Vaihingen to Dachau/München-Allach

Members of the Boys were held in Nazi labour and concentration camps and used as slave labourers.

From 1933-1945 Nazi Germany operated over 1,000 concentration camps and subcamps in its own territory and across German occupied Europe. Among them was the Vaihingen subcamp of the Natzweiler-Struthoff concentration camp.

As the camps were dissolved thousands of people, among them members of the Boys, endured horrific evacuations from the camps on foot, in freight wagons and open top trains, as well as perilous journeys across the Baltic Sea. 

The Boys were teenage and child-Holocaust survivors, who were brought to the UK after the war for rest and rehabilitation.

In January 1945 3,000 prisoners were loaded onto a train which was attacked by US fighter planes. The train was derailed and rolled down the embankment. Many of the prisoners were injured and killed. They were then marched during three nights to another railway station, which had just been bombed. The prisoners were forced to sleep in a field and then taken on a death march to another station.

The exact details of the route are not known.

“During the third night we arrived at our immediate destination which was a railway station, but this was ablaze, presumably bombed. Again the guards did not know what to do, and so we spent the rest of the night in a field near the station. We all laid down and slept. Later that night I was woken. It was raining and I had been lying in a pool of water, but this had not woken me, even though I was soaked to the skin. We started marching again, but we had no strength left so we were barely moving … One night whilst we were walking a friend of mine Yitschak Cygelman decided he could walk no further. Two of us had to walk dragging him along between us. Eventually we did manage to get to a train. We were on the train for seven days during which time we had no food nor water at all. By that time there was plenty of room in our carriage as every day we took out the dead and threw them into the last carriage, which was just for the dead.”

Charlie Ingielman, A Record of the Early Life of Hillel Chill Ingielman, a testament written in 1994.

Date of Death March:
17-18 April 1945
Distance:
244km
Destination:
Dachau concentration camp & the München-Allach subcamp
Duration:
Unknown
Number of Prisoners at Departure:
Exact figure is not known
Number of Prisoners at Arrival:
515
Memorialisation:
There is a memorial plaque
Death marches and trains from the Natzweiler-Struhhof subcamps, which members of the Boys endured, that have so far been identified:
Spachingen to Allgäu
Gieslingen to München-Allach
Urbès to Ludwiglust-Wöbbelin
Associated Boys:
Pinchas Hebel
Charlie Ingielman
Chaskiel Bernacki
Map:
Gallery:
Contact:
team@45aid.org
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Design and development:
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