This photograph was sent to England in 1939, on the basis of which I was selected. This is what I looked like at the age of 11.
I attended school of course. Rather than talk about what I liked in school, I?ll tell you what I didn't like: handiwork. To this day I remember how in Grade 5 we had to knit a row of faggoting onto some apron. I was completely incompetent. So I took it home, but my mother was just as incompetent at it. Nevertheless she helped me with it somehow. So this definitely wasn?t my favorite subject. I didn't like penmanship either. Otherwise I passed with more or less average marks, I always had at least one to three twos [out of five, roughly equivalent to between a B and a C], in penmanship and handiwork. I probably liked gym class the best.
My sister and I played the piano. This young lady teacher used to come to our place, a saint, because it would have been hard to find someone as musically untalented as my sister and I. I loved her. She was amazingly patient with us. And it's true, that when I listen to music today, I enjoy piano most of all, so I guess something of it must have rubbed off on me.
When I was little, I wasn?t really interested in anything very much. My parents were desperate, that I didn't like to read. Until once, I don?t know how, I got hold of a book called ?Irca vede jedenactku? by some author named Hüttlova, one of those books for girls. Thanks to it I got into reading and today I can?t imagine life without a book. But back then I was more likely to be jumping around somewhere, doing handstands and cartwheels. My father used to say, ?You?re more on your hands and head than on your feet.? I attended rhythmics twice a week. But I didn't have any special interests as such.
Alice Klimova
Centropa Collection acquired by USHMM
The Centropa archive has been acquired by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC.
USHMM will soon offer a Special Collections page for Centropa.
Academics please note: USHMM can provide you with original language word-for-word transcripts and high resolution photographs. All publications should be credited: "From the Centropa Collection at the United States Memorial Museum in Washington, DC". Please contact collection [at] centropa.org.