The Amazing Story of Nieuwlande

Nieuwlande is a village in the Netherlands, located in the province of Drenthe, known for its unique history during World War II. During the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, Nieuwlande became a safe haven for Jews and others. The villagers, predominantly farmers, worked together to hide Jewish families and individuals, saving them from persecution and deportation to concentration camps. This act of resistance and compassion is known as the Nieuwlande Experiment, and it stands as a testament to the courage and humanity of the people who lived there. Today, Nieuwlande is remembered for its remarkable role during the war, and there are monuments and memorials in the village to honor the bravery of its inhabitants.

Unlike other forms of resistance, which often involved armed struggle or sabotage, the Nieuwlande Experiment was a non-violent, highly effective form of resistance. The villagers risked their own lives and livelihoods to offer sanctuary to those fleeing the horrors of the Holocaust. They provided hiding places, food, and support, all while living under the constant threat of discovery by the Nazis.

Because of this unique, collective relief action, on April 11, 1985, the entire population of Nieuwelande was presented with an honorary certificate from the Israeli institute Yad Vashem by the Israeli ambassador Yaacov Nechushtan. Johannes Post was the driving force behind the resistance in Nieuwlande. He was born on October 4, 1906, in Hollandscheveld near Hoogeveen. During the occupation, he abandoned his prosperous agricultural business in Oosterhesselen (Drenthe) to devote himself entirely to resistance work. He played an important role, especially in the national Fighting Squads. Post was the leader of the KP(fighting squad) in the north of the Netherlands and undertook many sabotage actions and robberies of distribution offices and prisons. On July 16, 1944, Post was shot in the dunes near Bloemendaal. The prominent resistance fighter was buried at the Honorary Cemetery in Overveen. Unveiling The monument was unveiled in 1985.

Johannes Post was a Dutch resistance fighter during World War II, known for his leadership and bravery in resisting the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. Born on October 4, 1906, in Hollandscheveld, Netherlands, Post was a devout Christian and a schoolteacher by profession.

Post became involved in the resistance movement early in the war, joining the group, “De Gereformeerde Kerken,” affiliated with the Dutch Reformed Church. He later became a prominent member of the resistance organization known as the Knokploegen, or “Fighting Groups,” in the Drenthe region.

Post and his resistance group were involved in various acts of sabotage against the German occupiers, including destroying railways, disrupting communication lines, and assisting in smuggling Jews and downed Allied pilots to safety. They also collected intelligence and distributed underground newspapers to counter Nazi propaganda.

In addition to his activities in the resistance, Post played a key role in the Nieuwlande Experiment, helping to organize the hiding and protection of Jews in the village of Nieuwlande, where he lived.

Post’s resistance activities eventually led to his arrest by the Gestapo in 1944. Despite being subjected to torture, he refused to divulge information about his comrades or the resistance network. On July 16, 1944, Johannes Post was executed by firing squad along with his brother, Marinus, and several other resistance members.

Post’s bravery and sacrifice have been remembered and honored in the Netherlands. He is regarded as a national hero for his role in the resistance against Nazi oppression.

Roffel, Willem & Ritske (Blaak) Willem Roffel, born in Odoorn, was the beadle of the strictly Calvinist Dutch Reformed church in Nieuwlande, Drenthe. Nieuwlande is renowned for the large number of Jews hidden there during the war, among them two youngsters known as Peter and Herman (but actually named Isidore Joseph Davids and Lou Gans). Peter and Herman were training to be graphic artists and they were both talented draftsmen. While in hiding, they made themselves useful by falsifying identity cards and food coupons. They also wrote De Duikelaar, a satirical illegal weekly publication. In addition to these activities, Peter and Herman designed cartoon postcards to be sold to Resistance sympathizers, with the proceeds being donated to the Resistance. In October 1943, Nieuwlande was subjected to regular house searches, thus, the boys’ hiding place became unsafe. They moved the handouts to a safe hideout, dug out under the church’s pulpit. In this hideout, they set up their drafting tables, and a printing press and continued their work by candlelight. Willem Roffel and his wife, Ritske, also born in Odoorn, were the only people who knew about the hiding place and supplied Peter and Herman with food and other necessities daily. Willem and Ritske also distributed the fugitives’ publications and forged documents from the hideout. Peter and Herman hid in the dugout for nine months. One night in December 1944, the Germans carried out a house search. They forcibly took Willem to the church and ordered him to show them the hiding place. By this time, the boys were no longer there. On June 9, 1983, Yad Vashem recognized Willem Roffel and his wife, Ritske Roffel-Blaak, as Righteous Among the Nations.

It was certainly not the case that the entire village helped people in hiding en masse. That turns out to be a myth that was/is maintained consciously or subconsciously by some people. In short, this is because until recently the village was far too lowly estimated during the war in terms of the number of houses and inhabitants, plus the many hiding activities in surrounding villages were also wrongly attributed to the statistics that have been attributed to this village. This creates very skewed proportions and it seems as if almost every farm in this village must have had people in hiding, which is certainly not the case.

It is people like this though that make me proud to be Dutch, because many other Dutch, collaborated with the Nazis or turned a blind eye.




Sources

https://collections.yadvashem.org/en/search-results/Nieuwlande?page=1#relevant

https://www.drentheindeoorlog.nl/?aid=400

https://www.plaatsengids.nl/nieuwlande

https://www.liberationroute.com/pl/pois/1552/the-silent-village-that-has-much-to-tell

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Forgotten Hero—Koenraad Rozendaal

To many Koenraad (or Koen), Rozzendaal is a forgotten Hero, but for at least one friend of mine, he isn’t.

Koen (Koenraad) Rozendaal was born in Oud-Beijerland, the Netherlands . On April 19, 1911. He was a Dutch resistance fighter during the Second World War and a member of the KP-Waterland.KP stands for Knok Ploeg which translates in Fight Team.

Koen Rozendaal used the pseudonym Koen Visser, he worked as a gardener in Berkel.

