... And the Policeman Smiled: 10,000 Children Escape from Nazi Europe
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
26th August 1991
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Second World War
Modern warfare
Far-right political ideologies and movements
Social groups: religious groups and communities
940.53161
320
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
286g
For ten months before the Second World War, there was an organised movement of mainly Jewish children out of Nazi Europe. The children were bundled onto trains, waved goodbye to their parents and set off across Germany and Holland to the ferries which took them to England. Only a few spoke English, most had no family or friends here. Almost none ever saw their families again. The first memory of the children arriving at dawn in Harwich after their long trek was the policeman smiled, a telling witness to the authoritarian regime they were escaping from.
Based on previously unpublished records and extensive interviews, ...And the Policeman Smiled traces the poignant story of the Kindertransporte, those who helped organise the transports, the families who took them in, but above all the often painful adjustments of the young refugees to a strange country and often lonely life of billeting, fostering, evacuation and even deportation. By turns moving and amusing, the book captures the lives of both those who came to terms with their new existence and those who were unable to.
Excellent ... It brings a lump to the throat and also a smile to the lips * Sunday Times *
The childrens voices ... Linger in the mind, and beyond them the lost voices of the parents * Jewish Chronicle *
Told with poignant and hypnotising simplicity * Daily Mail *
Intensely moving * Independent on Sunday *