Lost Train
and Liberation

Chapter 7
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In April 1945, the SS moved most of the hostages away from the exchange camp. The three trains that departed from Bergen-Belsen were probably headed for Theresienstadt. Many hostages died during or shortly after the journey. One of the trains was liberated near the village of Tröbitz. This train was later referred to as the “Lost Train”.

Why did the SS force the exchange hostages to leave Bergen-Belsen?

The SS still believed that the hostages held value. They wanted to exchange them for Germans in Allied captivity, or for money and goods. They did not want to hand them over to the liberators, who were rapidly approaching the camp.

Susanne Schuller, “The barrier”, Bergen-Belsen, 1944/1945
© Bergen-Belsen Memorial

There are no known photos of the Lost Train. The drawings in this chapter were made by Susanne Schuller. She views the events with irony and sarcasm. The original drawings are very small, some of them quite tiny.

Susanne Schuller was also imprisoned in the Bergen-Belsen exchange camp. She did not know the Tal and Levenbach families, but was taken away from the camp on the same train. 

“It’s impossible that we’re leaving! And yet it happened.”

Annelie
Annelie

How did the prisoners get from the exchange camp to the railway ramp?

Most prisoners had to walk the approximately six kilometres to the railway ramp. Weak, sick and elderly prisoners were transported by truck. 

Susanne Schuller, “To the train station”, Bergen-Belsen, 1945
© Bergen-Belsen Memorial

Why did the SS bring thousands of other prisoners to Bergen-Belsen in April 1945?

In the weeks before the war ended, Bergen-Belsen became the destination of death marches and evacuation transports from other camps. To prevent the concentration camp prisoners from being liberated, the SS transported them deeper inside the German Reich.

Untitled Artwork 7

“As we were being evacuated from the camp, thousands of new prisoners arrived in Bergen-Belsen.”

Chanan
Chanan

What did the exchange prisoners see on their way to the railway ramp?

Susanne Schuller, “The railway ramp at Bergen-Belsen”, April 1945
© Bergen-Belsen Memorial

“Endless rows of prisoners came towards us.”

Annelie
Annelie

“We saw the docks full of people.”

Noomi
No'omi

How long did it take for the lost train to actually depart?

“After about an hour we could get on the train.”

Annelie
Annelie

“The next day towards midnight, the train began to move.”

Chanan
Chanan

What were the conditions like during the journey?

The train was completely overcrowded. There were passenger carriages and freight carriages.

Susanne Schuller, “Dusi and her group sleeping sitting up” (prisoners in a freight car), April 1945
© Bergen-Belsen Memorial

“Some of the carriages were regular coaches.”

Noomi
No'omi

Were the prisoners given anything to eat during the journey?

Some provisions had been distributed before departure. During the journey, the prisoners were occasionally given some bread or other food, but there was almost no water.

“We were left without food and drinking water.”

Chanan
Chanan

“Chanan was sick. He hallucinated about food.”

Noomi
No'omi

Why didn’t the prisoners escape from the train?

The train was not heavily guarded, but most of the prisoners were too weak and sick to escape.

Susanne Schuller, “Is there a locomotive?”, April 1945
© Bergen-Belsen Memorial

“People were so discouraged that they clung to this train, like... like it was life itself.”

Noomi
No'omi

What route did the train take?

The train travelled through a narrow corridor between the frontlines of the British and the US-American armies in the West and the Red Army in the East. The destination was the Ghetto of Theresienstadt. 

The route of the Lost Train. Map supplement No. 3 to Deutsches Kursbuch 1941 (IE 762 b), as of 1935 (excerpt), Verkehrswissenschaftliche Lehrmittelgesellschaft mbH bei der Deutschen Reichsbahn; Lithographisches Institut
© Stadtgeschichtliches Museum Leipzig

“We travelled through a burning and devastated Germany in the last month of the war.”

Chanan
Chanan

Why did so many prisoners die on the train journey?

The train’s occupants died from hunger, disease and exhaustion. There were also fatalities during Allied air raids that hit the train.

“We were frequently attacked by Allied planes despite the white makeshift flags we attached to the roofs of the carriages.”

Chanan
Chanan

“I remember the train was in Wittenberge, and there were a lot of bombings. We were ordered out.”

Noomi
No'omi

“Every day of the journey, we buried the dead by the side of the tracks whenever we had the chance.”

Chanan
Chanan

“But there were times when there was no time to bury them, and then they were pretty much just thrown out, and the train continued...”

