Showing posts with label Jason Hensley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Hensley. Show all posts

Tuesday 7 June 2016

Christadelphians, the Kindertransport, and Rescue from the Holocaust

English: Kindertransport monument at Liverpool...
English: Kindertransport monument at Liverpool Street Station. A project established by the Association of Jewish Refugees, it pays tribute to those Britons who aided the rescue of 10,000 Jewish children from the Nazi persecution which led onto the holocaust. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Breaking Israel News which  offers news from Israel from an Orthodox Jewish perspective to both Jewish and Christian readers has an article on the new book concerning what happened after the  Kristallnacht in November 1938.
Britain, the only willing host country, began the Kindertransport, taking in over 10,000 Jewish children from Austria, Czechoslovakia, and Germany. Conscientious objectors and shunners of politics our faith group which the magazine falsely accuses to be "an obscure Christian sect", were according to them "unlikely hosts". For us Christadelphians we have to have respect for the creatures of God and we do have to protect the weaker ones. Therefore is was very clear by the changing times we had to do something against the cruelty one group of people caused to an other group of human beings. In the face of the growing evil that threatened the Jews, our faith-group found we could not let everything happen just like that; We had to undertake action.
Today we can look back at the secret and other work the Christadelphians have done during the war years. Not wanting to take up the arms, the Christadelphians as pacifists, used their hands and their love to contribute to the humanitarian actions.
It is known that their participation in the Kindertransport saved 250 Jewish children from almost certain death.

The book project came as a result of Jason Hensley’s visit last year to the Holocaust Museum in Washington DC for a national conference of educators. Hensley, M.Ed, a principal of a small private school in California, was so affected by what he learned that he created a Holocaust course in his school. The message from the conference that impressed him most deeply was the reminder that the Holocaust is not about statistics, but about individuals.
 
Read more at
The Lost Story of How One Christian Sect’s Biblical Beliefs Kept 250 Jewish Children Alive

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Part of the Family: Christadelphians, the Kindertransport, and Rescue from the Holocaust

In 1938 and 1939, the Kindertransport occurred––a movement to bring thousands of Jewish children out of Nazi occupied territories to safety in Great Britain. These children came without their parents, almost always without a knowledge of English, and also little experience with English culture. They came to a new family, a new country, and a new life. Approximately 250 of these children were sponsored by Christadelphians, a small Christian group.

They came and lived in houses with Christadelphian families, or lived in hostels that the Christadelphians had started. So often the Holocaust is considered in terms of statistics––how many perished and how many were affected. Yet it is often the individual stories that provide the most powerful human connection and the opportunity to learn. Rather than focus on the statistics, this series examines the experiences of these people, who came to England as children, and lived with Christadelphians. Ten of the former Jewish refugees, and their families, were contacted and collaborated in this effort to bring about this first volume. These are their stories.


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Monday 28 March 2016

Christadelphians’ role in the rescue of Jewish children from Nazi Germany

Jason Hensley, principal of Christadelphia Heritage School in Simi Valley, is writing a book on the Christadelphians’ role in the rescue of Jewish children from Nazi Germany just before the outbreak of World War II. The project stems from Hensley’s visit last year to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., where he was one of 200 teachers who participated in the Arthur and Rochelle Belfer National Conference for Educators.  

From 1938 to 1940, an estimated 10,000 Jewish children under age 17 were transported from Nazi Germany to Britain in the Kindertransport. A majority were housed with families through the efforts of two main organizations, the British Committee for the Jews of Germany and the Movement for the Care of Children from Germany.
About 200 of the refugees found homes with Christadelphian families

We too shall publish in a short-while a (secret) booklet printed in World war II, on the matter.

> Find more to read:
Principal uncovers his church’s role in aiding child victims of the Holocaust 

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