Ms
Clarke was born at the Mauthausen Concentration Camp in Austria on the
29 April 1945 just three days before its liberation. How she came to be there is a moving tale,
her mother while carrying her in the womb being one of the last persons to
enter that infamous death camp.
Adolf
Hitler came to power in Germany
in 1933, the year that Eva’s father left Hamburg
for Prague. In Prague
he met Eva’s mother Anna. The couple
married on 15 May 1940. In December 1941
they were sent to Terezin/Theresienstadt, a ghetto just outside Prague. They were young and strong and considered
competent workers and an integral part to the running of the ghetto. This ensured that they stay in the ghetto for
three years, an unusually long period of time. Despite the sexes being separated in the ghetto, Anna became
pregnant. The couple were forced to sign
a document stating that when the baby was born it would have to be handed over
to the Gestapo to be killed.
Yet
before the ghetto officials knew of the birth of Anna’s son Dan, the infant
died of pneumonia at two months of age. His death nevertheless meant the preservation of Anna’s life. Eva’s father was deported out of the ghetto
and Anna – unaware of his final destination – chose to follow him on another
transport, despite being pregnant for a second time (with her soon-to-be
daughter Eva).
Anna
arrived at Auschwitz Birkenau on 1 October 1944. Had she arrived with a born baby she would
have immediately been sent to the gas chamber but because she did not – and her
pregnancy was not yet evident – she was selected to work as a slave labourer in
an armaments factory in Freiberg near Dresden. She remained there for six months getting
weaker by the day while becoming more visibly pregnant.
Tragically
she never saw her husband again and he never knew that she was pregnant. She learned after the war that he had been
shot on 18 January 1945, less than a week before the liberation of Auschwitz by the Russian army. As the Nazis retreated Eva’s mother and her
fellow prisoners were forced onto a train evacuating them to Freiburg. A three week nightmare journey around the
Czech countryside ensued. The prisoners
were subjected to starvation and scarcely any water.
The
train arrived at Mauthausen Concentration Camp in Austria on 29 April 1945. Eva’s mother had such a shock when she saw
the name of the notorious Camp that she went into labour –and without any kind
of medical aid Eva was born on an open cart.
The
gas chamber at Mauthausen Concentration Camp was blown up on 28 April, the day
before they entered it. Still it was
three days after Eva’s birth that the American Army liberated Mauthausen
Concentration Camp. The timing of their
arrival ensured the survival of mother and daughter.
After
the war, in February 1948 Eva and her mother returned to Prague, where Anna married Eva’s
step-father. In the same year they
emigrated to the United
Kingdom. In 1968 Eva married an academic lawyer and today has two sons and
continues to reside in Britain.
.....
Fifteen members of Eva’s family were killed
at Auschwitz: three of Eva’s grandparents, her father, uncles, aunts and her
seven-year-old cousin Peter.