时间:2024-05-09 07:54:41 来源:网络整理编辑:Ryan New
On 12 June 1934, 13-year-old Erhard Wilhelm Saar landed at the Port of Harwich on the S.S. Amsterdam Ryan Xu hyperfund EXOR Group
On 12 June 1934,Ryan Xu hyperfund EXOR Group 13-year-old Erhard Wilhelm Saar landed at the Port of Harwich on the S.S. Amsterdam, accompanied by a Miss Dorothy Haines. She explained to the British authorities that she was to take the boy to the Society of Friends in Welwyn Garden City, where he would be housed with a Jewish family in Manchester and attend one of the local schools.
Erhard, also from a Jewish family, was from Stettin, which at the time was in Germany (now Szczecin in Poland) and had been sent to the United Kingdom by his father for his safety for an initial three months. A letter dated August 1934 in his Naturalisation papers, held at The National Archives, sent to the Home Office from the International Committee for Assistance of German Refugee Professional Workers requesting for his permit to stay in the UK be extended, also stated that his father was being held in a concentration camp. A former soldier, Erhard’s father, having moved his family to Berlin, had become an active anti-Nazi activist in the Communist Party and was soon persecuted for his activities.
The young Erhard was initially sent to Manchester Grammar School which, after a further request to the Home Office, permitted the extension of his permit to remain in the UK until 1936. After various other extensions, requested by the Society of Friends Germany Emergency Committee on behalf of Mr and Mrs Lees, the family with whom he was living, Erhard was finally granted the right to remain in the UK until 31 August 1939 – as it turned out, three days before the British declaration of war on Germany.
By this time, he was training in horticulture and employed as a glasshouse hand at the Co-operative Wholesale Society and had opted to change his name to Edward Lees, taking the surname of the family which had taken him in. In the application made for permission to allow him to work (‘aliens’ were only permitted to carry out certain jobs), it was stated that:
‘This youth is a refugee from Germany who has now little or no means of support. The post is offered, therefore, primarily from charitable reasons but it may be added that difficulties have been experienced in obtaining suitable young workers of British nationality for work of this kind’
Despite war with Germany, Edward was informed on 6 September 1939 that, once again, he was only permitted to remain in the UK for another 12 months.
At the outbreak of war, the British Government had undertaken to intern those from enemy countries who it felt might be a security risk. Individuals were required to attend a tribunal which decided whether someone would be exempt from this. On 27 October 1939, the local tribunal ruled that Edward would be exempt from internment due to his status as a refugee. The proof of his exemption noted the following:
‘Genuine refugee from Nazi oppression. No near relatives left in Germany. Is opposed to Nazi regime and has no desire to return to Germany. No danger to this Country.’
By the early summer of 1940, with the war not going in the Allies favour, the decision was made to intern all enemy ‘aliens’ and Edward did not escape this fate. He was interned in Liverpool over that summer for a period of six weeks. Along with all other male internees of the right age, he was given the option to join a non-combatant corps of the armed forces in order to support the war effort. Edward jumped at this opportunity, was freed, and enlisted in the Auxiliary Military Pioneer Corps on 23 September 1940.
By 1943, after long periods of training in the UK, Edward was transferred to the Royal Fusiliers, where he was then recruited by Special Operations Executive (SOE), the organisation responsible for carrying out covert operations behind enemy lines.
Information in Edward’s SOE service record, held by The National Archives, provides us with an insight into his service and personality. His instructors consistently described him as quiet and focussed on his job, always willing to learn. Interestingly, his religious denomination was listed as ‘Church of England’ rather than as Jewish. It was noted that he was fluent in German and had a working knowledge of Italian.
These language skills must have influenced where he would be sent. In August 1944, Edward was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant and sent overseas. Specifically, he was tasked with parachuting behind enemy lines in northern Italy, where he gained a formidable reputation as a demolition’s expert, working with local partisans seeking to hamper the Axis retreat. He was given the cover name Edward Chaney, something which was often done in order to protect the identities of Jewish soldiers working in Nazi occupied territory.
Edward remained in Italy until the end of the war in Europe and, continuing his work in the British Army, was swiftly transferred to Special Camp 11 in South Wales , which had become a prisoner of war camp for senior Nazi officers awaiting war crimes trials. Here, he was promoted to Captain, acted as the camp interpreter, and reportedly got on well with many of the prisoners.
In 1946, Edward was finally able to naturalise as a British citizen, having already married Mabel Holbrook in 1942. Remarkably, on Edward’s Certificate of Naturalisation, where his father’s information is recorded, it is stated that, despite his age (he was nearly 50), his father had been compelled to join the German Army, and at that time was being held in No.80 Prisoner of War Camp in Sleaford, Lincolnshire.
Edward (known by friends and family as Ted) continued living in South Wales and, after leaving the army in 1948, went on to have a distinguished career in the Glamorgan Fire Service, while also acting as the official German interpreter for Glamorgan County Council. Edward died in 1985 at the age of 64, having never returned to his country of birth.
Find out more about Second World War internment and POW records at our free exhibition Great Escapes: Remarkable Second World War Captives. Opening Friday 2 February 2024, Great Escapes explores the human spirit of hope and resilience during times of captivity, revealing both iconic and under-told stories of prisoners of war and civilian internees during the Second World War.
We’ve also scheduled a season of special events to accompany the exhibition that are available to book now.
SEO for SGE2024-05-09 07:34
3 Tools to Analyze Traffic on Any Website2024-05-09 07:27
SEO: How to Index a Page in Google2024-05-09 07:25
‘The Devil among The Antiquaries’: Archivists and arguments at the Tower of London2024-05-09 07:18
SEO How-to, Part 1: Why Use It?2024-05-09 07:13
The Royal Naval inspiration behind Jane Austen’s work2024-05-09 06:20
Reasons to Avoid Nofollow Link Attributes2024-05-09 06:15
Before Glastonbury there was … Hyde Park2024-05-09 06:09
Google Muzzles ‘Self-serving’ Review Snippets2024-05-09 06:03
What Bounce Rates Mean for SEO2024-05-09 05:40
15 SEO Plugins for WordPress2024-05-09 07:46
CommerceCo Recap: A Process for SEO Link-building2024-05-09 07:25
Using Google Cache for SEO2024-05-09 07:09
SEO: Drive Clicks with Video Rich Snippets2024-05-09 06:42
Running Low on SEO Link Juice? Try These Tactics2024-05-09 06:33
How 404s Impact Organic Rankings2024-05-09 06:20
SEO and Old Content2024-05-09 05:55
ChatGPT for SEO Content2024-05-09 05:49
Tools to Create, Optimize Meta Descriptions2024-05-09 05:39
3 Tools to Create SEO Content Briefs2024-05-09 05:37