Be a #mensch Mensch is a Yiddish word, meaning a person of genuine decency and moral backbone. Today, in 2026, having 'moral backbone' means to stand publicly with the Jewish community at a time when visible solidarity is most in need.
Join us and the British Friends of Israel on the #mensch contingent on Sunday Immediately after October 7th, while the Islamist-left alliance were celebrating the Hamas pogroms, an important petition was set up as a way to establish solidarity with the people of Israel. A small number of non-Jews had created British Friends of Israel (BFOI) which then launched the petition in
Join the #mensch contingent on the rally against anti-Semitism this Sunday On Sunday, in Downing Street, at 1pm, at the rally organised by JLC and the Board of Deputies, non-Jews need to be visible. Come and find the #mensch contingent and be visible too.
The Green Party — Credible Alternative or Racist Party? Our Fight campaigners were in Archway last Sunday to warn voters in the upcoming council elections that the Green Party has changed; it is no longer the cranky, tree-hugging party of yesteryear, and is fast becoming Britain’s most racist party. Eve Kay describes the Green Party's anti-Semitic turn.
Police Stop Our Fight Joining March — Again Kurpa Patel was at the Together Alliance march to highlight a growing intolerance, spearheaded by the Green Party. She was also part of an Our Fight group that tried to join the march but was prevented by the police. Is the Met saying that we and our Jewish allies are the far right, she asks.
An Update on the 2026 Our Fight Delegation to Israel Unfortunately we've had to cancel our trip to Israel for Yom HaShoah, but we hope to reschedule around the third anniversary of October 7th. In the meantime, join us for a special visit to Nottingham's National Holocaust Museum, with guided tour and seminar. A coach from London is also available.
April 1st, 1933 was the Nazi's Boycott Day "We chose those images — from five years before Kristallnacht — to say that the best way to ensure we are not 'here again' is by resisting the modern equivalent of Boycott Day, and take a stand against boycotts." Mark Birbeck writes of the anniversary of the Nazi's Boycott Day, in 1933.