The Lisbon Route: Entry and Escape in Nazi Europe
The Lisbon Route tells of the extraordinary World War II transformation of Portugal's tranquil port city into the great escape hatch of Nazi Europe. Royalty, celebrities, diplomats, fleeing troops, and ordinary citizens desperately slogged their way across France and Spain to reach the neutral nation. Here the exiles found peace and plenty, though they often faced excruciating delays and uncertainties before they could book passage on ships or planes to their final destinations. As well as offering freedom from war, Lisbon provided spies, smugglers, relief workers, military figures, and adventurers with an avenue into the conflict and its opportunities. Ronald Weber traces the engaging stories of many of these colorful transients as they took pleasure in the city's charm and benign climate, its ample food and drink, its gambling casino and Atlantic beaches. Yet an ever-present shadow behind the gaiety was the fragile nature of Portuguese neutrality, which at any moment the Axis or Allies might choose to end.
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The Lisbon Route: Entry and Escape in Nazi Europe
The Lisbon Route tells of the extraordinary World War II transformation of Portugal's tranquil port city into the great escape hatch of Nazi Europe. Royalty, celebrities, diplomats, fleeing troops, and ordinary citizens desperately slogged their way across France and Spain to reach the neutral nation. Here the exiles found peace and plenty, though they often faced excruciating delays and uncertainties before they could book passage on ships or planes to their final destinations. As well as offering freedom from war, Lisbon provided spies, smugglers, relief workers, military figures, and adventurers with an avenue into the conflict and its opportunities. Ronald Weber traces the engaging stories of many of these colorful transients as they took pleasure in the city's charm and benign climate, its ample food and drink, its gambling casino and Atlantic beaches. Yet an ever-present shadow behind the gaiety was the fragile nature of Portuguese neutrality, which at any moment the Axis or Allies might choose to end.
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The Lisbon Route: Entry and Escape in Nazi Europe

The Lisbon Route: Entry and Escape in Nazi Europe

by Ronald Weber
The Lisbon Route: Entry and Escape in Nazi Europe

The Lisbon Route: Entry and Escape in Nazi Europe

by Ronald Weber

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$27.95 
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Overview

The Lisbon Route tells of the extraordinary World War II transformation of Portugal's tranquil port city into the great escape hatch of Nazi Europe. Royalty, celebrities, diplomats, fleeing troops, and ordinary citizens desperately slogged their way across France and Spain to reach the neutral nation. Here the exiles found peace and plenty, though they often faced excruciating delays and uncertainties before they could book passage on ships or planes to their final destinations. As well as offering freedom from war, Lisbon provided spies, smugglers, relief workers, military figures, and adventurers with an avenue into the conflict and its opportunities. Ronald Weber traces the engaging stories of many of these colorful transients as they took pleasure in the city's charm and benign climate, its ample food and drink, its gambling casino and Atlantic beaches. Yet an ever-present shadow behind the gaiety was the fragile nature of Portuguese neutrality, which at any moment the Axis or Allies might choose to end.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781566638760
Publisher: Dee, Ivan R. Publisher
Publication date: 03/16/2011
Pages: 376
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Ronald Weber is professor emeritus of American studies at the University of Notre Dame. His past books include News of Paris, America in Change, The Literature of Fact, and Hired Pens. He lives in Valparaiso, Indiana.

Read an Excerpt

THE LISBON ROUTE

Entry and Escape in Nazi Europe
By RONALD WEBER

IVAN R. DEE

Copyright © 2007 Ronald Weber
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-1-56663-876-0


Chapter One

HUB Of THE WESTERN UNIVERSE

Lisbon at present is the hub of the western universe, and it must be the most fascinating place in the world.

Irish Times, October 23, 1941

Today Lisbon stands once more at the threshold of great events."

So began a lengthy article in the National Geographic magazine in August 1941. In the illustrious past, adventurers had sailed from the Portuguese port city on the southwestern sliver of the Old World to claim new lands and a world empire; now, in a new and radically reversed period of prominence, Lisbon was on the receiving end of a great flood of refugees escaping an Old World at war. Geography and Portugal's wartime neutrality had thrust the country's capital to international attention as Europe's last open gateway of escape for victims of Nazi terror.

But there was irony here.

Refugees reached Lisbon after long and sometimes perilous journeys, only to leave again as swiftly as possible. They were the new adventurers, though of need rather than choice. Lisbon was still Europe; for nearly all exiles the city was merely a transfer point to permanent resettlement in Great Britain, North and South America, Africa, Asia, the Caribbean—to anywhere that was not Europe.

