4.4 • 13.7K Ratings
🗓️ 29 February 2004
⏱️ 37 minutes
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This week Sue's castaway is Judith Kerr - a writer and illustrator known to generations of children both for her charming Mog picture-books and for her careful rendering of the life of a Jewish child fleeing Nazi Germany. Judith Kerr escaped with her family on the day the Nazis were elected. The following day, police turned up at the doorstep in a belated attempt to confiscate their passports. The Kerr family moved across Europe, trying to support themselves and escape from the nearing threat, until they eventually settled in England in 1936. The family stayed in London throughout the war; surviving the Blitz and in fear of invasion. Judith Kerr wrote an autobiographical trilogy about her experiences and the books - in particular When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit - have been used ever since as a way of explaining to children the horrors of the Nazi threat. Today, they are set texts in many German schools.
She was always a keen painter but had never thought it could be a career; it was only when she had two children who enjoyed the tales she told that she decided to try her hand at picture books. Her first book, The Tiger Who Came to Tea, was instantly successful when it was published in 1968 and has never been out of print. But it is probably her series of books about Mog the Cat that have won her most affection with children - over the past 30 years they have sold more than three million copies.
[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]
Favourite track: Kyrie - the Opening of Great Mass in C Minor by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Book: A big, beautiful coffee table book of pictures by impressionists Luxury: Pencils and thick paper to write and draw on
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0:00.0 | Hello, I'm Kirstie Young, and this is a podcast from the Desert Island Discs archive. |
0:05.0 | For rights reasons, we've had to shorten the music. |
0:08.0 | The program was originally broadcast in 2004, and the presenter was Sue Lolly. My castaway this week is a writer and illustrator. Her most famous creation, Mog The Cat, has sold 3 million copies over the last 30 years and has never been out of print. |
0:40.0 | Alongside her carefully told stories for children sits another type of fiction, equally meticulous in its narrative, but with a more somber theme. |
0:49.0 | These are novels which reflect her own life as a young Jewish child in a happy German household |
0:55.0 | which in the 30s fled from the Hitler regime |
0:58.0 | to live first in France, in Paris, |
1:00.0 | and then its final home in England. |
1:02.0 | She wrote these books to help her English... and then its final home in England. |
1:02.7 | She wrote these books to help her English husband and children |
1:06.2 | to understand her own experiences and feelings. |
1:10.1 | Now 80, she says of the country that gave her the language of her success, that it was wonderfully |
1:15.7 | generous, one which saved our lives. |
1:18.8 | She is Judith Carr. |
1:21.0 | You've lived here for more than 65 years now Judith. I have a sense that you're more English than the English, is that right? |
1:28.0 | Well, my husband says so, and I think it applies to all refugees. |
1:33.0 | Why do you think it is? |
1:35.0 | Because they did save our lives and because we found a kind of humor and tolerance here |
1:42.0 | which didn't I think exist in other countries at that time. |
1:47.0 | I think I became a Brit as you would say during the war because the people here were so |
1:56.2 | extraordinarily good. We would hear right through the |
2:00.4 | Blitz and the bombing and people were being killed every night and they were my parents |
... |
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