Transport XX Köln 2008 | 20240720

Transport XX Köln 2008 | Collection Marc Michiels | Miracles•Media | 20240720 | TakeNode 4c18fc2a-e4bc-4485-8380-aa3a260b3a5d

Following the first installation May 2007 in Boortmeerbeek (Belgium) of the 4 canvases with portraits of the attackers and the escapees of Transport XX (1), the installation was next shown in Cologne (Köln) January 26-27, 2008, at the Cologne Central Station (Köln Hauptbahnhof), in front of the Cologne Cathedral – image installation above.

The information – DE, German language, quoted below – on this ‘ Poster campaign “Resistance and Survival” ‘ was published in 2010 at the Open Memory site by the ‘Initiative “Bahn erinnern“ ‘ from Köln (2).

Here the English translation (by Michel van der Burg, with an update of the quoted numbers in Notes*)

Resistance and survival: The 20th deportation train in Belgium

Poster exhibition 26 – 27 January 2008, Cathedral square, Cologne Central Station

The outstanding action against deportation trains of the Deutschen Reichsbahn, transporting Jews to the extermination camps, took place in Boortmeerbeek (Belgium). On April 19, 1943, three men stopped the train on the way to Auschwitz, opened a wagon, and thus enabled 17 people to escape. A further 215 people were able to free themselves before the German border, 119 of them survived the Nazi terror thanks to the support of the people in Belgium. *

In cooperation with Boortmeerbeek and the Jewish Museum of Deportation and Resistance (JMDR) in Mechelen, the “Bahn erinnern” Initiative displayed four large billboards on the Cathedral square of the Cologne Central Station, commemorating this resistance action.

In short contributions, guests from Belgium and members of the Initiative described the course of the action and focused in particular on the widespread resistance of the population against the persecution of Jews in Belgium. Their courageous advocacy for the persecuted saved more than half of the Jewish population from extermination by the Nazis.

DE


Widerstand und Überleben: Der 20. Deportationszug in Belgien

Plakatausstellung 26. – 27.1.2008 Bahnhofsvorplatz Köln

Die herausragende Aktion gegen Deportationszüge der Deutschen Reichsbahn, die Juden in die Vernichtungslager transportierten, fand in Boortmeerbeek (Belgien) statt. Am 19. April 1943 wurde der Zug auf dem Weg nach Auschwitz von drei Männern angehalten, ein Waggon geöffnet und so 17 Menschen die Flucht ermöglicht. Bis zur deutschen Grenze konnten sich weitere 215 Menschen selbst befreien, 119 von ihnen überlebten durch die Unterstützung der Bevölkerung in Belgien den Nazi-Terror. *

In Zusammenarbeit mit der Stadt Boortmeerbeek und dem Jüdischen Deportations- und Widerstandsmuseum in Mechelen zeigte die Initiative „Bahn erinnern“ auf dem Vorplatz des Kölner Hauptbahnhofs vier große Plakatwände, die an diese Widerstandsaktion erinnern.

In kurzen Beiträgen beschrieben Gäste aus Belgien und Mitglieder der Initiative den Verlauf der Aktion und gingen insbesondere auf den von der Bevölkerung breit getragenen Widerstand gegen die Judenverfolgung in Belgien ein. Deren couragiertes Eintreten für die Verfolgten rettete mehr als die Hälfte der jüdischen Bevölkerung vor der Vernichtung durch die Nazis.

Notes

Image : Transport XX Köln 2008 | Collection Marc Michiels | Miracles•Media | 20240720 | TakeNode 4c18fc2a-e4bc-4485-8380-aa3a260b3a5d

*Update numbers : A total of 238 deportees managed to escape from the train, however 90 were soon recaptured and put on the next convoy, 26 were shot dead and 122 succeeded in their escape (3).

Installation : The four large canvases of three meters high and five meters wide are placed ‘wagon-like’ next to each other. It shows the portraits of 236 deported Jews who managed to escape from the XXth transport on Belgian territory. The first of the four large canvases also features the three young Brussels’ men who stopped the train, Youra (Georges) Livschitz, Jean Franklemon and Robert Maistriau. Portraits are mostly from the State Archives, Brussels, digitized by Kazerne Dossin / JMDR (Mechelen, Belgium) for the project ‘Give them a face’.

