George Clare (writer)

Summary

George Peter Clare ( Georg Klaar) (21 December 1920 – 26 March 2009)[1] was a British author and Holocaust survivor who wrote autobiographies Last Waltz in Vienna and Berlin Days. Last Waltz won the 1982 WH Smith Literary Award.

He was born in Vienna in 1920; his father, Ernst Klaar, was an assimilated Jewish banker. He fought during World War II for the British Army and worked as a news editor for many years, including for Axel Springer AG.[2] He was naturalised as a British citizen in 1947.[3] He died on 26 March 2009, aged 88.

His mother was Stella Ernestyne.[4] The Klaars were an upper-class family, and George said that they led easy lives until the war. He came from a family of doctors; his grandfather was an army surgeon and the first Jew to reach a high military rank, and his grandfather was a distinguished doctor also.[5]

In 2005 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by NUI Galway.

George was married to Lisl Beck, his childhood sweetheart, from 1939 until the marriage was dissolved in 1964. They had one son and two daughters.[6] He went on to marry his Foreign News Service secretary, Christel Vorbringer in 1965. They remained married until his death.[5]

Books edit

In Last Waltz in Vienna he recounts his childhood and life as a Jew in Vienna and goes on to describe Hitler's rise to power and the catastrophe that followed, including his parents' death in Auschwitz. It also tells of his escape to Ireland where he married Lisl Beck, and subsequent enlistment in the British Army, first in the Pioneer Corps and then in the Royal Artillery.

In Berlin Days he recounts his work at the denazification bureaucracy, where he became highly skilled in identifying lies and omissions in application forms.

References edit

  1. ^ Profile of George Peter Clare
  2. ^ Obituary in the Daily Telegraph 12 April 2009
  3. ^ London Gazette Issue 37887 published on the 21 February 1947. Page 4
  4. ^ Shoenburg, Randy. "George Clare". Geni. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  5. ^ a b "Obituary: George Clare". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 17 April 2019. [permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Hawtree, Christopher (22 October 2011). "George Clare: Memoirist who recalled life in Nazi Vienna and postwar Berlin". The Independent. Retrieved 19 April 2019.

External links edit

  • Obituary in The Independent 1 July 2009
  • Obituary in the Daily Telegraph 12 April 2009
  • The Times obituary