Refugees in small boats are
much in the news, with governments determined to stop them coming, send them
back, or keep them incarcerated in camps. In the summer of 1940, there were
refugees in small boats in the English Channel. This is the story of one such refugee
family.
Amsterdam, early 20th Century
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Simon had already been a refugee twice. Born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire in about 1900, his parents sent him to Leipzig to escape conscription, and a few years later his relations told him to go to Holland. ‘The land of the free,’ they said. He found work in a firm of tailors’ accessories and married the owner’s niece, Maria. As the representative of “Double-weave underwear” Simon took Maria to Germany but after a few years they returned to The Netherlands with their two small children. ‘In Amsterdam nobody took any notice what religion you were,’ remembered their daughter Josephine. ‘Whether you were Jewish or gentile didn’t make any difference.’
In the late 1930s cousins from Germany stayed with the Kleins en route for America, travelling on through Belgium and France. But by May 1940, that route was blocked.
Josephine,
13, and her brother Eli, 15, were asleep on the night of 14 May 1940, when their
mother told them to dress quickly and grab their gas masks. With their uncle
Ralph, the Klein family took a taxi twenty miles west to the fishing town of
Ijmuiden. In the dark harbour, crowds
of people were trying to get away from the advancing German army. Mr Klein had struck
a deal with a man who owned a small rowing boat, and then given extra money for
water and food. The Kleins climbed on board, as more people swarmed down the
steps and jumped in.
It
was soon full but even so, there were more desperate people. ‘Take me…’ ‘For
mercy’s sake, take my son!’ ‘Let my wife come with you!’
German invasion 1940, from The Second World War, W. Churchill, 1948. |
As
Mr Klein pushed off, tears were streaming down his face. The boat was about 15 foot long, and there was only just room to
sit down. None of the dozen people on board were sailors, so Eli and another
boy, both Boy Scouts, took the oars. As they rowed into the dark water they
could see the flashes of guns behind the town of Ijmuiden. Mr Klein’s plan was
to row out to sea, where they would be picked up by a passing ship.
Day
came, and night again, and another day, with a rising wind at night and waves
that crashed against the boat. They had been tricked and they had only one
orange between them and a small tank of water, which they drank from a thimble.
There were no passing ships.
On
the third morning Josephine noticed the water rising in the boat, and quickly used
her gas-mask box to bail out the sea water. The next day they sighted land. They
believed they had rowed the hundred miles to the east coast of England. But
they had simply drifted down the coast of Holland, towards another invaded
port, possibly The Hague. Starving
and parched with thirst, the Kleins and their passengers turned out towards the
open sea again, and kept bailing.
Dunkirk in 1940 |
More
than week after they left Holland, a British destroyer sighted the tiny boat.
By then they were semi-conscious, and their feet were swollen from the sea
water. The British sailors carried them
on board and they were taken to a
hospital in Maidstone. The hospitals in Kent were all on stand-by for the imminent
evacuation from Dunkirk: fully staffed but still empty.
The
Kleins were soon recovering from ‘trench foot’ and when the evacuation from Dunkirk
began, they were sent to a refugee hostel in Chelsea filled with Belgian
fishing families and run by English lady aristocrats.
Guides arriving in Britain were called not ‘Refugee Guides’, but ‘Golondrinas’, or ‘Swallows’.
Guides arriving in Britain were called not ‘Refugee Guides’, but ‘Golondrinas’, or ‘Swallows’.
Josephine Klein wrote Our Need for Others
and Its Roots in Infancy, 1987, and
Doubts & Certainties in the Practice
of Psychotherapy, 1995. .
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When refugees arrived in Britain in small boats 75 years ago, they were welcomed. Nobody described the men who sold the boats as ‘people traffickers’, nor the refugees as ‘illegal immigrants’. They too were escaping war and persecution, just as people from Syria and Mali are today. The 20th Century refugees contributed to Britain, and helped make it the country it now is.
www.janiehampton.co.uk @janieoxford
enjoyed your article very much. (btw the soldier in second picture is Dutch)
ReplyDeleteDeeply moving and highly pertinent, Janie - though if you read what the Daily Mail said about Jewish refugees before the war, you might recognise some of the vicious rhetoric... Alas, hostility to refugees is as old as the hills. What is different now is the scale of the problem. What many people don't see is our co-responsibility for it; climate change, neo-colonialism, land grabs in Africa, the 'development corridors' putting opeople off their farms, and as you point out, war, which our arms manufactured profit from, and which are sometimes the result of our meddling in other people's politics..
ReplyDeleteI meant arms manufacturers but my phone corrected me...
ReplyDeleteAll nation's scome immigrants and refugees, and most do. There is still a place for the Kleins in the world, and always be. Today though,the world has changed from 1940, and nations in Europe as well as the US are being overrun by migrants and refugees expecting be allowed in. Immigrationl were designed to protect a nation's citizens from the affects of immigrants who are undocumented.
ReplyDeletePardon the misspelling s!
ReplyDelete