Gerda Mayer
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Gerda Kamilla Mayer (9 June 1927 – 15 July 2021) was an English poet born to a
Jewish Jews ( he, יְהוּדִים, , ) or Jewish people are an ethnoreligious group and nation originating from the Israelites Israelite origins and kingdom: "The first act in the long drama of Jewish history is the age of the Israelites""The ...
family in Karlsbad,
Czechoslovakia , rue, Чеськословеньско, , yi, טשעכאסלאוואקיי, , common_name = Czechoslovakia , life_span = 1918–19391945–1992 , p1 = Austria-Hungary , image_p1 ...
. She escaped to England from
Prague Prague ( ; cs, Praha ; german: Prag, ; la, Praga) is the capital and List of cities in the Czech Republic, largest city in the Czech Republic, and the historical capital of Bohemia. On the Vltava river, Prague is home to about 1.3 milli ...
in 1939, aged eleven, on a
Kindertransport The ''Kindertransport'' (German for "children's transport") was an organised rescue effort of children (but not their parents) from Nazi-controlled territory that took place during the nine months prior to the outbreak of the Second World ...
flight organised by Trevor Chadwick. Having composed her first poem, in German, at the age of four, she continued her education in
Dorset Dorset ( ; archaically: Dorsetshire , ) is a county in South West England on the English Channel coast. The ceremonial county comprises the unitary authority areas of Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole and Dorset. Covering an area of , ...
and Surrey and began writing poetry in English. She has published several volumes of verse and her poems have appeared in many anthologies. She has been described by
Carol Ann Duffy Dame Carol Ann Duffy (born 23 December 1955) is a Scottish poet and playwright. She is a professor of contemporary poetry at Manchester Metropolitan University, and was appointed Poet Laureate in May 2009, resigning in 2019. She was the first ...
as a fine poet "who should be better known."


