[Past event] SJCF to host ‘A Train Near Magdeburg’ author at Temple Sinai
Author Matthew Rozell discusses his book about a 1945 liberation of concentration camp prisoners, revealing American soldiers’ reunion efforts…
The Jewish World Team
2
mins read time
Published by
The Jewish World

Cover of the book A Train Near Magdeburg.
Editor’s note: This event has already taken place.
SARATOGA SPRINGS – The Saratoga Jewish Cultural Festival will present an evening with author Matthew Rozell, author of A Train Near Magdeburg on Tuesday, July 15, at 7 p.m.
Rozell, a Hudson Falls, N.Y. native, will share a teacher’s journey into the Holocaust and the reunions it inspired some 70 years later. The program will be offered at Temple Sinai, 509 Broadway, Saratoga Springs and on Zoom.
A Train Near Magdeburg is the true story behind an iconic photograph taken when American soldiers liberated a train carrying 2 500 concentration camp inmates, primarily Jewish, in the heart of Nazi Germany. In April 1945, a train crammed with Jews left Bergen Belsen. After seven days of shuttling on the tracks, the train stopped in a forest, hiding for cover from Allied planes. U.S. Tank Battalion 743 happened upon the train, and Major Clarence Benjamin stood and snapped a now famous photograph as the Americans liberated those inside.
This train, one of three that left Bergen-Belsen between April 6 and 10, was bound for Theresienstadt. Only one train arrived in Theresienstadt; the third was liberated by Soviet forces outside of Troebitz.
Rozell reconstructs the story, drawing on eyewitness accounts, survivor testimony, memoirs, wartime reports, and personal letters. He weaves together a chronology of the Holocaust as it unfolds across Europe and retraces the steps of the survivors and the American soldiers who freed them.
The book also brings to life the story of a dedicated high school history teacher who reunited hundreds of Holocaust survivors and their children with the American soldiers who rescued them.
Registration for the panel discussion in-person or on Zoom, may be obtained at
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[Past event] SJCF to host ‘A Train Near Magdeburg’ author at Temple Sinai
Author Matthew Rozell discusses his book about a 1945 liberation of concentration camp prisoners, revealing American soldiers’ reunion efforts…
The Jewish World Team
2
mins read time
Published by
The Jewish World

Cover of the book A Train Near Magdeburg.
Editor’s note: This event has already taken place.
SARATOGA SPRINGS – The Saratoga Jewish Cultural Festival will present an evening with author Matthew Rozell, author of A Train Near Magdeburg on Tuesday, July 15, at 7 p.m.
Rozell, a Hudson Falls, N.Y. native, will share a teacher’s journey into the Holocaust and the reunions it inspired some 70 years later. The program will be offered at Temple Sinai, 509 Broadway, Saratoga Springs and on Zoom.
A Train Near Magdeburg is the true story behind an iconic photograph taken when American soldiers liberated a train carrying 2 500 concentration camp inmates, primarily Jewish, in the heart of Nazi Germany. In April 1945, a train crammed with Jews left Bergen Belsen. After seven days of shuttling on the tracks, the train stopped in a forest, hiding for cover from Allied planes. U.S. Tank Battalion 743 happened upon the train, and Major Clarence Benjamin stood and snapped a now famous photograph as the Americans liberated those inside.
This train, one of three that left Bergen-Belsen between April 6 and 10, was bound for Theresienstadt. Only one train arrived in Theresienstadt; the third was liberated by Soviet forces outside of Troebitz.
Rozell reconstructs the story, drawing on eyewitness accounts, survivor testimony, memoirs, wartime reports, and personal letters. He weaves together a chronology of the Holocaust as it unfolds across Europe and retraces the steps of the survivors and the American soldiers who freed them.
The book also brings to life the story of a dedicated high school history teacher who reunited hundreds of Holocaust survivors and their children with the American soldiers who rescued them.
Registration for the panel discussion in-person or on Zoom, may be obtained at
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
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[Past event] SJCF to host ‘A Train Near Magdeburg’ author at Temple Sinai
Author Matthew Rozell discusses his book about a 1945 liberation of concentration camp prisoners, revealing American soldiers’ reunion efforts…
The Jewish World Team
2
mins read time
Published by
The Jewish World

