{"id":62629,"date":"2025-12-02T14:19:05","date_gmt":"2025-12-02T03:19:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/?p=62629"},"modified":"2025-12-02T20:43:38","modified_gmt":"2025-12-02T09:43:38","slug":"anna-essinger","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/?p=62629","title":{"rendered":"Anna Essinger"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-62630\" src=\"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Anna_Essinger.jpg\" alt=\"Anna Essinger\" width=\"512\" height=\"640\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Anna_Essinger.jpg 512w, https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Anna_Essinger-240x300.jpg 240w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 512px) 100vw, 512px\" \/><\/p>\n<div class=\"xdj266r x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">In April 1933, the Nazis ordered every public building in Germany to fly the swastika.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Anna Essinger looked at the flag. Looked at her students. And made a decision.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">She organized a hiking trip.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">When the children returned, the flag was gone. It had flown, as required by law\u2014but over an empty building.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">&#8220;Atop an empty building,&#8221; Anna said, &#8220;the flag can neither convey nor harm as much.&#8221;<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">It was a small act of defiance. But Anna Essinger was already planning something far larger.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">She was going to smuggle her entire school out of Nazi Germany.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Anna was born in Ulm in 1879, the oldest of nine children in a secular Jewish family.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">At twenty, she did something unusual for a German woman of her time\u2014she moved to America alone, spent ten years educating herself at the University of Wisconsin, and discovered the Quakers. Their values of equality, compassion, and peaceful resistance shaped everything she would become.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">She returned to Germany in 1919 on a Quaker relief mission, feeding hungry children in the aftermath of war. In 1926, she and her sisters founded a boarding school in a village called Herrlingen.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">It was progressive, coeducational, open to children of any faith. Students called teachers by their first names. Corporal punishment was forbidden. The philosophy was simple: teach children to think, to question, to live without fear.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">By 1933, Anna had built something rare\u2014a school where freedom of thought was the foundation of everything.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Then Hitler became chancellor.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Anna had read Mein Kampf.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">While her friends hoped the new government would moderate, Anna saw exactly what was coming. Within weeks of Hitler taking power, Jewish children across Germany were being humiliated in classrooms\u2014ordered to stand while teachers pointed out their &#8220;biological differences,&#8221; forced to eat lunch in toilets because they were &#8220;dirty Jews.&#8221;<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Anna watched as a famous Jewish educator, Kurt Hahn, was arrested. She watched as book burnings lit up Ulm&#8217;s cathedral square\u2014the works of Einstein, Freud, Marx reduced to ash.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">And she watched as someone inside her own school betrayed her.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Helman Speer, the husband of one of her teachers, wrote to the Nazi Minister of Culture to denounce Anna. Her &#8220;airy-fairy humanism,&#8221; he complained, was &#8220;altogether uncongenial&#8221; to National Socialism. He urged that a Nazi spy be installed at the school.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Anna didn&#8217;t wait to find out what would happen next.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">That spring, while Germany&#8217;s democracy collapsed around her, Anna began traveling secretly across Europe\u2014searching for a new home.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Switzerland. The Netherlands. Finally, England, where she found Quaker supporters willing to help her rent a rundown manor house in Kent called Bunce Court.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Then came the dangerous part.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Mass emigration was prohibited. If the Nazis discovered her plan, they could seize the school, impose crippling sanctions, or worse. Everything had to happen in secret.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Anna gathered the parents in small, hidden meetings across Germany. She explained what she intended to do. She asked for their trust\u2014and their children.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Nearly all of them said yes.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">That summer, while the children thought they were simply on vacation, Anna&#8217;s staff secretly taught them English. Lessons in British history and culture. Preparation for a journey the students didn&#8217;t yet know they would take.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">On October 5, 1933, Anna Essinger executed one of the most remarkable escapes of the Nazi era.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Her most trusted teachers spread out across Germany in three teams. Parents brought their children to pre-assigned railway stations along three separate routes out of the country.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">They had been warned: show no emotion on the platforms. No tears. No long goodbyes. Nothing that might attract attention.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">One group traveled along the Rhine from Basel. Another moved through Munich, Stuttgart, and Mannheim. A third crossed northern Germany.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">On the trains, everyone was silent as they approached the border.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Sixty-six children. Their teachers. Their headmistress.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">All of them made it to England.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Classes began the next day.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Bunce Court was a wreck\u2014an old manor house that had been abandoned for years.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">There was no money for repairs, no funds for domestic help. So everyone worked. Students and teachers together, gardening, laying telephone cables, converting stables into dormitories.