Showing posts with label Martha Leigh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martha Leigh. Show all posts

Sunday, 11 April 2021

Invisible Ink by Martha Leigh

 


 

This is an account of a family separated by the World War II and the Holocaust.  It is also the story of a couple who came together despite numerus difficulties.  Martha Leigh tells her parents’ story.  Her mother Edith was an accomplished pianist and her father Ralph was a professor at Cambridge University.

Edith came from the Ukraine but from a town that felt more Austrian than Ukrainian. She spent time in France and Switzerland. She was actually interned in Switzerland but still managed to give concerts.

Her brother and sister-in-law were doctors and were stopped form practising by the Nazis.   However, her brother went on to become a doctor again and specialised in anaesthesia.

Edith and Ralph’s had a long-distance relationship during the war years and Ralph could never love her the way she loved him – he was a homosexual.

This offers us some interesting insight into life in the 1930s and 1940s, and particularly what it was like for Jewish people and for homosexuals.

It’s not an easy read: there are a lot of names to remember, the subject matter is a little harrowing and the tone a little dry. However, it is rich in information and so it is worth persevering.