Category:SS Mouzinho Jun41 (subject)

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SS Mouzinho (June 1941)

Overview

111 unaccompanied children (June 1941)

111 children, released from French internment camps, such as Gurs and Rivesaltes, obtained permission in 1941 to emigrate to the United States.

The children left the Marseilles train station at the end of May 1941. They were accompanied by OSE workers Isaac and Masha Chomski, who coordinated the transport with the assistance of Morris Troper of the JDC as well as the American Friends Service Committee. The train stopped briefly at the Oloron train station, located outside the Gurs concentration camp, so that the children could say a final goodbye to their parents. The children had saved their morning food rations and presented them to their parents as a gift, to the amazement of all the adults present. The brief reunion was traumatic for both the children and the parents, and OSE decided to discontinue the practice on future convoys.

From France, the children traveled to Portugal by way of Spain. In Lisbon they boarded the SS Mouzinho which sailed on June 10, 1941. They arrived in New York on June 21, 1941.

Jewish Telegraphic Agency (June 12, 1941)

The refugee rescue ship Mouzinho sailed for New York last night carrying 700 passengers from all parts of Europe, including 130 children taken from QSE homes and internment camps in France who will be placed in American homes under the auspices of the United States Committee for Care of European Children.

The refugees, most of whom are joining friends and relatives in America, range from a babe in arms to a woman of 38.

Other passengers include Prof. Maximilian Weinberger, former head of the Rothschild Hospital in Vienna, who is supervising the care of the children aboard the ship; the painter, Marc Chagall, who has arranged to give them drawing lessons; Erwald Schindler, Prague stage director, with his wife, who is the daughter of Arthur Nikisch, former conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra; Chief Rabbi Robert Serebrenik of Luxemburg and Martin Aufhauser, banker.

Yesterday being a national holiday, the streets of Lisbon and the ships moored in the harbor were befogged, giving the Mouzinho departure a festive appearance, to which the children added when they drove to the pier waving Portuguese and American flags.

A special shipboard luncheon was attended by Government officials and American diplomats. Morris C. Troper, European director of the Joint Distribution Committee, paid tribute to the Portuguese line for arranging the run, to the Portuguese authorities for facilitating transit and to the American consulates here, in Marseille and elsewhere for their day-and-night work in rushing the necessary visas.

The children’s emigration was arranged by the J.D.C. in conjunction with the American Friends Service Committee. Many of the children are orphans.

A typical case is five brothers and sisters, the oldest thirteen who are joining their grandmother in America. Their father died in the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany and their mother died of pneumonia in the Gurs internment camp in unoccupied France.

Virtually all the children show signs of their intense privations of the past year. Those who were recently in Nazi-occupied countries show, by startled response to calls and gestures, the treatment to which they were accustomed.

Nurses who accompanied the children on the five-day trip from Marseille complained that their young charges were so accustomed to suffering that they did not inform the nurses when anything was wrong. One tot suffering from an arm injury bore the pain secretly until virtually in an agony from the infection before telling a nurse. The task of the nurses was eased by the older children, who cared for the youngsters’ needs.

After a few days on Portugal’s sunny coast the youngsters are laughing, smiling and romping, but it will be long before the older children forget their past experiences.

Most of the children arrived here in tattered clothing and wooden-soled shoes. Troper arranged for the children to be re-outfitted before sailing.

List of children

From La Bourboule (and Chateau de La Guette) (10)

This group of children are included in the 1940 JDC List

From Chateau de La Hille (and Belgium) (9)

From other Children's Homes

  1. Alfred Bar (M 1937)
  2. Martin Bar (M 1931)
  3. Robert Bergmann (M 1930)
  4. Josef Billet (M 1926) Vienna
  5. Alfred Eschwege (M 1931)
  6. Marga Ruth Fania Feudenthal (F 1927)
  7. Peter Goldberg (M 1926)
  8. Edith Gutman (F 1932)
  9. Lina Hafner (F 1926)
  10. Liselott Hafner (F 1927)
  11. Rolf Martin Herrmann (M 1925)
  12. Alselm Hirsch (M 1927-2007)
  13. Jakob Hirsch (M 1931-2003)
  14. Henryk Low (M 1926)
  15. Gertrude Pfifferling (F 1927)
  16. Heinz Warner Pfutzner (M 1925)
  17. Ruth Minna Saenger (F 1925)
  18. Hannolore Sailbergmann (F 1926)
  19. Herbert Wolfgang Sass (M 1927) Vienna
  20. Margot Schragenheim (F 1928)
  21. Erwin (?) Stern (M 1929)
  22. Liesel Weil (F 1930)
  23. Frymet Weiss (F 1925)
  24. Pesel Weiss (F 1928)
  25. Grete Wolf (F 1929)

External links