Early life

Mayer was born in 1927 in Karlsbad (Karlovy Vary), a spa town in the then mostly German-speaking Sudetenland area of
Czechoslovakia , rue, Чеськословеньско, , yi, טשעכאסלאוואקיי, , common_name = Czechoslovakia , life_span = 1918–19391945–1992 , p1 = Austria-Hungary , image_p1 ...
. Her father, Arnold Stein, had a small shop in the town selling ladies' coats and dresses, and her mother Erna (née Eisenberger) owned a knitwear business there. Mayer had an elder half-sister Johanna from her mother's previous marriage to Hans Trávníček, a Roman Catholic. The family fled east to Prague in September 1938, shortly before the Nazi annexation of the Sudetenland. The city was already home to many Jewish refugees from Germany and
Austria Austria, , bar, Östareich officially the Republic of Austria, is a country in the southern part of Central Europe, lying in the Eastern Alps. It is a federation of nine states, one of which is the capital, Vienna, the most populous ...
, and Mayer's parents spent the next six months chasing between official offices and consulates in a vain attempt to emigrate. As a last resort, in February 1939 her father made a direct approach to Trevor Chadwick, an Englishman who was organising the Prague end of an operation to rescue children at risk from the Nazis. This rescue operation was part of a wider project set up in October 1938 by
Doreen Warriner Doreen Agnes Rosemary Julia Warriner (16March 190417December 1972) was a development economist born in Long Compton, Warwickshire, England (now in Stratford-on-Avon district). In October 1938, she journeyed to Czechoslovakia to assist anti-N ...
, with later assistance from the British Committee for Refugees from Czechoslovakia (BCRC), aimed initially at helping exiled anti-Nazi Sudeten leaders to escape the country. As the scope of the project expanded to include these leaders' families, the responsibility for evacuating refugee children was taken on by
Nicholas Winton Sir Nicholas George Winton (born Wertheim; 19 May 1909 – 1 July 2015) was a British humanitarian who helped to rescue children who were at risk of being murdered by Nazi Germany. Born to German-Jewish parents who had emigrated to Britain at ...
who had come to Prague just before Christmas 1938 to help with the rescue. After weeks dealing with various agencies and interviewing candidate families, Winton returned to London to find guarantors for the children and deal with the sluggish British authorities. Before giving any child a permit for entry to Britain the Home Office needed a guarantor, in this case a person or organisation willing to keep and educate the child up to the age of seventeen and pay £50 to cover the cost of their eventual repatriation. This is . Trevor Chadwick had originally gone to Prague to select two boys to be looked after at his family's preparatory school in Swanage, Dorset. Soon after delivering them, however, he decided to return to the city to help with the evacuation of other children. He remained in Prague until June 1939 and organised a number of Kindertransport trains, working in partnership with Winton at the London end. Chadwick found a place for Mayer on a flight to Britain which left
Ruzyně Airport Ruzyně is a district of Prague city, part of Prague 6. It has been a part of Prague since 1960. Václav Havel Airport is located in this district. Czech Airlines has its head office on the grounds of the airport. Travel Service Airlines and its ...
on 14 March 1939, one day before German troops marched into Prague. He also arranged for her to be sponsored by his widowed mother and to live, at first, with his own family in Swanage. The dedication in Mayer's 1988 collection ''A Heartache of Grass'' is "to the memory of Muriel Chadwick and her son Trevor Chadwick to whom I owe my preservation". Mayer's father Arnold was sent to the Nisko concentration camp in Poland in 1939. He escaped and made his way to Soviet-occupied Lemberg/Lwów, joining Soviet forces fighting on the Eastern Front. His last letter to his daughter was written in June 1940. Interviewed in 2010 for a
Channel 5 (UK) Channel 5 is a British free-to-air public broadcast television channel launched in 1997. It is the fifth national terrestrial channel in the United Kingdom and is owned by Channel 5 Broadcasting Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary of American ...
documentary, Mayer describes how her father and a few companions were initially welcomed by the Russians. But she learned after the war that he had subsequently been sent to a Soviet labour camp where she believes he perished.
Britain’s Secret Schindler
', produced:
Testimony Films
', developed:
Brightside Films
'', commissioned:
Channel 5 (UK)
', broadcast: 27 January 2011, Producer/Director Steve Humphries.
Her mother Erna was sent to the
Theresienstadt concentration camp Theresienstadt Ghetto was established by the SS during World War II in the fortress town of Terezín, in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia ( German-occupied Czechoslovakia). Theresienstadt served as a waystation to the extermination ca ...
in October 1942, and then the following year to Auschwitz where she too died. Mayer's half-sister Johanna was half-Jewish and survived the war, working as a bank clerk in Prague. After the war she suffered from mental illness and was hospitalised in East Germany. Johanna died in 2007.


