The sixth transport from Hamburg to Theresienstadt left the city on May 5, 1943. It consisted of 50 Jews from Hamburg, Lueneburg, Roebel, Rostock and Winsen an der Luhe. Several days prior to the transport, all the deportees were assembled in the buildings of the Jewish community in Beneckestrasse. Their luggage, which was limited to 50 kilograms, was searched at the assembly site. They were forced to provide an inventory of their property and to sign a document transferring all their remaining assets to the Reich.
On the day of the transport, the Jews were moved to the Hannoversche Bahnhof (Hanover Station), an isolated cargo station located in the harbour area, which served as the embarkation point for all deportations leaving from Hamburg. They were forced to board one or two train cars, which were then attached to a regular train.
The train ride took two days. Due to the fact that the tracks into Theresienstadt had not yet been constructed, the train stopped in the nearby town of Bohusovice. The deportees had to walk the remaining three kilometers to the Ghetto carrying their luggage. Only people who were unable to walk were taken in trucks....
Beate Meyer, "Die Deportationen der Hamburger Juden 1941-1945, in Beate Meyer," ed., Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der Hamburger Juden 1933-1945 (Landeszentrale für politische Bildung, 2006), pp. 42-78