Description
Book SynopsisIn 2020 and 2021, at the height of the Covid pandemic, Gwrych Castle was familiar to the British public as the setting of I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! Lesser known is that, at the beginning of the Second World War, this once-grand country house in North Wales became home to around two hundred Jewish refugee children who had been rescued from Europe on the Kindertransport. Under trying conditions, while the families they had been separated from faced the gravest of dangers, these children and their adult guardians established a Hachshara at Gwrych Castle: a training centre intended to prepare them for the dream of establishing a Jewish homeland in Palestine (Eretz Yisrael), where they hoped one day to be reunited with the families they left behind. In this fascinating debut, historian Andrew Hesketh tells the story of these refugees and the community they built, shining a light on a chapter of Jewish history that deserves to be far more widely known. He recounts moving moments of friendship, respect, tension and humour as the new arrivals and local residents came to know each other, while the shadows of war loomed ever closer, and the Hachshara project found itself facing an uncertain future.
Table of ContentsAuthor’s Note Prologue ‘Are you from the castle?’ Chapter 1: ‘The young generation of a great people’ 1933–39: The Jews, the Nazis and Abergele Chapter 2: ‘A field in the middle of nowhere’ Summer 1939: The gathering of the Gwrych refugees Chapter 3: ‘On a dark night’ 30 August–6 September 1939: Arrival at Gwrych Castle Chapter 4: ‘I wanted to do something useful’ September 1939 (Part 1): Establishing the Gwrych Hachshara Chapter 5: ‘We had good plans’ September 1939 (Part 2): Developing the Gwrych Hachshara Chapter 6: ‘I didn’t tell them I was German’ October–November 1939: Aliens, football and meeting the neighbours Chapter 7: ‘An old bowler hat’ December 1939–February 1940: Blackouts, winter and The Wizard of Oz Chapter 8: ‘Leck mich am arsch’ March–April 1940: Learning Welsh, fancy dress, the ‘naughty’ boys and girls, and a car crash Chapter 9: ‘A very traumatic experience’ May–June 1940: Spy fever and internment Chapter 10: ‘I couldn’t see any purpose to it’ July–September 1940: Departures, arrivals and divisions Chapter 11: ‘Not quite the haven they anticipated’ October 1940–September 1941: Bombs, weddings and the closing down of the Gwrych Hachshara Epilogue ‘This place gave us a new life’ Appendix I: Nominal roll of those known to have been at Gwrych Castle between 1939 and 1941 Appendix II: Glossary Acknowledgements Notes Sources and Bibliography Index