The Nottingham Essay: Slavomir Rawicz (1 September 1915 – 5 April 2004)

Slavomir Rawicz’s story of endurance across continents during WWII is detailed in the aptly named memoir The Long Walk. The best selling book is another example of Nottingham’s rich literary history and why we were made a UNESCO City of Literature in 2015.

To some of us, Slavomir Rawicz will be remembered as the technician on the architectural ceramics course at Nottingham Trent, back when it was a Poly. For readers, he is the voice of The Long Walk, an incredible adventure tale that saw him escape a Russian Gulag camp in 1941, and trek 4,000 miles to freedom. To others, his story is pure fabrication. But we’ll deal with the complexities of truth in a bit…

Rawicz’s ghost-written memoir has shifted half a million copies worldwide, making him a worthy topic for our UNESCO City of Literature feature, but today we’re celebrating him because he was Polish. With the threat of a UKIP/Conservative coalition on the horizon, it’s time we put immigration into context. So skip the next two paragraphs if you’re the kind of person for whom facts get in the way of a good story.

According to the 2011 Census, 12.7% of Nottingham’s population moved to the UK in the last ten years, compared to 7.0% nationally. In total, 19.5% of Nottingham’s population was born outside the UK, with Pakistan accounting for the highest proportion and Poland a close second. Half a million people in Britain speak Polish, making it the most commonly spoken non-native language. Polish migration has increased seven-fold since 2003 – hardly surprising given Poland joined the EU in 2004. But we need to pop back sixty years, to the end of World War II, to find the real reason these hardworking migrants were lured by our chip-littered shores.

After the fall of France in 1940, the exiled Polish Prime Minister and his government set up office in London, accompanied by 20,000 soldiers and airmen. They were a powerful Allied force who accounted for 150,000 troops under the command of the British Army and represented the largest non-British group in the RAF during the Battle of Britain. Churchill was well impressed and vowed Britain would “never forget the debt they owe to the Polish” and pledged “citizenship and freedom of the British Empire” for all. Understandably, many didn’t want to return home to a Communist government and, after kicking up a stink, the Polish Resettlement Act 1947 was passed – the UK’s first mass immigration law. Now do the maths. As waves of immigration continued over the decades, a strong Polish community has developed, meaning our modern migrants aren’t just nipping over because we pay over double their minimum wage, but because the UK is where their family lives.

Slavomir Rawicz married Marjorie Gregory in the year the Polish Resettlement Act was passed and eventually settled down in Sandiacre, where he became the proud father of five children and lived a relatively quiet life before passing away on 5 April 2004. Prior to this, he was a young lieutenant in the Polish cavalry who was incarcerated in Siberian Labour Camp 303 in 1940 because he spoke Russian and was therefore deemed a spy. There were so many of these camps during the Stalinist period that writer, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, described them as a “Gulag Archipelago”. At their peak, they accounted for roughly 14 million captives.

After being unfairly imprisoned, forced to work gruelling shifts in inhumane conditions, and tortured by an interrogator who makes Mr Blonde in Reservoir Dogs look like Walter the Softy, Rawicz began planning his escape with six other prisoners. It would see them trek across the Gobi Desert, Tibet and the Himalayas before finally finding salvation in British India during the winter of 1942.
City of Literature

While in Tibet, Rawicz claims to have seen a yeti (think Martin Keown crossed with Chewbacca) which led to his story being mocked. But let’s put this into context. Rawicz’s long walk to freedom would see two escapees perish in brutal conditions, ranging from snow blizzards to blistering heat. Throw starvation, dehydration, fatigue, high altitude and grief into the equation, and it’s a wonder the world didn’t contort itself into something far more sinister. Given that it only takes a few weeks in the Big Brother house before ‘celebs’ start ramming bottles of wine up their fadge, let’s not be too quick to judge what deprivation can do to a person.

A BBC documentary in 2006 questioned the validity of other aspects of Rawicz’s story. A report based on former Soviet records, including statements supposedly written by Rawicz himself, showed he’d been released as part of the 1942 general amnesty of Poles in the USSR, and had subsequently been transported to a refugee camp in Iran. Three years later, Witold Glinski came forward and claimed everything Rawicz’s had said was true except one crucial factor: it was Glinski’s story. Then, in 2011, Leszek Glinlecki accused Witold Glinski of being a fibber on the grounds they’d been classmates when the long walk happened.

While all of this was going on, Linda Willis spent a decade thoroughly examining the facts and published Looking for Mr. Smith, which ironed out a lot of creases, but couldn’t say for certain that Rawicz’s story was untrue. Irrespective of what the friggin’ truth is, the ghost-written book has been translated into 25 languages and is one of the greatest adventure stories ever told. The public like a good yarn.

