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Rebel With a Cause
The Corbyns could trace their roots in England back to the eighteenth century and beyond. Farmers, priests, a tailor, a chemist and a solicitor conformed to a traditional middle-class background which in 1915 produced David Corbyn. David met his future wife Naomi Josling in 1936, at a meeting about the Spanish Civil War, when both were twenty-one-year-old students at London University. Naomi was studying science.
On 4 October that year Oswald Mosley, the leader of the British Union of Fascists, organised a march through Londonâs East End to assert his power. Met with fierce opposition by socialists and local inhabitants, the ensuing âBattle of Cable Streetâ entered folklore, especially among British Jews, as an example of their resilience. According to Jeremy Corbyn, David and Naomiâs fourth son, both his parents were present at the famous confrontation, in which 175 people were injured. Those who later met his parents have cast considerable doubt on this claim. Similarly, Corbyn would boast that his father considered volunteering to fight in Spain, but that is also unlikely. Neither parent was an adventurer: rather they were hard-working, intelligent professionals. Their son, it appears, added Cable Street and the Spanish Civil War to their life stories to camouflage his comfortable middle-class roots.
David Corbyn, a skilled engineer, was employed by Westinghouse Brake & Signal Co., a British manufacturer of electrical devices used by the railways. Following the outbreak of the Second World War, his then employers, English Electric, moved their factory to the West Country, to avoid German bombs. The family settled in Chippenham, a historic market town between Bristol and Swindon. Davidâs income increased, and he was able to buy a large stone house surrounded by a garden, fields and woods in Kington St Michael, a village three miles north of the town. In that pleasant environment, Corbynâs three older brothers were born â David, Andrew and Piers. All of them were clearly intelligent: David would become an electrical engineer and Andrew a mining engineer, while Piers pursued his childhood hobby to become an acknowledged weather expert.
By the time Jeremy was born, on 26 May 1949, the Corbyns owned a car, an unusual luxury in the immediate post-war years, but the whole family dressed scruffily, and were renowned for their unconventional lifestyle, not least because in a Tory area both parents were members of the local Labour Party. In that era there was nothing unusual in socialists sending their children to private primary schools to guarantee a good education and success at the 11-Plus exam. Indeed, most of the ministers in Clement Attleeâs Labour government had been either privately educated or sent to grammar schools. Nor was it unusual that the Corbyns moved to another area after their second son, Andrew, failed his 11-Plus. He successfully re-sat the exam and entered Haberdashersâ Adams grammar school in Newport, Shropshire. Jeremy would follow him there four years later. The familyâs new home, Yew Tree Manor, a five-bedroom seventeenth-century farmhouse, was exceptionally luxurious compared to that of most families, who struggled through post-war austerity with shortages of food and fuel and urban winter smog. Living an unconventional, slightly chaotic lifestyle, Naomi Corbyn, a grammar-school maths teacher, maintained a vegetable garden, while her husband converted their garage into a workshop where he would turn wood and build toys and carts.
The four sons were not detached from political or literary life. Naomi read modern fiction and contemporary history, and gave her youngest son a collection of George Orwellâs essays for his sixteenth birthday. Jeremy never claimed to have read them, although in 2016, he said he had been influenced by The Ragged-Trousered Philanthropists, a novel written in 1910 by Robert Tressell, the pseudonym of Robert Noonan, a house painter. The book describes the politically powerless underclass in Edwardian England, and its ruthless exploitation by employers and by the civic and religious authorities. Corbynâs reference to the novel fitted his narrative after he became Labourâs leader, but in truth, as a teenager he did not read any literature. Rather, he sat in his bedroom poring over Ordnance Survey maps of the surrounding countryside and gazing at a world atlas, dreaming of future journeys. In the corner was a hand-operated Gestetner duplicator, used to produce leaflets for the local Labour Party. By that time he was already a political animal.
