Below is the text from the Exhibition Plaque
About The Kindertransport Quilts
As
the German government intensified the anti-Jewish legislation
that threatened the lives of Jews living in Nazi-occupied
Europe, efforts to rescue them were initiated thoroughout
the Western world. Only Great Britain responded, following
Kristallnacht, by changing its immigration laws to
allow children up th the age of 17 to enter the country.
This change led to the Kindertransport, the mass evacuation
of nearly 10,000 children in the nine months before
the outbreak of war in Europe. It was made possible
through the selfless efforts of many individuals, and
the commitment of Jewish and non-Jewish organizations
working on behalf of the families and children.
From December 1938 to September 1939,
desperate Jewish parents in Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia
said goodbye as they watched their children board sealed
railroad cars for the first leg of their journey out
of harm's way. The second leg was on a ship that would
take them to England. Once there, the children were placed
with foster parents; in group homes, orphanages or hostels;
on working farms and in domestic service. As they came
of age, many fought as soldiers. After the war, they took
their places as productive citizens in many different countries.
Most of the children never saw their parents again.
In 1988, Anita Grosz, the daughter of
Kindertransport survivor Hanus Grosz, conceived of the
idea of preserving the memories of the Kindertransport
experience through the art of quilting. The "Kinder", now
adults, created the squares that grew into the quilts in
this exhibit. Sharing their experiences in this form opened
an avenue for releasing what often were long-repressed
memories too difficult to verbalize. The quilts also serve
as a vital link in the recorded history of the Holocaust.
The exhibit is made possible through
the financial support of the community and the Kindertransport
Association. The audio presentation represents the individual
Kindertransport memories that accompanied each quilt
square. Some of the voices you hear are those of the
actual "Kinder" who created these quilts.
The Kindertransport Memory Quilts have
been loaned on a permanent basis to the Holocaust Memorial
Center Zekelman Family Campus, by Kirsten Grosz and her
family, in memory of Hanus Grosz, the Kinder and their
brave parents.