Alice Glasnerová
Blogs:
2017
Thank you, Senator McCarthy: 18 Aug, 2017
Noel Field, soviet spy: 10 Sept, 2017
The
hunting dog finds a scent: 30 Sept, 2017
My past ghost: 24 Oct, 2017
Two worlds: meeting Alice for the first time: 26 Nov, 2017
2018
The London connection: 14 Feb, 2018
Stepping into the shadows: 13 March, 2018
Return
to the land of milk and honey: 22 April, 2018
Return to Czechoslovakia: 7 June, 2018
Dual
heritage: 18 June, 2018
Zilina, then and now: 1 July, 2018
A fateful triangle: Erwin, Noel Field and Alice: 29 Aug, 2018
Friends forever: 23
Oct, 2018
Lost luggage: 6 Nov, 2018
Questions of right and wrong: 20 Dec, 2018
2019
Letters from Alice: 26 Jan, 2019
A tale of two photographs: 1 March, 2019
In her father’s steps she trod: April 17, 2019
Prison visit: May 21, 2019
Cartoons and correctness: May 27, 2019
Visiting the dead: June 10, 2019
Alice in the archives: June 21, 2019
Dislocated worlds: May 12, 2019
Au revoir and not good-
Bienvenida Espana: 8 September 2019
Bullfighting in Albacete: 9 September 2019
Benicasim -
Surrounded by danger: 21 September 2019
Arrivals and departures: 29 September 2019
A place of execution (A cold afternoon): November 29, 2019
Seventy years on: 4 December 2019
Windows into the past: 10 December 2019
2021
Munich revisited: February 28, 2021
Will there be a Holocaust museum in Prague?: October 10, 2021
Statue wars: October 14, 2021
Transitional objects: October 21, 2021
My blogs
In her father’s steps she trod
April 17, 2019
I have been singing Good King Wenceslas for years without thinking that, of course, he was Czech. And the more I learn Czech and read Czech history and Czech writers, the more I notice Czech everywhere. Not only do I find myself following people in the street who are speaking Czech, including a whole tour group going round a madrasa in Fez, I start noticing Czech ancestry in people I had known about but never registered as Czech: Milos Forman, Madeleine Albright, Sissy Spacek, Kim Novak, Peter Falk, Karl Malden and worryingly, Donald Trump Jnr. (son of Ivana).
I follow the Czech Centre and other Czech and Slovak sites on Twitter, and learn that soft contact lenses, sugar cubes, finger prints and blood types were all first discovered/ invented by Czechs. And of course, there are the Czechs most people do know – Dvorak, Janacek, Smetana, Havel, Hasek, Kafka, and Freud, who was born in a town that is now in the Czech Republic. Czech history even pops up with surprising regularity in the spy and detective novels I read.
In just over two weeks, I shall be there – living for a month in Prague, going to Czech lessons every morning and then exploring the city in the afternoon and evening, finding where Erwin and Alice lived, the hotels where they stayed while on the medical mission, the medical and law faculties at Charles University where they studied, the law courts, the prisons where Alice spent five years of her life and the flats in which she lived after her release. I shall be going to the concert halls and galleries that were familiar to them and most exciting of all, I shall be meeting the sons and daughters of Alice’s friends.
At the end of the month, we go to Slovakia, to revisit Zilina, my father’s home, and then on to Ruzomberok where Alice grew up, before heading up to Poland for a study day in Auschwitz. I have started an Instagram account just for this research (e.j.kohn) so I can post immediate impressions as well as continuing to write here in more depth.
This visit has been planned for nearly a year and I thought I would probably be visiting
the EU as a non-
My parents were not unusual; many of their generation married husbands/wives from
other countries, as a result of the displacement of war. My generation, however,
mostly married people from the UK, yet their children have not; our friends’ children
have found partners from Russia, France, Cuba, Nigeria, Vietnam, Germany. Unlike
our parents, these young people met as a result of peace and the opening up of borders.
It is worrying to see that there are those who want to re-
Going to the former Czechoslovakia in search of the past has emotional challenges,
but also practical ones. Place names and street names, which are so constant in the
UK, in the former Austro -
I hope I shall be able to see beyond the present world of tourism and stag parties
into the layers of the past; to connect with the years between the wars when hope
in Masaryk’s government and the newly independent country was still strong, and later,
to the long years of communism, punctuated by the short-