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No going back to Moldova

by Anna Robertson

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https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3003742.html

I got this several years ago because I thought it was about the state of Moldova, which I know and love; but in fact it is a post-Habsburg memoir by a woman who was brought up in the Hungarian town of Uj-Moldova in the Banat, now Moldova Nouă in south-west Romania, and whose childhood was interrupted by the first world war, at the end of which she and her parents found themselves non-Czechs living in the new Czechoslovakia, and having to make what accommodation they could with the new state of affairs. Physical return to Uj-Moldova was difficult, but became possible as tensions reduced; but you can never go back to the past. Coming to it so soon after Stefan Zweig was interesting; obviously Anna’s family were small-town bourgeoisie rather than Jewish intellectuals, but that simply meant that the disintegration of the old system hit them in a somewhat different way. Anna lived to see her homeland taken over by Communism, and her family expelled as Sudeten Germans, but got out in time (and got her parents out) by marrying Mr Robertson. Despite the tension of the times, she retains an eye for the humorous and for telling details. The book was published in 1989, just as the world was changing again. ( )
  nwhyte | May 21, 2018 |
A charming and fascinating autobiography. Robertson, born in 1905, recounts her childhood in Moldova and growing up in the early part of the 20th century as borders shifted like sand, leaving her family regarded as "foreigners" in their home country. This is a knowledgable and interesting work that provides historical details that are not often available in one book, and certainly not with Robertson's appealing style. ( )
1 vote VivienneR | Jan 29, 2013 |
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There cannot be many people left who jetted around Europe in a two-seater plane in the late twenties, or who remember the hysterical rantings of that formidable little Austrian Corporal before he turned the world upside down - a story rich with anecdotes.
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To the memory of my sister who shared these days with me.
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Some places have a magic of their own. Such a place is Uj-Moldova, a small town in the Banat, now in Romania and lost forever behind the Iron Curtain.
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Anna Robertson (born Siller) spent her childhood in the nostalgic world of Franz Joseph's Austro-Hungarian Empire. Born in Budapest, with an extended family reaching into Romania in the east, and Silesia in the north, she and her sister - following the deaths of bother their mother and a stepmother - lived their early years either with relatives or in the sheltered world of a strict convent school.


With the advent of World War I, the Empire was smashed and Central and Eastern Europe entered a period of unequalled turmoil which uprooted the Stiller family, who found themselves part of a minority in the new Republic of Czechoslovakia, with the ugly face of Fascism rising on all sides. In 1923, in Munich, she heard Hitler for the first time, and gradually saw Europe crumbling once more into violence and confusion. As Hitler marched into Prague she managed to escape to England with her Scottish husband.

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