Left-handed under the Iron Curtain
Or: what do you mean there’s no toilet on the bus?
It was a pretty average looking bus, really. The sort of bus you’d go on a
school outing in, in fact. You know, a day trip to
Aboyne, or Montrose at a push. The kind of bus you’d
be heartily sick of, and rather uncomfortable in, after an hour or so. A particularly
late-seventies kind of bus with all the modern conveniences – translucent plastic
squares in the ceiling, and luggage racks. Oh, and the driver had a cassette
player. Or maybe it was a radio. Well, anyway, there was an entertainment
system. So a perfectly normal, everyday, run-of-the-mill
school outing-type bus. And we were going on a school outing in it.
We were going to drive south from
I have absolutely no idea how I came to be on the bus. I was not one of life’s
volunteers, and I cannot now imagine the process by which I came to be persuaded
that it would be a good idea to get on a bus and go to
But, somehow, I’m queuing up outside
Out of my capacious rucksack come the same things which I carry with me to this day – a large stack of paperback books, and some squashed sandwiches. I’m probably too wound-up to eat, but I might as well start on the books. There are several Graham Greene novels – I imagine he was a key component of Higher English – and a few frankly terrible thrillers, which might have seemed like a good idea at the time, browsing round Watt & Grant’s, but are not exactly cool. I don’t, of course, discover this right away. First, I get started on my dreadful book, then people start asking me what I’m reading. Then I hear some impromptu readings from the back of the bus.
If you’ve never encountered the work of William Kotzwinkle, then I don’t recommend starting with Dr. Rat.
It’s an uncompromising anti-vivisectionist novel, sections of which were declaimed
by Christine Watt with much glee from the back of the bus at regular intervals.
We were, of course, fasci
Slowly (and I mean slowly – there was virtually no decent road north of
After several more squashed sandwiches, and around a dozen bouts of cramp,
I looked up to find that we were getting a quick sightseeing tour of central
London – no M25 in those days – and decided that this was actually not a bad
way to spend a Saturday. Having said that, I didn’t realise how long it was
still going to take to get to
I do remember rumbling on through
How much did we know about Obersuhl, the village we were heading to? We must have talked about it in the weeks leading up to the trip. We must have looked at maps, and talked about the school and the people we were going to visit. We must have done all of that, but what we knew was we were going to the Iron Curtain. I, and I suspect, several others, began to search the landscape. What I was hoping to see, I’m not entirely sure – a Berlin Wall, a fence, an actual Iron Curtain? What we did see was the abrupt end of the Autobahn. This road goes no further, and was that a glimpse of fence up ahead? I can’t be sure, and now I’m assailed by my familiar trepidation. Any minute now I’m going to have to face the fact that I haven’t been entirely truthful with my colleagues. I am, of course, oblivious to their trepidation at meeting their hosts, and in truth, the whole thing passes off in a flurry of welcomes and luggage.
My hosts – Erika and her parents (and, I think, her older sister, although I’m a bit vague on this point. In fact, I’m shamefully vague on the whole family: was their name Schneider? I can’t be sure) are, of course, friendly and welcoming, and determined, it seems, to fill me with good, solid, German food at every opportunity. Then, it seems, there will be dancing. More precisely, we are to drag our exhausted, travel weary bodies back to the school for a disco. Somehow, we all manage to keep it together long enough to have a perfectly pleasant time – I remember having a conversation with someone about the ‘old-fashioned’ music we were dancing to: ‘Satisfaction’ must have been all of 15 years old, we managed to dance to it nevertheless. I imagine we all slept pretty well that first night.
And so to Monday morning, and breakfast. There are
all manner of oddly-coloured and shaped breads; sausages and – wait a minute:
Nutella? Is that chocolate spread? They eat
chocolate for breakfast? We could get used to this. Suitably over-filled with
things our mothers would not have approved of, we somehow find ourselves at
school at
It seems that left-handedness is unusual, to say the least, in this part of the world. The rest of the class was spent, at least in my memory, discussing this physical oddity from the fringes of civilisation. In truth, of course, we probably spent a couple of minutes talking interestedly about it, and then moved on. I was, as you might have gathered by now, a particularly sensitive teenager. I still am puzzled by that first morning, however. Is it really the case that none of these people had ever seen a left-hander before? How else am I to explain the genuinely disconcerted rumblings I heard as soon as I picked the pen up?
Left-handedness notwithstanding, a day at a German school was altogether intriguing. There was, of course, the unexpected delight of being at school without being expected to do any actual work, together with the fact that, if we were ever asked any questions, we could genuinely plead that we hadn’t quite understood; perhaps it could be rephrased in English.... The truth was, our hosts’ English was significantly more impressive than our German – well, more impressive than my German, anyway. For a language-based exchange visit, we seemed to spend a lot of time talking in English.
