HISTORICKÝ ČASOPIS |
5/2024 |
VEDECKÝ ČASOPIS O DEJINÁCH SLOVENSKA A STREDNEJ EURÓPY |
VEDECKÝ ČASOPIS O DEJINÁCH SLOVENSKA A
STREDNEJ EURÓPY
VYDÁVA HISTORICKÝ ÚSTAV SLOVENSKEJ AKADÉMIE VIED, V. V. I. ISSN 0018-2575 (print) ISSN 2585-9099 (online) EV 3084/09 Všetky obsahy sú čitateľom voľne dostupné podľa licencie Creative Commons CC BY 4.0. Indexovanie a abstraktovanie: Web of Science Core Collection: Arts & Humanities Citation Index Additional Web of Science Indexes: Current Contents Arts & Humanities Scopus CEEOL CEJSH EBSCO Historical Abstracts ESF (HUM) ERIH plus |
AKTUÁLNE ČÍSLO | REDAKCIA | POKYNY PRE AUTOROV | ARCHÍV | PREDPLATNÉ | O ČASOPISE | PUBLIKAČNÁ ETIKA | VÝZVY Židovskí emigranti v Bratislave v rokoch 1938 – 1940 Historický časopis, 2024, 72, 4, pp. 661-691, Bratislava. Abstract: In the 1930s and 1940s, the persecution of Jews in Nazi Germany and its allied countries was mounting. The victims responded in a variety of ways, one of which was emigration. Most countries did not welcome foreign Jews and actively resisted their influx. Such was also the case of Great Britain, which was in charge of Mandatory Palestine. The strict immigration quota set by the 1939 White Paper did not deter numerous Jews from attempting a journey to Palestine, even at the risk of ending up in British internment camps. Most Jews heading to the Eastern Mediterranean travelled by ship via the so-called Danube Route, which led through Bratislava and Romania, with others voyaging through Bratislava and Vienna or Budapest to Italy or Yugoslavia. This paper deals with the Jews who travelled to Palestine through Bratislava. As early as the autumn of 1938, the city began to see a mass influx of trains carrying Jews from Brno, Vienna, and Prague. Save a few exceptions, these Jews were lodged in the Slobodáreň boarding house on Železničiarska Street and, until the end of November 1939, in the former Patrónka munitions factory, where they awaited the next leg of their journey. This paper examines the migrants‘ everyday lives and the activities of Jewish as well as non-Jewish relief organisations aiding in the emigration of thousands of persecuted Jews. Keywords: Bratislava. Patrónka. Slobodáreň. Migration. Refugees. Jews. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31577/histcaso.2024.72.4.3
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