Lotte Moos
Margarete Charlotte Moos (née Jacoby; 9 December 1909 – 3 January 2008) was a German-born politically active poet and playwright.
Early life[]
Daughter of Samuel and Luise Jacoby, she was born in Berlin on 9 December 1909.[1] She soon showed her talent as a writer, when, in 1919, her essay on eastern European refugees was published in the Berliner Tageblatt and she was thanked personally by the editor, Theodor Wolff.[2] After a brief period at the school of the she worked as assistant to a photographer and then in the . Here she met left-wing economist Siegfried Moos, "Siege", whom she married in 1932.[1][2]
Emigration and travels[]
After Hitler's rise to power in 1933 it was necessary for Lotte and Siege to flee Germany, and initially they settled in Paris, but soon moved to London. Lotte's ambition to study at LSE was frustrated by the fact that her German qualifications were not recognised.[1][2] In 1936 the British government refused to renew her visa; she departed to the Soviet Union to join her friend Brian Goold-Verschoyle, and "to see what it was like".[2] She soon became disillusioned with the Soviet system and succeeded in returning to Britain. The British authorities received 'information' from the Soviet defector Walter Krivitsky that she could be a spy,[3] and she was arrested and interrogated by MI5 in Holloway Prison. She then was interned in the Isle of Man.[1][2]
Oxford and Durham[]
On release from internment she rejoined her husband in Oxford, where he was working at the Institute of Statistics under William Beveridge. Lotte worked as a nursemaid, translator, typist and teacher, and under the pseudonym Maria Lehmann, she wrote a column for the British German-language newspaper, Die Zeitung.[1][2] Shortly after the war ended Siege was appointed as a lecturer at Durham University, and the family, now with a baby daughter, moved to Durham. There Lotte took part in amateur dramatics and also wrote plays, still using the "Maria Lehmann" name. In May 1964 her play Come Back With Diamonds, a comedy about a released political prisoner returning to Moscow, was performed at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith.[1][2]
London[]
In 1966, Siegfried became an adviser to the Board of Trade, and he and Lotte moved to Hackney in London. Both of them wrote poetry at this time, and Lotte had three collections published. Some of her work also appeared in the anthology The New British Poetry (1988).[1] Siegfried died in 1988; Lotte died on 3 January 2008 in London. Their daughter Merilyn has written a biography of her father, which includes her search for the fate of her mother's Jewish parents in Germany under the Nazis.[4][5]
Published poetry[]
- Moos, Lotte (1981). Time to be Bold. London: Centerprise Trust.
- Moos, Lotte (1992). A Heart in Transit. London: Approach Poets.
- Moos, Lotte (1993). Collected Poems. Ware: Rockingham Press.
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Hope, Danielle; Rockingham, Len (10 January 2008). "Lotte Moos: Acclaimed poet and playwright". The Independent. London.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Perman, David (15 January 2008). "Lotte Moos". The Guardian. London.
- ^ McLoughlin, Barry (2007). Left to the Wolves: Irish Victims of Stalinist Terror. Irish Academic Press.
- ^ Moos, Merilyn (2010). The Language of Silence. Cressida Press.
- ^ Brinson, Charmian. "Hidden lives (review)". Association of Jewish Refugees, February 2011.
Further reading[]
- Moos, Merilyn (2010). The Language of Silence. Cressida Press. ISBN 0956646700
- Moos, Merilyn (2014). Beaten But Not Defeated. Chronos Books. ISBN 1782796770
- Perman, David (2013). Stranger in a borrowed land: Lotte Moos and her writing. Grendel Press. ISBN 9780956657015.
- 1909 births
- 2008 deaths
- German emigrants to England
- Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany to the United Kingdom
- People interned in the Isle of Man during World War II
- English-language poets
- English women poets
- 20th-century English poets
- 20th-century English women writers
- 20th-century English writers
- Writers from Berlin