Published in the Jerusalem Post Weekend Magazine, 6 September 2024
Sunday September 3, 1939 dawned clear and sunny in the south-west of England, but to me the weather meant nothing. Aged just 8 and hundreds of miles from home, I felt lost. I was surrounded by cousins, uncles and aunts, but I wanted my Mum and Dad and the familiar surroundings of home.
At dawn two days before, Germany had launched
an unprovoked assault on Poland. An advance force consisting of more
than 2,000 tanks crossed the border, supported by nearly 900 bombers and over
400 fighter planes. To people in Britain
the news meant that war was inevitable.
The government instantly put into effect the plans it had devised months before to protect city children from the anticipated aerial bombing. It began transferring youngsters in their thousands from cities and towns to rural areas. This evacuation, known as Operation Pied Piper, was the largest movement of people in British history, with over 1.5 million people evacuated, including 800,000 children.
The next day, Saturday, the papers were filled with pictures of bewildered boys and girls on crowded railway platforms, all carrying their gas masks and with their names firmly affixed to their coats with string. Mothers in tears waved to their little ones as they steamed out of railway stations bound for unknown destinations. My wealthy uncle, who had built up a
flourishing manufacturing business from scratch, had taken matters into his own
hands. He had traveled down to Somerset,
in the far south-west of the country, and rented a large derelict house. He then invited his married brothers and
sisters, if they wished, to come and join him and his family, or to send their
children, until the “emergency”, as it was called, resolved itself.
My parents earned their living from
a grocery store in London, sited within a largely Jewish population. They did not feel it would be right to close
down and flee. So, in accordance with
the posters that had begun to appear, they “stayed calm and carried on”. But they sent their only child to safety in
the country with his close family.
For most of the 1930s Britain had clung
to the trope that the First World War had been “the war to end wars”. The country persisted in yearning for peace,
despite the mounting evidence that peace was not to be had at any price.
Once Adolf Hitler had the reins of power in his hands, he began an ever accelerating program of rearmament. Much of Britain’s political elite approved, believing that Germany had been treated unfairly under the terms exacted after the First World War in the Treaty of Versailles. For years the UK government dragged its feet over calls to maintain an arms superiority over Germany. Only one voice in parliament rang out strong and clear against Hitler and the Nazi regime – Winston Churchill, who was labelled a “warmonger” on all sides.
Increasingly Hitler’s truly
aggressive and expansionist ambitions became clear. Just ahead of the 1936 Berlin Olympics,
German troops, in defiance of Versailles, marched into the Rhineland and
annexed it to the Reich. Hitler
proceeded to swallow Austria in March 1938, and immediately begin to demand
that the Sudetenland – the German populated borderlands of Czechoslovakia
– be “reunited” with the Fatherland.
In September 1938 the British prime minister, Neville Chamberlain, made a final bid to placate the implacable. He flew to Hitler’s residence at Berchtesgaden, and in discussions involving the French prime minister, the Italian leader Mussolini and his foreign minister, concluded what is known as the Munich Agreement. Britain, France, Italy and Germany agreed, without consulting Czechoslovakia, that “The occupation by stages of the predominantly German territory by German troops will begin on 1st October.” The document was signed on 29 September.
The next day Chamberlain flew back to England, and at the airport waved a flimsy piece of paper in the air. It was not the Munich agreement, but a separate non-aggression pact that he had induced Hitler to sign before leaving Berchtesgaden.
“This morning,” he announced to the
crowd, “I had another talk with the German Chancellor, Herr Hitler, and
here is the paper which bears his name upon it as well as mine…I would just
like to read it to you: ‘We regard the
agreement signed last night…as symbolic of the desire of our two peoples never
to go to war with one another again’.“
Later that day, he
stood outside the prime minister’s residence, 10 Downing Street, and told
the cheering crowd: “My good friends…a British Prime Minister has returned from
Germany bringing peace with honor. I believe it is peace for our time.”
A few days later the German army marched into
the Sudetenland and annexed it. In March
1939 the Czech prime minister was forced to sign away the rest of the country.
The Reich took over and it was ruled by Hitler’s Reichsprotektor.
That was when the British public began
preparing in earnest for the possibility of war.
Hitler’s next demand
was for the cession to Germany of Poland’s city port of Danzig. The Treaty of
Versailles had declared Danzig to be a free city administered by Poland and the
League of Nations. This time Britain and France were determined to thwart
Hitler’s insatiable demands. On March
31, 1939 they formed a military alliance with Poland that guaranteed its sovereignty
and independence, and promised to defend it if attacked.
The attack came on September 1, 1939. Chamberlain sent Hitler a note declaring that
if he did not withdraw his forces from Poland, Britain would declare war.
Eight years old I may have been, but I clearly recall standing in the warm sunshine that Sunday morning surrounded by family, listening to the radio placed near an open window. As Chamberlain uttered the words: “this country is at war with Germany,” everyone reacted and one of the women burst into tears.
My war years had begun. In the 1930s England was blessed with two
major Jewish boarding schools. My
parents chose the one situated in the south coast seaside resort of Hove. No one had the slightest premonition that,
within less than a year, Hitler’s forces would have conquered three quarters of
Europe including France, and that Britain faced the very real risk of invasion across
the English Channel that I and my schoolmates could see from our dormitory
window.
My headmaster was not one to let the grass grow
under his feet. Selecting the remotest
part of west Wales for safety, he located a castle standing in its own
extensive grounds that was large enough to accommodate his school. One morning in the fall of 1940 the whole
school crowded into a number of coaches, and we set off on a five- or six-hour
journey.
And there I spent the next four years, seeing
my parents only briefly. There is
usually a silver lining to the darkest cloud, and with little to distract me I
received a solid education, both general and Jewish, and was thoroughly prepared for my Barmitzvah.
For this I returned home. It was June 1944. My first morning back coincided with the arrival over London of what German propaganda had dubbed “Hitler’s secret weapon” – the V1 rocket, or “doodlebug” as it was quickly named. An unmanned missile, it chugged its way towards its target. Then its engine cut out, it turned its nose towards the ground, and fell, exploding as it landed.
It was succeeded a few weeks later by the V2, a
much more lethal version which flew swiftly and silently, and hit its target
with no warning. As allied armies moved further into Germany they overran the V2
launch sites, and the rockets stopped arriving.
Finally, on May 8, 1945 Churchill, who had been prime minister since
1940, broadcast to the nation announcing Victory in Europe day. The country
went wild. London was filled with
rejoicing crowds. It was a heady time to
be young and alive.
The full horror of what the Nazi regime had
inflicted on the Jewish people was soon to be revealed, but indications of the
Holocaust even then being perpetrated had reached the Allies as early as 1942. It even reached us in our secluded castle in
Wales.
Some time in 1942 a new boy aged about 14
arrived in the school. He spoke good
English, but with a German accent. We
asked him how he had come to join us.
His family had been picked up in a typical “Aktion”, and he and his father had been
separated from his mother and the others.
They had been packed into an over-crowded railway wagon and started on a
journey which lasted so long that he and his father were reduced to urinating
in his father’s hat. When they halted briefly
and people were allowed out of the wagons for a break, he and his father managed
to slip away.
If I heard how they succeeded in making it over
the Swiss border, I have forgotten the details.
But here he was, in our midst, safe and sound, embodying a minor triumph
against the evil that had plunged the world into the Second World War.
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