At school, he was regarded as an outsider. Unlike his three elder brothers, he was a poor student, uninterested in sport, insouciant and gauche. âHe was not noticeably clever,â recalled Lynton Seymour-Whiteley, his finely-named Latin teacher. Striking out against the schoolâs mainstream, Corbyn joined the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, the Young Socialists at Wrekinâs Labour Party, and the League Against Cruel Sports, the last an unusual show of contrariness in a Tory shire famous for hunting and shooting. Considering that the school motto was âServe and Obeyâ, his refusal to join the Combined Cadet Force, and instead to hoe a vegetable plot, was principled defiance, and a singular reason for being remembered. In 1967 he sat his A-Levels, passing two exams with a grade E, and failing the third. With no chance of following his three brothers to university, he risked being marooned in Shropshire. On his last day at school, John Roberts, the headmaster, harshly predicted that fate: âYouâll never make anything of your life.â In embarrassment, his mother would later tell people that it was her youngest sonâs poor handwriting that had prevented his getting to university. Without any status, he was a downstart. He came to loathe achievers, especially undergraduates with ambitions to get to the top, disdained those who enjoyed material wealth, and showed little respect for religion. Most of all he hated the rich and successful, and identified with losers. In his self-protection he became conspicuously stubborn.
He drifted into odd jobs for nearby farmers and a local newspaper, but his main focus was to organise the Wrekin Young Socialists. May Day in 1967 was marked by taking a home-made red banner to the top of the nearby Wrekin hill, tying it to the trig point and singing âThe Red Flagâ. Soon after, the Young Socialists held their annual dinner at the Charlton Hotel in Wellington. Clean-shaven, Corbyn arrived in a dark suit, white shirt and tie, looking like a typical middle-class teenager. Except that he faced an uncertain future.
His salvation was his parentsâ suggestion that he apply to join Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO), a Foreign Office initiative funded since 1958 to send young male volunteers to work in Britainâs former colonies for ÂŁ12 pocket money per month and free board and lodging. Most recruits were graduates, not eighteen-year-olds with poor A-Levels. Corbynâs luck was to be sent as a âcadet teacherâ to Kingston, Jamaica. He was contracted by VSO to stay on the island for two years. On 28 August 1967 he boarded a BOAC Boeing 707 with about thirty other volunteers for the twelve-hour flight.
The contrast between Shropshire and Kingston was dramatic. Jamaica had become independent in 1962, but that had done little to change the extreme divisions between rich and poor. âIt was impossible not to be influenced by the gulf between the iconic haves and the have-nots,â recalled Michael Humfrey, the head of the islandâs Special Branch. âThat would certainly have affected Corbyn deeply.â The âhavesâ, especially the twenty-one families who dominated the island, lived in luxury, while the âhave-notsâ, who inhabited three areas about a mile from Corbynâs school â known as Dunkirk, Tel Aviv and McGregor Gully â survived on a subsistence diet, without mains water or electricity, under zinc roofs resting on cardboard walls. The gap was aggravated by racism â whites at the top, followed by the Lebanese and those with light-brown skin, known as the âhigh brownsâ, then the Chinese, with blacks at the bottom. Jamaicans, quipped the locals, had âan eye for shadeâ.
Corbyn was based at Kingston College, an elite grammar school for 1,600 fee-paying and scholarship pupils. Contrary to his version, the college was not in a âdeprivedâ area, nor in this period did he, despite his assertion that he was known throughout the school as âMr Beardmanâ, grow a beard. Contemporary photographs show him mop-haired and clean-shaven, and none of his pupils or fellow teachers recalls him with a beard.
His one task was to teach Caribbean geography four times a week to third-form boys, all of whom had passed the 11-Plus, in classes of about thirty-five. Later, he would exaggerate that there were seventy pupils in his class. âIt was a really defining moment of my life,â he would say, âbecause I was thrown in at the deep end as an eighteen-year-old.â He kept ahead by the time-honoured ruse for beginner teachers of reading the textbook in advance of the lesson, then reciting it. In years to come, he would not admit to the schoolâs elite status. Dissembling further, in January 2018 he told GQ magazine that he had been âworking at schools and theatres and taught polio-stricken children in camps for the victimsâ. In truth, he worked at just the one school, helped with a single production in one theatre, and only briefly appeared at one camp for polio victims. There was a charity for such children attached to the townâs university, and a local organiser recalls âone white man helpingâ, but did not identify him as Corbyn. His only job was to teach. Years on, he would boast that his experiences taught him to control a crowd and to deal with a crisis. His students recall the opposite.