1. Canvases Transport XX – Boortmeerbeek | Collection Marc Michiels | Miracles•Media | 20240418

2. Initiative “Bahn erinnern”. Open Memory. URL http://open-memory.info/bahnerinnern . Retrieved Nov 27, 2013.

3. TRANSPORT XX installation Mechelen | Miracles•Media | 20240518

4. Marc Michiels – the Boortmeerbeek expert author on the history of Transport XX, and longtime coordinator of the annual Transport XX commemorations in Boortmeerbeek – wrote , that the “…four canvases ….were loaned to the German Democratic youth in 2008 for the exhibition ‘Deportationen mit einem Güterwaggon auf dem Bahnhofsvorplatz’ at the Cologne train station. Translation by Michel van der Burg, from Michiels’ dutch book :
Het XXste transport naar Auschwitz (2019). Marc Michiels, Mark Wijngaert (eds. Davidsfonds / Standaard Uitgeverij). ISBN 9789059089808

5. Installation Open Memory | Miracles•Media | 20240715

Citation info : Transport XX Köln 2008 | Collection Marc Michiels / Michel van der Burg | Miracles•Media | 20240720

Resistance | Miracles Moment #2 | 20240515

Faces of the attackers and escapees of Transport XX reflecting in the windows of this train leaving Boortmeerbeek station direction Mechelen, during the commemoration May 15, 2011 of Transport XX to Auschwitz.

The night of April 19, 1943, the 20th convoy left the transit camp Kazerne Dossin in Mechelen, with 1631 jewish deportees in circa 33 cattle cars heading for Auschwitz.

After passing the Boortmeerbeek train station, the three young Brussels’ heroes Youra Livschitz, Robert Maistriau, and Jean Franklemon, attacked this 20th convoy, opening one of the cars, and liberating 17 people.

A total of 238 deportees managed to escape from this death train before the Belgian border, by opening the cattle cars from the inside, with the help of some 20 jewish resistance fighters among the deportees, and also a second hold-up shortly after midnight at Korbeek-Lo.

The total number of 238 escapees (data update April 2024) , includes (i) the 17 people liberated during the attack in Boortmeerbeek, (ii) the escape of the 6-year-old boy Aron Luksenberg (a recent finding by Jo Peeters) , and (iii) the escape of Viviane , who escaped in the womb of her three-months pregnant mother Isabella Weinreb-Castegnier, and was born 6 months later in Brussels (Miracles.Media).

Just over half of the number of escapees – a total of 122 – managed to escape permanently — 26 escapees were shot dead when they jumped, and 90 escapees were recaptured and redeported…

Notes

Reflection shows the Transport XX – installation Boortmeerbeek, of four large canvases of three meters high and five meters wide placed ‘wagon-like’ next to each other, parallel to the Mechelen-Leuven railway line, with portraits of deported Jews who managed to escape from the XXth transport on Belgian territory. The first of the four large canvases also features the three young men who stopped the train, Youra (Georges) Livschitz, Jean Franklemon and Robert Maistriau.

The Transport XX – installation Boortmeerbeek was created for the 2007 Boortmeerbeek commemoration of Transport XX, with the theme: ‘Give Them a face’, and later commemoration events, thanks to Marc Michiels (commemoration coordinator) in collaboration with Marjan Verplancke and co-workers of the project “Give Them a Face” of Kazerne Dossin / Jewish Museum of Deportation and Resistance in Mechelen (Belgium) . Portraits of escapees are mostly from the State Archives, Brussels, digitized by Kazerne Dossin. Boortmeerbeek.

Citation info : Resistance | Miracles Moment #2 | Miracles•Media | 20240515 | ISAN 0000-0007-36B4-0002-A-0000-0000-7 | TakeNode bc70ea7c-278e-4f84-982c-4e926030c405

DVD Inlay Transport XX One Minute | 20240505

DVD Inlay Transport XX One Minute | Miracles•Media | 20240505

Wednesday April 11 , 2012. Mailing Marc Michiels (Coordinator commemoration Transport XX, Boortmeerbeek, Belgium) copies of a newly made DVD-Video edition of the 1 minute film of Transport XX, for the screening planned at Marc’s book presentation of Transport XX at the townhall of Boortmeerbeek , May 10, 2012 , with a short introduction by me, and the upcoming commemoration Sunday, May 13, 2012.
Citation info : DVD Inlay Transport XX One Minute | Miracles•Media | 20240505 | TakeNode 9072b608-cc5f-41dd-9805-b2de5f92060c

Transport XX Boortmeerbeek – Marc Michiels | 20240309

Transport XX Boortmeerbeek – Marc Michiels https://transportxxboortmeerbeek.be

Marc Michiels – expert author on the history of Transport XX and coordinator for many years of the annual Transport XX commemorations in Boortmeerbeek, Belgium – unfortunately passed away April 2021 . Some months later his web site ‘holocaust’ (at telenet.be) dedicated to Transport XX was taken offline.
Now — when searching for info on Robert Korten – Marc’s predecessor as the first coordinator and founder of the XXth convoy-commemorations – I was happy to to find Marc’s website is back online, now at the appropriate new domain : transportxxboortmeerbeek.be