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">British inspectors initially viewed the school with suspicion. But within a few years, they declared themselves amazed &#8220;at what could be achieved in teaching with limited facilities.&#8221; They concluded it was &#8220;the personality, enthusiasm and interest of teachers rather than their teaching apparatus&#8221; that made the school work.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">And what teachers they were.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">As war approached and Britain classified German refugees as &#8220;enemy aliens,&#8221; many were forbidden from professional work elsewhere\u2014but allowed to remain at Bunce Court. Suddenly, Anna had an astronomer teaching mathematics. A music teacher who had been assistant to the famous wildlife recordist Ludwig Koch. A former senior producer from Berlin&#8217;s Deutsches Theater directing school plays.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">The children learned not just academics, but music, art, gardening. They performed concerts for local villagers. They stayed with English families on weekends. They found, against all odds, something like home.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">One student, Leslie Brent, later called it &#8220;a paradise.&#8221; After everything he had witnessed in Germany, Bunce Court made the violence seem &#8220;like a bad dream.&#8221;<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Alumni would later describe it as &#8220;Shangri-La.&#8221; They spoke of &#8220;walking on holy ground.&#8221;<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">But Anna&#8217;s work was far from finished.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">In November 1938, after Kristallnacht, Britain agreed to accept 10,000 Jewish children on what became known as the Kindertransports. Anna was asked to establish a reception camp.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">She took in as many as she could\u2014children from Germany, Austria, Poland, Czechoslovakia. Children whose parents she would never meet. Children who would never see their families again.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">As Hitler invaded country after country, the refugees kept coming. When the British military requisitioned Bunce Court, Anna found another location and moved the entire school again.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Her eyesight was failing. By the war&#8217;s end, she was going blind.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">She kept working.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">The last children to arrive at Anna&#8217;s school were concentration camp survivors.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">They had seen things no child should see. They no longer knew what normal life looked like.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">One of them was Sidney Finkel, a fourteen-year-old Polish boy who had survived the Piotrkow ghetto, slave labor camps, Buchenwald, and Theresienstadt. He arrived in England in August 1945 with ten other Polish boys, all of them shattered.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Anna and her staff treated them with patience and love. Slowly, carefully, they taught them that the world could be safe again.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Decades later, Sidney wrote about his two years at Bunce Court.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">&#8220;It turned me back into a human being.&#8221;<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">By the time Anna closed her school in 1948, she had taught and cared for over nine hundred children.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Nine hundred.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">She started with sixty-six, smuggled across borders in secret. She ended with concentration camp survivors who had forgotten how to be children.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">She stayed at Bunce Court until her death in 1960, corresponding with former students, watching them build lives she had made possible.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">They became scientists, artists, professors, doctors. Frank Auerbach became one of Britain&#8217;s most celebrated painters. Leslie Brent became a pioneering immunologist. They scattered across the world, carrying with them what Anna had given them\u2014not just survival, but the belief that learning and kindness and freedom were worth fighting for.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">In 1933, while others hoped the darkness would pass, one woman saw clearly.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">She didn&#8217;t wait for permission. She didn&#8217;t wait for someone else to act. She organized a hiking trip, smuggled sixty-six children across a border, and spent the next fifteen years saving every child she could reach.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Anna Essinger proved something that remains true today:<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">One person who refuses to look away can change nine hundred lives.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">One school built on freedom can outlast any regime built on fear.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">One flag flying over an empty building can be the beginning of the end\u2014not for the children beneath it, but for everything that flag was supposed to represent.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In April 1933, the Nazis ordered every public building in Germany to fly the swastika. Anna Essinger looked at the flag. Looked at her students. And made a decision. She organized a hiking trip. When the children returned, the flag was gone. It had flown, as required by law\u2014but over an empty building. &#8220;Atop an &hellip; <\/p>\n<p class=\"link-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/?p=62629\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Anna Essinger&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[5,8],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-62629","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general-interest","category-inspiration"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/62629","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=62629"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/62629\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":62633,"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/62629\/revisions\/62633"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=62629"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=62629"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tomgrimshaw.com\/tomsblog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=62629"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}