And the school itself – I find today that it is called Blumensteinschule, but I had forgotten that, if indeed I ever
knew it – was full of unexpected differences from our own, dear, Hazlehead. Whiteboards, for one thing. And where we had a big patch of
grass out the back for doing sports on, this school had an athletics stadium.
Well, a proper track, at least, and some covered seating. They clearly took
their sports a little more seriously than we did. I seem to remember congregating
there at lunchtime, several of us contemplating how to politely dispose of our
packed lunches, mainly composed of black bread – no butteries here! We munched
our lunches, and slowly came to terms with the fact that this was actually the
end of the school day, and that we would be free to do as we liked for the rest
of the afternoon. Of course, what I want to do is go and see the border. Fortu
That afternoon is still vividly with me, 25 years later: I can close my eyes and see that great white wall, the tower and the barbed wire. It was not so much unreal, as beyond my normal experience in a way I couldn’t quite grasp. Not just being in a village so very far from the sea, but being in a field, staring at everything that ever needed to be said about 20th century European politics. Just over there – close enough that I could clearly make out their uniforms – were people quite prepared to kill me for what they imagined I believed in. Well, perhaps I exaggerate a little – they were certainly under orders to kill anyone trying to go the other way over the wall. Just beyond it, we could see another village, much the same size as this one we were in – I was subsequently told that it was Untersuhl, which made sense, but increased the oddness quotient a notch or two. Of course, what seemed so other-worldly and exotic to me was simply part of everyday life for Erika’s generation. I imagine that, for her parents, the experience must have been quite different, but somehow we never did properly talk about it.
Of course, having expended all that effort to get to Obersuhl, we were going to take every opportunity we could
to get back on the bus and go somewhere else. The whole trip seemed taken up
with bus trips to various places – I remember going to Fulda,
and at least one other gothic town; I remember a gliding club, for some reason,
and I clearly and most vividly remember going to a place called ‘Herkules’,
which is near Kassel. Herkules
and the Wilhelmshöhe park
were truly spectacular; built in that mad, 18th century style so
popular with princes and despots around then. Full of fountains and follys,
waterfalls and palaces, it was in many ways what I had expected
So many of the details of the trip have faded now, of course – I wish now that
I had kept a diary, but try telling the 15-year-old me that. Among the faded
memories are a truly spectacular thunderstorm on our way back from one of those
day trips, and some curiosities I can’t quite get straight. Why, for instance,
were we listening to the Wimbledon Ladies’ final sitting on the wall outside
the school – did someone have a shortwave radio? Did some of our party actually
go into
Of course, now I’ve mentioned the pub, and I’m going to have to explain that
whole aspect of the trip. Up to now, I may have given the impression that I
experienced this whole expedition more or less alone, but of course, we were
a bus full of pupils and teachers, with the teachers more or less in charge.
I remember Mr. Lee and Miss Dey; Miss
Of course, some of our party became quite attached to some of our hosts, and
there was a deal of – there’s no delicate way of putting this – snogging
going on. Being the kind of person I was, a lot of this passed me completely
by, and it wasn’t until I contacted some of my fellow travellers many, many
years later that I discovered the more salacious details. Ah, the innocence
of youth. On the final, or perhaps penultimate, evening there was a real cultural
novelty for us all – a gigantic outdoor barbecue in the middle of a field somewhere.
We simply didn’t have barbecues in
And then, suddenly, it was time to pile back on to the bus and face another
two days on the road. There were many tearful farewells, and a long, silent
first couple of hours, but we soon perked up, regaling each other with tales
of smuggled ashtrays and other derring-do. The return trip did, of course, drag
on for what felt like weeks – once we were out of
Te remainder of the journey has faded, thankfully – I have a vague memory of the Blackwall Tunnel, and a suspicion that we might have been on the wrong side of the road for a time, but I may have dreamt it. The whole of the trip back that Sunday is extremely hazy, and the only things I remember at all clearly are trying to call home at Hamilton services, and finding no one in – surely they weren’t all standing outside the school gates already – and someone finding ‘The Northern Lights’ by Renaissance on the radio just as Aberdeen came into view. We all groaned; it was too corny for words. As we all staggered off the bus in to the arms of our expectant parents and resentful siblings, not a backward glance was spared for the bus or the poor driver who had tolerated our racket for two weeks; we just wanted to be home.
Of course, the adventure didn’t end there – there was a return visit to deal
with; all these people who had looked after us so well were going to be subjected
to two weeks of life by the
But that’s another story.
© Richard M. Watt 2003