Date: June 11th
Category: Holocaust History | Refugee Journeys | Resistance & Rescue
In the winter of 1938, as the world stood on the edge of war, trains across Europe quietly began carrying their most precious cargo yet:
Children fleeing the Nazis.
They boarded with suitcases, name tags, and tearful goodbyes. Some never saw their families again. But these trains — and the resistance networks that powered them — offered a lifeline when borders were closing and time was running out.
Today, The Time Traveller’s Guild remembers the Kindertransport — the railway rescue effort that brought nearly 10,000 Jewish children to safety in Britain before WWII — and the underground networks that used trains to smuggle refugees, resistance fighters, and hope itself.
đźš‚ What Was the Kindertransport?
The Kindertransport (“Children’s Transport”) was a humanitarian rescue mission launched after Kristallnacht in November 1938 — a night of mass violence against Jews in Nazi Germany and Austria.
In response, the UK government agreed to:
- Accept unaccompanied Jewish children under 17
- Waive immigration visas in emergency cases
- Rely on private families, synagogues, and charities to sponsor care
Between December 1938 and September 1939, nearly 10,000 children were transported by train from:
- Germany
- Austria
- Czechoslovakia
- Poland
to ports in the Netherlands and Belgium, then by boat to Britain.
đź§ How the Trains Worked
The journeys were long, tense, and terrifying. But they were also extraordinarily organised:
- Each child had a name tag, a small bag, and sometimes a favourite toy
- Volunteer escorts rode with them for parts of the journey
- Many were met by strangers at Liverpool Street Station in London
🕯️ “We were told to wave until we couldn’t see our parents anymore. I never saw them again.” — Kindertransport survivor, Leo Bretholz
🕵️ Resistance on the Rails
The Kindertransport was only possible thanks to a network of activists, diplomats, and smugglers who worked across borders:
- Quakers and Jewish aid groups raised funds and coordinated logistics
- German and Austrian Jews risked arrest to get children on lists
- Dutch and Belgian resistance members helped guide trains and hide identities
Some trains were deliberately mislabelled to confuse Nazi authorities. Others carried falsified documents. In every case, time was tight — and courage was everything.
🇬🇧 Arrival in Britain
Most children arrived at London Liverpool Street Station, where a statue now stands in memory of their journeys.
From there, they were:
- Fostered by British families
- Sent to hostels, farms, or boarding schools
- Often separated from siblings or relatives
Though some thrived, others struggled — especially when the war cut off all contact with their families back home.
📜 Notable Figures
đź§ł Nicholas Winton
- British stockbroker who organised the rescue of 669 Czech children
- Dubbed the “British Schindler”
- His efforts were unknown until the 1980s
🕊️ Geertruida Wijsmuller-Meijer
- Dutch resistance worker
- Persuaded Adolf Eichmann to allow 600 children to leave Vienna
- Helped coordinate Kindertransport trains through the Netherlands
🚆 Kindertransport’s Legacy
- Many survivors went on to become doctors, artists, teachers, and campaigners
- Their experiences shaped post-war refugee policy, Holocaust education, and child migration rights
- Their stories remain vital reminders of what happens when borders close — and when people act with compassion anyway
🧠“I owe my life to a train ticket. And to the stranger who made sure I had it.” — Vera Schaufeld, Kindertransport survivor
🏛️ Where to Remember
- 🎓 Imperial War Museum, London – Holocaust galleries
- 🚉 Kindertransport Memorial, Liverpool Street Station
- 📍 Jewish Museum London – Artefacts and oral histories
- 🇩🇪 Berlin’s Trains to Life – Trains to Death Memorial, Friedrichstraße Station
📚 Want to Know More?
- Into the Arms of Strangers by Mark Jonathan Harris and Deborah Oppenheimer
- The Kindertransport: What Really Happened by Andrea Hammel
- Nicholas Winton and the Rescued Generation by Muriel Emanuel
- The Wiener Holocaust Library – Digital Kindertransport Archive
đź’¬ Light a Candle, Share a Name: #KindertransportRemembered
Post a tribute to a Kindertransport child or family.
Share artwork, poems, or simply the name of someone remembered.
Use #KindertransportRemembered and tag @TimeTravellersGuild — we’ll share them on June 20th, World Refugee Day.