Standing out with his pale skin, strange âbouncy walkâ and unusually long hair, and always wearing the same clothes â later dubbed âOxfam-reject styleâ â he faced a class which, Robert Buddan, one of his pupils, recalls, âteased him. We were a bit troublesome and didnât make things easy for him. He was a good target.â Asking his charges to explain Jamaican swearwords did not improve Corbynâs standing. Faced with boys who spoke out in class and directly challenged any poor mark, he regularly exploded in anger. âHe would shout at us and turn red,â says Buddan. The apprentice teacher was also unable to add up the marks he awarded for classwork accurately, and the boys frequently complained that his final totals were wrong. He was soon mocked across the school as âFire Redâ, especially after one particularly humiliating incident. While Corbynâs attention was distracted, a boy called Michael (âMadâ) Reid crept up behind the seated teacher and clipped a lock of his long hair. Corbyn leapt to his feet, lunged at the laughing boy and chased him through the school, at one point squeezing through a window on the first floor, keeping up the chase until he lost the trail. Sheepish and red-faced, he returned to the classroom. No one was punished by a detention or a caning.
At weekends the VSO volunteers would join up with Peace Corps aid workers from Canada and the USA, and meet local girls to drink Old Charlieâs rum and dance to rock music. Corbyn never took part. âHe didnât mix with us,â recalled Dennis Dawes, another VSO cadet and later a Hampshire police officer. âHe was serious-looking.â Corbyn even avoided the Christmas Day party at the British High Commission. The unsociable teenager came to notice just once, in November 1967, when he was working as a lighting technician at The Barn, the islandâs first professional theatre, which was staging a production called Itâs Not My Fault, Baby. Otherwise, he spent weekends with groups of ten Kingston College pupils hiking across the hills above the town and towards the 7,402-foot peak of the Blue Mountain. On one trip to the north coast they watched refugees from nearby Cuba landing on the beach. One hundred miles to the north, a heroic figure dressed in military fatigues was fighting American imperialists.
During Corbynâs first year in Jamaica, the island was on the edge of turmoil. Fascination with Fidel Castroâs Cuban republic, and the recent death of Che Guevara in Bolivia, had spread unrest across the region â although, unlike those in South America, Fidelâs few disciples in Jamaica were cautioned against violence. Castro had judged Jamaica to be unsuitable for guerrilla warfare, and his intelligence service made only limited contact with the islandâs young Marxists. These were led by Hugh Small, Trevor Munroe and D.K. Duncan, each inspired to overthrow the white colonial legacy by Americaâs Black Power movement, especially Martin Luther King, Stokely Carmichael and, most importantly, Malcolm Xâs anti-Semitic Nation of Islam, which condemned âZionist dollarsâ bankrolling colonial oppression. âWe were young, black agitators looking for answers,â recalled Small. Ever since two British soldiers had been killed by black nationalists inspired by an American Trotskyist in 1965, Small had led the fight against Washingtonâs influence, but his group, dispirited and fragmented, was failing to throw off the shackles of British rule.
Towards the end of 1967, the socialist Peopleâs National Party (PNP) unexpectedly lost a second successive general election to the centrist Labour Party. Many suspected electoral fraud. Following that defeat, Leroy Cooke, a Marxist, was appointed as the PNPâs youth organiser to agitate in schools. Peter Croft, a VSO cadet teacher who arrived at the same time as Corbyn, recalls their âendless discussions about Jamaican politics and the personalities involvedâ. Both young men read reports of the local socialistsâ tirades against colonialism, imperialism, racism and the capitalistsâ exploitation of Third World countries, and witnessed from the periphery the raw struggle between Jamaicaâs rich whites and impoverished blacks. In conversations over a beer in a bar on Friday after school with four other teachers, Corbyn would discuss the unrest. âHe asked about the difference between Labour and the PNP,â recalled Victor Chang, one of his drinking companions, âand was interested in socialism. He was curious about Jamaican Marxism.â
Unknown to Chang, Corbyn was unsettled by Kingston College. His classroom overlooked the schoolâs large chapel, where once a week Bishop Gibson, the Anglican cleric who had founded the school back in 1925, still preached. The pupils were focused on academic excellence, and were proud of the schoolâs reputation as a powerhouse of sport. The grounds were located close to the islandâs famous Sabina Park cricket ground, and England played the West Indies there in February 1968, but Corbyn was uninterested in that intense contest, or in the endless track competitions outside his classroom. The schoolâs motto â Fortis Cadere Cedere Non Potest (The Brave May Fall But Never Yield) â was painted in large letters on a wall overlooking the sports field. Equally irritating to him were the boysâ well-pressed khaki uniforms and ties, the compulsory combined cadet force, and the choir. Lest he forget religionâs importance, he could see Holy Trinity Catholic Cathedral across the road and, a little further down, St Georgeâs school, a rival private college rigorously overseen by Jesuit priests. Taken together â education, sport, tradition, the army, organised religion and the quest for achievement â Kingston College epitomised nearly everything Corbyn loathed.