Citation info : Transport XX Boortmeerbeek – Marc Michiels | 20240309 | Miracles•Media | TakeNode fd808fa3-09f2-4c0d-b9c8-f711a47b05ba | URL 1-memo.com/2024/03/09

Escape Landscapes from the 20th Convoy – 236 Photo Exhibition | 20230121

236 — Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy

Jo Struyven / Luc Tuymans

From 20 January 2023, the Jewish Museum of Belgium, in partnership with the Auschwitz Foundation, presents the exhibition entitled ‘ 236, Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy ‘. It is set up in the museum’s project space and offers an artistic look at an exceptional and forgotten event in the Second World War.

The 20th convoy

At 10 p.m. on April 19, 1943, the 20th convoy departed from the Kazerne Dossin transit camp in Mechelen with 1,631 Jewish deportees in cattle cars, heading for Auschwitz.
Thanks to resistance actions, both inside the wagons and from outside, 236 of these deportees managed to jump from that train, that was leading them to extermination. An unique event in Europe under the Nazi administration.

Jo Struyven, photographer

The work of the Belgian photographer Jo Struyven (°Sint-Truiden, 1961) takes us back to these acts of resistance – commemorating the 80th anniversary in 2023 – and gives us a glimpse of the landscapes in which this striking story took place.
Taking the perspective of those who jumped off that train, an act for which many of them paid with their lives, Struyven creates a contemporary ‘memorial’ with 19 large ‘nocturnal’ black and white images, and one colour print.

Jo Struyven :

The 20th convoy, heading for the unspeakable “Auschwitz”, crossed the area where I grew up, barely 50 meters from my childhood bedroom — I found out 2 years ago after meeting Simon Gronowski. Ever since, I imagine the distress of the deportees. The destination was unknown to them. Some, sensing the worst, tried to escape it. I wanted to give an account of this border between life and death, between resignation and the impossibility of choosing, and the freedom regained with resistance to the oppressor’s plans.

Works presented by Jo Struyven

Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy, 2020-2022, 19 black and white prints, 1 color print, 90×60 cm (Private collection – Belgium)

Jo Struyven, Land(es)capes from the 20th convoy 2020 2022, black and white print, 90x 60 cm, Wijchmaal (Private Collection, Belgium)

Jo Struyven, Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy 2020-2022, black and white print, 90x 60 cm, Bierbeek (Private Collection, Belgium)

Jo Struyven, Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy, 2020-2022, black and white print, 90x 60 cm, Borgloon (Private Collection, Belgium)

Jo Struyven, Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy, 2020-2022, black and white print, 90x 60 cm, Piringen (Private Collection, Belgium)

Jo Struyven, Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy, 2020-2022, black and white print, 90x 60 cm, Botzelaer (Private Collection, Belgium)

Luc Tuymans, visual artist

In dialogue with Jo Struyven’s photographs, two works by Belgian visual artist Luc Tuymans (°Mortsel, 1958) evoke the destruction of the Jews and Roma of Europe. Die Wiedergutmachung (The Reparation) depicts body parts – left the eyes of gypsy children who had been experimented on by the Nazis. … images that in its incompleteness, reflect the inability to represent facts and memory .

Works presented by Luc Tuymans

Luc Tuymans, Our New Quarters, 1986, Oil on canvas, 80,5 x 120 cm (MMK – Germany) (Photo Ben Blackwell, courtesy David Zwirner, New York, London)
Luc Tuymans, Die Wiedergutmachung, 1989, Oil on cardboard, mounted on plywood, Oil on canvas; diptych, 36,6 x 43 cm, 39,4 x 51,8 cm, courtesy: Private collection (Photo Studio Luc Tuymans)

Art after the Shoah

“Writing a poem after Auschwitz is barbaric”, wrote German philosopher Theodor W. Adorno in 1949. Through two contemporary perspectives from the visual arts, this exhibition seeks to address this question of the (im)possibility of art after the Shoah in a new way.

Testimonies & Catalogue

This exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue book edited by Daniel Weyssow and Jo Struyven and published by the Auschwitz Foundation entitled Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy (press release on April 19, 2023), as well as an educational space presenting the testimonies from interviews and archives of convoy escapees.

Info+ ( & Français | Nederlands)

236
Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy
Jo Struyven / Luc Tuymans
Exhibition at the Jewish Museum of Belgium, in Brussels, Belgium
20 January – 14 August 2023
Brussels
Website https://www.mjb-jmb.org

Auschwitz Foundation, Brussels, Belgium
Website https://www.auschwitz.be/en

News

Jan 20, 2023 – Vernissage ‘236’ Land(es)capes 20th convoy.

