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These past few days I have been thinking of my grandmother

We are seeing today the same bonds of family, of country, of self-determination and national independence being threatened by a dictator

March 4, 2022 15:59
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These past few days I have been thinking of my grandmother. No, I never knew her. She died before I was born, in Riga, possibly in the local forest where Jews were shot into an open pit by Nazis, often with the willing help of Latvian collaborators.  Or possibly not. Perhaps she died of some dreadful illness in the Riga ghetto. I will never know.

What I do know was that my mother had to leave her in Prague as the Nazis took the city. My mother successfully reached Edinburgh on a domestic visa and then came to London, not knowing what would happen to family in Prague. She spent the war years in London frantically trying to find someone, a protector, anyone who could offer her mother a visa to come here as a dressmaker, an ironer, a domestic servant, anything.  She did not succeed.

Much later I discovered letters from her mother in which she pleads for help to come to Britain, to do anything, anything at all, and in those letters, despite the anguish, there is also a touch of eternal optimism, some sense that “one day we will be together again”, something drawn deep from within the soul, a knowledge, an awareness that the bonds of family can never be broken, even by the vilest dictator, even at the point of death itself.

And so, these past days I have been thinking of my grandmother. The reason, of course, is because we are seeing today, in 21st century Europe, those same bonds, of family, of country, of self-determination and national independence, being threatened once again by a dictator; not this time by Hitler, but by someone equally megalomaniac, driven by reactionary imaginings that the chains – because that’s what they were – of a past Soviet imperialism are worth strangling an independent country for and forcing it to fight to the point of death.