The purpose of the German Jewish Children's Aid (GJCA) was to act as the receiving organization for unaccompanied or orphaned Jewish children emigrating primarily from Germany to the United States. It worked to provide visas and other necessary transit papers and acted as financial sponsor for the children (to avoid their "becoming a public charge") so that they could obtain those visas. It also obtained "foster home" placement or other housing for those children. The German Jewish Children's Aid Society was formed in New York in 1934 by a coalition consisting of the New York Foundation, the
Baron de Hirsch Fund,
B'nai B'rith, the Hofmeimer Foundation, the
American Jewish Committee and the Women's Committee of the
American Jewish Congress. These organizations contributed the funds for the GJCA.
Cecilia Razovsky was elected Executive Secretary of the organization at the time of its founding. All the children came unaccompanied; the parents were forced to stay behind in Germany or Austria or were dead. Most of these parents were murdered by the
Nazis. In 1938, when difficulties were encountered in raising funds for the GJCA work, the
National Council of Jewish Women assumed financial responsibility for the German-Jewish Children's Aid and its administration was taken over by the National Refugee Service. Both of these functions were, in turn, taken over completely by the
National Refugee Service in 1941. In November 1942, to accommodate federal government refugee legislation and coordinate with the United States Committee for the Care of European Children, the German-Jewish Children's Aid changed its name to the European-Jewish Children's Aid. The GJCA was based in the United States, but importantly it also had many personnel in Europe, primarily in Germany. After the March 1938
Anschluss German take-over of Austria to form the
Greater German Reich, there were also many personnel in Austria. The GJCA worked together with other organizations such as the
Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS) . Later it became part of the
American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (the "Joint"). The German Jewish Children's Aid, beginning in 1934, placed children primarily in private homes. ==One Child's Story: Werner S. Zimmt==