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How a language student became the heroic saviour of 16 Jewish Nobel laureates

A new biography tells the story of a young woman who masterminded the escape of academics from Nazi Europe to the UK

October 20, 2023 16:35
Esther Simpson Credit Leeds University
4 min read

To save one future Nobel laureate from Hitler’s clutches is admirable. To save 16 is nothing short of astonishing, and yet that is what Esther “Tess” Simpson achieved.

As the secretary of the London-based Academic Assistance Council founded in 1933, Simpson was a driving force in bringing Jewish academics from Nazi occupied Europe to safety.

“Her life,” says John Eidinow, author of a new biography of Simpson, “tracked the horrors of the 20th century.” It is an extraordinary story, of one woman’s selfless dedication to those persecuted by the Nazis, and until now, almost entirely overlooked.

Esther Simpson was born Esther Sinovitch in Leeds to a Russian Jewish immigrant family in 1903. Her home, writes Eidinow, would have resonated “to chatter in Yiddish and Russian and blessings and curses in Hebrew”.

Her two eldest brothers emigrated to Canada before the First World War, forever separating the family.

Unusually well-educated, Simpson studied at Leeds University, gaining a first-class degree in French and German. Despite her academic success, there was no obvious career path for a “very bright, very talented young Jewish woman”, so “she made much of the opportunities that were open to her”.

After a short-lived teaching career, she moved overseas, living between Paris, Vienna and Geneva, working for international organisations.

In 1933, Simpson returned and began a life dedicated to rescuing and resettling refugees, having been recommended for the role of secretary at the newly established AAC. “The job that came up in London was specifically to save academics from Germany who had been excluded from their university posts under Hitler,” explains Eidinow.

“The point of the AAC was to act as a sort of international labour exchange, so they could leave Germany and resume their careers, reroute themselves in safety and cultural opportunity.”

Yet Simpson was much more than just a secretary. While the AAC (known as the Society for the Protection of Science and Learning from 1936) had prominent founders, among them the physicist Leo Szilard, Simpson was a crucial figure behind the scenes.

She didn’t deal only with the administrative and logistical challenge of securing their route out, she helped established new lives for people who had, often, lost almost everything.

Her “children” as she called them — for she remained connected to many throughout her life — included Nobel laureates Sir Hans Krebs, Sir Ernst Chain, Max Born and Max Perutz, as well as Sir Ludwig Guttmann, who founded the Paralympics, and many more.

Eidinow’s exhaustively researched book explores the behind-the-scenes wrangling to create the SPSL, the turgid bureaucracy that helping refugees entailed, and the political debates around it. The SPSL was championed by the likes of William Beveridge, who later became the architect of the welfare state, but nonetheless the issue of migration was just as thorny then as it is today.

More than a few refugee scholars Simpson helped escape were subsequently interned as enemy aliens on the Isle of Man.

By the time she became involved, Simpson had almost entirely abandoned her Jewish upbringing and become an active Quaker. But, says Eidinow, “dealing with the mainly Jewish German-speaking academics, she was able to reconnect with her Jewishness, a form of Jewishness that was appealing and acceptable to her”. For many years the SPSL operated in north London and she lived in the Jewish émigré-heavy area known as “Finchleystrasse”.

For Simpson, unmarried and with no notable romantic attachments, the refugees became her family “in a really significant way”.

And although she may not have outwardly professed an attachment to her Jewish roots, it was the Jewish refugees that became lifelong friends — despite the later decades she spent supporting academics from places such as Chile, Biafra or the Soviet Union.