Kindertransport (Children's
Transport) was the informal name of a series of rescue efforts which brought
thousands of refugee Jewish children to Great Britain from Nazi Germany between
1938 and 1940.
Background
Nazi authorities staged a violent
pogrom upon Jews in Germany on November 9–10, 1938, known as Kristallnacht
(Night of Broken Glass). After the pogrom, the British government eased
immigration restrictions for certain categories of Jewish refugees. British
authorities agreed to allow an unspecified number of children under the age of
17 to enter Great Britain from Germany and German-annexed territories (that is,
Austria and the Czech lands). They were spurred by British public opinion and
the persistent efforts of refugee aid committees. Notable among the refugee aid
committees were the British Committee for the Jews of Germany and the Movement
for the Care of Children from Germany. Private citizens or organizations
had to guarantee payment for each child's care, education, and eventual
emigration from Britain. In return, the British government agreed to allow
unaccompanied refugee children to enter the country on temporary travel visas.
It was understood at the time that when the “crisis was over,” the children
would return to their families. Parents or guardians could not accompany the
children. The few infants included in the program were cared for by other
children on their transport.
The Transports
The first Kindertransport arrived
in Harwich, Great Britain, on December 2, 1938. It brought some 200 children
from a Jewish orphanage in Berlin which had been destroyed in the Kristallnacht
pogrom. Most transports left by train from Berlin, Vienna, Prague, and other
major cities in central Europe. Children from smaller towns and villages
traveled from their homes to these collection points in order to join the
transports. Jewish organizations inside the
Greater German Reich planned the transports. These organizations were the Reich
Representation of Jews in Germany, headquartered in Berlin; after early 1939,
its successor organization the Reich Association of Jews in Germany; and the
Jewish Community Organization (Kultusgemeinde) in Vienna. They generally
favored children whose emigration was urgent because their parents were in
concentration camps or were no longer able to support them. They also gave
priority to homeless children and orphans. Children chosen for a
Kindertransport convoy traveled by train to ports in Belgium and the
Netherlands, from where they sailed to Harwich. At least one of the early
transports left from the port of Hamburg in Germany. Some children from
Czechoslovakia were flown by plane directly to Britain. The last transport from
Germany left on September 1, 1939, just as World War II began. The last
transport from the Netherlands left for Britain on May 14, 1940, the same day
that the Dutch army surrendered to German forces.
Arrival in Harwich
After the transports arrived in
Harwich, children with sponsors went to London to meet their foster families.
Children without sponsors were housed in a summer camp in Dovercourt Bay and in
other facilities until individual families agreed to care for them or until
hostels could be organized to care for larger groups of children. Many organizations and
individuals participated in the rescue operation. Inside Britain, the Movement
for the Care of Children from Germany coordinated many of the rescue efforts.
Jews, Quakers, and Christians of many denominations worked together to bring
refugee children to Britain. About half of the children lived with foster families.
The others stayed in hostels, schools, or on farms throughout Great Britain. In all, the rescue operation
brought about 9,000-10,000 children from Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, and
Poland to Great Britain. Some 7,500 of these children were Jewish.
Enemy Aliens
In 1940, British authorities
interned as enemy aliens about 1,000 children from the Kindertransport. They
were held in internment camps on the Isle of Man, Canada, and Australia.
Despite their classification as enemy aliens, some of the boys from the
children's transport program later joined the British army and fought in the
war against Germany.
After the War
Many children from the children's
transport program became citizens of Great Britain, or emigrated to Israel, the
United States, Canada, and Australia. Most of them would never again see their
parents, who were murdered during the Holocaust.
https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/kindertransport-1938-40
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