Dear Sir –
The revolting fate of 68 BURGENLAND
Jews, driven from their home, received into no neighbouring country, nor allowed
to return, has been commented upon troughout the international Press.
Now we receive the report, which we enclose, of distress still encompassing the persecuted,
our authority being Mrs. M. SCHMOLKA,
director of the Hicem
Prague.
You are free to make such use of the report as you think fit. Mrs. SCHMOLKA, however, does not wish her name to
be mentioned, nor, as usual, must we be named as your source.
Yours faithfully,
JEWISH CENTRAL
INFORMATION OFFICE
Public Service
Institute
THE BURGENLAND
JEWS on the DANUBE TUG – BOAT
An Eye Witness Report
On April 16, 1938, the Jewish
inhabitants of Kittsee and Pama,
Burgenland, Austria, were ejected from their homes, robbed of what money and
identity papers they had and, during the night, marooned on some small island in the
Czech
section of the Danube. On April 17, they were found by the
Czech
frontier guard and taken to Bratislava. That very same day they were expelled from Czecho-Slovakia and
once again taken to the German
border. On a narrow streak, “No-man’s-land”, somewhere between the borders of Czecho-Slovakia,
Hungaria and
Austria, they spent three days and nights, in the bitter cold, half starved,
and without a roof over their heads, between the fixed bayonets of the sentries of all 3
countries which they were not allowed to enter. Some of them, 17 in all, managed to get back
to Kittsee, where
the old men and children were locked up in a cellar, and the grown ups, men and women, were
made do hard scrubbing work. Exhausted from 3 days’ starving, the poor people’s
strength threatened to fail, but ruthless beating put them to work
again. During the night, after a 30 miles walk, they were taken back to the Czech frontier.
At long last the Jews of Bratislava found a
temporary way-out. They hired a tug-boat, which landed on the Hungarian side of the
Danube, near
Royka, and
received the people, 68 altogether, agricultural workers and merchants, infants and 80 years
old men. No country along the Danube being prepared
to grant the refugees leave on land, the Hungarian authorities extend
the permit from week to week, hoping that the Jewish
organisations will secure their emigration overseas. It is now three months that these people, smitten with
despair, refused by every country, and even grudged the stay aboard the ship – it is now
three months that they are thus kept in the vague hope of salvation.
Efforts were made to induce various countries
overseas to receive these unfortunates. Though some of the inmates of the boat managed to
emigrate to the United States, the
majority could not be emigrated, being unable to comply with the requirements set up by
the countries overseas. It was in full realisation of this plight of theirs that we went to
see the refugees on the boat, on July 10.
We have seen their unspeakable mental distress, even increased by physical torture, as they
either must stay in the narrow rooms downstairs which are infested with rats and vermin, or
on the upper deck where they are left to the weather’s mood.
There must be an end to this awful tragedy. It is not enough that Jewry
must suffer all the humiliation that is being heaped upon it? Are we going to proclaim no,
before the whole world, our utter helplessness, deliver up these poorest of the poor to the
Gestapo,
and allow a mass suicide? We have taken down all particulars of every one of these
unfortunates, and in addition, worked out a plan to lead this problem towards its solution,
it being in the last resort nothing more than a question of finance: 4.000 Pounds.