Transport Eb from Theresienstadt,Ghetto,Czechoslovakia to Auschwitz Birkenau,Extermination Camp,Poland on 18/05/1944
Transport Eb from Theresienstadt, Ghetto, Czechoslovakia to Auschwitz Birkenau, Extermination Camp, Poland on 18/05/1944
Transport
Departure Date 18/05/1944 Arrival Date 19/05/1944
Theresienstadt,Ghetto,Czechoslovakia
Hamburg Barracks
Cattle Cars
Auschwitz Birkenau,Extermination Camp,Poland
In the morning of May 13, 1944, the inmates chosen for this transport received written notice ordering them to report to the assembly site, the “Schleuse” located at the Hamburg Barracks, on May 15. They were allowed to bring with them up to 50kg of luggage. The inmates, who had received identification numbers upon their deportation to Theresienstadt, were now given new ones. After they were counted, they were taken to the Theresienstadt train platform, where they were loaded onto the waiting train.
This transport, designated “Eb”, left Theresienstadt on May 18, 1944, and was the last of three transports that left Theresienstadt that month, prior to the inspection of Theresienstadt by the Red Cross delegation. . On board were 2,500 men, women and children. Historian Danuta Czech maintains that the transport arrived in Auschwitz-Birkenau the next day, on May 19. However, according to survivor testimonies, it arrived during the night between May 19 and May 20.
The trains from Theresienstadts to Auschwitz went north to Dresden, and then east to Breslau (Wroclaw) and Kattowitz (Katowice). Unlike most incoming transports to Auschwitz-Birkenau, the inmates of this transport did not undergo selection, and none of them were murdered immediately upon arrival. Instead, they were ordered to surrender their luggage and were taken the so-called ‘Sauna’ where they were shaved and tattooed with prisoner numbers. They were then taken to a separate, fenced-off section of Birkenau which received the designation “Familienlager (Family Camp) B II b”, together with thousands of Theresienstadt inmates who had arrived there in September 1943. The exact purpose of the Family Camp has not been ascertained. Rudolf Höss, commander of Auschwitz-Birkenau, claimed before the Nuremberg tribunal in 1946 that the Family Camp was meant to quell the fears of the inmates remaining in Theresienstadt of the fate that awaited them in the East. However, evidence presented by historian Otto Dov Kulka suggests that the Family Camp was meant to be used as a façade to showcase fair treatment of the Jews to foreign delegations (including representatives of the Danish government and the International Red Cross) who might wish to inspect Auschwitz-Birkenau. Such was the case with the ongoing endeavour to use Theresienstadt as a convincing illusion of normalcy in order to mislead the Red Cross. In the Family Camp, which was the only place in Auschwitz were young children were allowed to live, the adults did their best to maintain a normal environment for them....
Anna Frankova, "Deportationen aus dem Theresienstädter Ghetto. Methoden der Abfertigung von Transporten und deren Rückwirkungen auf das Leben der Häftlinge im Licht einiger Quellen," Judaica Bohemiae, XIII (1987), pp 3-28