Heda Margolius Kovály

Heda Margolius Kovály

Color facial profile of Kovály in Prague, 1992.

Kovály in Prague, 1992.
Born Heda Bloch
15 September 1919[1]
Prague, Czechoslovakia[1]
Died 5 December 2010 (aged 91)[1]
Prague, Czech Republic[1]
Occupation Writer and translator
Genre Memoirist

Heda Margolius Kovály (15 September 1919[1] – 5 December 2010[1]) was a Czech writer.

Early life

She was born Heda Bloch[1] to Jewish parents in Prague, Czechoslovakia, where she lived until 1941 when her family was rounded up along with first 5,000 of the city's Jewish population and taken to the Łódź Ghetto in central Poland.

Concentration-camp and Margolius-marriage years

Married to her childhood sweetheart, Rudolf Margolius, she was separated from her parents when the Jews were taken out of the ghetto and transported to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1944. After arriving at Auschwitz, she was chosen to survive – though her parents were immediately gassed[1] – and to work as a laborer in the Christianstadt labour camp.

When the Eastern Front of the war between Germany and the Soviet Union approached the camp, its prisoners were evacuated. With a few other women in the first months of 1945, it was decided while on this journey to Bergen-Belsen, to escape back to Prague. After arriving in the city, Margolius discovered that most of the people who remained in the city during the war were too frightened by the threat of German punishment to aid an escapee from the camps.

When Soviet forces finally freed Prague from Nazi control the Communist Party began to rise. The experiences of her husband at Auschwitz and Dachau concentration camps had led him to become a communist. Having been asked, he took a job with the Communist government of Klement Gottwald as Deputy Minister of Foreign Trade, despite his own and his wife's reservations about the position.

In 1952, her husband was found guilty of conspiracy during the notorious Slánský trial. Rudolf was one of the eleven Jews on the list of fourteen accused. Having been prevented from seeing her husband for eleven months after his arrest, and after he and the other arrested Jews gave false confessions extracted by torture, Heda later learned that he had been hanged and his body cremated and given to security officials for disposal. In a final indignity, a few miles out of Prague, the officials’ limousine began to skid on the icy road and his ashes were thrown under the wheels to create traction.[2] Related to 'a people's enemy' her life was made harder – "Heda was thrown out of her job and her apartment, and then additionally persecuted for being unemployed and homeless."[3]

Their son, Ivan Margolius, was raised in impoverished conditions. For as long as the Communist Party remained in power, she was kept from good jobs and socially shunned. She did not tell Ivan the truth about what happened to his father until he was sixteen years old.

Kovály-marriage years

She re-married in 1955 to Pavel Kovály (1928-2006). Unfortunately, his name was tarnished because of his association with her as the widow of the alleged traitor, her first husband, Rudolf Margolius.[4]

Emigration from Czechoslovakia to the United States

Finally in 1968, when once again Soviet Union troops invaded Prague after the Prague Spring and occupation seemed inevitable, Margolius Kovály fled Czechoslovakia to the United States.

She worked as a reference assistant librarian in the Harvard Law School Library at Harvard University, in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Return to Prague

Margolius Kovály returned to Prague to retire with her second husband in 1996.

Writing

Her memoir was originally written in Czech and published in Canada under the title Na vlastní kůži by 68 Publishers in Toronto in 1973. An English translation appeared in the same year as the first part of the book The Victors and the Vanquished published by Horizon Press in New York. A British edition of the book excluded the second treatise and was published by Weidenfeld and Nicolson under the title I Do Not Want To Remember in 1973.

In 1986, she re-published her memoir Under A Cruel Star – A Life in Prague 1941–1968 (published in the United Kingdom as Prague Farewell). The memoir is dedicated to her son and it has been widely translated and is available in French and English as an e-book.

In 1985 she published a novel called Nevina (Innocence) in Czech by Index, Köln and republished in the Czech Republic in 2013 by Mladá fronta, Praha. The English translation will be published by Soho Press, New York in June 2015.

Between 1958 and 1989 she translated from German or English into the Czech language over 24 works of well-known authors such as Arnold Zweig, Raymond Chandler, Philip Roth, Saul Bellow, Arnold Bennett, Muriel Spark, William Golding, John Steinbeck, H. G. Wells and many others.[5]

Death

Margolius Kovály died in Prague, age 91, after a long illness.[1] A memorial plaque dedicated to Heda Margolius Kovály together with her first husband Dr Rudolf Margolius is located on the family tomb at New Jewish Cemetery, Izraelská 1, Prague 3, sector no. 21, row no. 13, plot no. 33, directly behind Franz Kafka’s grave.[6]

Bibliography

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 (registration required) Grimes, William (9 December 2010). "Heda Kovaly, Czech Who Wrote of Totalitarianism, Is Dead at 91". The New York Times.
  2. Gross, Tom (15 December 2010). "A Shy Little Bird Hidden in My Rib Cage". tomgrossmedia.com. Retrieved 30 December 2010.
  3. Clive James, Cultural Amnesia, p, 366
  4. Margolius Kovály, Heda (1986). Under A Cruel Star – A Life in Prague 1941–1968. Plunkett Lake Press (Cambridge, Mass)ISBN 0-9614696-1-7.
  5. http://www.margolius.co.uk.
  6. Frank Shatz, The Lake Placid News, 8 July 2011 http://www.lakeplacidnews.com/page/content.detail/id/503813/WORLD-FOCUS--A-Kafkaesque-tale.html?nav=5001&showlayout=0

Further reading

External links