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Youngest Holocaust survivors look to next generation

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Doris Small, 89, center, spends a warm moment with her daughter Miriam "Tiger" Saunders, 60, left, and granddaughter Jenniffer Veno, 35, at a conference for Holocaust survivors who were part of the Kindertransport at the Irvine Marriott in Irvine, California, November 4, 2012. Small was one of the children saved by the Kindertransport rescue movement which sent 10,000 children, without their parents, out of Nazi Germany, Austria, Poland and Czechoslovakia to safety to Great Britain before the start of World War II. (Photo by Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

(MCT) — LOS ANGELES — She was an orphan, a 14-year-old Jewish girl, when she went to the Berlin train station on a summer day in 1939, leaving behind all that she had ever known.

She had already experienced loss: her parents claimed by illness, her brother taken by the Nazis. Now Dora Gostynski was about to get on a train that would take her and hundreds of other Jewish children to safety — but they had to go without the comfort of their parents.

She remembered the other children’s sobs as they embraced their parents, who had made the agonizing decision to give their children a chance at life, even if meant never seeing them again. And she remembered the parents who relented when their child didn’t want to leave them. They walked away from the train station, and back into a world of danger.

“There was like an ocean of people and an ocean of tears,” she said.

She was escaping Nazi Germany through the rescue mission Kindertransport, which carried about 10,000 youths to Britain and elsewhere for shelter during the Holocaust. Many — more than 60 percent, according to various estimates — never saw their parents again.

As they grew older, they sought out one another, drawn by a wrenching, shared experience. They founded the Kindertransport Association, and kinder from around the world have gathered every other year for the last two decades.

The kinder are among the youngest Holocaust survivors, yet even they are now mostly in their 80s, a group thinned by the passing years. With each gathering, there are whispers that it could be the last.

At the most recent gathering, in an Irvine, Calif., hotel, a much older Dora recalled the train station on that day more than 73 years ago. She recognized one of her classmates, a girl named Fritzy Hacker. Fritzy’s mother hugged each of the girls tightly before they boarded the train together. “She said goodbye to the two of us like she was my mother too,” she said.

But Dora couldn’t stop thinking about her sister, Ida. They had applied for the Kindertransport mission together. But as they waited for word to arrive, her sister had turned 17. She missed being able to qualify by two months.

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