Since they streamed in faster than they could be sent out by ship or air transport, on freighters carrying Portuguese goods to Britain or America, or on fishing boats willing for a price to take them through the Straits of Gibraltar to North Africa, the refugees formed in Lisbon a swelling bottleneck of fretful humanity. The city freed them from war yet also stopped them in their tracks, with no more borders to cross, with only the open sea ahead and limited means of getting across. For weeks and months they waited, milling about in a no-man's-land between past and future. The Lisbon route was the way of freedom, but the holdup before the final journey to safety could seem a cruel twist of fate.

And there was further irony.

Lisbon in World War II was a way into Europe as well as a way out—a revolving door of no importance to refugees wanting only to get away but of high value to the warring powers. As an open city, Lisbon allowed figures from both sides—correspondents, diplomats, businessmen, military brass, secret agents, smugglers, exchanged internees, ordinary citizens—to come and go, as it did newspapers, magazines, films, mail, and cables.

And members of both sides could simply linger in the city, savoring sun-splashed days and brightly illuminated nights, ample food and drink, well-stocked stores, and the possibility of winning or losing a fortune at the gambling casino in nearby Estoril while rubbing shoulders with the enemy in a café or, equally unsettling, following his foursome on manicured golf links. New arrivals at the airport in Sintra, some fifteen miles from Lisbon, were invariably startled by its multinational character in the midst of war. Five airlines provided passenger service from Lisbon to Britain, Germany, Italy, Spain, and North Africa while sharing office space in the terminal and parking their planes side by side on the tarmac.

But given the course of the European war, with Germany in control of France and capable of pressuring Francisco Franco's fascist regime in Spain, Portugal's vast neighbor on the Iberian peninsula, could a country so small and weak maintain its neutrality? Would the Allies demand military access to the Continent through Lisbon or take over Portugal's strategically placed Atlantic islands of Cape Verde or the Azores, in either case forcing Germany to add the country to its list of victims? As the war raged on could Lisbon possibly hold out as occupied Europe's lone port of arrival and departure?

The National Geographic article raised doubts. "Before these lines appear in print," came a disclaimer at the start, "Portugal may be only a memory and Lisbon a ghost town of the Second World War." And in closing the article returned to the possibility of the virtually defenseless country of some six million soon coming under Nazi rule: "It is almost too much to hope that, after ravaging nine-tenths of the Continent, the dogs of war should stop at the Portuguese border."

* * *

The author of "Lisbon—Gateway to a Warring Europe," Harvey Klemmer, had reached the city by way of London, where the ex-newspaperman had served since 1938 as a publicist and speechwriter for American Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy. His book about life in embattled Britain, They'll Never Quit, had just been published in the United States, the gritty resistance of the title leading to a plea for unlimited American economic and military support. Shortly before printing his Lisbon report, the National Geographic had carried "Everyday Life in Wartime England," an article drawn from the book.

In photos accompanying Klemmer's "Lisbon," only two depicted transients—passengers arriving on a Pan American Airways Clipper from New York; ticket-seekers jamming the airline's Lisbon's office—with the rest, many credited to Klemmer, merely local tourist snapshots. One of the unexpected pleasures of wartime Lisbon, Klemmer pointed out, was the freedom to take photographs when and where one wished. "I do not suppose," he wrote, "there is another city in Europe today where one may take pictures of such things as shipyards, factories, quays, and oil tanks. You can take anything you like in Portugal." (One photo accompanying the article, not taken by Klemmer, showed young boys parading down the broad Avenida da Liberdade, Lisbon's leafy version of the Champs-Elysées. The caption identified the boys as members of the "Youth Movement," a group created by the government to "promote physical fitness, form character, and inculcate respect for law and discipline." Left unremarked was that Portuguese Youth, formed in 1936, was a fascist-style organization modeled on Hitler Youth. The uniform of green shirt and khaki trousers included a leather belt, its large metal clasp branded with an S, which some believed stood for the Portuguese dictator António Salazar, and authorities said referred to Service.)

In Lisbon you could also read what you liked. International publications overflowed newsstands, Klemmer reported, with the displays seemingly devoid of emphasis or segregation, the vendors playing no favorites. "You could get," he noted, "the London Daily Mail and the New York Times; you can also get the Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, the Lavora Fascista, and the Falangist Arriba." The same was true of Paris newspapers published under German occupation. French refugees were startled when they saw such familiar papers as Paris-Soir or Le Matin, and startled again when they encountered the crude Nazi propaganda inside. (In Marseille an American aid worker was advised to buy Paris-Soir on grounds that "everything is in it, if you know how to read it properly. Read just the opposite of what is written, and you'll have the whole truth.")

