

It was the Conservative Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in 1960 who coined the term and accepted that there was a “Wind of Change” blowing through the British Empire, and particularly in Africa.  Remarkably, he was the first  British Prime Minister ever to visit the British Colonies in Africa.

MacMillan877
British Prime Minister Harold MacMillan with, left, Roy Welensky, Prime Minister of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasland, Salisbury (Harare), 1960.

He had been visiting African colonies for a month on a ‘fact finding’ mission when he gave his speech in the heartland of white supremacy sentiment and practice: South Africa.  He made the speech to members of the South African parliament in Cape Town on 3 February, 1960.

“In the twentieth century, and especially since the end of the war, the processes which gave birth to the nation states of Europe have been repeated all over the world. We have seen the awakening of national consciousness in peoples who have for centuries lived in dependence upon some other power. Fifteen years ago this movement spread through Asia. Many countries there, of different races and civilisations, pressed their claim to an independent national life.

Today the same thing is happening in Africa, and the most striking of all the impressions I have formed since I left London a month ago is of the strength of this African national consciousness. In different places it takes different forms, but it is happening everywhere.

The wind of change is blowing through this continent, and whether we like it or not, this growth of national consciousness is a political fact. We must all accept it as a fact, and our national policies must take account of it…….

……. As a fellow member of the Commonwealth it is our earnest desire to give South Africa our support and encouragement, but I hope you won’t mind my saying frankly that there are some aspects of your policies which make it impossible for us to do this without being false to our own deep convictions about the political destinies of free men to which in our own territories we are trying to give effect.”

The speech was met with contempt and hostility from the bulk of the white Dutch descended Afrikaner community in South Africa, and with alarm amongst the white politicians and  settlers of the East African colonies.  He had already given a similar speech, less reported, in Accra, the Gold Coast (Ghana) the month before, on 10 January, 1960.

In the 1960s the Labour Party had too accepted that self-rule (where desired) in the colonies was inevitable.  However, like the Conservative Party there were some areas that had a strategic defence interest (docks, airfields, army logistics) that they were loath to relinquish too quickly:  Malta, Cyprus and Aden, for instance.

And security and strategic concerns (often in conjunction with the United States) continued to effect ‘native’ populations in scattered colonies: Easter Island  in the Pacific Ocean, for instance.  Part of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands,  it and associated scattered islands are now known as the Republic of Kirbati, becoming independent in 1979.

Gilbert & Ellice Islands copy

The forced depopulation of Diego Garcia (part of the British Indian Ocean Territory) in the Indian Ocean to make way for a United States base began in 1968 (Harold Wilson Labour Prime Minister) and was completed in 1973. The permanency of the depopulation was effectively sealed when the Labour Government of Prime Minister Gordon Brown secretly proposed in leaked documents from 2009 to make the area a Marine Conservation area. (5)

British Indian Ocean Terr

So, Darkie Comrades, watch your step.  Socialist Internationalism for the British Labour Party stops at the Port of Dover.

Oh, and yes, nearly forgot:

p.s. Fraternal Greetings.

______________________________________________

Footnotes

  1.  A.G.Street shared his views on the British Empire in his introduction to the Odhams Press book England Today in Pictures.  Odhams Press was a large publisher of popular photo based books,  encyclopaedias, popular histories, DIY related reference and tutorial books etc.  It was also the publisher and majority share holder, from 1931, of the British Labour Party’s Daily Herald.
  2.  Quoted in Hurrah for the Blackshirts: Fascists and Fascism in Britain Between the Wars, Martin Pugh, 2005.
  3. Keir Hardie quotes are from several sources, including scottishmining.co.uk  and Wikipedia.
  4. see The Social and Racial Characteristics of….  in Recent Posts.
  5.  Not Counting Niggers, July 1939.  Orwell: Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters Volume 1.
  6. “According to leaked diplomatic cables obtained by Wikileaks and released in 2010, in a calculated move in 2009 to prevent re-settlement of the BIOT by native Chagossians, the UK proposed that the BIOT become a “marine reserve” with the aim of preventing the former inhabitants from returning to their lands. The summary of the diplomatic cable is as follows :   HMG would like to establish a “marine park” or “reserve” providing comprehensive environmental protection to the reefs and waters of the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT), a senior Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) official informed Polcouns on May 12.  The official insisted that the establishment of a marine park — the world’s largest — would in no way impinge on USG use of the BIOT, including Diego Garcia, for military purposes. He agreed that the UK and U.S. should carefully negotiate the details of the marine reserve to assure that U.S. interests were safeguarded and the strategic value of BIOT was upheld. He said that the BIOT’s former inhabitants would find it difficult, if not impossible, to pursue their claim for resettlement on the islands if the entire Chagos Archipelago were a marine reserve.”  (This material quoted in Wikipedia)