This is from a genealogy site

  • Koen Rozendaal (Koen Visser) went into hiding with farmer Jan Ruijter in the Beemster in 1943. Here he came into contact with some OD officers.
  • As an employee of the resistance group around E.B. Brune, he was involved in espionage, various heists, and liquidations.
  • He also provided people in hiding with distribution documents.
  • As leader of the KP-Purmerend/Waterland, which he co-founded in March 1944, Rozendaal organized robberies at the Edam police station and distribution office, the Monnickendam distribution office, and the Purmerend post office, during which large quantities of ration cards were captured.
  • Weapons were seized during the robbery of a police post on Overtoom in Amsterdam.
  • On April 4, he and others in Purmerend, after a fierce firefight, freed the arrested LOer P. Peek during his transport to the police station in Amsterdam.
  • On May 1 he took part in the G.J. van der Veen organized (failed) robbery at the HvB-Weteringschans.
  • In early 1944, Rozendaal had done everything he could to free the arrested Brune from the Koepel in Arnhem, but at the beginning of July 1944, he was betrayed by the same Brune (who, after arrest and serious assault, had started working for the Sipo) at Heck. s Lunchroom on Amsterdam’s Rembrandtplein arrested by the police.
  • On July 16, 1944, he was shot dead

Koen (Koenraad) Rozendaal (Oud-Beijerland, April 19, 1911 – Overveen, July 16, 1944) is a Dutch resistance fighter during the Second World War and a member of the KP-Waterland.

Koen Rozendaal (Koen Visser) works as a gardener in Berkel.

In 1943 he went into hiding with farmer Jan Ruijter in the Beemster. Here he comes into contact with some OD’ers. As an employee of the resistance group around E.B. Brune, he later became active in espionage, various squatting (including in Middenbeemster), and liquidations. He also provides people in hiding with distribution documents.

As the leader of the KP-Purmerend/Waterland, which he co-founded in March 1944, Rozendaal organized robberies at the Edam police station and distribution office, the Monnickendam distribution office, and the Purmerend post office. Large quantities of ration cards are captured. Weapons are seized during the robbery of a police post on Overtoom in Amsterdam.

On April 4, he, together with others, freed the arrested resistance fighter P. Peek in Purmerend. This was accompanied by a fierce firefight. At that time, Peek is transferred to the office of the Security Police in Amsterdam’s Euterpestraat.

On May 1, he took part in the robbery of the Detention Center at the Weteringschans organized by Gerrit van der Veen.

At the beginning of 1944, Koen made every effort to free the arrested Brune from De Koepel in Arnhem. At the beginning of July 1944, however, he was betrayed by this man, who decided to work for the Security Police after his arrest and serious assault.

Koen was arrested at Hecks Lunchroom on Amsterdam’s Rembrandtplein. He was locked up in the House of Detention at the Weteringschans.

Under the direction of Johannes Post and Hilbert van Dijk, an attempt was made on July 14 to free him and other resistance fighters. However, this failed due to betrayal.

On Sunday afternoon, July 16, Koen, together with Johannes Post, Jan Niklaas Veldman, Willem Frederik Smit, Arie Stramrood and Jacques Stil, Nico Jonk, Rens Prins, Jacob Balder, Frits Boverhuis, Ernst Klijzing and Ferdinand Ploeger, will gather at the headquarters of the SD on Euterpestraat. The injured Hilbert van Dijk and Cor ten Hoope are also added to the group on stretchers. People are transported to the dune area in Overveen. There they were all shot dead by the Nazis. Involved in this execution is, among others, the 21-year-old Dutch SS man Johan Willem Snoek. He murdered the men by shooting them in the back of the head.

The victims were then buried in a mass grave in the dunes. In the summer of 1945, some of them were reburied at the honorary cemetery in Bloemendaal.

A street in Middenbeemster is named after Koen Rozendaal.

Epitaph

Koenraad ROZENDAAL
April 19, 1911 in Oud-Beijerland
July 16, 1944, in the dune area near Overveen (municipality Bloemendaal)
unmarried
reformed
gardener’s assistant in Berkel
burial pit II (memorial stone 4)
26
Remember, O Lord, how weak I am, how short-lived! Psalm 89:19

Many thanks to Matt Tinkelenberg for introducing me to the story of his Great Uncle Koen, and other family members, of whom I will do blogs in the near future.

Sources

https://oorlogsgravenstichting.nl/personen/131166/koenraad-rozendaal

https://www.genealogieonline.nl/van-der-waal-stamboom/I190493.php

https://database.documentatiegroep40-45.nl/details2.php?ID=16140

Remembering the Hero—Pierre Coronel

I am not sure what to make about the photograph above. It is either extremely brave and heroic, or naive, perhaps even arrogant. The photo is of Pierre Coronel, operating a radio transmitter during World War II, while in hiding. It is one from a set of pictures. Listening to an illegal radio could result in severe punishment if caught. Operating an illegal radio for broadcast purposes was punishable by death. Taking photos of it meant risking them to be used as evidence. It may not have been the wisest of actions.

However, the actions by Pierre Coronel can only be described as heroic. He was born in Ouder-Amstel, the Netherlands on 26 December 1914. Pierre was the son of Salomon Haïm Coronel and a non-Jewish mother. He was a radio operator. During the war, he took part in the resistance, operating an illegal broadcasting station hidden in the hospital ‘Onze Lieve Vrouwen Gasthuis’’

He trained as a radio operator in the 1930s and worked for Radio-Holland for some time. During the war, he lived alternately in Utrecht and Amsterdam. In 1942, Coronel was forced to work in Ostfriesland (Germany)

On October 12, 1942, he tried to travel home by train with a forged identity card but was caught during a check and transferred to a prison in Oldenburg. He returned to work after a captivity of several months, and managed to escape on March 15, 1943, to return to the Netherlands. There he provided assistance to Jewish people in hiding.

After being arrested several times for labor deployment and escaping, in September 1944, Pierre Coronel became a wireless operator for the illegal Channel Eagle.

