Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac
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The study you quoted above is one of the sources for the statements I have been making about the rarity of public displays of drunkenness and violence towards women among Jews in the East East of London.
I believe I quoted Inspector Barker on another thread many moons ago.
I also quoted the following:
During the whole time I had charge there I never saw a drunken Jew. I always found them industrious, and good fellows to live among.
(Inspector Edmund Reid,
Lloyd's Weekly London Newspaper, 4th February, 1912)
I would also cite # 426 in A photograph of Joseph Lawende in 1899
in which I quoted from the same study as the one from which you quoted, as well as other sources, in reference to the Whitechapel murders, as well as the assault on Stride.
One of my sources was a police officer who witnessed the accusations being made against the Jews on the very day of the Hanbury Street murder, three days before Elizabeth Long told police about a dark 'foreigner'.
He was not the only policeman to note that the accusations, so readily made, were based on nothing more than prejudice.
Soon after the Hanbury Street murder, young men marched down Hanbury Street chanting that the murder had been committed by a Jew - on a day which happened to be the holiest Sabbath in the Jewish calendar.
There also appeared an erroneous newspaper report that the murderer had left a chalked message in the back yard of 29 Hanbury Street.
I commend your post for its quotation from Englander's study, but cannot see why you think it supports your final comment.
I suggest that the scene was set for the murderer to give the public what it wanted: a chalked message pointing an accusatory finger at you know whom.
And on the night of the next murders, after a body was found outside a Jewish club, an item of bloody clothing from the latest victim just happened to be left next to a message accusing the Jews.
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