Nostalgia: Those were the days
I was born in a hospital in Norbury, in the district of Croydon, not too far from where His Majesty’s government had an aerodrome. This was some years before the outbreak of the Second World War. I had an elder brother named Gunar who was also born in Norbury. But he died soon after birth. So when the stork started hovering over our house, and Planet Earth was about to be regaled with another baby of mixed Prussian and Indian parentage, my father suggested to my mother that as he was a Muslim, she should try a Muslim name for a change and not another Swedish import. That’s how the I ended up being called Anwer, and not Siegfried or Tristan. Apparently, according to the Chronicles, I wasn’t a model baby. I bawled and howled and shrieked so much, that the nurses and the hospital management broke records in the speed with which they sent me packing.
My mother also couldn’t handle the incessant crying and had to send for her mother from Berlin whom all grandchildren addressed as Oma. Granny had been given strict instructions to push my pram on the pavement opposite to the one on which my mother walked. My father, who was a student at the Royal Dental Hospital in Leicester Square, didn’t approve of my incessant yells which were delivered fortissimo in the register used by the German soprano Elizabeth Schwarzkopf. He said that they interfered with his homework. And so, two Prussians of two different generations and one half-Prussian of the third generation were packed off to Berlin to irritate the German side of the family. However, the moment the train stopped at Hauptbahnhof in Berlin, the Norse gods must have smiled for the crying and whimpering miraculously stopped.
My mother’s family which consisted of an older sister and a younger brother, their spouses and offspring, lived in three neat, small brick houses in the northern part of Berlin, close to some tram lines. By the time, I was five the only language I could speak was German and I spoke it like a native, slang and all. Summer and winter, I was up at six and walked about 0.1km to a bakery run by Frau Nikstadt who, for a few pfennigs, supplied me rolls called broetchen. For entertainment there were the parades, lots and lots of them. Some took place in broad daylight, as a band thumped out martial music and hard heels in measured tread clicked on cobble-stoned roads. On such occasions there was a profusion of flags.
Life as a child in pre-war Berlin
At night there were the torchlight tattoos, where searchlights scanned the sky in sweeping gestures. I had two cousins Henry and Christa. The three of us were told never to enter the private property of an old Junker, named Herr Stein, who used to eat young children for supper. His vast grounds were fenced in and notices posted at regular intervals stated that trespassers would be imprisoned. One day my mother joined us on our walk and we spotted the Junker walking his two dogs. He didn’t look at all ferocious to us. That evening, my mother told my sister that Herr Stein reminded her of the rambler in one of those Shell posters, complete with cap, jersey, pipe, sturdy stick and trousers stuck into his socks.