He exchanged messages with England and the already liberated city of Eindhoven. For safety, this happened from different locations, including the attic on the Eerste Leliedwarsstraat 21 and in the Our Lady’s Hospital (OLVG) laboratory. In those days when there was a shortage of power supply, the hospital was still able to obtain electricity through aggregates. After the channel was discovered, there was a raid by the Security forces and police. Coronel was armed and shot two men dead, but he was also killed. In the OLVG there is a memorial stone placed in memory of the resistance activities that took place there.

He was shot on February 25, 1945, which was only a few weeks away from liberation. After the war, Pierre Coronel was buried in the field of honour in Overveen. A street in Amsterdam was named for him—Coronelstraat.




Sources:

https://www.joodsmonument.nl/en/page/523913/about-pierre-antoine-coronel

https://www.geni.com/people/Harry-Coronel/6000000038502305873

https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=203970

https://oorlogsgravenstichting.nl/personen/29277/pierre-antoine-coronel

https://www.nationaalarchief.nl/onderzoeken/archief/2.19.255.01/invnr/29277A/file/NL-HaNA_2.19.255.01_29277A_0016

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Remembering a Hero—Jan Thijssen

Before I start the main story, I must tell you about the wider context. About 75% of all Jews in the Netherlands were murdered during the Holocaust. The Netherlands as a country, received understandably a lot of criticism for this and to a great extent, it was justified. However, it is not as a black-and-white issue as some people may think it is. It is not that the Dutch were more anti-Semitic than other Europeans—in fact, in many cases, they were less. Per capita, the Dutch have more Righteous among the nations than any other European country.

The Dutch did have one thing that contributed greaty to the Dutch Holocaust—the most efficient and detailed population register in the world. Which made it very easy for the Nazis to find out where the Dutch Jews lived. Of course, there were also plenty of Dutch who collaborated with the Nazis.

On February 22, 1941, the Germans arrested and deported several hundred Jews from Amsterdam—first to the Buchenwald Concentration Camp and then to the Mauthausen Concentration Camp. Almost all of them were murdered in Mauthausen. The arrests and the brutal treatment shocked the population of Amsterdam. In response, Communist activists organized a general strike for February 25 and were joined by many other worker organizations. Major factories, the transportation system, and most public services came to a standstill. The Nazis brutally suppressed the strike after three days, crippling Dutch resistance organizations in the process. This was the first time that citizens of an occupied country protested publicly against the Nazis. It was also the largest mass protest against the Nazi regime in Europe. The February 1941 General Strike was—an extremely rare instance—where non-Jews collectively risked life and limb for their Jewish neighbors and fellow citizens.

Nine strikers were killed during the suppression by the Nazis, and dozens were injured. Shortly afterward, another 18 were executed. Needless to say, this instilled fear in the Dutch population.

The reprisals did not cease with the strike’s end. The Germans sacked the entire city council. Sybren Tulp, who had served in the colonial army in the Dutch East Indies, assumed control of Amsterdam’s police force

Although the Dutch resistance was crippled by this, it didn’t stop the resistance. Several resistance groups were formed afterward. Jan Thijssen was a member of one of the resistance groups.

Jan was born on December 29, 1908, in Bussum. He was an electrical officer at the PTT (Dutch Post and Telecommunications). He was in charge of tracking down clandestine transmitters. He was himself an enthusiastic radio amateur.

After the Germans invaded the Netherlands, Jan Thijssen soon had the idea of establishing a nationwide radio network to support the underground. In 1942, he contacted the Ordedienst (O.D.), one of the premier nationwide underground organizations led by career officers and military in nature. He presented his plan to the O.D. Chief of Staff, Jr. P.J. Six, who accepted his idea. Thanks to Thijssen’s commitment, a nationwide communication network was all but completed in 1942. In this, he was heavily supported by a chemist, J. Hoekstra, employed by N.V. Philips in Eindhoven and who succeeded in -illegally- acquiring from the factory various parts vital to the radio network with the help of a family member.

Thijssen grew disillusioned when it became clear that the O.D. wished to use his radio network solely for their own purposes. He also felt irritated by the much too passive attitude of the O.D. He advocated a new, nationwide organization to fully occupy itself with active resistance like sabotage and keep in close contact with the Allies. At the end of April 1943, along with six other underground workers, including the Communist D. van der Meer from Amersfoort. he established the R.V.V. (Raad van Verzet, the Council for Resistance in the Kingdom of the Netherlands). Van der Meer resigned a month later and was succeeded by G. Wagenaar, one of the national leaders of the Military Commission, the resistance movement of the Dutch Communist Party.

Another general strike in April and May of 1943, started spontaneously following a notification by German General Christiansen to the effect that all former Dutch military personnel be returned to imprisonment as POWs caused Thijssen to call for a boycott of this measure and to commit sabotage. He was the first to inform London of this strike and his proposed actions through his transmitter.

During 1943 and 1944, the R.V.V. performed liquidations, raided distribution offices and public records, and committed acts of sabotage. However, the objective of the R.V.V. to gain overall leadership within the active resistance was not reached. This was (partly) because the illegally printed C.P.N. ‘De Waarheid’ (Truth) identified itself more and more with the R.V.V., lending the organization an “albeit undeserved” communist aura. The O.D. and the R.V.V. couldn’t agree on matters that caused the Chief Staff of the O.D., Jhr. P. Six to oust Jan Thijssen as Chief of Radio Service of the O.D. There was also much rivalry between the R.V.V. and the Landelijke Knokploegen (L.K.P., National Raiding Parties).

From April 1944 onwards, the R.V.V. maintained radio contact with the London-based Bureau of Intelligence, established through the assistance of Thijssen’s friend and colleague, A.W.M. Ausems, who had been trained in England as a secret agent. July 1944, at Deurne Castle, a meeting took place between the national leaders of the R.V.V. At this meeting, Thijssen proposed an establishment of the Operations Center to be headed by himself. The existing R.V.V. groups had to be transformed into small sabotage groups to be deployed mainly against the German army.

