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Transport I/113 from Berlin, Berlin (Berlin), City of Berlin, Germany to Theresienstadt, Ghetto, Czechoslovakia on 16/06/1944

Transport
Departure Date 16/06/1944
Jewish Hospital Building, Iranische Strasse, 2-4, Berlin
Berlin, Anhalter Bahnhof
Rail car attached to a regular passenger train
Central Rail Station
Rail car attached to a regular passenger train
Theresienstadt,Ghetto,Czechoslovakia
This transport departed from Anhalter Bahnhof in Berlin on 16 June 1944 and arrived in Theresienstadt in the early evening of the same day. The transport consisted of 28 Jews, of whom 17 were women and 11 were men. The average age of the deportees was 46.2. The youngest of them was a 9-year-old boy and the oldest was aged 83. One person was between the age of 13 and 18, ten of them were between 19 and 45, nine were between 46 and 60, and seven of the deportees were between the ages of 61 and 85. Although the city of Berlin had been declared "Free of Jews", the Gestapo continued to search for and arrest individual Jews that met the criteria for deportation. The deportees were brought to the assembly site, where they were detained until a larger group of Jews was assembled and the Reichsbahn had supplied one or two railway cars for their transport. From 1 March 1944, the Jewish hospital in Berlin-Wedding, Iranische Strasse 2-4, was the last remaining center of Jewish life in Berlin and, sadly, also served as the assembly camp. On the day of the transport, the deportees had to leave the site. They were taken to Anhalter Bahnhof located on Schöneberger Strasse or to another spot along the adjoining tracks. There they were ordered to board one or two old third-class rail cars, which were connected to a regular train that left the station for Dresden. In Dresden the cars with the Jews were connected to another regular train headed for Prague....
Margot Ann Friedlander (Anni Margot Bendheim) - deported from Berlin to Theresienstadt on 16/06/1944