Sunday, October 09, 2022

They did not pass!

by New Worker correspondent


London communists returned to Cable Street last weekend, to remember the epic day in 1936 when the Sir Oswald Mosley’s fascist legions were stopped in their tracks in London on 4th October 1936.
    NCP members and Greek KKE comrades paid tribute to the heroic stand of the Londoners who stopped the Blackshirts, at a ceremony by the Cable Street mural in London’s East End.
    On that day, thousands of working people, led by the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) and the Independent Labour Party (ILP) rose early from their beds to occupy four key places along the route of a planned march by Mosley and his British Union of Fascists, in order to block its path.
    Throughout the day they stood firm, despite mounted police baton charges and numerous arrests.
    By noon, Gardiner’s Corner was impassable due to the number of anti-fascist demonstrators. Police tried to clear a route through Leman Street – but this was blocked by a tram, deliberately abandoned by its driver.
    Police tried to reroute the march through Cable Street. Anti-fascist demonstrators, the vast majority local residents, blocked Cable Street with barricades in three different places. Police fought their way through one barricade, only to be confronted by the second.
    Eventually the police gave up and ordered Mosley to abandon his march. They escorted him to the Embankment where his followers dispersed.
    This was a humiliating defeat for Mosley and it eventually led to a cutting off of vital funds from his main financial sponsor, the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. The Battle of Cable Street marked a significant turning point and the end of any prospects of fascism becoming a truly mass movement in Britain, as it had done in some other European countries.
    The massive mural in Cable Street, painted by a number of local artists, was started in 1979 and finally completed in 1983. The work has been vandalised by fascists several times, but it was substantially restored in 2011.
    The design was based on original photographs of the battle and the buildings of the day. Some of the people who took part in the battle are depicted in the mural, along with others who symbolise the people of the East End today.

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