black metal train rails

đź§ł Trains That Hid Refugees: Kindertransport & Beyond

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, FriedrichstraĂźe Station

📚 Want to Know More?


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.


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