Full report at michelvanderburg.com here : https://michelvanderburg.com/2023/01/20/vernissage-236-landescapes-20th-convoy/

Vernissage ‘236’ Land(es)capes 20th convoy | 20230120

Video report : Vernissage ‘236’ Land(es)capes 20th convoy

Thursday January 19th, 2023, the vernissage of the photo exhibition 236 — Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy was opened with speeches by Philippe Blondin, President of the Jewish Museum, and by Pierre-Yves Jeholet , Minister-President of the Government of the Federation Wallonia-Brussels. Next, the Belgian photographer Jo Struyven presented his work — escape landscape photographs glowing in the dark — like being lit by moonlight — as well as paintings contributed by Luc Tuymans in the project space. The exhibition runs from January 20 – August 14, 2023 in the Jewish Museum of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium. Video report (20230120) Michel van der Burg | Miracles•Media .

Jan 20, 2023 – VRT | Kristien Bonneure (Belgian Flemish Broadcast) 20 jan 2023

Post and podcast interview (dutch) Jo Struyven – link https://www.vrt.be/vrtnws/nl/2023/01/18/expo-xxe-konvooi/

Updates

Sunday January 22th, 2023. Updated Museum’s poster image, and the Vernissage news item , editing text, plus embedding video.

Vernissage ‘236’ Land(es)capes 20th convoy | 20230120


Photographer Jo Struyven presents a preview of his work last night , Thursday January 19th, 2023 at the vernissage of 236 — Land(es)capes from the 20th Convoy , an exhibition of works by Jo Struyven and Luc Tuymans in the Jewish Museum of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium, open from today for the public January 20 – August 14, 2023.

On April 19, 1943, the 20th transport left the Mechelen transit camp to deport 1,631 Jews to Auschwitz. Thanks to resistance actions, both inside and outside the wagons, 236 of these deportees managed to jump from the train that would lead them to destruction.

Photographer Jo Struyven revisits this unique act of resistance in Western Europe during the Nazi regime and shows us the landscapes in which this little-known story took place.

The vernissage was opened by Philippe Blondin, President of the Jewish Museum, and by Pierre-Yves Jeholet , Minister-President of the Government of the Federation Wallonia-Brussels.

Follow-up post tomorrow 20230121.
License info : Vernissage ‘236’ Land(es)capes 20th convoy | 20230120 | Michel van der Burg | Miracles•Media | TakeNode 5e71633a-0ff2-44bf-99dc-34f3db25bb26

Jews and the Resistance | Marc Michiels | 20221120


Lezing Marc Michiels : De verzetsactie op het 20ste transport Mechelen-Auschwitz. Studiedag CegeSoma & Kazerne Dossin , 20 nov 2013, in Kazerne Dossin , Mechelen , Belgium.

Camera notities van Joods Verzet & Transport XX door Michel van der Burg. Ik was nog net op tijd voor deze lezing van Marc Michiels. De dag daarvoor filmde ik Simon Gronowski de hele dag en avond in Saint Sépulcre, Luik. Plan was om na overnachting in Luik , van daar uit naar de studiedag te gaan. Maar al onderweg in de auto toen ik borden Brussel zag herinnerde ik mij plots dat Simon Gronowski terloops iets gezegd had over ‘actie’ ‘morgen’ ‘Waterloo’ (dat drong niet tot me door toen tijdens filmen) en besloot ik dat op te zoeken in Brussel, nog net op tijd voor de speech van Amir Jafari, 12 jaar en Afghaanse vluchteling. Na maken van reportage daar in Brussel, besloten alsnog naar Kazerne Dossin te rijden voor rest van studiedag : de Afternoon Session …
Moderator Ward Adriaens – met bijdragen van Thierry Rozenblum, Herman Van Goethem, Laurence Schram, Marc Michiels, Arnaud Bozzini, en Rudi Van Doorslaer.

On 20 November 2013, roughly 70 years after the attack on the 20th Convoy from Mechelen to Auschwitz in Boortmeerbeek, Kazerne Dossin and Cegesoma jointly organized a study day about Jews and the Resistance. The symposium languages were Dutch and French.
License info: Jews and the Resistance | Marc Michiels | 20221120 | Michel van der Burg | michelvanderburg•com | TakeNode ID: 21438c65-6185-4efe-b3fb-9ce630db30b5

TAGS #Jews #resistance #Marc Michiels #Herman Van Goethem #education #lecture #Kazerne Dossin #Mechelen #Belgium #train #deportation #rescue #escape #dutch #lezing #Transport XX #study #holocaust #museum #TakeNode #MiraclesMedia #michelvanderburg