In part aided by local resistance activities, the Allied drive through Western Europe progressed faster than was anticipated. At the end of August, the L.K.P. and the R.V.V. also received weapons by airdrops, and the Allied Supreme Command gave orders for large-scale sabotage acts directed against the Dutch railway system. There was a split between Jan Thijssen’s R.V.V. and Frank van Bijnen’s L.K.P.; the latter was named National Commander of Sabotage within the L.K.P. on August 25th, 1944. Problems were inevitable, and so, on September 12th, the newly appointed commander of the Binnenlandse Strijdkrachten (B.S., Internal Armed Forces), H.R.H. Prince Bernhard ordered the L.K.P., the R.V.V., and the O.D. to start the so-called Delta council to end the rivalry between the various organizations. Colonel Henri Koot was asked to take command of the B.S., and he accepted. He requested to be permitted to set up his HQ in Amsterdam. At that time, however, Jan Thijssen and Frank van Bijnen were heavily involved in underground activities to support the battle for Arnhem, which was in progress at that very moment. Therefore, they were absent from the Delta meeting in Amsterdam. As a result, the O.D. claimed ever more power for itself, something Thijssen could only disagree with. Among other things, he claimed the weapons that had been dropped for himself. He also clashed with Van Bijnen, and a crisis within the B.S. was looming. The disagreement continued for weeks and erupted when Commander Delta Koot relieved Thijssen of his function. A few days later, on November 8th, on the highway between Rotterdam and The Hague, driving a Red Cross van, Thijssen was arrested by the Nazis. He was taken to a prison in Zwolle. On March 8, 1945 Jan Thijssen was executed. He was one of 116 inmates from various prisons, mainly members of the resistance, who were taken to De Woeste Hoeve and shot in reprisal of the raid on SS-Obergruppenfuhrer und General der Waffen-SS und der Polizei, (General of the SS, Waffen-SS and Police) Hans Rauter.

The prisoners, in five groups of twenty and one of sixteen, were taken to the exact location of the raid near De Woeste Hoeve and shot. The German Oberwachtmeister der Ordnungspolizei (Chief of Police), Helmut Seijffards, who refused to be a member of the firing squad, was executed on the spot as well. Of all the people being led to their execution, Jan Thijssen was the only one attempting to escape, a remarkable example of rebelliousness and resistance to the bitter end. In his prison cell in Zwolle, he wrote a few phrases on the wall: “Ons slaat geen stormwind neder”, “Het hart kent zijn eigen droefheid alleen” en “Spijt, smart en schrik door dun en dik. De dood steeds in ’t zicht na vreselijk gericht. Gestreden onversaagd tot de vrijheidzonne daagt!” (“No storm will bring us down,” “Only the heart knows its own sadness,” and “Regret, grief, and fright against all odds. Always facing death after terrible Judgment. In struggle undaunted ’till the sun of freedom rises.”) While in prison, he painted several murals, including the illustration pictured below.

On September 14, 1945, he was buried with military honors.

It is men like Jan Thijssen—that makes me proud to be a Dutch man.

Prisoner and guard. Varnished at the request of Prince Bernhard




Sources

https://www.annefrank.org/en/timeline/34/the-february-strike/

https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/amsterdam-general-strike-february-1941

https://picryl.com/media/jan-thijssen-1908-1945-a5a780

https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/34932/Thijssen-Jan.htm

https://oorlogsgravenstichting.nl/personen/153765/jan-thijssen

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Betsie ten Boom—Dutch Hero

Not all heroes wear uniforms or capes. Not all resistance fighters use guns. In fact, the bravest ones don’t. Betsie ten Boom was a Hero and resistance fighter. She and her family saw what was happening with their Jewish neighbours and acted. I wish politicians nowadays would follow Betsie’s example and not do the easy thing—but the right thing.

Many people will know the name of Corrie ten Boom from the book and movie The Hiding Place, which tells the story of Corrie and her family who hid Jews in their home during the war.

Betsie was Corrie’s older sister, and her story is less known. Betsie was a member of the Dutch Reformed Church and strongly believed all men were equal in the eyes of God. She remained steadfast in that belief until the day she died.

She was born on 19th August 1885 in Amsterdam, with Congenital pernicious anemia, which is believed to be caused by a malfunction of the gastric juices of intrinsic factor during the nine weeks before birth. Her illness prevented her from bearing children, so she chose, at a young age, not to marry. Whilst she wasn’t active outside of the home during the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands, she did keep everyone who passed through the home fed and watered and was a welcoming host.

In May 1942, a Jewish woman came to the Ten Boom home begging for help, knowing that if caught, she would be vulnerable to being deported by the Nazis or worse. The Ten Boom family, without hesitation, did what they saw as their duty as Christians and helped the woman They not only took this woman in but also opened their home to many others who were also in need.

In February 1944, the Nazis started suspecting that the Ten Booms were hiding Jews in their home and raided their home on the 28th of February. The ten Boom family and other people at the house, about 30 in all, were arrested for their resistance activities and taken to Scheveningen prison. The six Jews they were hiding had not been discovered, and all survived with the help of other Resistance workers. Casper ten Boom became ill and died ten days later at the prison.

Afterwards, Betsie and Corrie were moved to Vught near ‘s-Hertogenbosch, a concentration camp for political prisoners. Writing in The Hiding Place, Corrie recalls:
“Together we climbed onto the train, together found seats in a crowded compartment, together wept tears of gratitude. The four months in Scheveningen had been our first separation in 53 years; it seemed to me that I could bear whatever happened with Betsie beside me.”

What is remarkable about Betsie is her positivity and determination that even in such a horrible, hate-filled place, she could see potential, she accepted the ordeal. She was the encourager for Corrie, who didn’t always see things the way her sister did. This is reflected in her statement to Corrie after they were given the rules by the guards in the camp:
“Corrie, if people can be taught to hate, they can be taught to love! We must find the way, you and I, no matter how long it takes. I saw a grey uniform and a visored hat; Betsie saw a wounded human being. And I wondered, not for the first time, what sort of a person she was, this sister of mine, what kind of road she followed while I trudged beside her.”

