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Lest we forget

Submitted by Editor on January 20, 2010 – 9:00 am7 Comments

With Holocaust Memorial Day on the horizon (January 27), CD-traveller spoke to Holocaust survivor Hermann Hirschberger – now in his 80s – about the reality of life in Nazi Germany, the persecution of the Jewish community and the desperation to escape to a new life in England

Born in 1926 in the Black Forest Town of Karlsruhe, Mr Hirschberger was one of 3000 Jews who made up part of the town’s total population of quarter of a million people. The inhabitants of Karlsruhe suffering like much of Germany from mass unemployment – a legacy of the loathed Treaty Of Versailles and the world economic crisis – “lacked a degree of political maturity”, something that only intensified when Hitler seized power in January 1933.

Mr Hirschberger was seven during that fateful month and in his second year at school (unlike the British education system, in Germany children don’t start school until six years of age.) One of only two Jewish boys in a class of 30, Mr Hirschberger soon found himself “exposed to insults” – a consequence of Hitler’s propaganda proclaiming Jews were draining the country’s wealth. Unable to endure any more mental or physical abuse, Mr Hirschberger finally summoned the courage to complain to his headmaster about being labelled a “stinking Jew”. His headmaster replied: “Well isn’t that what you are?” That day marked a monumental awakening for Mr Hirschberger that things would never be the same again.

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Racial hostility intensified and following the passing of the Nuremberg Laws in 1935, the Jewish community in Germany (around half a million) found themselves facing further segregation. Mr Hirschberger, his older brother and his fellow Jewish classmate, Manfred, were thrown out school while his Father (a bank manager) and mother (a secretary), being “devout Jews”, were made redundant. In no time at all,  signs such as ‘Jews Not Wanted’ sprung up all over the shop: at clubs, restaurants, swimming pools – even hairdressers. Slowly but surely all dignity and humanity towards Jewish people was cancelled out. The final straw came on the night of 9-10 November 1939 (now referred to as ‘Kristallnacht’): synagogues were set on fire and Jewish shops were looted.

Kristallnacht also signified the last time that the young Mr Hirschberger ever saw his father. Hermann still vividly recalls his Mother donning a heavy overcoat and going out to search for her husband only to discover that he had been arrested. While his mother was out, Mr Hirschberger and his brother (aged 12 and 14 respectively) had to endure a raid on their apartment by Gestapo agents armed with revolvers. After Kristallnacht “alarm bells rang in every Jewish home home” sparking a recognition by the Jewish community “that there was no point in staying.” Life in Nazi Germany was no longer a safe or viable option and many families fled the country to seek safety in Australia and America. For their part, the Hirschbergers attempted to secure residence in Belgium but their efforts were to no avail – something that, with hindsight, turned out to be a blessing in disguise as by May 1940 Belgium had surrendered entirely to German occupation.

Towards the end of 1939 there were 300,000 Jews (of which 50,000 were children) still in Nazi Germany – desperate to flee persecution but finding it impossible to gain entry to other countries if they had no living relatives established there. Fortunately the British government of the time was beginning to wake up and realise the plight of Jewish children typified by Mr Hirschberger. On November 21, a debate took place in the House of Commons resulting in the decision to allow 10,000 Jewish children to enter Britain unaccompanied upon payment of a “£50 bond of warranty”.

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The first Kindertransport left Berlin in December 1939 bound for the shores of Great Britain. At first, Jewish families took in the Kinder but later, as the movement gathered momentum, non-Jewish families took them in as well. By the outbreak of war, 9,500 children between the ages of 8-16 had been brought to the UK. In order to enter the UK, took a train from Karlsruhe to Hamburg from where he sailed by ship to Southampton. As he lay on his tiny bunk, Mr Hirschberger admits to having felt “really lost” – the excitement at the first sight of sea soon giving way to intense homesickness. Finally after three days at sea, the kindertransport arrived safely in Southampton to be greeted with the sight of flashing lights as The Daily Telegraph snapped its story for the next day’s edition.

