Authors: Steven Pressman
Tags: #NF-WWII
After gliding past the Statue of Liberty, the children turned their wide-eyed attention to the incredibly tall buildings that loomed before them. The skyscrapers clustered toward the lower tip of Manhattan only seemed to grow taller and taller as the ship inched closer to its West Side berth. Eleanor delicately balanced her way to the ship’s B Deck, where she joined Bob and the children for the
Harding
’s arrival into port. Gil, who had been up since before dawn, remained in his stateroom, reviewing arrangements for immigration and customs inspections. Louis Levine, the Brith Sholom leader, and Congressman Leon Sacks from Philadelphia had boarded the ship at Ambrose Light and had been working with Gil all morning to ensure a smooth transition onto shore. The three men did not emerge back up on the deck until just before the ship was tied up at the pier, which jutted out into the Hudson River at the foot of West Eighteenth Street in Manhattan.
Excited shouts and welcome-home greetings broke the morning silence as the ship’s passengers made their way down the gangplank and into the embrace of awaiting family and friends. Eleanor stayed on deck with Bob and the children, bracing herself as she spotted newspaper reporters heading in their direction. “They made a beeline for the group of children I was standing with,” wrote Eleanor. “Gil remained below with Louie and Congressman Sacks. I was cornered by the press.” The reporters had been alerted that fifty German children were onboard the
Harding
. “We didn’t want any publicity, yet I was afraid to say nothing at all about the children,” said Eleanor. “I was as non-committal as I could be.” As the reporters flung questions at her, Eleanor described the children’s arrival as a “quiet, private project” that resulted from “friends of ours who had become interested in bringing some children into this country.”
When Gil appeared on deck, he lost his temper, shouting that he did not want any publicity about the children’s arrival. Gil remained acutely aware of the public’s generally negative views toward opening up the country to Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany. He worried that news about the arrival of even a small group of Jewish children would not be greeted so warmly by others around the country.
Eleanor caught sight of a family friend waiting along the dock. The friend held up a small girl wearing a printed dress. Eleanor recognized the dress even before she could make out the girl’s face. It was her daughter, Ellen. A boy kept bouncing up and down next to Ellen, and Eleanor flashed a smile at her son, Steven.
By this time, most of the ship’s passengers had made their way off the ship. Gil and Eleanor had a considerable amount of luggage of their own to manage, along with all of the children’s suitcases. “It was quite a procession off the ship, with all of our baggage and all our children,” wrote Eleanor. “We tried to keep the children in line. We tried to keep them all together. We tried to unscramble their baggage, but everything did get mixed up.” More than a dozen volunteers from Brith Sholom were waiting alongside the ship to help keep track of the children. Two school buses were parked nearby, ready to transport the children to the house outside of Philadelphia.
Some of the children’s relatives—many of them had aunts, uncles, cousins, and others living in the United States—were also waiting on the dock. “They would find the child they had come to see and then the child would bring the relatives up to us and introduce them,” said Eleanor. Paul Beller had an awkward moment with a pair of cousins who had come to see him. “They spoke to me in Yiddish because they figured I would understand since it was pretty close to German,” recalled Paul, who managed to understand what his cousins were saying. “How do you like America?” one of them asked. “How am I supposed to know? I just got here,” the boy impishly replied. “They probably didn’t care for that answer too much.”
At long last, it was Eleanor’s turn to embrace her own children. For the rest of the morning Eleanor clung to her daughter, holding her hand tightly. Her son, Steven, at thirteen, was more interested in roaming the grounds on his own.
Bob Schless, who had spent virtually every waking moment with the children during the voyage, came over to Eleanor and pointed to his own three boys and his mother, all of whom had traveled from Philadelphia to greet the ship. “Do you think it will be all right for me to go home with my children now?” he quietly asked Eleanor. She happily insisted that he should.
Gil remained hard at work. “He opened each child’s suitcase very carefully as part of the customs inspection,” said Eleanor. “He was so tired, so worn, and still working like a steam engine in order to get everything finished.” It took more than two hours to inspect all of the suitcases.
By late morning, everyone had boarded buses for the three-hour drive to the Brith Sholom house in Collegeville, Pennsylvania. “What joy, what peace,” said Eleanor. “I sat on a seat across from my sister, clutching my daughter all the way there.”
As the familiar countryside rushed by, Eleanor’s mind wandered over the events of the past six months, which seemed to pass in a blur. She thought back to the evening in January when Gil had first mentioned this fantastic idea to rescue Jewish children from Nazi Germany. She remembered the impassioned pleas from all of those who had been so intent on convincing Gil not to go ahead with his seemingly impossible plan. She could still hear the desperate voices of the parents in Vienna who begged them to take their children from them and bring them to safety in America. And now here they were—rumbling along a New Jersey highway with fifty children in their care.
Eleanor stared out the window again and then looked back down at Ellen. She squeezed the young girl’s hand tightly in her own. She was home. She was back with her children. Everyone was safe.
For the first time in my life, tears of joy. God has granted you such fortune, and granted us, the parents, to partake in it
.