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Author petegraftonPosted on June 13, 2016December 14, 2018Categories Political & Social HistoryTags A Hanging, A.G.Street, A.V.Alexander, Accra, Aden, Attitude to Africa Penguin Books, Beatrice Webb, British Empire, British Empire and the Labour Party, British Fabians, British Indian Ocean Territory, Burmese Days, Clement Atlee, Colin Legum, Cyprus, Diego Garcia, Emmeline Pankhurst, Ernest Bevin, Fenner Brockway, Friedrich Engels, George Bernard Shaw, George Orwell, Ghana, Gilber & Ellice Islands, Glengarnock Ironworks, Gordon Brown, Harare, Harold MacMillan, Harold Wilson, Hugh Gaitskill, ILP, Introducing the Colonies HMSO, Jimmy Thomas, Kark Marx, Keir Hardie, Kenya, Malaya, Malta, Martin Pugh, Martin Wight, Merrie England, Michael Scott, Republic of Kirbati, Rhodesia, Robert Blatchford, Roy Welensky, Royal Australian Airforce Avro Lincoln, Shooting an Elephant, Smethwick Labour Club, Sydney Webb, The British Labour Party, the Gold Coast, The Webbs, W.Arthur Lewis, White Man's Burden, Wind of Change SpeechLeave a comment on Yes, Comrade Bwana: The British Empire and the Labour Party

Len: Our Ownest Darling Girl now Online

Len: Our Ownest Darling Girl is now online.

The letters between Mother and Daughter span 1939 – 1950, and are now being published every Friday.   This is the link to the book – lendarlinggirl.com – and here is an extract from Part Two 3  Life As Medicine.  Len, born in Scotland, is working for the Ministry of Supply in Cairo.  She is a shorthand typist, and is 21.

Part Two  3: Life As Medicine

“Some of the English girls don’t seem alive at all – they take life as a sort of medicine.” – Vera, a young Russian, quoted by Len, 28 August, 1947.

Len for Egypt letters png18 August, 1947.  Cairo.

Hello my Darlings,

You’re such a joy to me, for when I hear from you I realise more than ever how much you both mean to me. Your letters are – well it’s almost like talking to you and believe me that’s what I need. 18th of August, one says the date to oneself, thinks of ones longing for ones people and the U.K. and on the other side the need for money and the other things which keep one in this Lotus Land.

I know how you feel about the “10lb look” (apologies to Barrie), but I really do want to lose it and E. is the only person who agrees with me – everyone else says I’m alright and that once plump always plump, which is a fallacy and inspired by lazy defeatists. I do need some one else to want me lose weight too and the incentive of the studio portrait is a help. Also re. dignity, it’s there O.K., you needn’t worry about that and he knows it. After all, I’ve told him to be charming and outwardly he hasn’t taken any offence and really that’s an awful lot more for him to do than me to lose 10lb and put on some nail polish. N’est ce pas?

In his last letter Ernst mentions Canada with quite a lot of keenness, I’m rather glad. He received your letter Mum and told me he was replying in a few days, I expect you have his letter by now.

Buying the house – what’s noo? I want us to have the house, and us all (inc. E) to go to Canada. The house is an asset and why shouldn’t we be ‘men of property’ even if we’re elsewhere. Our schemes are nebulous, but it’s better to have such schemes which can be adapted or suddenly clarify than no scheme at all.

