Another institution operating in the same house was the Youth Aliyah.
Aliyah is the Hebrew word for immigration to Palestine. In the Prague case, it was primarily about rescuing children and teenagers; the ideology of mass emigration was primarily an argument for the Nazi authorities.
This Zionist version of the Kindertransport, allowing unaccompanied minor refugees to enter the UK, was fundamentally limited by the number of immigration certificates issued by the British administration in Palestine. The whole of inter-war Czechoslovakia was entitled to only a few dozen certificates, distributed according to political affiliation with Zionist movements and corresponding to retraining for agricultural work.