In June 1944, Betsie ten Boom and her sister Corrie were transferred to Ravensbrück Concentration Camp. Her strong faith in God kept her from depression throughout her life, especially within the camps. Corrie told of how Betsie reached out to help others and helped Corrie see the best in everything, no matter what the circumstances.

One day, Betsie and Corrie were out levelling rough ground inside the camp wall. As Betsie wasn’t strong—she couldn’t put as much on her shovel, and when the guards saw her efforts, they made fun of her and beat her with a whip. This enraged Corrie, who rushed at the guard before Betsie stopped her, pleading for her to keep calm and keep working. When looking at the mark the whip left, Betsie said, “Don’t look at it, Corrie. Look at Jesus only.”

The harsh treatment, working long days outdoors, 4 am starts and lack of nutritious food led to Betsie becoming weaker as winter began. No longer able to do any duties, Betsie was brought to the camp hospital. One morning, Corrie had sneaked around to the hospital window after roll call to see her, only to find she had passed away. Betsie died on December 16, 1944.



Sources

https://www.hhhistory.com/2021/10/betsie-ten-boom-uncommon-hero.html

https://collections.yadvashem.org/en/righteous/4014036

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I am passionate about my site and I know you all like reading my blogs. I have been doing this at no cost and will continue to do so. All I ask is for a voluntary donation of $2, however if you are not in a position to do so I can fully understand, maybe next time then. Thank you. To donate click on the credit/debit card icon of the card you will use. If you want to donate more then $2 just add a higher number in the box left from the PayPal link. Many thanks.

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School Protests in Doetinchem

Doetinchem is a city and municipality in the east of the Netherlands. It is situated along the Oude IJssel (Old IJssel) River in a part of the province of Gelderland.

The school protests in Doetinchem took place after the dismissal of Jewish civil servants on November 21, 1940. After the Aryan declaration, all Jewish civil servants, including teachers, were first suspended and then dismissed. On November 26, 1940, students at the Lyceum in Doetinchem protested against the dismissal of two Jewish teachers and the Aryan declaration in general.

In the autumn of 1940, the German occupiers began a series of measures to separate Dutch Jews from the rest of the Dutch population. The first measure was the removal of Jews from the municipal air protection services. This was followed by a ban on ritual slaughter. Before October 26, 1940, all teachers had to submit an Aryan declaration. Those who refused were fired by order of the German occupier, and immediately in November, the occupier began to fire Jewish teachers.


Protests
All university teachers had to provide an Aryan declaration under penalty of dismissal. The best-known example of protest against this is the Cleveringa speech.

—Protest address by Professor Cleveringa
The address was given on 26 November 1940 by Professor Rudolph Pabus Cleveringa, Dean of the Faculty of Law, in protest against the dismissal of Professor E.M. Meijers, professor at the (State) University of Leiden.

“I am standing here today, at a time when you would expect to find a different person before you—your and my teacher, Professor Meijers. The reason for this is a letter that he received this morning directly from the Department of Education, Arts and Sciences, informing him of the following, As directed by the State Commissioner for the occupied territory of the Netherlands, pertaining to non-Aryan government staff and those of equal status, I inform you that with effect from today, you are discharged from your position as professor at the State University of Leiden. The State Commissioner has determined that those concerned for the time being retain the entitlement to their salary (including allowances, etc.).

“I pass on this message to you, stark as it is, and make no attempt to qualify it further. I fear that any words I could find—however, I might choose them, would fail to convey the grievous and bitter emotions that this message has aroused in me and in my colleagues, and, I am convinced, also in you and in countless other people within and—in so far as this comes to their notice—beyond our borders.

“I believe I am relieved of any need to interpret these emotions because I sense that the same thoughts and feelings are being communicated back and forth between us, without the need for words, yet completely and precisely understood by all of us. It is not for the purpose of any such interpretation that I request permission to address a few words to you; if I had no other aim than to emphasise our state of mind, I would, I believe, have no better instrument than to end here and to leave you to the icy oppressiveness of the horrifying silence that would immediately descend upon us. Nor shall I with my words try to direct your thoughts towards those people who were the originators of this letter, the contents of which I have reported to you. Their very act speaks for itself.

“All I desire is to remove them from our sight, leaving them beneath us, and to direct your eyes upwards to the resplendent figure of the person to whom we owe our presence here.

“I believe it is appropriate at this point in time that we should again try to bring to mind who it is, that an authority resting on no other foundation than itself, can carelessly brush aside after thirty years of service; who it is whom we see forced to interrupt his work in this manner. I say to you: this is what I wish to do, but at the same time as expressing this desire, I am also faced with the awareness that my wish can never be fully realised because the greatness of such a man as Meijers cannot be captured in just a few minutes and with just a few words. I can do no more than attempt with a few sentences, a few references, and a few lines to produce an image that may serve as a suggestion for receptive spirits, and of course, that applies to all of you. Because of what you have heard from others and what you yourselves have already experienced, each of you to some degree appreciates Meijers’ significance for his University, his people, and his country, and each of you is open to the awareness of this.”

In addition to this well-known speech by Cleveringa, a professor at Leiden University, there have also been smaller protests that are less anchored in the collective memory. A Gelderland example was the student strike at the Municipal Lyceum in Doetinchem. On 26 November, it was announced that the Jewish teachers Cauveren (classical languages) and Hoek (physics and chemistry) had been dismissed by the Germans. This announcement was followed by a short-lived strike by the Doetinchem students.

