Flight to Shanghai (Wiebke Lohfeld, 2006)

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Flight to Shanghai (Wiebke Lohfeld, 2006) Persecuted by the NS-State Nearly 17.000 Jews from Germany, Austria, Poland, Czech, Hungary and a few other countries survived the Holocaust by escaping to Shanghai. The majority came in late 1938 after the Kristallnacht (Night of Broken Glass) until August 1939. Jews were forced to leave Germany by brutal German persecution. The only place where Jews could go with no visa, no money and no official nationality was Shanghai until it closed its doors in August 1939. Source of all pictures: http://www.talesofchina/shanghai/places.cmf

Shanghai: The City of Shanghai was divided by the International Settlement and the French Concession since the mid 19th Century. The Police Force and Administration lay in the hands of international representatives, mainly British and American. Shanghai was one of the greatest centers for trade in the world. In the 30s Shanghai was surrounded by the Sino-Japanese War that hit the city hard in 1937 when the Japanese Army occupied Shanghai and parts of the city were destroyed. However, the International Settlement and French Concession were not occupied until 1941 and stayed established as before. Population: In 1915 the population of Shanghai was about 1,500.000. The two Settlements only contained 787.920 persons from which only 20.924 were foreigners and the rest Chinese. The numbers increased over the years and in 1930 there were about 36.471 foreigners in the city. A great majority of these were Japanese, followed by British, Russian and American. For the year 1934 the population of Greater Shanghai was estimated to be 3,133.782. (69.797 foreigners). In 1942 the number of foreigners was about 150.931 including all stateless persons in Shanghai at this time as well.

Leaving Germany and Austria: Until 1940 most Jews from Germany and Austria went by train to Italy and boarded an ocean-liner to Shanghai in Trieste or Genoa. They were only allowed to carry 10 Reichsmark out of Germany; most of the refugees lost their valuable possessions. German officials watched as they packed boxes. How much they would take on the trip and send in huge trunks, and what actually would get to Shanghai varied. But most of them lost almost everything. After Italy allied with Germany, Jews could only go by train over the continent, and only with guaranteed transit-visa to pass through Russia, and this made the flight even more difficult. Arriving in Shanghai: When Jewish Emigrants came in boat-loads to Shanghai in 1938 and 1939, local help organizations were established very quick, they got also international help, especially from the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, the HIAS (Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society) and after the war, in 1945, from the UNRRA (United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration). The poorest emigrants were sheltered in so called Heime where several families lived together in one room, furnished with bunk-beds. There were public kitchens that served one to two warm meals a day. There were about 2,500 refugees living in the Heime for the whole time they were staying in Shanghai. Around 5,000 were dependent on the kitchens until the end of their stay.

The Ghetto Hongkew : After attacking Pearl Harbor in December 1941 Japan took over all forces in Shanghai. It had already joined the Axis with Germany and Italy but did not attack Jews in Shanghai. On February 18 th 1943 the Japanese proclaimed that those Jews who came to Shanghai after 1937 had to move into a one-mile-square section, named Hongkew, within a three months deadline. Japan didn t believe in Hitler s policy of Jewish annihilation. Hongkew was a separate area northeast of the city that was mostly destroyed in the 1937 battle. The Ghetto was later liberated by arrival of American forces in August 1945. The End of World War II: Japan surrendered on August 14 th 1945 after it got hit by two atomic bombs dropped by the American Air-Force. Shanghai was then taken over by American forces.

