Towards the end of November 1941, the Nazi authorities began to deport the Jews of Bohemia and Moravia (the Protectorate) to the fortress city of Theresienstadt, about 60 km north of Prague. The city’s 18th century fortress now served as a ghetto. Thousands of deportees were housed in the army barracks under terrible conditions. By depicting Theresienstadt as a "model of Jewish settlement" and thus concealing its role as a transit camp for Jewish deportees, the Nazis were able to camouflage their true objectives and policies namely, the mass annihilation of the Jews.
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Commencing in January 1942, transports started to leave Theresienstadt for Riga. Later, some of the transports were sent to extermination camps and murder sites, including Auschwitz, Treblinka and Maly Trostenets.
In June 1942, the RSHA (Reichssicherheitshauptamt – Reich Security Main Office) embarked on mass deportations of Jews from Germany and Austria to Theresienstadt. The Jews sent there were mostly elderly (above the age of 65). They belonged to various groups consisting primarily of those who had earned high military decorations and citations during the First World War, people of international renown, and Jews who had formerly been married to non-Jewish spouses. Included in the last group were what the Nazis coined Mischling, that is, the offspring of Jewish and non-Jewish unions (a term literally meaning "crossbreed"). Essentially these were Germans deemed by the Nazi racist laws to be Jewish because they did not have full Aryan ancestry.
Following the two big deportations in June and July 1942, five smaller transports were carried out from September consisting of about 50 Jews each. The remaining members of the Jewish administration were on these transports. Several Jews from so-called mixed marriages were also deported. On these transports, an additional 242 persons were sent to Theresienstadt by the end of the year. From then on the only Jews allowed to stay in Cologne were those married to non-Jewish spouses.
There were 50 people on the third transport from Cologne. They were brought to Theresienstadt in a single car attached to a regular train. Twenty seven of the deportees were women and 23 were men. The average age of the deportees was 49. The oldest deportee was an 85 year old man. The transport left Cologne on September 5 1942 and reached Theresienstadt on the same day.
In Theresienstadt the transport was given the reference III/3, the Roman numeral III signifying the city of Cologne.
According to the Historians Alfred Gottwaldt and Diana Schulle, 9 people survived this transport.
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