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The Improbable Escape of Two Toung Brothers From Nazi Germany

Movies
A documentary. In the aftermath of Kristallnacht, in December 1938, two young Jewish boys, ages 12 and 14, boarded a train out of Berlin for Holland, to escape Grmany. Arriving in Nijmegen, Holland without documents or family, George and Alexander Tscherny were placed with a family by the Dutch Committee for Jewish Refugees, waiting to be granted asylum from the Queen and then dispatched to a refugee camp. When Germany invaded Holland in May 1940, the Tscherny brothers were in further peril. Nazis seized the property housing the refugee children and they were shunted to an orphanage in Amsterdam. Meanwhile, their parents had successfully fled Germany and were able to provide entry visas to the USA, but the boys had to return to Nazi Germany to obtain transit visas to reach Lisbon, their port to freedom. They left Amsterdam in February 1941 and joined a group of 10 other children who were assembling in Berlin with the same purpose. After several months, Jewish agencies were ultimately able to secure the necessary approval for their transit visas. In a sealed train, the 12 children departed for Lisbon, where they boarded various ships to the United States. Alex and George were finally able to sail on Alex’s birthday, June 10, 1941, aboard the Mouzinho bound for New York.