The second transport left Karlovy Vary to the Theresienstadt Ghetto on 9 December 1942. It consisted of 33 elderly Jewish inhabitants of the Edersgrün camp. Very little is known about this transport. Like elsewhere within the Reich, the local branch of the Association of Jews in Germany was forced to cooperate with the Nazi authorities in organizing the transports.
The elderly Jews were ordered to purchase a room in an old age home in Theresienstadt, (“Heimeinkaufsvertrag”) with their remaining assets. The Association of Jews in Germany was forced to act as mediator and transferred the money to the RSHA. Upon their arrival in Theresienstadt the deportees were housed in the same harsh conditions as the rest of the inhabitants of the Ghetto. Prior to their deportation, the deportees were searched and all valuable items in their possession were confiscated.
It is assumed that the deportees were driven in buses or trucks from Edersgrün to Theresienstadt. In the Theresienstadt Ghetto listings the transport was recorded as XXII/2 where the Roman numeral XXII refers to Karlovy Vary....