—L
ETTER FROM
H
ERMANN
R
OTH TO HIS SON
K
URT
C
OLLEGEVILLE
, P
ENNSYLVANIA
–H
AVANA
, C
UBA
J
UNE
–A
UGUST
1939
A
s the buses meandered through New Jersey and Pennsylvania, Henny Wenkart’s first taste of America took on the flavor of inedible chocolate. “Someone had brought a Whitman’s Sampler to the dock, and the box made its way around the bus that I was on,” she remembered. One by one, each of the children bit into the chocolates, which brought at least some of them to tears. “Viennese chocolate was so good,” Wenkart remembered fondly. “And the Whitman’s chocolates were really awful!”
For Robert Braun, the bus ride to Collegeville provided a dramatic reminder of some of the stark differences between his upcoming life in the casual new world of America and the formal Old World that had been left behind in Vienna. Gil and Eleanor’s son, Steven, had folded himself into a seat directly behind the bus driver, draping his legs over the chrome railing that separated the driver’s seat from the rest of the bus. “That was so shocking to us,” remembered Robert. “If I had done that in Austria, my parents would have clobbered me or the conductor would have thrown me off the tram. But here it seemed very relaxed.”
Dozens of Brith Sholom members, their wives, and others were waiting on the lawn in front of the sprawling, one-story stone house to greet the children when the buses arrived later that afternoon. The house had been swept clean throughout, and every one of the twenty-five bedrooms had been outfitted with immaculate new furniture. The “ladies’ auxiliary” of Brith Sholom had also excitedly prepared for the children’s arrival. “The dining room was set for all of us,” wrote Eleanor. “I had never seen so much food in all my life. Turkeys, pies, cakes—everything cooked and served by the women of Brith Sholom. No children the world over were ever more beautifully received or had a better welcome.”
In spite of the effusive smiles and delicious feast that greeted the children, many of them remained understandably nervous as they took in the unusual sights and sounds of their strange new surroundings. The Brith Sholom house stood adjacent to the summer camp that the organization operated for children, which further confused the new arrivals from Vienna. “I had been very apprehensive from the time I got off the ship, particularly when someone told us that we were going to be taken to a camp,” said Klara Rattner. “I didn’t know what a camp was in the United States, but we had all heard about concentration camps back in Germany and Austria.” The children’s fears melted away as the afternoon wore on. There was clearly no reason to be frightened by a camp like this, one where delicious cakes and pies were freely served up to anyone who asked.
Gil excused himself from the hubbub of the dining room and closeted himself away with a group of men from Brith Sholom. With fifty children now in their care, he wanted to make sure that all of their needs would be met. Among the men was a dentist from nearby Norristown who readily volunteered his services. “He probably did more than any other one man for the children as all their teeth needed attention,” wrote Eleanor. Several doctors also offered to help, guaranteeing that the children would receive ongoing care throughout the summer.
By early evening, the children had settled into their bedrooms. Most of the younger ones fell asleep immediately after the long and tiring day. A few of the older children stayed up a while longer, talking excitedly about everything they had seen, heard, tasted that day. Before long, however, a comforting silence had settled throughout the big stone house. Eleanor turned to Gil and asked, “Do you think I could please go home now? I’d like to be alone in my own house with my own two children.”
It was very late when she arrived back home on Cypress Street. She was much too tired to even think about unpacking; it could wait until the morning. She looked in on her children, who had been taken home earlier by one of Eleanor’s sisters. Minutes later, she was in her own bed and fast asleep, alone—Gil remained at the Brith Sholom house that first night. He did not want the children to wake up in a strange, new country without seeing at least one familiar face.
On Sunday, June 4, the
Philadelphia Inquirer
published a photograph that showed several of the children, their backs turned toward the camera, waving at the Statue of Liberty from aboard the
President Harding
. “An after-dinner discussion—started casually in the home of a Philadelphia lawyer last January—about the plight of the Jews in Vienna under the Nazi regime neared a happy conclusion yesterday with the arrival in New York of fifty Viennese refugee children,” read a line from the accompanying article.
Other parts of the article were wholly inaccurate, which undoubtedly disturbed Gil, given his efforts to stifle any publicity about the rescue project. According to the newspaper, Gil and Eleanor “went abroad several months ago and got photographs of the children who need help. The pictures were sent to the backers of the [rescue] plan and the children were selected.”
That same day, the
Inquirer
published another story, this one on the front page, about a disturbing development in the situation facing Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany. The Associated Press dispatch from Havana described a tense saga over the fate of 937 Jewish passengers who had sailed from Hamburg aboard the SS
St. Louis
ten days before the
President Harding
had left for New York. Although the Jewish passengers on the
St. Louis
had obtained visas to enter Cuba, by the time the ship arrived in Havana on May 27, government officials had changed their minds about honoring the visas. Despite a flurry of international negotiations, as well as desperate pleas from the passengers themselves, the Cuban government ordered the ship to leave on June 2.
American officials, including President Roosevelt, received a flood of urgent requests to allow the
St. Louis
into the United States. Cuba was not the final destination for the majority of the passengers; almost all were awaiting American visas. Roosevelt also received a telegram from some of those trapped aboard the ship. “Most urgently repeat plea for help for the passengers of the
St. Louis
,” read the telegram, written in German. “Mr. President, help the 900 passengers, including over 400 women and children.” The appeals fell on deaf ears. Even as the ship sailed within sight of the United States—at one point, passengers could see the lights of Miami from the deck of their doomed ship—American officials refused to relax the laws that stood between the passengers and freedom. A telegram from the State Department informed the passengers they must “await their turns on the waiting list and qualify for and obtain immigration visas before they may be admissible into the United States.”