Rose and Henry Baum and the painting from Terezin by her father. Escape P lus 50 Survivors from the Kindertransport will reunite in England. RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer Marion Alflen found a "blitzkrieg" of sorts in Detroit. A photograph of a painting of a con- centration camp bakery hangs in the living room of Henry and Rose Baum's Southfield home. It is a constant reminder of the Holocaust, when Henry and Rose — who hadn't yet met — escaped Hitler and his Nazi followers and fled from Germany to England via Kindertransport. The large, sepia photo shows an original painting that the Baums coincidental- ly discovered during a 1983 visit to Yad Vashem in Israel. Rose Baum's father, a cantor, painted it. Her parents were killed at Terezin. Henry's parents nearly escaped, but were held up by red tape. They died at Auschwitz. "I had a funny feeling as we walked in that, if there was anything there from that camp, his (her father's) would be among them," Rose Baum said. Rose and Henry met in 1947, eight years after they were whisked to England by Kindertransport, Great Bri- _ tain's response to Kristallnacht. In the days following the Nazi pogrom, British and German Jewish groups work- ed together to bring unaccom- panied German, Austrian, Polish and Czechoslovakian youngsters ages 2 to 17 to England. The Kinder- transport ran for 10 months, beginning December 1938. British families sponsored the children, who numbered close to 10,000 by the program's end. Now, 50 years later, Kinder- transport children from THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 107