It’s most likely that Rawicz’s story is a composite of other stories, and there’s quite a few to choose from. Stalin was responsible for more deaths than Hitler, and it’s been estimated by British historian Norman Davies that he’s accountable for fifty million deaths during his reign from 1924-53. That’s excluding wartime casualties. This makes any escape from Siberia an absolute miracle.

Whoevers version of truth we choose to believe, bear this statistic in mind from author Tadeusz Piotrowski: there were approximately 6 million Polish deaths during WWII, which equates to about one fifth of the pre-war Polish population. Therefore, Rawicz’s story needs to be understood in the context of survivor guilt – a mental condition that occurs when a person perceives themselves to have done wrong by surviving a traumatic event when others did not.

War is absolutely incomprehensible unless you’ve experienced it, so it’s pretty pointless trying to rationalise events through a modern lens. The validity of his story should be determined by those who were there, not those who weren’t. Clearly there is great sensitivity surrounding these stories and at least we can say Rawicz wasn’t attempting to monetise grief, as large chunks of profit were donated to charities. Writing acts as a form of therapy, a way of ordering experience into manageable chunks and exerting some level of control over our lives. The book may simply have enabled Rawicz to come to terms with events fortunately beyond our everyday comprehension. Nobody can deny him that.

His story has done others good too. Political cartoonist John ‘Brick’ Clark read Rawicz’s book as a nine-year-old who discovered The Long Walk in the library at his boarding school. It would inspire Brick to become a travel writer and satirise political injustices around the world through cartoons. All of which he recalled beautifully in an earlier issue of the Nottingham literary graphic novel, Dawn of the Unread.

Now, Rawicz is integral to a very different fight. Let us celebrate one of one of the many Polish immigrants to settle down in Nottingham over the past sixty years who contributed to the wealth of local culture. Remember that on 7 May…

My Long Walk with Slav by John ‘Brick’ Clark is available on the Dawn of the Unread website. This article was originally published in LeftLion magazine in April 2015

The Nottingham Essay: Alan Sillitoe (4 March 1928 – 25 April 2010)

It’s hard to think of a writer who better encapsulates Nottingham’s defiant individualism than Alan Sillitoe. The creation of anti-hero Arthur Seaton is reason in itself for Nottingham to be accredited as a UNESCO City of Literature.

In 1958 Saturday Night and Sunday Morning became the first Pan paperback to sell a million copies thanks to the antics of hard drinking, womanising anti-hero Arthur Seaton. In the opening chapter to Alan Sillitoe’s raw portrait of working-class Nottingham life, Seaton quenches payday thirst by having a skinful down his local, The White Horse.

By the end of the evening he’s had a drinking game with a sailor, thrown up over some fellow drinkers before exiting head first down the pub stairs.

Yet Seaton is more than just your average drunk. He’s belligerent and hedonistic, with a healthy scepticism of all forms of authority. Karel Reisz’s 1960 film would immortalise him forever as the icon of anti-establishment defiance.

‘Factories sweat you to death, labour exchanges talk you to death, and income tax offices rob you to death,’ the wonderfully quotable Seaton declares. ‘And if you’re still left with a tiny bit of life in your guts after all this boggering about, the army calls you up and you get shot to death.”

Sillitoe’s novel has provided the defining image of my home town, Nottingham, be it in our labelling as the binge capital of Britain, or in recognition of the defiant streak that has manifested itself in numerous ways over the centuries.

You don’t get more unconventional than the 1766 Cheese Riots, when we expressed our dissatisfaction with rising food prices by flattening the mayor with      a barrel-shaped cheese, or the 1831 Reform Riots when we burned down our very own castle. And let’s not forget that we’re home to England’s favourite potty mouth, D H Lawrence. The acquittal of Penguin Books in the Lady Chatterley trial of 1960 would pave the way for greater freedom of expression for us all. A Nottingham man made it possible for everyone to swear more freely.

But Nottingham has an incredibly rich literary history that extends beyond booze and foul language. It was home to Quaker poet Mary Howitt who translated the works of Hans Christian Anderson, it’s the birthplace of Alma Reville, aka Mrs Hitchcock, and it was here that J M Barrie found the inspiration for Peter Pan and Graham Greene converted to Catholicism. More recently it has become the adopted home of Booker-shortlisted author Alison Moore and Impac winner Jon McGregor. Yet despite this, Nottingham, and the Midlands in general, are largely ignored when it comes to mapping out English literary culture.

