Wednesday, 20 May 2015

Hetty Bower over 90 years a campaigner for peace and justice


The remarkable inspirational Hetty Bower  died on the 20th May 2013 at the age of 108. From the First World War to the day she  died she was a tireless campaigner for peace and justice, who was still marching and joining demonstrations well into her second century.
For Hetty the myth of ‘our brave boys’ going off to fight the enemy was quickly dispelled when she saw disabled and limbless servicemen returning during World War I.  She had met people who were committed to not killing and seen how badly conscientious objectors were treated in 1918.  She became and remained a pacifist. 
In  a lifetime of campaigns she was involved in the General Strike campaign in the 1920s, she could recall the "battle of Cable Street" in 1936 when fascists were stopped from marching through east London.  During the Second World War, During the war, with two young daughters to care for, she volunteered to help at the offices of the Czech Refugee Trust Fund and subsequently ended up running a Czech Refugee Hostel in North London for Trade Unionists, Socialists, Communists, Jews and anyone else they could get out of Czechoslovakia during that period. She was also a founding member of the Campaign For Nuclear Disarmament, and a veteran of many other progressive causes, joining the anti-war protests over Iraq. An activist to the very end. 
She said: "I have lived for a very long time and I have a very good memory. I've lived through two world wars and I have spent most of my adult life working for peace on our planet. I don't think human beings are civilised while we still waste time and money killing each other, when we should be sitting at a table discussing how to improve the lives of ordinary people."

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