French national rail building Holocaust museum at abandoned station

Separately, Amsterdam’s transportation company said it would look as ways to “come to terms” with its employees role in the dispatch of thousands of victims.

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(JTA) — France’s national rail company allocated $2.3 million toward building a Holocaust museum at one of its abandoned stations.

The museum being built with funding from SNCF is scheduled to open in 2020 at the former Pithiviers station in eastern France.

Separately, Amsterdam’s GVB transportation company this week announced it “would look into ways to come to terms” with the role of its employees in transporting thousands of Jews to be murdered during the German occupation of the Netherlands. Last month, the Dutch national rail company NS said it would offer compensation to victims.

The first concentration camp in Nazi-occupied France, Pithiviers station predated the most infamous deportations of French Jews and the murder of Jews en masse in Auschwitz. CRIF, the umbrella group of French Jewish communities, will be a partner in designing the museum, the France Info news website reported last week.

With SNCF’s logistical support, some 16,000 Jews were sent to be murdered in death camps from Pithiviers station and the neighboring camp of Beaune-la-Rolande in eight transports between 1941 and 1943.

Last year, local authorities said they would devote hundreds of thousands of euros to preserve the station, set up educational exhibitions on its walls and declare it a historical monument.

The abandoned train station, whose old rails have not been replaced, had remained unused for decades. Some schools have been bringing pupils for years to see the station, which currently is closed to the public.

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