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Opinion

Remembering Kitchener Camp

A memorial concert is taking place at Wigmore Hall this month on Yom Hashoah

April 11, 2022 14:14
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4 min read

Seder night 1939 in Sandwich, Kent. Forty bewildered Berliners disembark from the coach that collected them from Dover docks and make their way to the truck parked alongside, piled to the brim with their luggage. A chirpy man, in school-boy German, instructs them to collect their suitcases, which contain all their worldly goods, and directs them towards two large wooden gates, swung wide open in welcoming embrace; the entrance of their new home.

Six months earlier, in another life, many of these men had passed through similarly imposing gates, but few would have made the connection. This camp had no sneering guards or snarling dogs, just cheerful faces, helping hands and, as this night was different from all other nights, the muffled distant sound of young voices singing the ma’nistanah. And it was to the hut where those voices were coming from that these men, the most recent arrivals at Kitchener Camp, were led. 

Set up by the Central British Fund for German Jewry and managed by the Jewish Lads’ Brigade, in an abandoned World War One army base, the Kitchener Camp scheme was British Jewry’s reaction to the desperate plight of the thousands of men languishing in concentration camps after the November ‘38 pogroms. The derelict site on the Kent coast was effectively rebuilt by its first wave of refugees, over the harshest of winters, to accommodate stateless Jews in Germany and Austria who could prove they were planning to move on to third countries.

This remarkable rescue mission deserves rightful acclaim, but it was not an act of resettlement. While it was only made possible by the same loosened visa restrictions that enabled the Kindertransport, official permission to establish the camp was only obtained on condition it would become a place of transit. “We sincerely hope,” proclaimed Lord Winterton, Britain’s representative at the Evian Conference, on a visit to the camp, “that it may be soon possible to find permanent homes for all, not in this country”.