Book Reviews

A Very English Hero: The Making of Frank Thompson

By Peter Conradi

Review by Anne Sebba, The Jewish Chronicle, September 2012

A Very English Hero: The Making of Frank Thompson In January 1943 a 22 year-old British officer gave a talk to entertain his men as the unit idled in the desert. The topic was Occupied Europe, with accounts of collaboration, resistance and murder in fifteen countries about which British newspapers said little. Yet Captain Frank Thompson, Unit Education Officer, detailed the murder by the Nazis of 54,000 Jews at Babi Yarnear Kiev followed by the killing elsewhere of one million Jewish men, women and children by machine gun, torture hunger ‘and what Frank quaintly called “lethal chamber.”’

The talk was a tour de force. Amazingly, he held his audience enraptured for almost two hours as he passionately explained that the future of humanity was at stake in the coming struggle, that a Nazi victory would mean slave labour, starvation, torture and mass murder.  Frank’s information came largely from the Daily Worker, the Soviet War News, serving in an intelligence unit and listening to Moscow Radio. But his passion came from the heart.

Winchester-educated Frank Thompson was handsome, sensitive and a Communist Party sympathiser but too much of a rebel to obey party rules. He had instinctive sympathy for all downtrodden peoples and, as Peter Conradi explains in this magnificent, tragic and thought- provoking biography, “that Frank at 22 understood that hatred entails loss of virtue is reason enough to honour and admire him.”  In addition, he was a fine poet and brilliant linguist proficient in nine languages. In April, 1939 Frank had volunteered at the New Herrlingen School in Kent, founded by Anna Essinger, a German-Jewish refugee, for the many refugee children arriving in England without parents, clothes or money. Much of the book is about understanding what made this very English hero dedicate his life to fighting the evils of Fascism. His parents came from a long line of missionary stock and much of his idealism can be traced directly to them. He joined SOE to avoid “the long littleness of life” and in June 1944, aged just 23, was captured, tortured and executed in Litakovo, Bulgaria. Today he is uniquely revered in Bulgaria for his courageous fight for the country’s liberation.