Talk:Sydney Silverman

Unsourced chronology removed
I have removed from the article an unsourced list-style chronology of Sydney Silverman's life, which had been appended to the article in |this edit. I have reproduced the text here, because some of the points might be worth incorporating if they can be sourced. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 21:32, 14 July 2007 (UTC)

Here is a chronology of SYDNEY SILVERMAN's life...

1895	Born in Liverpool, eldest son of a poor Jewish refugee from Rumania, a pedlar or "Scotch draper".

1908	Won scholarship to the Liverpool Institute.

1913	Began course in English Literature at Liverpool University.

1914	Already a committed Socialist on outbreak of world war.

1916	Conscripted into army. Due to his socialist (as opposed to religious) objections to military service, was denied recognition as a conscientious objector. Arrested for refusing to obey military orders, sentenced to two years' hard labour. Went on hunger strike, lived for a year on a daily pint of milk. Sentence commuted. On release, found a military escort waiting to conscript him at the prison gates. Once again defied orders, was court-martialled and jailed again. Spent a total of 2 years 3 months in jail.

1920-1	Readmitted to Liverpool University to complete his BA course; gained degree in 1921.

1921-5	Unable to find a job in Britain, worked at Helsinki University as lecturer in English.

1925	Returned to Liverpool University to study law, a subject in which he had become interested while campaigning on behalf of his fellow prisoners in jail.

1927	Gained law degree with First Class honours.

1928	Opened solicitor's office without capital or connections. Defended poor and working-class clients, often unpaid, living on costs awarded when he won his cases. Local police chiefs called him "our greatest enemy".

1932	Elected Labour Councillor and "workers' class representative" in St Annes Ward, Liverpool.

1933	Married Nancy Rubinstein, a musician, whose refugee father had been killed in a local racist attack. Fought a by-election for Labour in Liverpool. Narrowly lost after a Tory campaign of anti-Semitic bigotry. A delegation from Nelson & Colne Labour Party (a nearby militant Labour constituency party), visiting Liverpool in search of a suitable fighting Socialist candidate, and having already heard Silverman's name, found him during the bye-election helping the family of an unemployed docker resist eviction.They decided to approach him to fight the next election as their candidate in Nelson & Colne.

1935	First elected MP for the constituency, which he represented for the following 33 years until his death, winning altogether eight successive elections.

1935-9 Fought against National Government; appeasement of Hitler; the Hitler-Stalin pact. Condemned Moscow trials and defended Trotsky in public debates with DN Pritt.

1940	Elected Chairman, British Section of World Jewish Congress, the body's wartime European headquarters.

1942	In this capacity was among the first to warn the world of Hitler's "Final Solution of the Jewish question", and mount worldwide campaign to save European Jewry from genocide. 1944	Successfully defended trade-unionists prosecuted for violating wartime anti-strike laws.

1945	Visited recently liberated Buchenwald and Belsen Nazi concentration camps as member of parliamentary delegations.

1946	Campaigned against Labour Government's military attacks on Jewish migrants to Palestine, largely concentration-camp refugees.

1948	Launched first campaign to abolish capital punishment.

1951	Opposed Labour Government's rearmament programme.

1955-7	Fought renewed campagn against capital punishment.

1959	Co-founder of Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.

1960	As Chairman of Victory for Socialism, attacked Gaitskell's leadership of the Labour Party.

1961	Following LP Conference vote for nuclear disarmament, voted in Parliament against defence estimates, along with four other Labour MPs. Expelled from Parliamentary Labour Party.

1965	Successfully carried bill through Parliament to abolish capital punishment.

1966	Won election with increased majority, despite intervention of a pro-hanging candidate in the aftermath of the local Moors murders.

1967	Wrote open letter condemning Harold Wilson's attack on the right of Labour MPs to criticise the Labour Government, and accusing him of betraying socialist principles. When the Chief Whip tried to pacify him with compliments describing his campaign against capital punishment as his "great memorial", he replied: "The only memorial I would value is that I have given a lifetime of service in the Labour Party's continuing effort to establish a socialist society under a Labour Government in this country."

1968	Died.

War Aims
I have added a reference to "war aims" ... this relates to an intervention in the House of Commons on 15 October 1940. There is more to this than meets the eye, and I will try to flesh out the entry, when and if I can find out more. The "war aims" issue was at that time one of the most contentious political issues ... you will see it referenced in Churchill's famous "The Few" speech of 20 August 1940. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.12.71.146 (talk) 08:40, 11 March 2011 (UTC)