As 1968 began, the mood in Kingston became tense. Walter Rodney, a twenty-six-year-old Guyanese, arrived from Havana to forge an anti-capitalist alliance between radicals, Black Power supporters and what were called âthe discontentedâ. Rodney was already well known to the islandâs Special Branch. In 1962, while studying at University College of the West Indies in Kingston, he had travelled to Havana, where he met Fidel Castro, and returned to Jamaica with a plan to spread Marxism across the West Indies. Later that year he flew to a so-called peace congress in Leningrad, earning the CIA classification of âconvinced Communist with pro-Castro ideals and an interest in Black Powerâ. Back in Jamaica, he took a small group of young Marxist graduates to âReasoningsâ â meetings across the island with the dispossessed and Rastafarians. Encouraged by Armando Velazquez, the Cuban consul on the island, he spoke about revolution at secondary schools, churches and youth centres. Although Rodney was banned by the schoolâs administrators from speaking at Kingston College, Corbyn heard about his lectures, and about CIA plots to overthrow governments in Cuba and across Latin America. He learned about the importance of the Soviet Unionâs contribution to Castroâs revolution. Without Moscowâs assistance, the leftâs ambitions across South America would have been snuffed out by America. And ever since the failed CIA-inspired invasion of Cuba at the Bay of Pigs in 1961, Jamaica had been treated as Washingtonâs appendage, and hated for that.
In the summer of 1968 Corbyn was joined at Kingston College by Paul Wimpory, a physics graduate from Birmingham, also on a VSO contract, and the two became friends. By that time Corbyn had moved into a rented room in a house on Easton Avenue, a residential area in New Kingston, owned by the aunt of Dawn Tapper, one of the schoolâs English teachers. On the eve of her marriage, Tapper asked Corbyn to be the chief usher in the church. He agreed, only to forget his principal chore â he left all the wedding programmes in the house, and there was no time to return to collect them. As a result, the ceremony was confused, the minister omitted parts of the service, and the congregation did not say the responses. âHe felt very bad about it,â Tapper recalled.
Walter Rodney lived in an adjoining road to Corbyn. Wimpory believed that Corbyn, no longer under the direct supervision of the High Commission, was ârebelling against his affluent backgroundâ and his links with traditional Britain. None of the VSO students who attended a drinks reception at the High Commission in early September recall seeing Corbyn. By then, about to start his second year of teaching, Corbyn frequently expressed to Wimpory his dismay about the âvast inequalitiesâ on the island, 137 years after slavery in Jamaica was abolished. He became convinced that the British Empire had not benefited Jamaicans, and that it had left behind a legacy of guilt for the gross exploitation of innocent, impoverished people.