Cover of the book A Train Near Magdeburg.
Editor’s note: This event has already taken place.
SARATOGA SPRINGS – The Saratoga Jewish Cultural Festival will present an evening with author Matthew Rozell, author of A Train Near Magdeburg on Tuesday, July 15, at 7 p.m.
Rozell, a Hudson Falls, N.Y. native, will share a teacher’s journey into the Holocaust and the reunions it inspired some 70 years later. The program will be offered at Temple Sinai, 509 Broadway, Saratoga Springs and on Zoom.
A Train Near Magdeburg is the true story behind an iconic photograph taken when American soldiers liberated a train carrying 2 500 concentration camp inmates, primarily Jewish, in the heart of Nazi Germany. In April 1945, a train crammed with Jews left Bergen Belsen. After seven days of shuttling on the tracks, the train stopped in a forest, hiding for cover from Allied planes. U.S. Tank Battalion 743 happened upon the train, and Major Clarence Benjamin stood and snapped a now famous photograph as the Americans liberated those inside.
This train, one of three that left Bergen-Belsen between April 6 and 10, was bound for Theresienstadt. Only one train arrived in Theresienstadt; the third was liberated by Soviet forces outside of Troebitz.
Rozell reconstructs the story, drawing on eyewitness accounts, survivor testimony, memoirs, wartime reports, and personal letters. He weaves together a chronology of the Holocaust as it unfolds across Europe and retraces the steps of the survivors and the American soldiers who freed them.
The book also brings to life the story of a dedicated high school history teacher who reunited hundreds of Holocaust survivors and their children with the American soldiers who rescued them.
Registration for the panel discussion in-person or on Zoom, may be obtained at
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
[Past event] SJCF to host ‘A Train Near Magdeburg’ author at Temple Sinai
Author Matthew Rozell discusses his book about a 1945 liberation of concentration camp prisoners, revealing American soldiers’ reunion efforts…
The Jewish World Team
2
mins read time
Published by
The Jewish World

Cover of the book A Train Near Magdeburg.
Editor’s note: This event has already taken place.
SARATOGA SPRINGS – The Saratoga Jewish Cultural Festival will present an evening with author Matthew Rozell, author of A Train Near Magdeburg on Tuesday, July 15, at 7 p.m.
Rozell, a Hudson Falls, N.Y. native, will share a teacher’s journey into the Holocaust and the reunions it inspired some 70 years later. The program will be offered at Temple Sinai, 509 Broadway, Saratoga Springs and on Zoom.
A Train Near Magdeburg is the true story behind an iconic photograph taken when American soldiers liberated a train carrying 2 500 concentration camp inmates, primarily Jewish, in the heart of Nazi Germany. In April 1945, a train crammed with Jews left Bergen Belsen. After seven days of shuttling on the tracks, the train stopped in a forest, hiding for cover from Allied planes. U.S. Tank Battalion 743 happened upon the train, and Major Clarence Benjamin stood and snapped a now famous photograph as the Americans liberated those inside.
This train, one of three that left Bergen-Belsen between April 6 and 10, was bound for Theresienstadt. Only one train arrived in Theresienstadt; the third was liberated by Soviet forces outside of Troebitz.
Rozell reconstructs the story, drawing on eyewitness accounts, survivor testimony, memoirs, wartime reports, and personal letters. He weaves together a chronology of the Holocaust as it unfolds across Europe and retraces the steps of the survivors and the American soldiers who freed them.
The book also brings to life the story of a dedicated high school history teacher who reunited hundreds of Holocaust survivors and their children with the American soldiers who rescued them.
Registration for the panel discussion in-person or on Zoom, may be obtained at
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© 2026 The Jewish World · Since 1965 - The Capital Region's gateway to Jewish life
Designed and Developed by Ta-Da Studios
© 2026 The Jewish World · Since 1965 - The Capital Region's gateway to Jewish life
Designed and Developed by Ta-Da Studios
© 2026 The Jewish World · Since 1965 - The Capital Region's gateway to Jewish life
Designed and Developed by Ta-Da Studios
