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I thought I’d be the one to see disaster coming

'Now I realise how strong the urge is to ignore an impending threat, to carry on shopping and pretending that all will be well.'

March 4, 2021 15:14
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One people alone. A senior woman enjoys evening shopping while taking advantage of offers and discounts. On his arm a lot of shopping bags while she looks at her cell phone
3 min read

Exactly a year ago, I went shopping with my daughter. She’d been promoted and needed work clothes. So off we went to Westfield Stratford, where she tried on jackets, trousers, dresses — essential for office life.

We knew, of course, that there was a pandemic raging elsewhere in the world. But it didn’t affect our mission. She started her new job on March 9. Less than 10 days later she was working from home. The new jackets and smart trousers are hanging in her wardrobe almost unworn, a reproach from another era.

When I think about that shopping trip now, I ask myself why we didn’t realise. We knew about China. We knew about Italy. But somehow we didn’t allow ourselves to consider that office clothes would not be required at all for the next 12 months.

The next day, I spent time with survivor Mala Tribich, as part of the research for my new book. We sat together in her flat, drank tea and talked, about the darkest of days, about life in the ghetto and the camps. And then her phone rang, cancelling her plans to speak at schools in the next few weeks.

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