On 15 October, Walter Rodney attempted to return to Jamaica via Canada. By then his trips to Cuba and Moscow, combined with reports of student revolts in Europe and guerrilla warfare financed by Moscow in Asia, Africa and Latin America, had aroused fear among pro-Western Jamaicans. In that mood, the government banned his entry. Three days later, the university campus in Kingston erupted. For two days, left-wing students rioted, burning buildings and cars in what became known as the Rodney Riots. The unrest was put down, but the government failed to recover its authority. Remarkably, none of the young Marxists recalls seeing Corbyn during the rioting, and neither Wimpory nor Chang ever discussed those tumultuous events with him. He has never mentioned witnessing the uprising, and has never since met the Marxist students who subsequently became prominent Jamaicans. Yet their influence on him would seem to have been profound. Within eight weeks of the riots, Corbyn decided he could no longer tolerate Kingston College. To his good fortune, the school had been underpaying him by ÂŁ1 per week, so he received a lump sum of ÂŁ52 (about ÂŁ900 today), and planned in secret how to escape.
The first casualty of his leaving was one of the collegeâs pupils, Derrick Aarons, a fourteen-year-old weekend hiker and a participant in the Duke of Edinburgh Award. Aarons had completed all the requirements for the awardâs Bronze Medal, and had been assured by Corbyn that the necessary forms had been sent to London, and that in January 1969 he would receive his medal from Jamaicaâs governor general. The excited boy frequently asked Corbyn if he had received a reply yet from London. The answer was always no. In January Aarons returned from his holidays, and was told that Corbyn had decamped back to Britain. The medal never materialised. âI was,â recalled Aarons, âa very disappointed teenager.â Had Corbyn even submitted the forms? During a recent trip to London, Aarons, today a prominent Caribbean doctor, contacted Corbynâs office to arrange a reunion. âI was convinced,â he said, âthat he would remember me as the keenest of his hikers, but I never received any acknowledgement.â
The more important casualties of Corbynâs decision to quit early were the pupils in his four geography classes. No replacement could be found. âI always thought how curious to leave part of the way through the school year,â observed Paul Wimpory. âIt was not very professional.â Corbyn left Jamaica, Dawn Tapper recalled, just days after her wedding on 14 December. âJeremy told us that he was returning to Britain,â she said. âI gave him a piece of my wedding cake to eat on his journey.â
Corbyn has always concealed what he did after leaving Kingston. âI spent my youth in Jamaica,â he told Channel 4 News in 2015, but did not elaborate. According to his account, he left Jamaica in July 1969, having fulfilled his two-year contract. Not only is that untrue, but he has never honestly revealed what happened during the missing seven months. His description of the journey from Jamaica is vague: âI took a sailing boat around the Caribbean, and then a fishing boat to Guyana.â The only local passenger ship leaving Kingston and going as far as Trinidad was a small island-hopping freighter. That left 430 miles along the coast to Georgetown, Guyanaâs capital â hardly the route for a âfishing boatâ.
Corbyn says that he âspent some time in Guyanaâ, a pertinent revelation. The former British colony was then Walter Rodneyâs home. Until 1964, Cheddi Jagan, a Marxist, had been the countryâs leader, but with the connivance of the British and the CIA he had been replaced by a pro-Western prime minister. Nevertheless, in 1968 the strong Cuban presence in Guyana, Castroâs base for guerrilla warfare in South America, remained undiminished, and with Rodneyâs help Corbyn could have flown to Cuba via Mexico. He has never said when he first visited Cuba, and the extent of his Marxist education in Guyana remains unknown. Like so much of his account of his life until he left Guyana, it is partly romanticised, and possibly an invention.
According to Corbynâs version, he travelled from Guyana to Brazil, and on to Uruguay, Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Paraguay, Peru, back to Buenos Aires, and then sailed to France in 1970. He has said that during the year he spent travelling he had been impressed by the culture of South Americaâs indigenous tribes, the history of the European settlersâ revolts against the colonial powers, and the countriesâ battles during the 1950s against rapacious American corporations and CIA subversion. The journey confirmed his socialist ideals. Here was a cause that suited his âloserâ personality â he would fight for the downtrodden against their oppressors.
More recently, Corbyn has claimed that he was influenced by Open Veins of Latin America, by the Uruguayan journalist, writer and poet Eduardo Galeano, a critique of the exploitation of the continentâs Indians by monarchs, the Catholic Church and multinational American corporations. That is doubtful. The book was first published in 1971, a year after Corbyn returned to Britain, and he could not read Spanish. Pertinently, shortly before his death in 2015 Galeano repudiated the book as a distortion of t...