Gerrit de Leeuw
One of the students and strikers at the time, Gerrit de Leeuw, talks about the strike in Doetinchem in the TV series De Beschiking by Loe de Jong:
“I was at school here in November 1940, fifth or fourth grade. I don’t even remember. That morning, I was here early, and on the street, there was not the usual noise of school children but a defeated mood. Everyone stood together in groups, with dejected faces, broken as it were…like people who have just buried their father or mother and feel that emptiness. They stood and did nothing until the bell rang. And there was a murmur, like ‘we don’t do it, we don’t go to school, we don’t take this from those bastards who take our teachers away from us.’ And without making any further fuss about it, they stood on the other side of the sidewalk, the entire school—one big group in silence. Don’t demonstratively have fun, like ‘let’s have fun doing this’. But only out of torture that this school—that this small community was destroyed.

“I don’t know how long we stood there. After an hour, the rector came and spoke to us. ‘I understand your sadness—we and the teachers feel the same way but do not continue this demonstration because you are endangering the school. And you can’t save the dismissed Jewish teachers. You did your duty, and this demonstration was right!

”We went inside, we didn’t know any other solution. And I don’t see another way yet.”


Sources

https://www.wo2gld.nl/

https://www.joodsmonument.nl/nl/page/546948/anti-joodse-maatregelen-registratie-isolatie-en-de-februaristaking

https://mijngelderland.nl/inhoud/verhalen/schoolprotest-in-doetinchem#!#customCarouselDetail

The Great Bank Robbery

Although I have literally written hundreds of posts on World War II and the Holocaust, I hadn’t heard about the great bank robbery.

The bank robbery at Almelo 1944, is a bank robbery was committed by the Dutch resistance on November 15, in which 46.1 million guilders (value in 2023: €354 million) was taken. It concerned money moved from Arnhem to Almelo on behalf of Reich Commissioner Seyss-Inquart to end up in Germany. At the time, an NSB member worked as a director at the bank.

This robbery of thirteen cash boxes was considered the largest bank robbery in the Netherlands until well after the year 2000, and more money was involved than the well-known British train robbery. Ex-bank employee Derk Smoes, leader of the Fighting Squad in Almelo, initiated this robbery. Other members included Douwe Mik, Herman Höften, Hendrik Frielink, who survived the Neuengamme Concentration Camp, and resistance fighter Henk Bosch. It was an act of resistance for which the Dutch government had given written permission from London. The loot was intended to finance the 1944 railway strike.

The resistance had received a tip that the large sum of money was stored in the Almelo bank branch. From there, Reich Commissioner Seyss-Inquart wanted to have it brought to Germany. After the successful robbery, which was carried out with the approval of the Dutch government in London, there was no trace of the perpetrators.

“Wednesday, November 15, 1944, half past six in the afternoon. The bank building is closed. Then the doorbell rings. The youngest servant opens the door and immediately looks into the barrels of the pistols. Four K.P. members enter. The others keep watch outside and occupy the house above the building. The staff, who are completely surprised, raise their hands and the director (matte SS pin on his jacket!) is forced to lead the men downstairs and open the safe. “I don’t know the numerical code,” he said. But when he notices that it is serious and that refusal will cost him his life, the iron gate opens and so do the safe doors. The millions are up for grabs. The staff must pack everything into boxes. Thirteen boxes full! Meanwhile, the director puts away his SS pin. “I don’t want to annoy you with your work,” he says. After forty-five minutes (“It seemed like hours,” the robbers said later) everything above. The truck of Willem Meenks from Rijssen can drive up. The engine runs on wood gas and cuts out repeatedly. But he still manages to get the car in front of the door with the loading platform facing backwards. Just as loading is underway, the K.P. members get the fright of their lives. An entire column of Grime Polizei marches past. They still have to circle around the car because it is half on the road. One of the K.P. members gives them some guidance. But the Germans notice nothing and continue singing loudly (Auf der Heide blüht ein kleines Blümelein). Everyone breathes a sigh of relief when it all ends well. Shortly afterwards everything was loaded. Just cut the telephone wires and then drive away. But the wrong wire is cut and the alarm system starts blaring. How could it be otherwise, a small panic arises, but everyone knows what to do. The retreat does not go entirely according to plan, but during the evening the millions arrive safely in Daarle where they are temporarily stored in a haystack. A few days later the money, a total of ƒ46,150,000, was brought to Daarlerveen in two trips by horse and cart, again in a haystack. Everything went well.”

The Germans had offered 1 million guilders for the golden tip that would lead to the arrest of the bank robbers. Ultimately, the arrest of an acquaintance of the robbers, with forged identity cards in his pocket, led the Germans on the trail of the resistance group involved.

The false identification documents led to the hiding place of Derk Smoes, the ringleader of the bank robbery. He was arrested together with others involved in the robbery. The Germans proposed a compromise to Smoes: if he told them where the money was, they would not conduct any further large-scale research in the area.

Smoes, who feared that such an investigation would reveal more to the Germans than the resistance wanted, passed on the location of the money. The SD eventually found the entire amount under the hay at a farm in Daarlerveen.

Nine people were arrested and sent to Neuengamme and Reiherhorst, Reiherhorst, a wooden barracks camp within Wöbbelin Concentration Camp. Six of them had to pay for it with their lives.

Below are a few of the biographies of those involved.

Derk Smoes (Vriezenveen, 7 December 1914–Neuengamme, 14 March 1945) was a bank clerk. From July 1944, he took over the leadership of the KP (a resistance group) Almelo together with Andries Kalter. Smoes was involved in several robberies on distribution transports and the bank robbery of the Dutch Bank in Almelo. He was arrested on 30 November 1944. Smoes died on 14 March 1945 in Camp Neuengamme.

Death Certificate

Douwe Mik (Borger, 23 May 1917–Wöbbelin, Germany, 17 April 1945) was a police officer. Mik had to go into hiding and subsequently ended up in the Twente resistance. He was involved, among other things, in the squatting of the Dutch Bank in Almelo. Mik was arrested for this and died in Wöbbelin Concentration Camp.

Herman Höften (Wierden, February 15, 1920)was a resistance fighter and politician. During the Second World War, he was affiliated with KP Almelo. He took part in the robbery of the Detention Center in Almelo and the robbery of the Dutch Bank in Almelo. Herman died in Almelo in 2007.