As the Chair of the Nottingham Writers’ Studio, I find this absolutely maddening and dedicate every waking hour to rectifying this vulgar prejudice. Currently I’m doing this through a graphic novel called Dawn of the Unread in which twelve literary figures from Nottingham’s past return back from the grave in search of the one thing that can keep their memories alive: Boooks. The aim is to get people reading about local history and in turn supporting libraries. The fact that so far we’ve only lost one library, at Wilford in 2010, suggests the fighting spirit of Arthur Seaton lives on.

We may be good at standing up to authority but we’re absolutely rammel – that’s local dialect for ‘rubbish’ – at promoting ourselves. All of which might go some way to explaining why England is talked about as a country of two halves: Our Friends in the North and the Beautiful South. These binary identities have acted as a kind of cultural vice that have effectively crushed everything in between. Talk about a squeezed middle – that’s the Midlands for you. Neither use nor ornament to use another local phrase.

It’s probably because of this that when you tell someone you’re from Nottingham they don’t go, ‘which of Geoffrey Trease’s 113 books would you recommend?’ Instead preconceptions about Nottingham can be reduced to three recurring themes: Are there really four women to every man? Will I get shot? And Brian Clough – manager of Nottingham Forest in their heyday – was mint. Sex, violence and vanity. It makes us sound like we’re in a Jilly Cooper novel.

The female myth is a throwback to the Age of Empire when a quarter-mile square chunk of the city was the centre of the world’s lace industry. The knitting frame was invented here in 1589 by William Lee, which would help mechanise the textile industry. By the 1750s there were about 1,800 frames in Britain, with the majority located in the East Midlands.

But, as is typical of Nottingham, no sooner had we invented something, we were smashing it up: the Luddite movement began here. Ned Ludd was reputed to be a resident of Sherwood Forest – like that other famous local anti-establishment rebel, Robin Hood. So 1811 saw the smashing of frames in protest at diminishing wages and when the government threatened to make this a capital crime, Lord Byron, who had inherited the ancestral home of nearby Newstead Abbey, stepped forward and delivered his maiden speech in the House of Lords.

“Can you carry this bill into effect? Can you commit a whole county to their own prisons? Will you erect a gibbet in every field and hang up men like scarecrows?” Byron isn’t around to stand up for the poor anymore – come to think of it, nobody is, certainly not in these parts. A recent survey found that there are fewer noble lords and baronesses in the House of Lords representing the East Midlands than any other part of the UK.

The lace industry has long gone and the warehouses that once housed a thriving workforce have been converted into fancy apartments and swanky offices. But still hordes of lusty stags invade the Nottingham city centre every weekend hoping to find the streets paved with garters. Rather than tell them they’re a couple of centuries late, I quietly whisper: they’re at home writing books. There’s Betty Trask winner Nicola Monaghan and Sarah Jackson, who took the 2012 Seamus Heaney Prize. And let’s not forget Jenny Swann, publisher of Candlestick Press or Alison Em, editor of irreverent local magazine LeftLion. We are the Queen of the Midlands in more ways than one.

The perception of Nottingham as a hedonistic and violent city may in large part be down to the success of Sillitoe’s Saturday Night and Sunday Morning. But not everybody shared Arthur Seaton’s idea of a good time: many publishers rejected the original manuscript because they wanted a more edifying narrative, feeling that the working class had it hard enough already. They feared the book might incite hatred for decent working men among its potential readers; some even suggested that the author had no experience of the life he described – at the time, Sillitoe was sunning it up abroad in self-imposed exile.

The opposite was true.

He had grown up in chronic poverty and witnessed his illiterate, violent father Christopher imprisoned for being unable to pay for food acquired on tick, while his mother, Sabina, had at one point turned to prostitution to provide for her family. Sillitoe was simply following the advice of his friend Robert Graves and writing what he knew with such devastating accuracy, it scared the living daylights out of the literati.

In the late ’50s Sillitoe would find himself grouped alongside the likes of John Braine, Kingsley Amis and John Osborne as an Angry Young Man. But, according to critic Peter Green, the Nottingham writer’s guttural version of working class life made the Northerner Braine’s offering in Room at the Top look “like a vicarage tea party” by comparison.

Sillitoe deplored labels and had no interest in being a member of anyone’s gang, a characteristic he shared with Arthur Seaton. Everyone was out for whatever they could get and only extreme cunning would give you protection, as Seaton put it, from “the snot-gobbling get that teks my income tax, the swivel-eyed swine that collects our rent, the big-headed bastard that gets my goat when he asks me to union meetings.” The message both Sillitoe and Seaton send to the world at large is clear: leave me alone.

