Night of the Broken Glass and the Kindertransport

A Mission to Save Jewish Children

 

   

Night of the Broken Glass and the Kindertransport

 

By Fritz Voll

 

A Mission to Save Jewish Children

 

"Reichskristallnacht," Night of the Broken Glass, November 9, 1938, was a   turning point in the fate of Germany"s Jews. The synagogues had been burned, Jewish shops   ransacked and residences plundered. More than 20,000 Jews had been rounded up and   imprisoned. Others were murdered on the streets. Jewish family bank accounts were frozen and   Jewish schools closed. Many families began to turn all their thoughts on escape, especially   on saving the children.

 

An English relief effort provided the so-called Kindertransport, that over nine months   took some 9,300, mostly Jewish children, from Germany, Austria, Poland and Czechoslovakia to   England. The children had to go without their parents and lived with strangers, waiting for   the Nazi madness to pass. They did not know that only one in ten would ever see their   parents again. Many of the younger ones did not even know why they had to leave their   parents. The older ones were glad to flee the isolation from other kids and the constant   harassment from teachers, other children and neighbors. In England some of them were placed   in well-to-do families, others in modest homes and many had to move a few times. They had to   learn English and adjust to the life of their new families. For a few years they were able   to write to and receive letters from their parents. But in the early 1940s that also ended   and there was absolute silence.

 

Besides a number of books about the Kindertransport there has so far been only one   documentary film about the rescue effort, "My Knees Were Jumping: Remembering the   Kindertransport." A film by Melissa Hacker (1995). Another documentary is in   preparation for release in 2000 that has the working title, "Until We Meet Again:   Stories of the Kindertransport." The film’s producer is Deborah Oppenheimer. Her   mother had been 11 years old when her parents sent her away on a Kindertransport train. She   never saw them again. The writer and director of the film is Mark Jonathan Harris, who won   an Oscar for his Holocaust documentary "The Long Way Home."

 

The filmmakers were able to persuade the Kindertransport Association to mail out an   invitation to send materials and memories. They then reviewed hundreds of old diaries,   photographs, documents letters, memoirs and testimonies of participants in the   Kindertransport. They also filmed the train route from Berlin to Holland and the boat   crossing to Norwich.

 

It is not hard to imagine the trauma these children suffered and at that time there were   no professional counsellors available. Many have broken their long years of silence and have   written their memories. The few, who found their parents alive, often wanted to stay with   their foster parents because they could not communicate well in German anymore. One lady   remembers being pulled out of the train by her father only to end up in a concentration camp   where she survived. Norbert Wollheim, one of the persons interviewed shortly before his   death, had taken part in the organization of the Kindertransport in Berlin. His own wife and   child died only a few years later in Auschwitz.

 

Many of the children of those who were part of the Kindertransport want to learn about   the stories of their parents and do not want them to be lost when they die. These stories   are also part of the Holocaust and should never be forgotten.