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  Msg # 408 of 620 on ZZUK4446, Thursday 10-29-25, 2:32  
  From: NY.TRANSFER.NEWS@BLYTHE.O  
  To: ALL  
  Subj: The Orwell File: Brit Cops Thought He wa  
 XPost: uk.media, U$ChargingStrandedU$Citizens 
  
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 The Orwell File: Brit Cops Thought He was a Red, Kept Tabs 
  
 Via NY Transfer News Collective  *  All the News that Doesn't Fit 
  
 AP via rick kissell (no URL) - Sep 4, 2007 
  
  
 Britain's 'Big Brother' Kept Tabs on Orwell 
  
 By JILL LAWLESS 
  
 (Sept. 3) - George Orwell's left-wing views and bohemian clothes led 
 British police to label him a communist - but the MI5 spy agency 
 stepped in to correct that view, the writer's newly released security 
 file reveals. 
  
 The secret file that MI5 kept on the author from 1929 until his death 
 in 1950 is being declassified Tuesday by the National Archives. 
  
 It reveals that in contrast to the fictional "Big Brother," the cruel 
 and all-seeing secret police of Orwell's classic "1984," MI5 took a 
 surprisingly benign view of the writer. 
  
 Orwell savaged the totalitarianism of Stalin's Russia in "Animal Farm" 
 and "1984." But he was also a socialist who railed against inequality 
 in earlier works such as "Down and Out in Paris and London" and "The 
 Road to Wigan Pier." 
  
 The documents show Orwell - whose real name was Eric Arthur Blair - 
 attracted the attention of police in 1936 for alleged "communist 
 activities in Wigan." Then 33, he had gone to the mining town to 
 research a book about working-class life in northern England. 
  
 MI5 had already been watching Orwell since 1929, when he was a 
 struggling journalist in Paris, attempting to write for left-wing 
 publications. 
  
 In 1942, Orwell drew police interest again while working for the Indian 
 service of the British Broadcasting Corp. A report by a sergeant named 
 Ewing of Special Branch, the British police intelligence wing, said 
 Orwell had "advanced communist views, and several of his Indian friends 
 say they have often seen him at communist meetings." 
  
 "He dresses in a bohemian fashion both at his office and in his leisure 
 hours," police noted. 
  
 The file shows that MI5 took no action against Orwell over Ewing's 
 report. In a note, an MI5 officer named W. Ogilvie reveals that he 
 phoned Special Branch to ask why Ewing had described Orwell as having 
 "advanced Communist views." 
  
 A police inspector replied that the sergeant felt Orwell was an 
 "unorthodox communist." 
  
 "I gathered that the good Sergeant was rather at a loss as to how he 
 could describe this rather individual line," Ogilvie wrote. 
  
 "It is evident from his recent writings ... that he does not hold with 
 the Communist Party nor they with him," he added. 
  
 The Special Branch files on Orwell were released by the archives in 
 2005. MI5's response had been secret until now. It was declassified as 
 part of a phased release of MI5 files under the Freedom of Information 
 Act, which was passed in 2005. 
  
 Other documents in the file reveal MI5 did not consider Orwell a 
 security risk. In 1943, it was asked whether Orwell should be 
 accredited as a journalist with Allied armed forces headquarters. "The 
 Security Service have records of this man, but raise no objection to 
 his appointment," was the reply. 
  
 A year earlier MI5 had approved Orwell's wife Eileen as suitable for 
 employment with the Ministry of Food. 
  
 Despite his lifelong socialist views, in 1949, a year before his death 
 at 46, Orwell gave the government a list of people he thought were 
 Stalinist sympathizers or "fellow travelers." 
  
 The declassified file includes photographs, Orwell's passport 
 application and a 1936 Special Branch summary of his career, which 
 began conventionally - education at the elite Eton College and service 
 as a colonial police officer in Burma - before taking a radical turn. 
  
 Special Branch notes that he "eked out a precarious living" as a 
 freelance journalist and moved to France to research "Down and Out in 
 London and Paris." 
  
 The last entry in the file notes simply that "George Orwell ... died on 
 the 21st January 1950." 
  
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