After first being taken to a market in Soho, Mr Hirschberger found himself transported to a disused hotel on the seafront of Margate, Cliftonville that had been renovated into a hostel to accommodate around 60 boys. Six weeks down the line, he began to pick up the “new, strange and alien language” that was English. At Margate, food, security and clothes were readily available yet there was no provision for the inevitable “emotional trauma” of the experience. This “psychological hurt” is something that has stayed with the kindertransport children for life. Yet Mr Hirschberger is quick to stress that it wasn’t all doom and gloom and he has many fond memories of Margate such as being voted vice captain of his school house ‘Kipling.’

Yet there was no escaping the horror of the holocaust and Mr Hirschberger and his brother were shortly separated. His brother, being 15, went to work in London whilst 13-year-old Mr Hirschberger was sent to Staffordshire to live with a coal mining family. Eighteen months later, having reached “working age” himself, Mr Hirschberger was summoned before a tribunal who wanted to see if he was a spy for Germany! Here he had to answer questions such as “Do You like Hitler?”and “How much money do you have on you?” To the latter, Mr Hirshberger replied “one pound seventeen and sixpence” – believing this to be the amount he possessed in his pocket at that time. As he walked back to work via Waterloo Bridge, he suddenly “realised that I had two pounds seventeen and six pence in my pocket and I expected to feel a hand on my shoulder at any second!” – such was the terror and fear that characterised the lives of the kinder.

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Mr Hirschberger enrolled in evening classes (“a half way house between GCSEs and A Levels”) with a view to becoming a chartered engineer, when he learned that his parents had been gassed to death at Auschwitz: the largest cemetery and deathbed in the history of the world where everything was geared to killing and “the smell of burning flesh penetrated the air”.

Yet the tone of our talk was one of optimism with Mr Hirschberger quick to praise the Chamberlain government, which was widely criticised for favouring a policy of appeasement towards Hitter instead of taking a firm line from the offset. It was the Chamberlain government that implemented the kindertransport initiative saving the lives of some 9500 Jewish children so “whatever we say about Chamberlain, we must salute the committee, the government of the day, for their act of decency and humanity”.

Approximately 6,000 kinder, including Mr Hirschberger, opted to remain in Britain after the war. Those that stayed “pulled themselves up by their shoe laces” and fought to become important members of the community by going into business or training as doctors, musicians, scientists and a whole host of other professions. Their contribution was recognised in 1988 by then Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, at a reunion for kinder and their spouse: “I am glad your lives were saved and I thank you for the contribution you have made to our society.”

Of course, it wasn’t just Jewish people who suffered in the Holocaust. Four million people of Catholic, Polish, Slav and ethnic origins were collectively united by the same enemy: Hitler. However the greatest brunt of Hitler’s prejudices were reserved for Jewish people –six million of whom were exterminated throughout the course of the Second World War.

Mr Hirschberger reveals he lost confidence in his faith in the post war years and at 18 became “almost agnostic”. Upon marriage and Fatherhood in the 1960s, he rejoined the synagogue to give his “children the choice”. His son and daughter know their father had a “special deal” but have grown up as normal children in an English environment and “never really asked questions”.

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Throughout his life Mr Hirschberger has been involved in commemorating the kindertransport and has organised many reunions for the kindertransport children – to celebrate their life and remember those that did not survive.  To this end, he thinks that “everyone should see the film Schindler’s List. Director, Steven Spielberg, became a conscious Jew after the film had wrapped, donating the movie’s profits to Jewish causes. My only question is why did it take so long to be made? And why did it take so long for real Schindlers like Sir Nicholas Wynton to achieve the recognition they so richly deserved?”

Mr Hirschberger admits to living in the past but also observing the present; opening peoples eyes to the horror of the holocaust so that humanity will never again repeat this tragedy. He gives 20-30 talks a year to all age groups both in the UK and Germany for, as he points out: “the experience of hearing about the Holocaust first hand from a survivor can never compare to reading about it in a textbook.” He understands that people are wary of asylum seekers yet feels they should “sometimes be welcomed and I will always have sentiment and support for people being persecuted. The asylum seekers of 1939 have made an invaluable contribution to society bringing an additional drop of blood to the country – although we had to work and were not supported financially by the government, like today.”

