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Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts

Monday, December 2, 2013

Survivors recall Kindertransport flight from Nazis


In this Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2013 photo, Oscar Findling, 91, who was brought to England by Kindertransport from Germany to escape Nazi persecution, sits at his home in London. The operation was called Kindertransport - Children’s Transport - and it was a passage from hell to freedom. Kristallnacht had just rocked Nazi Germany. The pogroms killed dozens of Jews, burned hundreds of synagogues and imprisoned tens of thousands in concentration camps. Many historians see them as the start of Hitler’s Final Solution. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)
 
 
In this Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2013 photo, Oscar Findling, 91, who was brought to England by Kindertransport from Germany to escape Nazi persecution, sits at his home in London. The operation was called Kindertransport - Children’s Transport - and it was a passage from hell to freedom. Kristallnacht had just rocked Nazi Germany. The pogroms killed dozens of Jews, burned hundreds of synagogues and imprisoned tens of thousands in concentration camps. Many historians see them as the start of Hitler’s Final Solution. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)
LONDON (AP) — The operation was called Kindertransport — Children's Transport — and it was a passage from hell to freedom.
Kristallnacht had just rocked Nazi Germany. The pogroms killed dozens of Jews, burned hundreds of synagogues and imprisoned tens of thousands in concentration camps. Many historians see them as the start of Hitler's Final Solution.
Amid the horror, Britain agreed to take in children threatened by the Nazi murder machine.
Seventy-five years ago this week, the first group of kids arrived without their parents at the English port of Harwich, and took a train to London's Liverpool Street Station.
Some 10,000 children, most but not all Jewish, would escape the Nazis in the months to come — until the outbreak of war in September 1939, when the borders were closed.
From London the children went to homes and hostels across Britain. But their parents — the few that eventually made it over — were placed in camps as "enemy aliens."
Many of the children settled in Britain, having found their families wiped out by the Nazis.
Monday is World Kindertransport Day, with events to mark the anniversary in many countries. These are the stories of five Kinder in their own words. The AP has removed some sentences for purposes of condensing their accounts.
OSCAR FINDLING, 91
My father was not a German citizen. On the night before Kristallnacht, he was arrested by the Gestapo.
That was the last I saw of my father.
As soon as we found out (about the Kindertransport), my mother went to where the committee was and put my name down. She wouldn't put my brother down because, she said, "I don't want to lose both my sons on one day."
I'll never forget the last words my mother said: "Will I ever see you again?"
Prophetic words.
I was two years in a hostel in Manchester. The committee got me a job in a fur shop. Once I was over 18 I was allowed to go to London. In 1944 I got papers from the Ministry of Labor that I had to go in the army.
It took me 30 years to get my parents' story together. Basically they were put in the ghetto in 1941 and in September 1942 ... they were all put on the cattle trains. They were sent to a place called Belzec, which was one of the well-known gas chambers near Treblinka.
And that was that.
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Already 16 when he arrived in June 1939, Findling, who grew up in the eastern German city of Leipzig, is the oldest surviving Kind. After a career in garment manufacturing, he now lives with his second wife in London.
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HERBERT LEVY, 84
My parents had tried to get out of Germany for many years but it was very difficult to get into anywhere until the British government allowed children to come on the Kindertransport. My parents applied, and by pure luck I was one of the chosen ones. I was not yet 10 years old.
My parents took me to the station. I said goodbye to my grandparents. My grandfather was to die a few weeks later. My grandmother was one of the 6 million people who died in the extermination camps, with her two sisters, many cousins, many nephews and nieces.
We finally arrived at the border. You can't imagine the relief of being in Holland, to have passed Nazi Germany.
It was fantastic to feel free at last.
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Levy came from Berlin via the Netherlands in June 1939. Months later, his parents joined him. They were interned in a British camp for "enemy aliens." Levy recalls being greeted with chants of 'Bloody Germans!' ("This was quite amazing for me," he said, "because I had been shouted at as 'bloody Jew' until recently.") Levy went on to become an actor. His wife, Lillian, survived the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
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THE REV. FRANCIS WAHLE, 84