England

Upon arrival at Croydon Airport to the south of London, Mayer and another girl, Hanna Stern, left the other refugee children and travelled down to
Dorset Dorset ( ; archaically: Dorsetshire , ) is a county in South West England on the English Channel coast. The ceremonial county comprises the unitary authority areas of Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole and Dorset. Covering an area of , ...
by car with Hanna's guarantors. Mayer was taken to Chadwick's family home in Swanage where she was welcomed by his wife. Chadwick had remained with the main group and the following day set out again for Prague, which was now under Nazi occupation. A semi-fictionalized account of Mayer's rescue is used for the character Hugo in the children's book ''War Games'' by Jenny Koralek, Chadwick's niece. Although Mayer generally had a good relationship with her guarantor, Muriel Chadwick, they were not particularly close and in 1940 she was enrolled at a boarding school in Swanage. Here her native language meant she was wrongly perceived to be German and she was then teased by the other pupils. By 1942 the school was in decline and Mayer left to become a boarder at the Stoatley Rough School in Haslemere, Surrey where she was much happier, describing it as "heavenly". This co-educational, non-denominational school had been founded in 1934 by German émigré Dr Hilde Lion and Quaker activist Bertha Bracey, to provide an education for mainly Jewish refugee children from Nazi Europe. Three of Mayer's favourite teachers there, Dr Lion (head teacher), Dr Emmy Wolff (German language and literature) and Dr. Luise Leven (music) are celebrated in her poem "A Lion, a Wolf and a Fox". Mayer finished her schooling at Stoatley Rough in 1944 aged seventeen and joined her guarantor, who by then was living at Stratford-upon-Avon. At the beginning of 1945, Mayer left for '' hachsharah'' (preparation for kibbutz life in Palestine), working on farms in Worcestershire and Surrey. But after seventeen months she felt no vocation for life on the land and at the end of May 1946 moved to London to take up office work. She became a naturalised British citizen in 1949 following her marriage to Adolf Mayer in September that year. He too had come to England in 1939 as a refugee, in his case from Vienna. He served in the British Army between 1940 and 1946 and then worked as an office manager. In 1960 he set up his own import business, where Mayer helped with clerical tasks whilst working on her poems. In her thirties Mayer read for a degree at Bedford College,
University of London The University of London (UoL; abbreviated as Lond or more rarely Londin in post-nominals) is a federal public research university located in London, England, United Kingdom. The university was established by royal charter in 1836 as a degree ...
, graduating in 1963 with a BA in English, German and History of Art. Her course included lectures at Birkbeck College given by
Nikolaus Pevsner Sir Nikolaus Bernhard Leon Pevsner (30 January 1902 – 18 August 1983) was a German-British art historian and architectural historian best known for his monumental 46-volume series of county-by-county guides, ''The Buildings of England'' (1 ...
, author of the 46-volume series ''
The Buildings of England ''The'' () is a grammatical article in English, denoting persons or things already mentioned, under discussion, implied or otherwise presumed familiar to listeners, readers, or speakers. It is the definite article in English. ''The'' is the ...
''. In late 1963 she was employed by him as a part-time research assistant on the ''Bedfordshire'' volume but the work (gathering building references from the ''
Victoria County History The Victoria History of the Counties of England, commonly known as the Victoria County History or the VCH, is an English history project which began in 1899 with the aim of creating an encyclopaedic history of each of the historic counties of En ...
'') was unfulfilling, and to Pevsner's great annoyance she left after a few months to resume her writing. Gerda Mayer died on 15 July 2021.


Poetry

Much of Gerda Mayer's poetry draws on the trauma of her uprooting and loss of family in 1939, but her creativity was apparent many years before that. In fact her first poem was composed when she was just four years old and was recorded by her father in a ''Babys Tagebuch'' (German equivalent of "Baby Diary"), a journal he had kept from her birth until her departure from Prague that year. At school in England her reading was soon on a par with that of her classmates but the poetry took much longer to catch up, as she recalled in 2009: "My first English poem, written at the age of twelve was no better than one I had composed (in my pre-literacy days) at the age of four ... and a poem I wrote at the age of sixteen was on a level with one I had written at the age of eleven, just before leaving home." During the 1950s and 1960s Mayer's output increased and in 1975 her first major collection appeared in ''Treble Poets 2''. She continued to have poems published in magazines and anthologies and appeared regularly at poetry readings, on one occasion speaking at the
Aldeburgh Festival The Aldeburgh Festival of Music and the Arts is an English arts festival devoted mainly to classical music. It takes place each June in the Aldeburgh area of Suffolk, centred on Snape Maltings Concert Hall. History of the Aldeburgh Festival Th ...
. Further collections were published including two for children, with many poems written specifically for that audience, and 2013 saw a selection of her poems translated into Norwegian. In 2005 her ''Prague Winter'' was published, a short account in prose and poetry of the events leading to Mayer's departure from Prague, and the people she left behind. On BBC radio she has featured in episodes of ''Poetry Now'' (1987) and ''Time For Verse'' (1990), when
Carol Ann Duffy Dame Carol Ann Duffy (born 23 December 1955) is a Scottish poet and playwright. She is a professor of contemporary poetry at Manchester Metropolitan University, and was appointed Poet Laureate in May 2009, resigning in 2019. She was the first ...
presented poems written and read by Mayer. Mayer's most powerful poems speak of loss and longing, and express a deep sadness. The poet
Elaine Feinstein Elaine Feinstein FRSL (born Elaine Cooklin; 24 October 1930 – 23 September 2019) was an English poet, novelist, short-story writer, playwright, biographer and translator. She joined the Council of the Royal Society of Literature in 2007. Earl ...
for example observed in a 1996 review that "most readers ... will have paused over that poignant poem, 'Make Believe' ", in which Mayer imagines her father alive again. There is a wistfulness, too, when she writes about the countryside (of both her native and adoptive lands). These poems rarely fall into the trap of self-pity, though Mayer can veer in that direction when writing about the minor disappointments of life. In the poems "My Aunt Selfpity" and "Selfpity Again" she first identifies, then renounces, her dependence on that negative emotion to inspire her, though she also fears that without it her poems would be "bland and blank". The majority of Mayer's poems however are sharp and entertaining observations of familiar human foibles, domestic life and growing old grudgingly. Her wry sense of humour is never far away, and in poems such as "The Poetry Reading" and "Drip Drip or Not Bloody Likely" she is quite happy to take aim at the poetry scene and fellow poets.


