Eglantyne jebb biography of nancy


  • Eglantyne jebb biography of nancy
  • Eglantyne jebb biography of nancy

  • Eglantyne jebb biography of nancy
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    100 years ago this May, a courageous Shropshire-woman was arrested in Trafalgar Square. Eglantyne Jebb had been protesting about the starvation facing thousands of children inside Austria and Germany, countries that had been at war with Britain just a few months earlier.

    ‘Fight the Famine’

    Appalled to learn that after the armistice, around 800 children were dying every week in Germany alone, Jebb was distributing hundreds of leaflets and posters, and some accounts mention her chalking up the pavements, a traditional suffragette tactic, with slogans such as ‘End the Blockade’, and ‘Fight the Famine.’

    Jebb distributed hundreds of leaflets and posters.

    Anxious to avoid attention being drawn to their policy of continuing the economic blockade to Europe as a means of pushing through reparations, the British government had Jebb removed.

    This, it would turn out, was a strategic error. Jebb was not a woman to be hushed up.

    Jebb knew that technically she had broken the law