Everything Possible: JDC and the Children of the DP Camps

Bergen-Belsen concentration camp was liberated by the British in April 1945. One of the first acts survivors took was to erect a memorial: "In memoriam to the 30,000 Jewish victims of war and starvation who fell during the regime of the German tyrants and the concentration camp of Bergen-Belsen." Joseph Rosensaft, chairman of the camp’s Central Jewish Committee of Liberated Jews, later noted that JDC’s representatives were the first to visit from the outside world, and that its staff brought survivors "warmth and encouragement from America." Germany, c. 1945. Those who made it through the devastations of the Holocaust found themselves at the end of the war with nothing to live on and no place to go.  Refugees with newly provided clothes lined up for counting at a displaced persons camp. Germany, c. 1945. President Truman's Special Envoy Earl Harrison (right) came to Germany in the summer of 1945 to inspect conditions in the U.S.-administered displaced persons camps. He invited Dr. Joseph Schwartz (left), JDC's Director of Overseas Operations, to accompany him. Harrison's subsequent report led to significant improvements and separate camps for Jews. Germany, c. 1945. An urgent cable from JDC's representative in Switzerland, Saly Mayer, received on June 14, 1945 shortly after the liberation, conveys the desperate conditions facing displaced persons and the challenges for those seeking to help them. AR45-54, File 323.

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A Place of Refuge?

The camps were intended as emergency shelters for those displaced by the war. After years of living in mortal fear, Jews found it hard to be placed among often hostile groups of inhabitants, including Nazi collaborators. But returning to their countries of origin, where anti-Semitism still prevailed, was even more dangerous.