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Little-Known Holocaust History: Fleeing Germany, Then Living In A British Castle


On November 15, 1938, shortly after Kristallnacht, a delegation of prominent British Jewish leaders had met with Prime Minister Sir Neville Chamberlain urging him to allow a large number of Jewish children from Germany to immigrate to Britain. A week later, Home Secretary Sir Samuel Hoare announced that the Home Office would grant temporary refuge to unaccompanied children up to the age of 17 provided that the Jewish community supported them.


Meanwhile, British Zionist leader Arieh Handler, who was looking for hachsharah farms for the arriving Orthodox children, got lucky when Lord Dundonald, the owner of an early 19th century castle – Gwrych Castle – offered it rent-free to Kindertransport children.

The children in the castle

The castle was situated on a 500-acre property in Abergele, North Wales, overlooking the Irish sea. Its facade – which included 18 embattled towers and buildings – stretched over 2,000 yards. Inside the four-storied building was a 52-step marble staircase leading to 128 rooms including a billiard room, a music room, eight bathrooms, rooms for servants, and a battery room that provided electricity to the castle.


Over 200 refugee children ages 15-16 years inhabited the castle: 60 from Bachad; 129 from Youth Aliyah, and 43 from Llandough Castle who evacuated it after it was bombed by the Germans.

“We arrived at the castle late at night. There was no electricity, only paraffin lamps. There was no hot water, no showers, just bathtubs. Hot water came several weeks later and was rationed. We slept on straw for the first few nights until the Quakers in Abergele supplied us with furniture and other items.”

The 24-year-old Handler organised counsellors to look after the children. His brother Julius served as the children’s’ physician.


“There were several Welsh farms surrounding the castle that employed some of the boys, including myself. The local farmers would pick us up in the morning and bring us back in the afternoon.

“Three weeks after our arrival in the UK, three boys and I went for a walk in Abergele browsing shop windows. As a policeman approached us, two of the boys fled. After the policeman caught them, he asked, ‘Why are you boys running away?’ I spoke fluent English and replied, ‘If a policeman approaches Jewish children in Germany, it means trouble.’


“The policeman nearly cried. He replied, ‘Tell them that this is not Germany. Here a policeman is your friend. When you’re in trouble, you don’t run away from a policeman. You look for one.’ Following that incident, a few policemen came to the castle to speak to the group about the British police. They bought us tea, coffee and cakes.


“Each child was permitted to send one letter per month containing 25 words to their parents. The Red Cross required a payment of 2 ½ shillings to send a letter.”

The boys remained in the castle until 1941 when the government requisitioned it. Some of the children were relocated to Youth Aliyah centres while others were sent to farms near Belfast.

Glanz wound up working in a factory manufacturing machine guns from 1942-1944 and later joined the U.S. army as a censor of German mail, for which he was sent to Munich.


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