Berend Bruijnes (Ermelo, 6 January 1921–11 March 1945) After being imprisoned for several months in 1943 following the May strike, Berend Bruijnes (Bruintje) took over the work of his father (Arie Bruijnes) on November 25 after he was arrested for betrayal along with Jewish people in hiding. He has been involved in, among other things, distributing distribution vouchers and identity cards in the Epe and Zwolle areas. He was also part of the RVV group Epe of the Domestic Armed Forces under the command of Johannes Daamen and also provided shooting instructions. On 29 November 1944, he was arrested in Almelo in possession of blank identity cards and, after “sharpened” interrogation, was imprisoned in the Kruisberg in Doetinchem. From there he was deported to Neuengamme on 1 February 1945, and from there to Reyerhorst Concentration Camp in Wöbbelin, where he died of dysentery on March 11.

Willem Meenks (Rijssen, 20 December 1915–15 March 1945) On 5 February 1945, Willem Meenks was transported from Doetinchem to Neuengamme, where he died on 15 March 1945.

Gerardus Hendrikus Frielink (Tubbergen, 14 January 1912–28 April 1945, Auffanglager Wöbbelin) was one of the seven young men who were transported by train from the Netherlands to the Neuengamme Concentration Camp near Hamburg, on the night of February 1–2, 1945. Frielink and his brother Hendrik may not have been robbers but owners of the café of the same name in Harbrinkhoek, they had made their pub available to the gang to plan the robbery. However, it turned into a tragedy when the robbers were caught, and the Frielink brothers were also arrested by the Nazis.
The journey followed in appalling conditions, lasted almost a week in a closed wagon, after which the train arrived at Camp Neuengamme on 7 February.
“The men were desperate for water and food, but when they arrived at the camp, a reception committee of SS men and kapos (prisoners who were appointed as camp guards, etc.) was ready with clubs and eager sheepdogs,” says Krake. “After they had gone through this welcome, they received their camp number (70900 for Gerard Frielink). It was on a piece of fabric that they had to sew onto their camp clothes themselves.”
He died at the camp on April 28, 1945.

Gerhard Nijland   The Twente resistance fighter Gerhard Nijland did not survive the Nazi camp Ahlem. He was buried ingloriously and under the wrong name, while his SS camp commander Otto ‘Thull’ Harder— an acclaimed professional football player—avoided the death penalty and was later buried by a guard of honour. “It is distressing,” says Gerhard’s niece.
Gerhard Nijland was involved in the 1944 robbery of De Nederlandsche Bank, in which 46 million guilders were stolen. Nijland hid the loot in the family’s haystack in Daarlerveen. The Germans were at their wits’ end and did everything they could to capture the resistance group. They arrested seven men, including Nijland. He was never heard from again.
Since Gerhard’s death, he was no longer talked about in the family. Gerie has been ordered since childhood never to talk about him. It was too painful. Because of that silence, no one in the family knew exactly what had happened to Gerhard. His father could not cope with his death and committed suicide in 1948.
In contradiction, Gerhard’s tormentor, Otto Fritz Harder, had been a German Footballer before World War II. In October 1932, following his football career, Harder ran an insurance agency and became a member of the NSDAP before joining the SS in May 1933. In August 1939, he was drafted into the Waffen-SS and served shortly at Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp, then at Neuengamme in Hamburg by the end of that year.[10] On 30 November 1944, Harder became an SS-Hauptscharführer and a commander (Schutzhaftlagerführer) at the Ahlem camp in Hanover. On 30 January 1945, he was promoted to SS-Untersturmführer (equivalent second lieutenant). He also served as a camp commander in Uelzen, a subcamp of Neuengamme, which was evacuated under his leadership on 16–17 April due to British attacks, in which prisoners were transferred to the main camp. In May 1945, he was captured by the British military and was taken to Iserbrook. Due to health issues, he was initially released but then was arrested again.
After World War II, Harder was tried for war crimes by the British military court at the Curio house in Rotherbaum. On 6 May 1947, he was sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment. After the trial, Hamburger SV excluded him for a short time. However, his sentence was later reduced to ten years in prison, of which he ended up serving only four years. He was released from Werl Prison before Christmas 1951. Harder later moved to Bendestorf, where he worked as an insurance agent until his death on 4 March 1956 in Hamburg.

Otto Harder as the captain of the German Football team (on the left)

In Frank Krake’s 2023 book, The Resistance Man and the Football Hero, the author contrasts the life of SS Camp Commandant Harder, who “created a living hell” (according to Henry Kissinger, one of the US 84th Division which liberated the Ahlen Concentration Camp), with the life of Gerhard Nijland, a Dutch resistance hero who became a prisoner in Harder’s camp. Nijland died in April 1945, five days after being liberated by the Americans, and was buried in an unmarked grave.
When the Football World Cup was held in Germany in 1974, the city of Hamburg even produced a brochure in which Harder was also honoured as one of their great football heroes. Frank Krake, “That ultimately went too far. The page was removed from the brochure at the very last minute.”




Sources

https://www.ad.nl/hellendoorn/onvoorstelbaar-voor-twentse-nabestaanden-verzetsstrijder-gerhard-nijland-brute-kampcommandant-bleef-een-held~a667bb0a/

https://www.tubantia.nl/hellendoorn/bankroof-duits-kamp-in-plaats-van-verloving-voor-gerhard-uit-daarlerveen~a0246f7b/

https://doetinchemherdenkt.nl/bankovervallers

https://www.rtvoost.nl/nieuws/2094825/document-uit-concentratiekamp-rond-grootste-bankroof-opgedoken-kreeg-er-koude-rillingen-van

https://www.oudvriezenveen.nl/dorpsgeschiedenis/bankoverval/eenstelkoelbloedigesnotneuzen

https://www.destentor.nl/binnenland/hoe-het-twentse-verzet-de-grootste-bankoverval-ooit-pleegde-zelfs-churchill-werd-op-de-hoogte-gebracht~ac408678/

https://nos.nl/75jaarbevrijding/bericht/2313050-verzetsleden-die-bankoverval-pleegden-opgepakt

https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankroof_Almelo_1944

https://www.oorlogsbronnen.nl/mensen?theme=https%3A%2F%2Fdata.niod.nl%2FWO2_Thesaurus%2Fevents%2F7528

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Waldemar Hugh Nods—Forgotten Hero

I have been doing posts about World War II and the Holocaust since 2016. When I started, I reckoned I’d have enough material to last for a year, two years tops. Seven years on, I am still finding new stories daily. Stories like that of Waldemar Hugh Nods.