Hitler marched into Austria in March 1938. Until that time I was just an ordinary Catholic. I then discovered that I was Jewish as far as Hitler was concerned, because all my four grandparents were Jewish. My parents tried to get us out. As we had relations in Italy the first attempt was to get us out to Italy, but they never got all the right papers. So we started learning English.
I was 9 ½ at the time. It was dreary that journey through Germany until we came to the Dutch border and then the ladies provided the kids with soft drinks and a bit of cake.
My sister and I were split up. I was very lucky. I was taken to a place in Sussex. A lady had let the committee have her very large place for the refugees.
I stayed there until 1940. At that time a new regulation came in that enemy aliens — and of course we were classed as enemy aliens — were not allowed to be within so many miles of the coast because we might be spies. And so we had to leave. I was taken on for free by the Jesuits in a boarding school.
Having escaped death really, and my parents having escaped death, it's made me immensely grateful to God, and I suppose the fact of becoming a priest is the result of that.
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Wahle and his younger sister Anna left Vienna in January 1939. He was an accountant before studying for the priesthood. Although now retired from his parish, he still works as a priest. Wahle's parents fled their home as the Gestapo came to arrest them; they went underground, living without papers for three years. Wahle's father went on to become the most senior judge in Austria.
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RUTH BARNETT, 78
I was only 4 when I came to England so I have snatches of memory. My dad was a judge in Berlin. He was summarily sacked when the Nazis came into power in 1933. He did get out and he went to Shanghai, which was awful because of the war between Japan and China.
Our mother came with us on the train because being a proper Aryan German she could get a visa. So I experienced it as a family outing. I remember saying, "Are we nearly there? Are we nearly there?"
My mother had to go back (to Germany). She would have been an enemy once war broke out. She brought us to our first foster family, which was a vicar and his wife in Kent. The vicar was a lovely man but his wife obviously didn't want refugees foisted on her. She was very cruel to us.
The second foster family ... had five children and they treated us exactly the same as their children. But where we were living there was in the path of the doodlebugs, and that absolutely fazed (my brother) Martin. So we had to be moved. Our third family was on a farm. I was in seventh heaven with the animals.
I had no nationality for the first 18 years of my life. The Nazis ... took away citizenship from all the Jews and Gypsies. I had to travel on a document that was a sheet of paper with "person of no nationality" written across the top. It had such a deep effect on me.
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Barnett's father was Jewish but her mother was not. She arrived in February 1939 with her older brother Martin. Having worked as a psychotherapist, she speaks today in schools about the Holocaust and seeks to highlight the fate not only of Jews but also of the hundreds of thousands of Gypsies killed by Hitler.
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EVE WILLMAN, 80
I was 5 when I came. My father was a doctor. My mother converted to Judaism when she married my father.
I came with another girl who was older than me. The only thing I remember about the journey is stopping at one point and people coming in and giving us a sweet drink. I don't remember saying goodbye to my parents.
I went to the first foster home — a Unitarian minister and his wife. They didn't have any children. I remember that she was very strict and precise.
After a year they couldn't keep me anymore and so I went to the next foster home ... to an extremely nice family. But one of my uncles who had been a rabbi was most concerned that I didn't have any Jewish instruction. And so I went to another family. It was not such a nice family.
My uncle and aunt were then established in West Hartlepool. I went there for a holiday. It was such a wonderful turning point in my life somehow. My aunt said, "when you come back, you will be with us forever." I was 11. I became one of their children. My cousins became my brother and sister.
My father survived the war. My mother was able to work and she worked in a factory, and the factory was bombed. She was killed just before the end of the war so I never saw her again.
It was really a wonderful thing that the government did to let 10,000 children in who probably would have lost their lives.
But it's happening again. It isn't happening to Jews, but look at the children in Syria.
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Willman, an only child, arrived from Vienna in April 1939. She later obtained a Ph.D. in biochemistry and worked as a researcher and biology teacher. She lives in London and has never married.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Drinkers tell of 'huge bang' before collapse at Glasgow pub


