Maurice Orbach


Maurice Orbach was a British Labour Party politician.

Life

Background

Born to a Jewish family, Orbach was educated at technical college in Wales and as an extramural student at New York University.

Service

Orbach was a lifelong member of Poale Zion.
He was general secretary of the Jewish Trades Advisory Council from 1940 and remained its secretary until his death in 1976.
He was chairman of Central Middlesex Group hospital management committee.
He was active in the World Jewish Congress. In 1954, on behalf of both the WJC and Winston Churchill, he went to Cairo to help save the lives of Jews sentenced to death as part of the Lavon Affair. Later, he said that Egypt's President, Gamal Abdel Nasser, had agreed to spare their lives but then reneged to balance their deaths with members of Muslim Brotherhood.

Political career

Orbach contested Huntingdonshire in the 1931 election and Willesden East in 1935 and in a 1938 by-election. In 1937 he was elected to the London County Council, representing St Pancras South West.
He was elected Member of Parliament for Willesden East in 1945, serving until his defeat in 1959, and for Stockport South from 1964 until his death just before the 1979 general election. His successor was Thomas McNally.

Personal life

In 1935, Orbach married Ruth, an American, who later taught English to refugees from Nazi Germany. She served as chairman of Pioneer Women. She died in 1983.
His daughter Susie is a psychotherapist, writer and co-founder of The Women's Therapy Centre in London. His son Laurence taught history at Columbia University, New York, before founding Quarto Publishing in London in 1976. He was chairman and CEO of The Quarto Group, Inc.

Legacy

At his death in 1979, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency called him a "prominent leader of Anglo Jewry" and stated "a stalwart Zionist, he was a founder of the Labour Friends of Israel."
In 2010 The Guardian referred to him as "a self-proclaimed Labour Zionist who had conspicuously failed to support Israel during the Suez crisis."