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Family & Education

Plight of the parents

Geoffrey Charin's new novel was inspired by adverts in old copies of the Jewish Chronicle

November 21, 2021 08:31
Brampton Court 1947
5 min read

In 1938, you would have needed to steel yourself before turning to the Personal Ads section of the Jewish Chronicle. Advert after advert from terrified and traumatised Jews in Germany and Austria desperate to get a visa for themselves and for their families: Begging for a chance to work, their pride and dignity long rendered unimportant. When I first came across these, researching for my novel, I cried. I had been looking for something that might plausibly turn my protagonist from a political ingenue, happy to cavort with Nazis during her stay in Germany, into someone who would do whatever was in her power to help the victims of those Nazis. It is the moment when she reads those terrible ads in the Jewish Chronicle that moves her. Her tears are mine.

For me there was a personal angle, for I knew Miriam Eris, née Keller who was the child of people like those sending ads to a Jewish newspaper many hundreds of miles away. Her parents put their savings into getting documents for her, their eldest daughter, so that she, at least, could leave Germany. That wouldn’t have been enough to save her though, if her father hadn’t scrambled through a back window when the Gestapo knocked on their door, in Leipzig, on the night of October 27 1938. In what the Nazis call the ‘Polenaktion’ (the Polish Action), it was decided that all Jews of Polish origin would be expelled to Poland and that night, Miriam, her mother and her two siblings, were pushed over the border. It made no difference that the parents had come to Germany as teenagers and their children were all German.

Because her father had escaped the round up, he was able to return to their home and from there he found someone who could smuggle Miriam back into Germany, as her documents to leave the country were only valid from there.

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