Noomi
No'omi

“And then, Father’s condition got worse and worse.”

Noomi
No'omi
Bild Ch7 Abb7.2 web

Sander Tal

1903 – 1945

“My father faded away from hunger and general exhaustion on the night of 21 April 1945, 8 Iyyar 5755 in the Jewish calendar.”

Chanan
Chanan

“The following morning, 22 April, they came to pick up Father”

Annelie
Annelie
Death list from the transport on 10 April 1945

Transcription

128 Tal, Alexander [born] 24-10-03 [died] 21-4-45 auf der Strecke Finsterwalde-Torgau vor Falkenberg, Nether[ands]

Josef Weiss, the camp elder of the Star Camp, recorded in a small notebook everyone who died on the Lost Train. He included their names, the date of their death, the exact burial place, and their birth country. 

The information in this list of deceased persons is based on Josef Weiss’ notes.

When and where were the exchange prisoners liberated?

The Red Army liberated the Lost Train near the village of Tröbitz on 23 April 1945.

Susanne Schuller, “First Russians”, April 1945
© Bergen-Belsen Memorial

“At the end, silence.”

Annelie
Annelie

“We’ve been liberated!”

Noomi
No'omi

“Mother was already very weak, and Joost was skinny as a skeleton.”

Annelie
Annelie

“Mother was already very weak, and Joost was skinny as a skeleton.”

Annelie
Annelie

Why did the freed prisoners have to take care of themselves at first?

The Red Army ordered the Germans to evacuate the village of Tröbitz. Most of the Soviet soldiers quickly moved on.

Susanne Schuller, “Back to the wagon with the booty”, April 1945
© Bergen-Belsen Memorial

From the moment she was liberated, Susanne Schuller used coloured pencils she had found in Tröbitz to make her drawings. In this one she shows survivors bringing their “booty” to the train. They wanted to use the food to feed those who had stayed behind.

“The Russians told the villagers to move and make room. And that’s what the villagers did.”

Noomi
No'omi
The house at Schulstraße (school street) 15, Tröbitz, in the 1990s
© Private property of the Tal family

The villagers had vacated the house at 15 Schulstraße. The Tal family moved in with another family.

“Anyone who was strong enough got off the train to look for food... to look for a place to stay.”

Noomi
No'omi

How did the villagers react to the evacuation and to the freed prisoners?

The residents of Tröbitz claimed to have known nothing about the crimes committed by the Nazis.

Susanne Schuller, “It’s better this way, if they (the Red Army soldiers) come back”, spring 1945
© Bergen-Belsen Memorial

Susanne Schuller drew a resident of Tröbitz: The woman hides a portrait of Hitler under a chest of drawers. Then she takes it out again and burns it in the oven.

Many Germans denied having ever supported National Socialism or benefitted from it. They feared that their support might be discovered if the Red Army soldiers came back. 

“The residents of Tröbitz repeatedly claimed that they didn’t know...”

Noomi
No'omi

“It was more convenient to ignore, to be indifferent... and not to know.”

Noomi
No'omi

Why did so many former prisoners die in Tröbitz after liberation?

The liberated prisoners died from the effects of imprisonment: malnutrition, exhaustion and diseases they had contracted in Bergen-Belsen.

“Mother got very sick and feverish.”

Annelie
Annelie
Bild Ch7 Abb12.2 web

Elizabeth Goudeket-Levenbach

1894 – 1945

“My mother died on 15 May 1945, 3 Sivan 5755 in the Jewish calendar, five minutes to midnight.”

Annelie
Annelie
The entrance to the Jewish cemetery in Tröbitz, 1990s
© Erika Arlt / Bergen-Belsen Memorial

Because so many people died after the liberation of the Lost Train, a separate Jewish cemetery was established next to the Christian cemetery in Tröbitz.

“She was buried in the Jewish cemetery in Tröbitz.”

Annelie
Annelie
The Muiderberg Cemetery. A headstone in memory of Elizabeth Levenbach-Goudeket and Adolf Levenbach
© Private property of the Tal family

Transcription

Here lies Elisabeth Levenbach-Goudeket
Died in Tröbitz
3 Siewan 5705
15 May 1945
Wife of Adolf Levenbach
Died in Bergen-Belsen
17 Adar 5705
3 March 1945

“Four years later, her bones were buried in the Jewish cemetery of Muiderberg, near Amsterdam.”

Annelie
Annelie