Thanks so much for all your letters, I have them all to 187. It’s grand to get the dough, I’m exchanging some of it with U.K. bound people like Betty Mac who think they’ll find it useful. The Black Market could not be found, so I changed all my dough at the ninety seven and a half touch, found it maddening, but what could I do. (1)

Pat was at Ish at the week-end. (2) As you know I don’t propose going away till Ernst’s birthday at the end of September , so sometime in October I want to go to Ish.

Right now I’m busy collecting addresses in U.K. for everyone seems to be going that way, naturally I’ve given our address, so you’d better prepare for people popping in.

On Sunday after breakfast – which we had about 8.30 I went over to the Stokes. I talked to them for a while, then walked with them across to Gezira – whilst they went on to Wilcox.

Guess who I met in Gezira – Major Wallace. You remember I met him in the Fort William-Glencoe bus in September, 1945 and on the steps of the “Britannia” gangplank for a few minutes on the morning of a riot in February 1946 (3)

He’s a gem of a man and one to whom the adjective charming can be fearlessly applied. I do wish you could meet him Mum, for honest you’d get on together so well. He went into raptures when I said you came from Dornoch. I s’pose I said it in a cold Anglified way and when he repeated it after me, (in rapture) he really rolled it around his tongue and practically made a poem out of the word.

He was telling me his daughter of 18 has just left Roedean (you know, the school) and was starting on a tour of Scotland with her cousin and was also going to the Musical Festival at Edinburgh (the people I know who are going there – lucky so-and-sos – Ethel Wilson, Olga Rundall, co-voyager-out, etc.). (4)

He also told me about her playing the violin, whereupon I said “Oh, was it her picture in the Sphinx”. And it was. (5)

Mr Wallace as he is now took me out of the sun for this conversation and got me one of those gorgeous jugs of shandy. He was telling me that some pals and he have 16,000 acres in Cyprus and export to Britain and all about. As it’s a Crown Colony they have Imperial Preference etc. He told me too of all the car trips all over Europe which he’s done and was giving me various alternative itineraries for hitching home. I was talking to him also of the Summer Isles out from Gruinard Bay in Wester Ross and of Barrie’s “Marie Rose” being centred around one of them. (6)

He’s a pensioned official of the Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada and now acts in a freelance capacity. I just wish I could really get in with his family. I’d be car-ing home then next year if I’d my way. However, he made a most charming companion for a short while.

As I’d had a lot of sun I slept for a little in the Ladies’ Lounge after looking at my French verbs, then went across to Wilcox for tea with the Stokes. It was lovely sitting there under the trees and they insisted I go back to supper with them.

My Digs. Of course I knew snags were bound to arise and they’re arising. The room is excellent and so are the breakfasts. However here are some points of interest, and of complaint, three of them:

1. This morning her clock was wrong and her watch was wrong, – about 20 mins. to half an hour. In consequence I missed the bus.

2. Last night I got in from the Stokes about 11.30 (as you know Mum, early for Cairo). She’d given me a key , but lo and behold although it turned, I couldn’t get in for the door was bolted. Of course she let me in, but this morning suggested I let her know when I was going to be late, I said I didn’t know, where upon she said I could phone her, but I intend doing no such thing, for it’s not as if she’s got to alter meals, my having b&b.

3. The other night she suddenly intimated she wanted her money in advance. I mentioned this in passing to the Stokes. I’ve 50Pt. to pay for this fortnight (i.e. the balance of £5, half of the month’s dough – from 15th to end of the month), and Mr Stokes says I should pay this at the end of the month and tell her she’s getting the rest of the money at the end of each of the month and not in advance. Her argument is that she pays for everything in advance. Mr Stokes says that’s not my worry and they pay everything in advance, but Mr W. pays them at the end of the month. He says too she can’t hold a pistol to my head as they are all desperate for people just now, not like the war years when they had the upper hand. He says I stand to lose a month’s dough and the principle of the thing’s bad.

