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Pretending the Kindertransport was a part of a 'noble tradition' is ignorant of history

Special provision was made for children because Britain refused to let in their parents

March 15, 2022 17:50
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3 min read

There is history and there is myth, and they are not the same thing. In the category of myth come those tales nations tell themselves to feel virtuous, even heroic. One such tale has been told with great frequency in recent days about the UK and, as it happens, it involves Jews. 

The conservative commentator Simon Heffer nodded to it in a discussion on BBC Radio 4’s Broadcasting House programme on Sunday. The panellists were talking about Britain’s obligations to those fleeing war in Ukraine and Heffer said: “We have a noble tradition of looking after refugees: I think back to the kindertransport.” It was a sentence that had been uttered, in one form or another, so many times in the previous week or so, plenty of listeners might not even have noticed it. 

But it nagged at me, for the very same reason that most might not have registered it at all: it is becoming a settled part of the British national story. But it really shouldn’t be. Because to cite the kindertransport as evidence of a “noble tradition” of welcoming refugees is to betray the facts and to deceive ourselves. 

It is quite true that between March 1938 and the outbreak of war in September 1939, some 9,000 Jews below the age of 17 came to Britain on the specially chartered trains that would become known as the kindertransport. But here’s the question asked by too few of those who like to invoke that episode as proof of British generosity: why exactly was it children who were admitted, given that it was Jews of all ages who faced the threat of lethal Nazi persecution in Europe?