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Peter Cadogan 1921-2007
John Rowley
Peter Cadogan was once called "the
England". He campaigned most expelled socialist in
effectively on many fronts for
peace, justice and human
rights. His most important
mentors were William Blake,
Gandhi and John MacMurray.
Peter Cadogan was born in
Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1921
where he witnessed the poverty
and humiliation of workers during the Depression  something
that drove him all his life.
After working as an insurance
clerk, he served in the Air Sea
Rescue Service from 1941 to
1946. During periods of inactivity he read Shaw, Wells, John
MacMurray, Laski and, most
importantly, Lenin's State and
Revolution ("a lethal confidence-trick of a book", which he
had been "completely taken in
by").
On demobilisation, he joined
the Communist Party, thrilling
to the ideas buzzing around the
CP's Historian's Group with
Christopher Hill, EP Thompson, and Eric Hobsbawm.
However, in 1956, Khruschev's demolition of Stalin
came as a blow and, when the
USSR invaded Hungary, Peter's
sharp criticisms found their way
into the national press.
He was suspended from the
CP and then quit, joining the
Labour Party. Two years later, he
organised for them the first
nuclear base demonstration in
Britain, at the Thor missile base
near Ely.
He was then recruited by
Gerry Healy in 1959 to become
a founder member of the Socialist Labour League (SLL) Â which
later became the Workers' Revolutionary Party. As a result,
Peter was expelled from the
Labour Party.
Soon discovering that the SLL
was just as dogmatic and intolerant as the CP, he formed the
"Stamford Faction" with Peter
Fryer and Ken Coates, and was
expelled once again.
He was next recruited by the
Luxemburgist, Tony Cliff, and
wrote the first feature article in
the first issue of International
Socialism (the theoretical journal of what is now the Socialist
Worker Party) in 1960. Peter's
belief in the freedom of speech
soon led Cliff to eject him.
It was then that he became
known as England's most
expelled socialist. Not an
achievement, he stressed, but an
invaluable learning experience
about the tyranny of the ego.
In 1960, when Bertrand Russell proposed nonviolent civil
disobedience against nuclear
weapons, Peter joined the
"Committee of 100", later
becoming its national secretary.
Peter was also the spokesper-
son for  but did not belong to Â
the "Spies for Peace", who
revealed that 14 huge underground bunkers had been built
as "Regional Seats of Government" in the event of nuclear
war.
He set up the "Save Biafra"
campaign within days of the war
starting in May 1968.
From 1970 to 1981, Peter was
the general secretary of the
South Place Ethical Society at
Conway Hall.
In 1975, he wrote Direct
Democracy, integrating his "revelatory discovery" of William
Blake and Friedrich Nietzsche.
From 1993, he worked for
The Gandhi Foundation, leading
their project in Northern Ireland
and advocating nonviolent
direct action.
Peter continued to write to
the very end, never afraid to
speak his mind. This seemed at
first to many as intolerance, even
arrogance.
In fact, all soon discovered
that it was no more than his passion for accuracy and clear
thinking in the pursuit of justice. Like Gandhi, he became
and remained friends with all
his temporary enemies.
Peter co-founded The Blake
Society in 1995, and was its
president before becoming "life
vice-president". He told those
around his sickbed that Blake's
Jerusalem (Plate 99) "said it all".
His dying words were Blake's
moral imperative: "Live differently!" Peter did just that, his
integrity intact.
There will be a Celebration of
Peter's life in St James's Church,
Piccadilly, London, where Blake
was christened, next Spring.
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