The Stokes were dears the way they championed my cause unasked and they also said if she says I’ve got to go I can bunk in with them for a while, so I intend to stand firm – wish me luck. I don’t mention all this for sympathy, but because I know it’ll interest you. I t’s part of the growing up process I hadn’t encountered before.

People keep on asking for bulletins about you Mum, they’re not content with knowing you got home safely at all almost want day to day bulletins.

Anything you want from the Musky , as I hope to go down there at the beginning of next month? (7).

I was nearly ill when I read the description of your accident on the DM.(8). Please take care of her Dad. Remember all those lovely plans can mature without money, but one must have ones health, for you can’t fight without that.

Good gracious, is the leopard skin ready all ready? Don’t work too hard at it Mum. Unless I receive your wee slip giving gen on thread I won’t get it on Thursday, for I daresay I’ll be going into town again pretty soon, after that. Thanks so much for your letter of comfort (re. E and me) I feel a new woman. (9)

I don’t mind you telling the people you said you’d tell about my homecoming and am with you in what you say about them – they are nice types. It’s just this dislike of the Reid-Ballantine clan which overwhelms my outlook – sorry. I know how you feel about the announcement angle Mum and can sense you’re feeling of wanting to tell the world we’re doing all right, but just ignore that clan, we don’t alter our behaviour for them. (10). I feel so strongly that E must have a good long holiday (and only hope he does) in our lovely land and that it will do him so much good and take away all that ME (11) tension and you know it’s with this thought in mind and the hope that it’ll be gratified that makes me feel a bit tense myself waiting for the months to slip by, wanting UK, wanting the dough I get out here to save and wanting E and you two all at the same time.

Must close this letter now and get it off – it’s 19th now.

Your own most loving Len xxxx

____________________________________________

1. Len is converting her British sterling to Egyptian Pounds.

2. Ish: Ishmailia, seventy miles to the north east of Cairo, on the west bank of the Suez Canal. Nearby was a RAF camp, which today is used by the Egyptian airforce.

3. From a news report of the time, 21 February, 1946: ‘Riots Erupt in Cairo. British troops in Cairo today opened fire on angry crowds demanding an end to foreign influence. Twelve people are reported to have been killed and over 100 wounded’. There had also been protests in the Suez Canal Zone, beginning in December 1945. The protests reached their peak in Cairo, as reported above, in February, 1946. The Turf Club in Cairo, for instance, was set alight by protestors and eleven members died. British Army casualties during this period have been put at 33 soldiers killed and 69 wounded.

4. This was the first Edinburgh Festival.

5. A Cairo English language paper for the Brits.

6: Unknown to either of them, Gruinard Island, in Gruinard Bay, had been lethally toxic since 1942, and remained toxic until declared safe in 1990. Scientists from the Chemical and Biological Warfare Station at Porton Down, Wiltshire, had released a virulent strain of anthrax on the island, killing sheep that had been tethered. The conclusion was that anthrax bombs dropped on German cities would be very successful, apart from the problem that the cities would remain toxic wastelands for years. Len, in 1949, would be working at Porton Down.

7. Musky: the Arab market quarter. Variant spellings exist. Cecil Beaton in his Near East (1943) spells it Moski.

8. Mum had tripped or fallen and pulled a ligament.

9. This letter of comfort is not in this collection.

10. Mum’s sister Ena was married to Bill Reid. Their brother Dennis was married to Euphemia Ballantine – Aunt Phem. The cause for Len’s dislike of them is unknown. The ‘home coming’ is when Len’s tour of duty in Cairo would be over; the ‘announcement’ is more than just her returning to Scotland – Len and Ernst were engaged.

11. ME: Middle East.

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Len: Our Ownest Darling Girl

Author petegraftonPosted on September 26, 2014October 31, 2014Categories Political & Social HistoryTags Black Market, Cairo, Cyprus, Dornoch, Edinburgh Festival, Fort Willian, Gezira Club, Glencoe, Gruinard Island, Ishmailia, Mousky, Porton Down, Sphinx magazine Cairo, Suez Canal Zone, Turf Club CairoLeave a comment on Len: Our Ownest Darling Girl now Online
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