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Geertruida Wijsmuller-Meijer

Geertruida Wijsmuller-Meijer (21 April 1896, in Alkmaar – 30 August 1978, in Amsterdam) was a Dutch resistance fighter who brought Jewish children and adults into safety before and during the Second World War. Together with other people involved in the pre-war Kindertransport, she saved the lives of more than 10,000 Jewish children, fleeing anti-Semitism. She was honored as Righteous among the Nations by Yad Vashem. After the war she served on the Amsterdam city council.

Wijsmuller in 1965

Early life edit

Geertruida Wijsmuller-Meijer, known as 'Truus' to her family, was born in the city of Alkmaar. She was the firstborn child of Jacob Meijer, who worked in a drug store, and Hendrika Boer, a self-employed dressmaker. For two years she attended the School of Commerce.[1] Her teachers described her as a "desperate case", "even though she is diligent". But gradually things got better,[2] In 1913, the family moved to Amsterdam. Her parents taught her to stand up for people[3] and, after World War I, set an example of helping the needy by taking in a homeless Austrian boy.

A year later, she got her first job at a bank, where she met her future husband, the banker J. F. (Joop) Wijsmuller. They married in 1922 and went to live on the Nassaukade in an apartment on the third floor. Wijsmuller stopped working as was usual at the time. When it became clear that they were not having children, Wijsmuller became involved in social work.[4] Her husband supported her in all her activities. From 1933 they could always count on their live-in assistant, Cietje Hackmann.[5] She did her administration and took care of children, if they stayed with them, when Wijsmuller was away from home.

 
Wijsmuller, date and photographer unknown

Social and political work edit

Wijsmuller took on several unpaid jobs as a social worker. For example, she was a coordinator for an association for homecare, and administrator for a daycare center for children of working women. From 1939 on she was a board member of Beatrix-Oord, a sanatorium in Amsterdam. After the war she had it converted into a general hospital, where abortion was also possible. She joined the Vereeniging voor Vrouwenbelangen en Gelijk Staatsburgerschap ("Association for Women's Interests and for Equal Citizenship"). There she met chairman Mies Boissevain-van Lennep, who would later become a resistance fighter.

In addition to this work, Wijsmuller was nominated as number 6 on the list of Liberal candidates for the Amsterdam city council elections in 1935. Because of the threat of war she founded the Korps Vrouwelijke Vrijwilligers (KVV; "Corps for Female Volunteers") in 1938, which she managed from her home. Soon she had an extensive network of people.

From 1933 onward: help for Jewish children edit

From 1933 onward, Wijsmuller traveled to Germany to fetch family members of Jewish acquaintances and bring them safely to the Netherlands. She did so for many years to come. After the Kristallnacht in 1938, rumours reached her that Jewish children were wandering unattended in the woods, so she went to the Dutch–German border to see what was going on there. She smuggled a Yiddish speaking Polish boy across the frontier under her skirts, and took him to Amsterdam.

On 17 November 1938, she took her first group of 6 children from the crowded waiting room of the Dutch consulate to the train. But customs attempted to remove them from the train. Wijsmuller however had noticed that the Dutch Princess Juliana was on the coupe next to her. "Children, comb your hair and wash your hands" and she threatened to take the six of them to the princess. After which customs backed down.

December 1938: Meeting Eichmann edit

In November 1938 the British Government decided to let Jewish children under the age of 17 from Nazi countries enter the United Kingdom for a temporary stay. Various organisations started working together in the Refugee Children's Movement[6] (RCM) to take care of these children.

On December 2, Wijsmuller received a request to come to the newly established Dutch Children's Committee in Amsterdam. During this visit, Norman Bentwich from England was also present. He asked her to travel to Vienna to meet a certain Dr Eichner, which they believed was the name of Adolf Eichmann. She left to Vienna the same day.

Eichmann then was the Nazi official handling the forced "emigration" of Jews. It was thought that Wijsmuller, as a non-Jewish woman, might be able to get permission from the Nazis for the children to travel to Britain. Eichmann snarled at her, but Wijsmuller was imperturbable and fearless. She told him why she came. "Unbelievable, so rein-arisch und dann so verrückt!"[7] ("so purely Aryan and then so crazy"), Eichmann concluded. He responded by giving her permission to travel with 600 children, but it had to happen by the upcoming Saturday, on Shabbat, a deadline he seemed to assume she would not be able to make.

First, she reserved trains at the station. Then, the parents, the Jewish organisations and Wijsmuller succeeded in letting 600 children leave Vienna on 10 December. The journey from Vienna to Hook of Holland took around 30 hours. One hundred of the children received shelter in the Netherlands, while 500 traveled on to Britain. In England Wijsmuller had contact with Lola Hahn-Warburg (a chairwoman from the RCM, who asked in astonishment: "but you were only sent to talk?"[8] when Wijsmuller arrived with 600 children) and others. In the Netherlands she cooperated with the social worker Gertrude van Tijn[9] from the Committee for Special Jewish Interests [nl; nl] , belonging to the Committee for Jewish Refugees), Mies Boissevain-van Lennep and many others.

