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Obituary: Kurt Treitel

Oldest Kindertransport survivor, who equally embraced British and German culture

March 8, 2018 13:36
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2 min read

The oldest living Kindertransport survivor, Kurt Treitel, who has died aged 95, reached Britain from Berlin on  March 24, 1939, just before his 17th birthday. He often recalled his huge joy and relief as he and his younger brother Guenter stepped onto British soil, and he retained a lifelong gratitude to his British hosts.

Kurt kept a detailed diary in fluent English about his experiences on the journey and in Nazi Germany.

While embracing his new British identity, Kurt also remained close to his German roots. He retained a love of German culture and stayed in touch with school-friends and relatives. His  lifelong optimism about the essential goodness of human nature was reinforced by an immensely brave German Catholic couple, Martha and Albert Horlitz, friends who had risked their lives to save his and his father’s, on Kristallnacht, November 9, 1938.

After a neighbour warned the Treitels that the Gestapo were next door and coming for them, Kurt and his father fled across Berlin to the Horlitzes as synagogues burned around them. Sending the Nazi maid out on an errand, the couple hid the pair in a small attic, where they remained in silence for five days lest the maid discover and  betray them, until the worst violence had died down,