On a final note I ask Mr Hirschberger how he feels about second generation Germans today? He says that “they are not to blame for their parents’ crimes but I can’t entirely forgive and forget. There is such a thing as communal guilt – of a whole nation being at fault. The whole nation was indoctrinated; the whole nation was anti Semitic. When you have schoolchildren physically abusing Jews – that is indoctrination. There is a saying “When you meet a German he knew nothing about what was going on, and when you meet a Frenchman they all served in the French Resistance”.

In ten years time, the sad reality is that the events of the Holocaust will no longer exist in living memory. Initiatives such as Holocaust Memorial Day can only help to preserve the memory of those that died and stories of those who survived.

 

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7 Comments »

  • John Mugglestone says:

    Jesus just what do you say to this. I doubt that I would have the stomach to visit these places with so many sad ghosts

  • Mo Edwards says:

    throughout human history racial groups have been persecuted & perceived as ‘lesser’ beings (e.g.enslavement of negroes, views of arabs or chinese by caucasians, pre20th. century views of peasants or working class folk) Hitler tapped into a deep human need to feel special & better than others.Maybe because Germans felt so humiliated after the 1st WW settlements which crippled their country. Anti Semitism was always wide spread throughout the world but reached it’s peak in Nazi Germany.Casual cruelty to others is on the increase again in western societies & we have not learned the hard lessons the Holocaust should have taught us. I believe evil abounds and only constant striving against it can keep societies free and humane to all citizens.

  • Duncan Bell says:

    Great sorrow and sadness is the genuine emotion I feel when I read anything about the Holocaust.
    Thinking back to my first real exposure to what took place in Germany and across Europe, I’m still unsure if it was general youthful interest and intrigue on my part or something else? In 1986 I decided to visit the Belson Death-Camp site for no other apparent reason than I happened to be passing through the area while working with the British Armed Forces in Germany. Before I had even pulled into the car parking area I was filled with a dreadful feeling of immense sadness and grace. This vivid gut wrenching feeling immediately returns to me every time I think back or read articles and personal accounts such as Mr Hirschberger’s. I still struggle to get my head around the whole subject and why it even happened!
    Impossible to forget….

  • Beth Long says:

    Thank you,Hermann Hirschberger, for reliving some of your most painful memories to tell us just what your family went through (and many others). I would never have believed such things could have happened and especially in so-called “decent society”. I feel an enormous apology is owed to you. I hope perhaps that one day you can regain your faith in God, because although it was dreadful times, these people eradicated all God’s commandments and if His commandments had been honoured it would never have been allowed to happen. I pray that it never ever happens again, but nevertheless, we all need to be alert and on our guard against the smallest beginnings of such things and stamp them out.

  • mike costa says:

    what can you say
    the tears are rolling down my face
    i am a jew born after the war so i was safe and sound.
    may this man have many happy years a-head of him

    mike and hazel costa

  • Christoph says:

    Many moons ago I walked beneath the sign that says “Arbeit macht frei”. For me it was as a free man. As I walked I observed people running and laughing and fealt a sense of distaste for those who so laughingly apeared not to know what had taken place in that camp; or understood the severity of it.
    As my anger seethed within me, this thought came from I know not where. ” What if, at the time of those terrible happenings,
    someone prayed Lord God grant that someday little children will run and skip here with joy in their hearts!”
    Herr Hirschburger; danke sehr. May the God of Abraham, Isak and Jakob give you peace in your heart and may your words toutch the hearts of men so that they will see what man may become and change the paths that they have chosen. Lest we make the same mistakes again.

  • vanessa sparrowhawk says:

    Born during the war i have grown old in Britain always feerful of a repeat of the Holocaust. I visited Auchwitz last year and like everybody who visits I was moved. I know that the jews suffered most but
    people of the left and academics gypsies and gay people suffered too. We must be on guard to prevent
    this ever happening again. there is a rise of the far right in Britain at the moment with the BNP. Everybody must be encouraged to vote for anybody other than the BNP.

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