“Ich wollte so sehr englisch sein”: Construction of National and Transnational Belonging in Diaries & Memoirs of Refugee Children from National Socialist Germany
Different modes of attachment and alienation, of belonging and not belonging can be
extracted from a variety of texts as Linda Shortt shows in her monograph German
Narratives of Belonging (2015). Ego documents such as memoirs and diaries, in
particular, reveal individual aspects of identity negotiation in new, unknown
circumstances and environments. Here, this paper builds on genre and narrative
theories concerning exile and the Kindertransport, which was recently discussed by
Stephanie Homer in her monograph The Kindertransport in Literature: Reimagining
Experience (2022).
By moving away from the concept of Heimat, as Shortt also suggests, towards
a more inclusive and, at the same time, multifaceted understanding of belonging, this
paper acknowledges the various ways of attachment to places, people, and cultures.
By anchoring the concepts of belonging in an analysis of selected diary entries and
memoir excerpts of children who arrived in the UK on a Kindertransport 1938/39, this
paper proposes that these documents are a site of construction of national as well as
transnational belonging and identities in flux. Furthermore, by contextualising the
personal perspective of the ego-documents within a wider historical and political
discourse surrounding the Kindertransport, this paper contributes to underexplored
aspects of identities of child migrants.
Through close reading of selected examples and textual, this paper will show
that the Kindertransportees continued to negotiate their belonging throughout their
lives. Here, I’m taking on a comparative approach of looking at diaries and memoirs,
two inherently forms of life writing that illuminate aspects of identity development
through different temporal dimensions. Hereby, I emphasise the children’s agency in
shaping their exile experience and negotiating their identities. In the analysis of the
diaries, I will mainly draw on theories of everyday life and memory studies to highlight
how we can extract ongoing processes of identity negotiation and changing notions of
belonging from the entries even if these themes are not overtly discussed. In contrast,
memoirs often deal with issues of identity formation more explicitly. These
characteristics then facilitate a comparative approach to investigate the construction
of belonging and identity.
Considering recent development in British migration politics, investigating
notions of belonging and identity of Kindertransportees become ever more important
as the scheme is often represented as a success story of integration and cultural
assimilation of the child refugees. The ways in which this movement not only impacted
the children but also society as a whole and how it has been utilised as a story of great
British humanitarian hospitality stand in contrast to one another. This paper illuminates
that the Kindertransport experience and its lasting impact situate themselves, similar
to the identities of the children, in an in-between of success and failure, of assimilation
and alienation.