Style and reception

In some poems, such as "Poetry Doesn't Move", Mayer doubts her talent, and she is sometimes inclined to agree with her father who once told her despairingly: "Nothing will ever become of you." Critical reaction, however, has been far more positive:


Works


Collections

* 1970: ''Oddments'', (self-published) * 1972: ''Gerda Mayer's Library Folder'' (illustrated by Deirdre Farrell), All In (Nina Steane) * 1973: ''Poet Tree Centaur: A Walthamstow Group Anthology'' (edited by Gerda Mayer), Oddments * 1975: ''Treble Poets 2'' (Florence Elon, Daniel Halpern, Gerda Mayer), Chatto & Windus * 1980: ''Monkey on the Analyst's Couch'', Ceolfrith Press (a
Poetry Book Society The Poetry Book Society (PBS) was founded in 1953 by T. S. Eliot and friends, including Sir Basil Blackwell, "to propagate the art of poetry". Eric Walter White was secretary from December 1953 until 1971, and was subsequently the society's chai ...
recommendation) * 1985: ''March Postman'', Priapus Press * 1988: ''A Heartache of Grass'', Peterloo Poets * 1995: ''Time Watching'', Hearing Eye * 1999: ''Bernini's Cat: New and Selected Poems'', IRON Press * 2003: ''Hop Pickers' Holiday'', The Happy Dragons Press * 2013: ''Alle Blad Har Mist Sitt Tre'' (All the Leaves have Lost their Trees), Nordsjoforlaget (Norwegian translation by Odveig Klyve)


Collections for children

* 1978: ''The Knockabout Show'', Chatto & Windus * 1984: ''The Candy-Floss Tree'' (Norman Nicholson, Gerda Mayer, Frank Flynn),
Oxford University Press Oxford University Press (OUP) is the university press of the University of Oxford. It is the largest university press in the world, and its printing history dates back to the 1480s. Having been officially granted the legal right to print books ...


Autobiography

* 2005: ''Prague Winter'', Hearing Eye


References


Further reading

* Mayer, Gerda ''Prague Winter'', Hearing Eye, 2005 * Mayer, Gerda "Flight to England" ''Poetry Review '' 88.4, The Poetry Society, Winter 1998/99 * Chadwick, William ''The Rescue of the Prague Refugees 1938–39'', Matador, 2010


External links


''Poetry Magazines'' article including the poem "Fragment"


* ttp://www.peterloopoets.com/html/stocklist_145.html ''Heartache of Grass'' publisher's page including the poem "Poetry Doesn’t Move"
''My Poetry Cafe'' blog including the poem "Shallow Poem"



Oral history interview with Gerda Mayer in December 1989 (recorded for the book ''The Uprooted'' by Dorit B. Whiteman)

Entry for Gerda Mayer (née Stein) on Nicholas Winton's list

Stoatley Rough School Historical Trust
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mayer, Gerda 1927 births 2021 deaths English women poets Jewish poets 20th-century English poets Alumni of Royal Holloway, University of London Kindertransport refugees 21st-century English poets Alumni of Bedford College, London Czech Jews Czechoslovak emigrants to England Naturalised citizens of the United Kingdom 21st-century English women writers 20th-century English women writers People from Karlovy Vary