Difference between revisions of "Category:Benghasi Group (subject)"

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'''Benghasi Group
'''Benghasi Group''' (see [[Holocaust Children Studies]])
 


== Overview ==


The Benghazi group was made up of 302 foreign Jews, men, women, children, from various countries, who mostly fled to Italy with a tourist visa, but then, in May 1940, fearing being expelled, they left for Libya, where they thought they were illegally embarking for Palestine.
The Benghazi group was made up of 302 foreign Jews, men, women, children, from various countries, who mostly fled to Italy with a tourist visa, but then, in May 1940, fearing being expelled, they left for Libya, where they thought they were illegally embarking for Palestine.

Revision as of 17:23, 22 November 2020

Benghasi Group (see Holocaust Children Studies)

Overview

The Benghazi group was made up of 302 foreign Jews, men, women, children, from various countries, who mostly fled to Italy with a tourist visa, but then, in May 1940, fearing being expelled, they left for Libya, where they thought they were illegally embarking for Palestine.

138 of the 302 participants, originating mainly from Austria, Poland and Germany, came from Trieste, the others from Milan, Genoa, Rijeka and Rome. The journalist Benno Marcus, who had lived in Italy since the mid-thirties, led the trip.

In Benghazi they were surprised by Italy's entry into the war, which put an end to civil navigation. While they were still waiting for the ship that had been promised to them, they were able to enjoy the hospitality of the Jews of that city, who welcomed them into their often very modest homes and lovingly assisted them. The Jewish community made available a rather large sum for their assistance and Delasem of Genoa also sent money. Later also in Benghazi the refugees suffered the fate of internment, first in a military barracks, then in a slum on the edge of the city.

The proximity of the front, the movements of troops in the port, and the fear of bombing were probably at the origin of the Ministry of the Interior to order their transfer to Ferramonti-Tarsia. On 29 August they were embarked on a passenger ship still furnished as in peacetime, which, escorted by two torpedo boats, took them to Naples. Upon arrival at the port they were greeted by an imposing array of police and militia who, to their great consternation, led them to the infamous Poggioreale prison. Here they had to wait for three weeks, suffering the usual privations and tormented by constant uncertainty about their future, until they were transferred to Calabria escorted by police officers.

The group of foreign Jews from Benghazi is registered as present in Ferramonti on 29 September 1940. At the end of 1941 it was proposed to the family groups that were part of it to choose between three internment locations in various regions of Italy and so many left the camp.