Marie Schmolka
Maria Schmolka Society
Marie Eisner married at 30 and although their short marriage remained childless, she loved her step-children. After the death of her lawyer-husband Leopold Schmolka, Marie toured the Near East - it was this visit to Palestine that stirred her Zionist passion. On returning to Prague, Marie joined the Zionist Organisation, WIZO and the Jewish Party, of which she soon was a central figures.
In 1933 she was the founder and president of the National Coordinating Committee for Czech Refugees, where her colleagues included Max Brod. This was the organisation that took the central role in the relief campaign for Nazi victims from Germany, both Jews and non-Jews. It was thought she was the moving spirit in the establishment of the relief committee for the Jews of Carpathian Ruthenia, part of the 1st and 2nd Czechoslovak Republic between the wars (and the location of my in-laws’ home).
It must have been a exhausting life for Schmolka, attending the conferences of international committees in Geneva, Paris and London, as well as Jewish conferences dedicated to social and national causes. She visited the areas where refugees huddled, collecting evidence to mobilise public opinion and writing appeals to foreign ambassadors in Prague and to Jewish agencies abroad.
Originally German Jewish refugees found Czechoslovakia welcoming, but they were gradually viewed with suspicion. And other countries refused to offer asylum at all: Schmolka knew this first hand as she was the Czech delegate at the infamous Evian Conference in July 1938. in France. Even Britain would take only unaccompanied children – that way, no criminal foreigner parents would invade their nation.
After the Sept 1938 Munich agreement and the subsequent annexation of the Czech borderlands, the relief organisations in Prague were unable to cope with the large influx of refugees from the occupied Sudetenland; both Jews and political opponents of Nazism were flooding in. Her struggle intensified on behalf of Jewish refugees who were stranded in no-man's-land, the narrow strip between the 1939 German and Czechoslovak borders.
It was Marie Schmolka’s appeal for help that brought the young Nicholas Winton (1909-2015) to Prague in Dec 1938. For the next three weeks, Winton helped organise the emigration of Czech Jewish children to Great Britain. He returned to Britain in Jan 1939, two months before the occupation, and continued with refugee work. Winton was definitely a hero, but it is clear that other, longer serving volunteers had already worked to save thousands of Jewish and political refugees from the Nazis.
Schmolka's appeals were met by other humane U.K volunteers eg Doreen Warriner, a representative of the British Committee for Czech Refugees. Doreen was monitored by MI5 between 1938-52 for her remarkable efforts!
When Germany occupied the rest of Czechoslovakia in March 1939, Marie Schmolka and her co-workers from the Committee for Refugees were among the first arrested. In the meantime Warriner supported Winton with the vital Kindertransport programme.
The Czech Kindertransport arrived in London, Feb 1939
The Guardian
Hannah Steiner, president of Czech WIZO, was arrested a day after the German occupation of Prague in March 1939, so Marie Schmolka presented herself to the Gestapo and declared that she was responsible for all the activities of the relief committee. Soon after, Schmolka was imprisoned for two months in the notorious Pankrác Prison where the Gestapo subjected her to hideous questioning. Schmolka was released only in May 1939, thanks to ongoing protests of the Ministers of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.
After her release, Schmolka had the energy to resume her work. But even more unbelievably, in Aug 1939 Adolf Eichmann, the head of the Central Office for Jewish Emigration, sent this Jewish woman to Paris, to demand more efficient Jewish emigration!!
Terrified by the outbreak of the WW2, Schmolka moved to London and established herself. She was active on behalf of the Czechoslovak Jewish refugees and exiles, working in Bloomsbury House. This was the former Palace Hotel purchased in Gower St which became the meeting place for the Czech, Zionist and Quaker social workers. Months later in March 1940, Marie Schmolka was dead at 46, having exhausted herself into a fatal heart attack. She wouldn’t take time off work to seek out medical care.
Prominent Zionists and luminaries of the Czechoslovakian government in exile gathered at the Golders Green Crematorium (no grave) to say farewell to one of the key European organisers of Jewish emigration before and during the early years of WW2. Jan Masaryk, the Czechoslovak foreign minister, made the main speech.
The Czech exile WIZO group changed their name to Marie Schmolka Society and in 1944, published a slim memorial. Now the Marie Schmolka Memorial is collecting information for her memorials - a plaque at her house near Hampstead, a statue in Prague and a prize for historical work addressing female Jewish social workers in the Holocaust.
honouring the heroine. Press to expand
The women organisers featured in the contemporary records, but disappeared from public memory later on. There were monographs of Schmolka's fellow Zionists Felix Weltsch and Max Brod but Schmolka, who saved thousands of lives, was very difficult to trace. Some new information emerged in April 2019, at an Association of Jewish Refugees Conference,
London. Thank you to the Marie Schmolka Society and to Anna Hájková, in History Today 2018




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