This defiant individualism and mistrust of all forms of propaganda is a trait that has come to define the Nottingham character. With the 30th anniversary of the Miners’ Strike upon us we’ll inevitably be reminded of another, not-unrelated label: Scab City. I grew up in a mining village south east of the Trent called Cotgrave. That’s right: Cot. Grave. Says it all. For years I thought the local accent was Geordie because men from the north east relocated here in the early seventies since Nottinghamshire miners drew one of the highest salaries in the country. We were second in output only to Yorkshire.

Most Nottinghamshire miners didn’t join their Yorkshire brethren in coming out on strike when Arthur Scargill made the call; the mining town of Mansfield, 12 miles up the road, became the headquarters of the breakaway – and non-striking – Union of Democratic Miners. The non-strikers were seen by many to have betrayed their own in refusing to down tools but I guess how you interpret this depends on whose account of history you’re reading and whether you’re going to lump us all together.

We were either greedy and out for ourselves or we simply didn’t like outsiders coming down and expecting us to do as we were told. And let’s be honest. It wasn’t like it was the first time in history we’d defied orders to strike or refused to go along with other people’s propaganda.

This spirit of resistance is best exemplified by an incident in 1936 when Miners’ leaders flocked to the cause of the Spanish Republic in fighting Franco’s fascism. The Miners’ Federation of Great Britain introduced a members levy to raise funds for the International Brigade but guess who refused to contribute. Nottinghamshire.

As writer Harry Patterson reports: ‘The Area insisted that if the leadership wanted to send cash to the Spanish fighters, then it should come from the Union’s political fund and not the members’ political pocket.’

I’m not going to blather on about the Strike because it’s a complicated mess and you’re best listening to those that were down the pit rather than a writer with clean finger nails like me. But there are many similarities between the stance of Arthur Seaton in Saturday Night and Sunday Morning and the issues raised by the Miners’ Strike.

Some critics accused Sillitoe of being a traitor to his own. That instead of necking pints Arthur Seaton should have done something more “constructive” to change his material existence. He should have united with his work colleagues, rather than turn them against each other. Yeah, imagine that: For it was Saturday Night, the binggiest gladtime of the week. But Arthur went to bed early because he had work the next morning and he didn’t want to let his fellow comrades down.

If anything, Seaton’s political sentiments are an early echo of Thatcherism in that he, too, believes there is no such thing as society: “If I won the lottery, I’d only look after me own. I’d make bonfires out of the beggin letters.”

Sillitoe addressed these accusations of disloyalty when he wrote: “Those individuals who work in factories are only members of a ‘class’ when they band together to come out on strike for better wages and conditions. In normal circumstances they see each other as unique people, otherwise they would not see each other as human beings at all.” Perhaps this is what happened in the Miners’ Strike. Workers saw themselves as individuals, belonging to individual tribes with their own ballots, rather than as an entire class of people.

When Raleigh workers were interviewed about their response to the character of Arthur Seaton they protested that they were nothing like him, and that nobody they knew in the factory was like him either. I imagine this would have made Sillitoe laugh as it echoed the very sentiments of his charismatic protagonist: “I’m me and nobody else,” declared Seaton, ‘and whatever people think I am or say I am, that’s what I’m not, because they don’t know a bloody thing about me.”

I don’t think people know a bloody thing about Nottingham either, and I think most of us here prefer it this way. We’re much happier left to our own devices, something the villagers of Goatham can testify to. Back in the days of King John, folklore has it that to avoid a Royal Highway being built through the village – which the locals would be expected to build for free – they feigned madness by fencing off a small tree in order to keep a cuckoo captive. At the time madness was seen as contagious and so when King John’s knights witnessed Cuckoogate they re-routed their highway to avoid the village. It’s a cracking story that pretty much sums up our attitude to authority and unnecessary work. Goatham has now become Gothem and is forever immortalised as the fictional home of Batman in the DC Comics.

I see this sense of defiance everywhere I look in Nottingham, not least in the River Trent which cuts a crooked smile through the heart of England and has acted at more than one point in history as the dividing line between north and south. Its refusal to take the natural route offered by the geological configuration of the land by suddenly darting north east captures the rebellious and unpredictable essence of our personality, though I guess you could also say it suggests indecision. Let’s not get carried away.

So next time you’re heading our way swing past the Nottingham Writers’ Studio and let’s have a natter about the literature and fighting that has been hewn and continues to be sculpted from the city’s rough sandstone heart. And if you insist on calling us scabs or Shottingham, don’t be surprised if we lob a cheese cob at your head. Tara, duck.

This was originally published by Radio 3 for The Essay as part of their In Praise of the Midlands series, produced by Robert Shore and Made in Manchester.