Waldemar Hugh Nods was born on 1 September 1908 in Surinam, South America, a Dutch colony. His parents were some of the first Surinamese people born free from slavery. Slavery was abolished in 1863 in Surinam.

In 1928, 20-year-old Waldemar came to study in the Netherlands. His dark skin color caused attention and discrimination.

In October 1928, Waldemar met Rika van der Lans: white, 17 years his senior, and already married with four children. When they began their relationship, it caused a scandal.

Rika had already upset her Catholic parents by marrying a Protestant, Willem Hagenaar, in 1913. However, by the time she met Waldemar, she was separated from Willem and took their children to live in The Hague. She supported the children by renting out rooms, which is how she met Waldemar.

When she found herself pregnant by Waldemar, it led to alienation from her
children and their family. Their son Waldy was born on 17 November 1929. he was nicknamed “Sonny Boy,” after the Al Jolson song, popular at the time.

Rika Waldemar and their son were evicted from their home. They met an elderly Jewish man named Sam, who offered them shelter.

Waldemar completed his studies in 1931 and secured a job as an accountant. His new family moved with him to Scheveningen, a seaside district of The Hague, where they opened a guesthouse, with financial help from Sam, in 1934: Pension Walda.

Despite the Great Depression, the guesthouse was remarkably successful, especially with German tourists. This was mainly thanks to Waldemar’s perfect German, acquired by studying for his diploma in business correspondence in German.

Finally, Waldemar and Rika were married on 17 May 1937.

Right at the time, Rika’s affairs with her own children seem to normalize again when the Germans invade the country. Rika and Waldemar were forced to shelter German soldiers. After a while, the family had to leave because the area was being cleared for the Atlantic Wall. Because Rika mentions that she has five children, they are assigned a larger house. Then in November 1942, the couple began to hide Jews from the Nazis at the request of a young resistance fighter. They were seen by the Dutch resistance as ideal candidates as they were a small family with spare rooms in their home and were also free of the antisemitism that occurred among the resistance, which made Jews harder to hide than other Dutch fugitives.

Their son, Waldy, was unaware of the hidden guests until the day he was brought home by the police after getting in a fight with a boy who had racially abused him. This panicked his mother, who told him about the Jews and insisted that nobody must ever find out.

In August 1943, the family moved to a house on Pijnboomstraat where they continued to hide Jews and others. The resistance sent them fugitives others were unwilling to accommodate. Among them were Dobbe Franken, the daughter of a leading member of the Jewish Council in Rotterdam, and Gerard van Haringen, a Dutch SS deserter, who now regretted running away from home aged 17 to sign up. Just before dawn on 18 January 1944, the house was raided. Everyone, including Waldy and the hidden fugitives, was interrogated. Waldemar admitted to hiding Jews.

Rika took all the blame and was sentenced to life imprisonment. She was first imprisoned in Scheveningen, and from there, she went to Vught concentration camp (near ‘s-Hertogenbosch) and was eventually taken to Ravensbrück, where she was murdered in February 1945.

Waldemar was given a lenient sentence compared to his wife, whom he last saw at Scheveningen prison. He was deported via Vught concentration camp to Neuengamme Concentration Camp on 23 February 1944 and was given prisoner number 32180.

Waldemar’s dark skin stood out at Neuengamme. The SS guards remarked, “He was a chimpanzee who surprisingly turned out to be able to understand and perform complicated instructions to the letter in German.” Thanks to his language skills he was put to work in the camp post office and was able to communicate with his family.

Waldemar wrote his last letter to his relatives on 7 January 1945 in German as prescribed.

“[ … ] and Waldie my boy, how are you? Work hard and also do your best with football.”

He knew that the war would soon be over and hoped to return home soon:

“[ … ] back as soon as possible. [ … ] I am waiting for that now.”

In April 1945, due to the evacuation of the Neuengamme main camp, Waldemar Nods, like many other prisoners, was put on the passenger ship Cap Arcona, which was moored in the Lübecker Bay, the stretch of sea Northeast of Hamburg. On 3 May 1945, the ship was accidentally bombed by British aircraft. The vast majority of prisoners on board the Cap Arcona died.

Waldemar initially survives the attack. He jumped into the sea and swam to the coast (he was a good swimmer in Surinam—he already swam long distances in the river), made it to shore only to be gunned down by SS child soldiers, with orders to shoot any survivors.

Waldemar and Rika’s son, Waldy, grew up in a foster home. He worked as a financial and economic journalist at Het Parool and later at Bruynzeel in Suriname.

Waldemar died at the age of 85 in 2015.



Sources

https://www.kz-gedenkstaette-neuengamme.de/vorbereitung/biografie_waldemar_nods.html

https://vrijheid.scouting.nl/scouting-in-de-oorlog/database-bestanden/burgerslachtoffers/766-burgerslachtoffers-waldy-sonny-boy-nods/file

https://olc.chocochaos.com/dosn15z.htm

https://www.oorlogsbronnen.nl/tijdlijn/Waldemar-Hugh-Nods/02/110382

Donation

I am passionate about my site and I know you all like reading my blogs. I have been doing this at no cost and will continue to do so. All I ask is for a voluntary donation of $2, however if you are not in a position to do so I can fully understand, maybe next time then. Thank you. To donate click on the credit/debit card icon of the card you will use. If you want to donate more then $2 just add a higher number in the box left from the PayPal link. Many thanks.

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