Klemmer told of refugees jamming all Lisbon-area boardinghouses and hotel rooms while waiting for ships and planes to carry them away. With the United States the destination of choice, its consulate was inundated with applicants for visas. "If we could go out on the front steps and announce that everyone who wanted to could go to America," said a consular official, "I think we would get about 40,000." Klemmer learned that already seven thousand Americans had been evacuated from Lisbon, and those remaining were going home at a rate of about a hundred a week.

However gradual their rate of departure, American citizens ranked among the privileged few, with priority on American-owned overseas transport—though companies were required to honor previously purchased tickets of noncitizens on dates they came due. Other refugees roamed about the city, grasping at snatches of conversation, easy prey for rumor and deception:

There's a Basque fisherman who, for 20,000 escudos, will run passengers to North Africa.

Have you heard about the Greek passenger ship, going to New York?

My brother knows a man at the American Express; he says the Portuguese are going to put on another boat.

My hotel porter says a Spanish freighter is in port, loading for South America.

If they could somehow block out the plight of the refugees, new arrivals coming from suffering London, Klemmer among them, discovered in lush and colorful Lisbon "some half-forgotten splendor out of another life." They gaped at the lights, the strolling throngs, the automobile traffic, the displays in the windows. And in seaside Estoril they found a casino operating full blast, conversations conducted without censorship, beaches without mines or barbed wire. Still, never far from mind was Portugal's vulnerability.

The country had little military capability, giving rise to a standing joke among Germans and others in the country that Hitler could take Portugal with a telephone call—meaning that a powerful fifth column, already positioned in the country, would rise up; or that the government had a fascist leaning despite its neutrality; or simply that Germany's military might was so obviously superior that Portugal would not attempt resistance. The best to be said, Klemmer concluded, was that "the Portuguese have handled themselves well, thus far, in one of the most difficult situations with which any nation has even been confronted."

* * *

Klemmer's "Lisbon" bore the importance of appearing in a prominent magazine. But, in the summer of 1941, the article added mostly detail and texture to already familiar accounts in American, British, and other national publications about the surprising wartime importance of the small, poor, peripheral, but proud nation that was outside the war and hoping to remain so, yet found itself—as imagined by a columnist in the Irish Times, looking on from a similarly neutral nation—"the most fascinating place in the world." In December 1940, some nine months before Klemmer's report, the London Times cited war developments that "have brought Portugal into the glare of the international limelight." In the same month the New York Times reported that Portugal, "the last comparatively free country on the Continent of Europe," had war refugees flocking to its port city. Earlier, in October 1940, the London Times noted in an editorial that for more than three months refugees had been coming to Lisbon "by sea and land, by boat and bicycle, by train and on foot, from every country invaded or threatened by the Nazi scourge."

Earlier still, in July 1940, the New York Times' Lisbon correspondent, Alva E. Gaymon, wrote of an expanding refugee population in Lisbon that was increasing by the hundreds each day. The city was a "veritable bee hive" of activity. "From early morning until late at night taxis are running about in all directions. Cafés are open virtually all night and interpreters are at a premium." As a result of the refugee buildup, accommodations were nearly impossible to find in Lisbon or the nearby beach communities of Estoril, Monte Estoril, and Cascais. The consulates of the overseas countries that the refugees hoped to reach were swamped with work. In the same month of 1940 Lilian Mowrer related in The New Yorker a personal story of joining the flight through France to Lisbon, "the new and magic goal of the growing thousands of refugees." The refugees were a jumble of nationalities and backgrounds—she was the British-born wife of Edgar Ansel Mowrer, a notable American correspondent based in Paris—but shared a single goal: "All of them were headed for Lisbon, the port of good hope, from which they could escape from the Germans by Clipper, or ocean liner, or freighter, or tramp ship—anything that would take them away from a Europe that was rapidly becoming a prison."

The German blitzkrieg that had swept through the Low Countries and France in May 1940 had triggered a mass exodus of refugees fleeing south while under aerial assault by the Luftwaffe. Most of those overflowing the roads and rail stations were French, but there were also Belgians, Dutch, Luxembourgers, Central Europeans, and German refugees who had earlier fled to France and elsewhere—in all, some six to eight million people, with four million fleeing from the Paris region alone. Following the total collapse of France and the signing of the Franco-German armistice on June 22, the country was redrawn into zones—the most important splitting the nation into an occupied zone, which included Paris and the entire Atlantic coast, and a free zone with Vichy as seat of a puppet government and the aged Marshal Philippe Pétain as head of state—and many of the French, refugees in their own land, returned to their homes. For a million or more others, including tens of thousands of Jews and sizable numbers of American and British citizens who had been living or traveling in Europe, the great migration pressed on.

