Originally posted by Wickerman
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Did BS-man murder Liz Stride?
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Originally posted by The Good Michael View PostWhat I said was that the belief that a certain interpretation of the GSG could cause riots, was one that was a pro-Jewish one. I also said that I don't know what the GSG meant. The only interpretation that would send people over the edge was one that a Jew wrote the graffiti, thereby, showing some sort of connection or pride about the murders. How is any of this some sort of swimming against the stream?
Mike
Just because this area was predominantly Jewish doesn't mean it was exclusively so, Gentiles would have been regulars on the street also...and the feelings in general towards the local immigrant Jew was what the police feared would add fuel to any spark. The "Lipski" preoccupation by the police confirms that position.
Obviously context and the common linguistics of the period factor greatly into any interpretation of that message.
Ill just add to that when people called out "Murder" in the night during that period, it rarely involved an actual murder, or an attempted one.
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It was queries by the Home Office (first mentioned in a marginal comment by Godfrey Lushington on Swanson's Oct. 19th report) that sparked the communications concerning the Lipski comment. There is no evidence that the police had a "preoccupation" with the term, but rather the Home Office instead, to which Swanson and his lieutenants at CID tried to oblige.Best Wishes,
Hunter
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When evidence is not to be had, theories abound. Even the most plausible of them do not carry conviction- London Times Nov. 10.1888
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Originally posted by Hunter View PostIt was queries by the Home Office (first mentioned in a marginal comment by Godfrey Lushington on Swanson's Oct. 19th report) that sparked the communications concerning the Lipski comment. There is no evidence that the police had a "preoccupation" with the term, but rather the Home Office instead, to which Swanson and his lieutenants at CID tried to oblige.
The animosity towards this Jewish population segment in the East End is clear in the press of the day, as were the police fears.
I think the written evidence at Goulston intended to incite anti semitic reaction, perhaps even retaliatory action from outraged Jews, resulting in street violence that couldn't easily be controlled. I also think the writing and the cloth are likely from the same source. The cloth is a signature of sorts, and a way to claim the Eddowes murder, and the message is to distance himself from any culpability for the earlier murder on Jewish Immigrant property. Instead he suggests in a less than literal manner that we might want to look at the Jewish population on site that night for the culprit for that crime.
"The Jewes are not the men that will be blamed for nothing,", or "for no good reason", meaning, "there are reasons to blame the Jews for something".
This would mean that the killer in Mitre Square was aware of the Berner Street murder before writing the message, and would know that the club Jews were scrambling to stay out of any suspicions.
Since its possible the cloth was left there up to almost 70 minutes after the Mitre Square killing, there is ample time to have heard street chatter as the news spread on the streets.
The Mitre Square killer may or may not have been this Jack fellow, but I believe if he wrote the message he probably wasn't very fond of Jews as well.
Cheers
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Originally posted by c.d. View PostThat is some damn fine reasoning there, Wickerman.
c.d.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Hi Mike,
I don't think its a matter of "who started it" as much as who was "preoccupied "with the term, Lipski, as you say. In this, it is apparent that the Home Office was. The police investigation at this time was widespread and encompassed many avenues of inquiry, which Swanson's report bears out. The officials at the Home Office felt compelled to single out one of them, ironically, because at least Lushington thought Stride's assailant in this instance WAS a Jew.
I doubt there was any concern that a backlash from the Jewish community - at least violence or civil disobedience - was a threat compared to the opposite scenario already exemplified to some degree by the Pizer fiasco.Last edited by Hunter; 12-20-2014, 08:24 PM.Best Wishes,
Hunter
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When evidence is not to be had, theories abound. Even the most plausible of them do not carry conviction- London Times Nov. 10.1888
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostI'm not sure why you and Wickerman are trying to argue against the evidence in order to dismiss the graffiti?
No evidence exists to say who wrote it, when it was written, or why, though no shortage of belief exists to fill that gap.
The idea no one saw white chalk on black brick on their own home is very hard to swallow.
Jews were above all that infantile Gentile provocation, then there is the question of how many could actually read English.
I grew up knowing someone who could speak English fluently, but could not read. Is that so unique?
Jewish people were hardened to this treatment, they were used to it. If you were exposed to contempt, derogatory remarks, and provocative slander, why would you be interested when you see more of the same.
Common sense tells the resident Jew that these words scrawled in chalk are not intended as praise.
Why would they even read it, assuming they could?Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostI'm not sure why you and Wickerman are trying to argue against the evidence in order to dismiss the graffiti? There may have been a dozen people who told them it wasn't there the day before, but of course these witnesses would not have been encouraged by the police to speak publicly as the police angle was to promote the graffiti as irrelevant. However, any witnesses who could swear it was an old graffiti would have been trumpeted loudly, but no such person existed. The idea no one saw white chalk on black brick on their own home is very hard to swallow.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
What you say makes sense but do we have any record of police conversations with the residents of the building or are you simply speculating?
c.d.
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Police on the scene on record said its fresh and would have been rubbed off by the jewish residents/locals there.
Its in double cockney. That's from Fido.
The implications are staggering for those who think JtR was a Jew.Bona fide canonical and then some.
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Originally posted by Batman View PostPolice on the scene on record said its fresh and would have been rubbed off by the jewish residents/locals there.
Its in double cockney. That's from Fido.
The implications are staggering for those who think JtR was a Jew.
What exactly are those implications?
c.d.
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Originally posted by Batman View PostYou need a Jew blaming the Jews, who can't spell Jews.
In the late 90's I was searching on a Jewish Forum specifically to see if this word (Jews), written by the people themselves, had a variety of spellings, and to my astonishment one student wrote "Juwes" in a letter to another student.Last edited by Wickerman; 12-21-2014, 09:51 AM.Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostI can only mention this as a point of interest, but my original post from the late 1990's on the subject is likely on the first Casebook archived disks, I don't have a copy now.
In the late 90's I was searching on a Jewish Forum specifically to see if this word (Jews), written by the people themselves, had a variety of spellings, and to my astonishment one student wrote "Juwes" in a letter to another student.
I believe in this case though there are more versions that record Jewes than Juwes.
Cheers
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