 Helicopter crash in Glasgow
Glasgow (AFP) - Pubgoers inside The Clutha bar in Glasgow told Saturday how the roof collapsed shortly after they heard a giant thud, as a police helicopter plummeted onto the crowded bar.

In the initial confusion, "I thought 'has the band blown something electrical like a speaker?' said client William Byrne.
He and others recounted how customers and passers-by helped pull the wounded from the wreckage and tried to shift debris to allow others to escape.
At least one person was killed and 32 others taken by ambulance to city hospitals, police said, as the search for more possible victims continued.
Revellers in the one-storey pub, by the River Clyde in the city centre, were watching Glaswegian ska band Esperanza play when the chopper hit the one-storey bar at around 10:25pm (2225 GMT) on a busy Friday night.
Byrne, 45, from Coatbridge, east of the city, was in the bar with his brother and a friend, when the helicopter hit.
"I was just coming back from the other side of the pub and there was a huge bang," he told BBC television.
"There was a couple of seconds of almost stillness after this bang and then the whole other side of the pub collapsed in on itself, the roof and the gantry of the bar collapsed.
"The side we were in was covered in dust but, from debris, relatively unscathed," he said, with the bar going dark.
"The left hand side of the pub just collapsed. People on our side of the pub were so, so lucky.
"I went outside, we held the door open, trying to make people to file out one by one.
"We've gone back in and helped lift the gantry up and get a few people out."
Brendan Riordan, said it had been tough to move in the bar with the amount of people enjoying the concert.
He told the BBC he heard "a very loud bang" before a cloud of dust filled the pub.
"I was on the right side of the pub where the band were performing", adding that the central and left sides had caved in.
"After I exited the pub I saw people coming out covered in blood and covered in dust.
"There were people quite desperate and just before I left the inside of the pub I noticed that the ceiling had fallen towards the bar.
"People were not aware that a helicopter had crash-landed on the pub."
Retired firefighter Edward Waltham ran inside to help with the rescue effort.
"I helped grab a couple of people. One gentleman in particular who was completely covered in dust, who had very shallow breathing and appeared to be quite badly injured." he told the BBC.
"My initial reaction for him from my experience was to try not to move him because he had been in a crush situation.
"But as we were lying there other people were literally being pulled out of the pub and more or less thrown on top of us."
Esperanza, the nine-piece group playing a free gig in the venue, said the group was safe and well.
"Our only concern now is for the safety and welfare of those less fortunate than ourselves," they said on their Facebook page.
"Waking up and realising that it is all definitely horribly real," said Jessica Combe, the band's bassist and general manager.
"Despite the situation everyone was so helpful and caring of each other. The police, ambulances, firefighters all did a stellar job and continue to do so today in extremely difficult conditions."

Authorities investigate Glasgow pub helicopter crash


Emergency services carry out search and rescue operations in Glasgow on November 30, 2013 at the site where a police helicopter crashed through the roof of a pub
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Glasgow (AFP) - Authorities were on Sunday investigating what caused a police helicopter to plunge through the roof of a busy Glasgow pub, as emergency services worked to recover the remains of at least eight people killed.

Police said recovery work was difficult because the wreckage of the Clutha pub was still unsafe following Friday night's freak accident, while 14 people were still in hospital with serious injuries.
Special prayers for the dead will be held at Glasgow Cathedral on Sunday as the nation mourns on what was supposed to be a weekend of festivities for Saint Andrew's Day.
Witnesses said the helicopter dropped "like a stone" onto the pub where more than 100 people were watching a band play. Three people on the helicopter and five people in the bar are so far known to have been killed.
The first victim whose body was recovered from the scene was named as Gary Arthur, 48, from the Paisley area of Glasgow, whose daughter Chloe plays for the women's first team of Celtic football club.
"Extensive efforts continue to recover the remaining bodies from the scene but due to ongoing safety constraints this is likely to take some time," Police Scotland said in a statement.
The wreckage of the Eurocopter EC135 on the roof remained covered by a tarpaulin more than 24 hours after the accident, with one of the rotors still visible, with a crane also on site.
Police appealed for anyone with video footage of the crash to send it to them, saying it "may be of help to the team as they investigate the cause of the crash".
Britain's Air Accident Investigation Bureau said it had sent a team to the scene amid reports that the company that leased the chopper to the police had temporarily grounded that model last year.
Bond Air Services found a crack on part of the main rotor and grounded its fleet of 22 EC135s for a month while it carried out checks and reported it to Eurocopter and the European Aviation Safety Agency, the Guardian said.
Bond was not immediately available for comment.
People inside the bar said they heard a heavy thud before the roof caved in and the air filled with dust and screams. Most were not aware until later that a helicopter had crashed on to the building.
Afterwards pubgoers and passers-by formed a "human chain" to help the wounded while emergency services worked through the night in a bid to recover people from the wreckage.
Throughout Saturday people stood at the cordon 30 yards back from the scene, their hopes fading by the hour for missing friends and loved ones.
John McGarrigle was desperately waiting for news of his father.
"I think he was in there when it crashed," the 38-year-old said, showing journalists a picture on his mobile phone of him standing with his 59-year-old father who had been in the pub.
"I've checked every hospital and there's no sign of him," said his son.
Scotland Chief Constable Stephen House said the two officers and the civilian pilot aboard the police helicopter were killed along with five people inside the pub. Thirty-two people were injured of whom 18 were later discharged.
"You can imagine the terror of the situation when a helicopter came through the top of the building," House said.
"We are dealing with a very sensitive investigation and operation here. It will go on for many days yet."
The injured had "chest injuries, head injuries, long-bone fractures and lacerations", said Jennifer Armstrong, medical director of the Greater Glasgow Health Board.
Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond called it a "black day" and ordered flags to fly at half-mast.
A minute's silence was held ahead of a football match between Falkirk and Rangers.
"But it's also St. Andrew's Day and it's a day we can take pride and courage in how we respond to adversity and tragedy," said the nationalist leader, who just days ago was celebrating the release of a legal blueprint for Scottish independence.
Queen Elizabeth said her prayers were with the victims while Prime Minister David Cameron praised the "bravery of the ordinary Glaswegians" who rushed to help.