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Review: Berlin to London

Saraga tells the story not only of who was left behind in Berlin, but also of what, says David Herman

December 18, 2019 16:38
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1 min read

Berlin to London by Esther Saraga (Vallentine Mitchell, £14.99)

In 1984, Esther Saraga’s mother died, leaving boxes and envelopes full of papers and photographs. “They were in sideboards and cupboards,” writes Saraga, “in the loft and in the garage. Some were simply stuffed at the back of drawers.” The letters and documents told the story of how her parents had escaped from Nazi Germany.

Both of Esther’s parents were born in Berlin and had come to Britain as Jewish refugees — her father Wolja in May 1938 and her mother Lotte four months later. But Berlin to London is not just a personal story. Saraga uses her research to put her parents’ story in a larger historical context.

The book is full of fascinating insights and details. There is the importance of luck in her parents’ story. Esther’s father owed his escape to the kindness of strangers, many of them non-Jews. Establishment scientists in Germany and Britain, including von Laue in Berlin and William Bragg in Britain, were prepared to use their networks of friends and colleagues to help an unknown but promising young Jewish scientist.