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Thursday 28 August 2008

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from Manchester Metro News Thursday 6  April  2000

Vandals wreck a war hero's military grave
by Claire Hindley

VANDALS have desecrated the grave of a war hero. The thugs have also trashed surrounding burial plots at Philips Park Cemetery in Bradford, east Manchester, tipping over tombstones and tearing up plants.
Archaeologist Jeffrey Millar discovered the devastation while inspecting the site for inclusion in a
local heritage trail. At the centre of the damage was the grave of Second Lieutenant Leonard Fleet, the first Jewish airman from Manchester to be killed in the First World War.

His ornate marble memorial stone had been smashed into three pieces, which were left scattered in the grass.

Elsewhere, also in the Jewish section of the cemetery, other gravestones had been pushed over and flowers ripped from their pots.

Mr Millar said: "It is an insult to all the men and women who gave their lives for future generations.

"I can’t stop thinking about the bravery of the second lieutenant, who was only 22 when he died, in comparison to the cowardice of the thugs who destroyed his grave. I don’t know if it was anti-semitic gesture but it is deeply offensive to everybody."

Mr Millar said he would inform the War Graves Commission about the vandalism in the hope the grave will be repaired.

Sonny Fromson, chairman of the Synagogue Commission for Funerals and Supervision, said: "It is particularly bad that it was the grave of an airman killed in the war. This should not have happened after all he did for the country."

A spokesman for Manchester City Council, which is responsible for the maintenance of cemeteries, said: "The council has pledged to tackle the problems caused by vandals in cemeteries."

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