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Interview: Monica Morris

The war-torn children

September 9, 2009 16:37
Monica Morris as a young evacuee

BySimon Round, Simon Round

2 min read

Over the past week, the commemorations of the 70th anniversary of the beginning of the Second World War have been hard to ignore.

Among all the discussion of Germany’s invasion of Poland, the Phoney War and the Battle of Britain, there is one operation which has been recalled with extra poignancy — one that did not involve military action but rather the movement of hundreds of thousands of children.

The removal of minors from the cities and towns which were predicted to be the likely targets for Hitler’s bombs was a mission without parallel. Children were put on buses and trains, taken to villages and towns in the country and billeted with whoever had room to put them up.

Monica Morris was one of those children. Seventy years on, she has written Goodnight Children, Everywhere — a memoir of her own experiences and those of other evacuees like her.