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      <header>
        <identifier>oai:gjd:source-8.en</identifier>
        <datestamp>2025-06-10T00:00:00Z</datestamp>
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      <metadata>
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                <dc:language>en</dc:language>
                <dc:title>Register entries for the twins Ernst (1925–1941) and Rudolf Farnbacher (1925–1946)</dc:title>
                <dc:identifier>https://diaspora.jewish-history-online.net/source/gjd:source-8</dc:identifier>
                <dc:creator/>
                <dc:publisher>Moses Mendelssohn Center for European-Jewish Studies</dc:publisher>
                <dc:subject/>
                <dc:type>Online Ressource</dc:type>
                <dc:description>After the November Pogroms in 1938, tens of thousands of Jews tried to
leave Nazi Germany. Although the United Kingdom’s immigration policy
remained strict, this country, along with a few others, announced that
it would accept Jewish children and teenagers. The so-called
Kindertransports to the United Kingdom from 1938 to 1939 would become
one of the greatest rescue missions before the outbreak of the Second
World War.

Two out of the roughly 10,000 saved ‘Kinder,’ as the participants
call themselves today, were the Augsburg-born twins Ernst
(1925–1941) and Rudolf Farnbacher (1925–1946). Although the
transports saved thousands from being murdered in the Shoah, they only
temporarily brought salvation for the two brothers: The public
register of the English district of Howdenshire near Leeds shows that
Ernst Farnbacher committed suicide two years after his emigration,
aged only 16. The medical record shows that he died by
self-strangulation “whilst the balance of his mind was disturbed.”
Five years later, Hendon District near London recorded an almost
identical entry in the register referencing a poison, potassium
cyanide. In 1946, Rudolf Farnbacher took his own life at the age of
21. He had presumably discovered only a short while previously that
his parents had been murdered in Auschwitz.

Suicides were very rare among the roughly 10,000 Jewish children and
teenagers who fled to the United Kingdom. Yet the records concerning
the Farnbacher twins evince the enormous psychological pressure with
which these young participants in the transports were confronted.
Their case also adds a hitherto underappreciated dimension to the
story of the transports, which have to date been regarded as a tragic,
but above all successful, rescue operation.</dc:description>
                <dc:date>2025-06-10</dc:date>
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