saving her daughter via Kindertransport

Henny Hartog was 40 years old when this photo was taken in 1937. She was a Jewish woman, married to a Jewish teacher – Hermann - and they lived with their two daughters in north-west Germany, in Wilhelmshaven. The previous year they had all waved goodbye to the elder girl, Lore, as she left for England to pursue an education that was no longer available to her as a Jewish youngster in Germany.
One year after this photograph, on the night of 9/10 November 1938, Nazis burnt synagogues to the ground, destroyed Jewish businesses, and took Jewish people into custody, where they harassed and humiliated them. Henny and Hermann were taken into custody along with their younger daughter, Inge, and Henny's father. The following morning Hermann was taken to a concentration camp and the others were allowed home.
Henny remained extraordinarily strong, despite 'wanting to cry my eyes out'. She arranged for her elderly father to go and live with Hermann's relatives away from the city, and immediately wrote to Lore with instructions of how to help their situation from England. Lore was 14 years old. Henny's other concerns were how to help effect Hermann's release, and how to get Inge to safety.
Within the following week, the British government agreed to permit the temporary admission of Jewish children under seventeen years of age without their parents, and without the requirement of a visa. This transportation of children became known as the 'Kindertransport'. Clearly, not all children whose parents wanted them to go to England would be able to do so; Henny worked fast to secure a place for her younger daughter.
She needed to complete a questionnaire concerning Inge's character and background, and enclose a photograph of her that were sent to the local social worker’s office. This office then sent the documents to the 'Reichsvertretung der Juden in Deutschland' [the Federal Representation of Jews in Germany] in Berlin, together with Inge's health certificate - in order to receive permission to leave the country. Henny also had to sign a statement allowing the committee in Britain to look after Inge, and another statement that declared the religion that Inge had been brought up in. The documentation was then sent to London for review by the Refugee Children’s Movement.
All went well, and Henny was issued with a travel date and departure details for Inge, who was allowed to take a small sealed suitcase with her – but no valuables, and only ten marks in money. She was included, with almost 200 other children, on the first 'Kindertransport' train which left the German town of Bad Bentheim, on the border of Holland, on Thursday 1 December 1938. Inge was then three days short of her twelfth birthday.
(the picture shows Henny Hartog (born Scheuer) in 1937)