The Refugees further Emigration: The number of HIAS-registered refugees in 1946 added up to 16.300. After being forced to stay in Shanghai through the National Socialistic regime and war in Europe as well as through the Pacific War, most refugees wanted to leave Shanghai as soon as possible. The desired destinations were the United States of America, Israel and Australia, but also Austria and other European countries including Germany. Further migration was organized by the UNRRA and also the American JOINT, HIAS and smaller splinter groups founded by Shanghai refugees themselves. Ongoing restrictions by the United States government made it still difficult to enter the United States. Only in 1949 the restrictions were loosened and emigration to the United States became easier. Until 1948 around 10.000 refugees had left Shanghai. Civil-War in China: The Chinese Civil War was a conflict in China between the Kuomintang (The Nationalist Party KMT) and the Communist Party of China (CPC). Already started in 1926 when the newly appointed Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek put a stop to leftist and Communist party-infiltration it ended not before 1949 when the Communist took over the power in China. On October 1 st, 1949 Mao Zedong proclaimed the founding of the People s Republic of China. For the refugees still living in Shanghai the advance of the Communist troupes during these years was frightening. The increasing insecurity made them feel that they once more were being forced to leave. Shanghai was no longer a safe place to live or even to stay temporarily.

Flight from Shanghai: The UNRRA, JOINT, IRO and HIAS organized ships and airplanes to rescue the Jewish refugees from Shanghai. However, some were not evacuated before beginning of 1950. Although the aidorganizations made a lot of effort to bring the remaining refugees out of Shanghai they had to learn that the Communists would still let foreigners leave the country. In the end the fear that Shanghai would be sealed up was baseless. Historical timetable about the flight to Shanghai: 1935 Nuremberg Laws: Racial persecution of Jews 1937 Only 10 Reichsmark were allowed to be taken out of Germany, establishing taxes for fleeing the Reich, looting of Jewish capitals March 1938 Annexation of Austria, anti-semitic persecution, flight of Austrian Jews to Shanghai June 1938 Evian- Conference: 32 nations close their doors to emigrants flooding in Oct. 1938 German troops occupy parts of Czechoslovakia Nov. 1938 Pogroms against Jews, Synagogues and Jewish stores are being destroyed, Jewish men are arrested, the flight of as Jewish persecuted people from Germany begins Dec. 1938 Five-Minister-Conference in Tokyo. Japan is not persecuting Jews and gives out visas for German Jews Aug. 1939 Shanghai restricts immigration: Shanghais doors are closed to more emigrants Sept. 1939 Outbreak of the war in Europe: Hitler attacks Poland

June 1940 Italy enters the war allied with Germany. The route to Shanghai through Italy is closed Dec. 1941 Japan enters the war by attacking Pearl Harbor. It occupies the rest of the City of Shanghai. The United States enters the war. Febr. 1943 Proclamation of the Designated Area: Installation of the Jewish Ghetto in Hongkew May 1945 World War II ends in Europe Aug. 1945 Japan gets hit by two atomic bombs dropped by the American Air-Force, Japan surrenders, American forces liberate the Ghetto and take over Shanghai 1. Oct. Proclamation of the People s Republic of China 1949 Spring 1950 Almost all Jewish refugees have left Shanghai Bibliography: Freyeisen, Astrid (2000): Shanghai und die Politik des Dritten Reiches. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann. Hochstadt, Steve (2000): Flucht ins Ungewisse: Die jüdische Emigration nach Shanghai. In: Armbrüster, Georg/Kohlstruck, Michael/Mühlberger, Sonja (Hrsg.): Exil Shanghai 1938-1947. Jüdisches Leben in der Emigration. Berlin: Hentrich & Hentrich, S. 27-34. Hoss, Christiane (2000): Abenteurer. Wer waren die Shanghai-Flüchtlinge aus Mitteleuropa? In: Armbrüster, Georg/Kohlstruck, Michael/Mühlberger, Sonja (Hrsg.): Exil Shanghai 1938-1947. Jüdisches Leben in der Emigration. Berlin: Hentrich & Hentrich, S. 103-132. Kranzler, David (1976): Japanese, Nazis & Jews: the Jewish refugee community of Shanghai, 1938-1945. New York: Yeshiva University Press. Lohfeld, Wiebke (2005): Du bist nicht mehr Teil Deutschlands. Die Flucht nach Shanghai 1939. Einzelfallanalyse aus einem DFG-Projekt. In: Bios, Zeitschrift für Biographieforschung, Oral History und Lebenslaufanalysen, Heft 2/2005, S. 264-286.