After years of controversy, an exhibition dedicated to the role played by the Reichsbahn -- the predecessor to today's Deutsche Bahn, the German national railway -- in transporting Jews to their deaths in concentration camps is finally being shown in Germany's train stations.
The exhibition, entitled "Chartered Trains to Death -- Deportation with the German Reichsbahn," opened Wednesday at the Potsdamer Platz train station in Berlin. Focusing on the fate of around 11,000 Jewish children who were deported from France, the exhibition can be seen in Berlin until Feb. 11, after which it will travel to other cities, including Frankfurt, Munich, Münster, Schwerin and Halle.
The exhibition was an initiative of the German-French Nazi hunter Beate Klarsfeld and her husband Serge. "It was our wish to show the children," said Klarsfeld, speaking at the opening Wednesday. An earlier version of the exhibition was successfully shown at 18 railway stations in France over a period of three years.
However, Deutsche Bahn CEO Hartmut Mehdorn originally did not want the exhibition to be shown within German train stations, arguing that it was not an appropriate location for the subject matter. Eventually Mehdorn gave in at the end of 2006, after the German Transport Ministry put its weight behind the project.
"Dealing with our history in a responsible fashion is a pre-condition for democracy and tolerance," said Transport Minister Wolfgang Tiefensee at the exhibition's opening. He said there had been "obstacles" which had to be overcome in the run-up to the exhibition. Tiefensee had publicly argued with Mehdorn in 2006 over the question of whether the exhibition should be shown in German train stations.
Mehdorn himself was not present at the opening, where Deutsche Bahn was represented by board member Margret Suckale. "The Reichsbahn without a doubt played a supporting role in the Nazi genocide," she said in a speech.
The Reichsbahn was responsible for transporting around 3 million Holocaust victims to their deaths during the Third Reich. "The industrial murder of millions of people would not have been possible without the Reichsbahn," Deutsche Bahn historian Susanne Kill told the news agency Agence France Presse.
"Chartered Trains to Death" is not the only exhibition devoted to the role of the Reichsbahn in the Holocaust currently on show in Germany. A train-mounted exhibition called "Train of Commemoration," which is not related to the Klarsfeld exhibition, is currently making a six-month journey from Frankfurt to Auschwitz.
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