Eighty years later

The 4 September is a memorable date for my husband and me; it is our wedding anniversary. But what we didn't know when we married on that gloriously happy and sunny day in 1971, was that about thirty years previously it had been a desperately sad and tragic day for our family. Not even my future mother-in-law knew the details: now, we do.
On Friday 4 September 1942, eighty years ago this year (2022), my husband's grandparents were herded on to a cattle truck at the concentration camp at Drancy, in Paris. (It happened to be the Jewish Sabbath.) They were sent with other Jews on Convoy 28 from Drancy to the extermination camp at Auschwitz, where they were immediately murdered. Henny Hartog was 45 years old, and her husband, Hermann – a school teacher and cantor – was ten years older. Their daughters, then aged 17 and 15, were in England.
There had been French people who had willingly tried to help, but ultimately they were unable to resist the arrest and deportation of the Jewish refugees from Germany who had lodged in their village in the foothills of the Pyrenees. Despite the courageous actions of their neighbours, Henny and Hermann had been rounded up by the French police who - acting on orders of those subservient to their German invaders - had returned them to the local concentration camp, Camp de Gurs. From there they had been transported by lorry to the nearby railway station, Oloron Sainte Marie, and then by cattle trucks to Paris.
Henny and Hermann had been fearful of this outcome for some months. They had been able to listen to the radio reports over the summer months which described the rounding up of Jews in the south-west of France, for deportation 'to the east'. It was really just a matter of time before they, too, heard the knock on the door. There was little – at this stage – that their French friends could do for them, but they took care of some money, letters from the children, Hermann's religious vestments.
In Camp de Gurs, there was not much time to make arrangements, but Henny gave another detained Jewish woman her daughter's address, and asked her to write:
'She asked me to write to you before she left. She looked well, she was very quiet (so was your father – and both were very courageous) and not afraid of the long journey. Your parents asked me to tell you that you must not be afraid, and not be worried if you hear nothing for a long time.'
This year, we remember the thousands of Jewish people who were deported from the Unoccupied Zone of France to the extermination camps of Germany, eighty years ago.