At the time of the armistice, the German military thrust into France along the Atlantic Coast had reached south to Bordeaux. Refugees still ahead of the Wehrmacht could head for Bayonne, Biarritz, St. Jean-de-Luz, and finally Hendaye on the border with Spain. The other main escape route was to the east, through unoccupied France to such centers as Toulouse, Nîmes, Avignon, and eventually Marseille on the Mediterranean. Despite its advantage as France's largest port and major link with North Africa, the old Roman city was now under Vichy authority and its shipping subject to the British sea blockade. As result, most of the refugees reaching Marseille used it as a preparation area for, so they hoped, a continued overland journey to the Spanish border at Cerbère.

Whether fleeing through occupied or unoccupied France or from Italy, by the summer of 1940 the final European goal for most refugees was Lisbon. Reaching it meant leaving France, crossing Spain, entering Portugal—a long, costly, often frightening three-stage journey further burdened by a gauntlet of bureaucrats and a maddening array of differing national demands for proper papers. A character in Erich Maria Remarque's acclaimed 1964 novel The Night in Lisbon—published while the literary lion of World War I was living in the United States—bitterly recalled the frenzied gathering of documents that faced World War II refugees trying to reach Portugal:

Bordeaux. The Pyrenees. You feel out the border crossing. Retreat to Marseille. The battle to move sluggish hearts as the barbarian hordes come closer. Through it all the lunacy of bureaucracy gone wild. No residence permit, but no exit permit either. They won't let you stay and they won't let you leave. Finally you get your exit permit, but your Spanish transit visa has meanwhile expired. You can't get another unless you have a Portuguese visa, and that's contingent on something else again. Which means that you have to start all over again—your days are spent waiting outside the consulates, those vestibules of heaven and hell! A vicious circle of madness!

Finally arriving in Lisbon meant only another trek to leave Europe behind completely, yet without arrival there was little hope of total escape. Other neutral nations not already overrun by the Nazis—Sweden, Switzerland, Spain—also offered sanctuary, but Lisbon alone had an Atlantic port for resettlement overseas and the vital land buffer of Spain between it and the Nazi war machine. The Lisbon route, as the Swiss writer Denis de Rougemont characterized it in his journal when he reached Portugal in August 1940, was the war's lifeline of freedom.

* * *

Like Portugal, Spain had declared neutrality when the war broke out in September 1939. But whether the country would remain free of the war was, from the summer of 1940 onward, anyone's guess. Three years of civil war had left the Spanish economy in shambles. Food shortages were now such that the American embassy in Madrid used its own truck to haul in supplies from Portugal. Politically the civil war had drawn the Franco regime deeply within the German orbit, and when the European war began, and especially after the fall of France, Spain leaned heavily in the direction of the Third Reich. Refugees pushed as rapidly as possible through the country, wrote Lilian Mowrer, because "no one knew how soon Spain would drop the mask of neutrality or how quickly Portugal's independence would be threatened. It was this fear which kept us swiftly on the move."

There was ample reason to fear. Following a meeting of Hitler and Franco at Hendaye in October 1940—the second stop of the Führer's private train on a journey that included talks with Pétain and Mussolini—Spain signed a protocol with Germany that pledged entry into the war at some future point agreed upon by the two governments. Spain never carried through with the pact, though for the next two years joining the Axis powers remained Spanish policy, and collaboration between Madrid and Berlin was pursued on many fronts.

Nonetheless in the summer and early fall of 1940 Spain went its own way by liberally issuing transit visas to Jews and other refugees who also had Portuguese transit visas and some evidence of a final destination overseas. It was clear the refugees were meant to keep moving through Spain; in the words of the foreign minister of the time, Jordana y Sousa, they were "passing through our country as light passes through a glass, leaving no trace." Spain wanted no trouble with Germany over the exiles, yet beyond the exclusion of fit men of military age together with some currency restrictions, the country kept its doors open to those with proper papers.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from THE LISBON ROUTE by RONALD WEBER Copyright © 2007 by Ronald Weber. Excerpted by permission of IVAN R. DEE. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Preface ix

Maps xi

1 Hub of the Western Universe 1

2 Tramping Forward 27

3 Whatever We Can 53

4 The Last Lap 77

5 Gaiety, Plenty, and Brilliant Lights 95

6 Living There 121

7 Celebrité de Passage 143

8 Holding Out Hopes 171

9 Gloriously Neutral 193

10 War without Guns 209

11 The Seething Cauldron 231

12 One World to Another 251

13 Wolfram by Day 277

14 Where to Spend One's Holiday 293

Acknowledgments 305

Notes 307

Sources 339

Index 349

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