Wijsmullers' vigour was fuelled by the degrading way she had seen Jewish inhabitants treated in Vienna. In the Netherlands, however, nobody believed what she had seen.

December 1938-September 1939: Kindertransport edit

From then until the outbreak of World War II on September 1, 1939, Wijsmuller organised children's transports with children up to 17 years old from Nazi Germany and the annexed territories, mainly to Great Britain, but also to the Netherlands, Belgium and France. The trains from the south-east arrived via Emmerich on Tuesdays and Wednesdays; the trains from the north-east passed Bentheim on Thursdays.[10]

After the first large transport, the work involved became more structured and a maximum of 150 children per transport was agreed upon. Several times a week, Wijsmuller traveled to Germany and Nazi-occupied territories to pick up children and arrange things on site with the organisers involved.

The children were allowed to take one suitcase, 10 German Marks and no photos or valuables. Mostly - but it was not always allowed- Jewish companions traveled with the children to the UK border, provided they all returned. Otherwise the transports would have ended. Once a group of weakened women and children of Sudeten-Germans traveled with them.

It was an exceptional operation carried out under great pressure that required the cooperation of parents, guardians and various committees with volunteers in many cities and countries. It was mainly women who took care of the travel and accommodation of the children.

Wijsmuller was convinced of the urgency of these transports and gave momentum to the "Kindertransporte", as the evacuations came to be called. She maintained contacts with all of the parties involved in several countries, including the main committees in Vienna, Hamburg, Frankfurt and Berlin (from March 1939 in Prague and Dantzig[11] ) and also the train and boat companies.

She always carried in her handbag a toothbrush, a bar of soap and a towel, as she could be asked at any time to travel. Wijsmuller took responsibility for the travel documents when traveling.. She arranged, that the border police and customs controls were carried out as much as possible on the way before the border. And under her guidance (or under that of one of the other Dutch women). That prevented delays.[12]

On August 24, 1939, Wijsmuller was met at the border by a delegation from the Gestapo with a brass band. She was forced to celebrate with them that she had crossed the border at Bentheim for the 50th time.

Wijsmuller was later quoted saying that the success of the operation was mainly due to the Jewish committees in Vienna, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Berlin and Breslau (and later in Prague, Dantzig and Riga).[13] A miracle of self-control in her eyes, because she realized how afraid people must have been to send their children into the world.[14]

Other people organised transports too, for example Nicholas Winton and Recha Freier. Ultimately, 10,000 children up to 17 years old were saved from a certain death by being transported on a route via the Netherlands into Great Britain. Approximately 1800 refugee children from nazi-countries remained in the Netherlands.[15]

The outbreak of the war between Great Britain and Germany in September 1939 put a stop to these transports, as from then on the borders to the UK were closed.

March 1939 Children in the Burgerweeshuis edit

From March 1939 onwards Wijsmuller was on the board of the Amsterdam orphanage Burgerweeshuis, (now the Amsterdam Museum), which started to accommodate the refugee children. Wijsmuller and her husband were very involved with the children. The children came in small groups to stay overnight at the Wijsmullers'. Joop Wijsmuller took them on outings, for example to Artis, the Amsterdam zoo. The children called Wijsmuller "Tante Truus" (Auntie Truus).

June–July 1939: Refugee ships edit

In June 1939, international negotiations took place in Antwerp among European countries about the distribution of nearly one thousand Jewish refugees on the MS St. Louis. Wijsmuller was part of the Dutch delegation, who boarded the ship and welcomed the 181 refugees on their arrival in the Netherlands. In July 1939 Wijsmuller was involved in the departure of children on the cargoship the Dora which eventually landed with 450 refugees in the then English mandate territory Palestine.

September 1939 – December 1939: Last journeys from the German border edit

The mobilisation disrupted train traffic and the border at Bentheim in Germany was closed. On 31 August Wijsmuller was told that a group of children from the Youth Aliyah was stuck in Kleve. She arranged travel documents, picked the children up in buses and took them to the boat in Hoek van Holland.

On 1 September she received a telephone call from Germany that Orthodox boys were stranded at the station of Kleve. The Dutch Railways put together a train for her, consisting of dining cars. At the station at Kleve she also found a group of 300 Orthodox men from Galicia. She told the Germans that "after all, these are also boys",[16] and got permission for them to leave. It was the last group to leave Nazi territory via Vlissingen to England.

In November and December 1939 she regularly collected Jewish refugees in Bentheim (from Vienna and other places) who had papers for America. They left with the Holland America Line from Rotterdam.

September 1939 – May 1940: Journeys to England and southern France edit

From September 1939 till May 1940 Wijsmuller helped Jewish children and adults stranded in the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark and Sweden. She traveled with them to England and the unoccupied parts of France and Spain. In Danmark she arranged an airplane and gasoline for the refugees. On these journeys (by plane to Amsterdam and from Amsterdam by plane to England, and by train to Marseille) she accompanied the refugees. She arranged all the while the necessary but hard-to-get travel documents.

Wijsmuller was described as a born tour conductor,[17][18][19]] being able to reassure the refugees and to unearth all the talented children aboard for songs, recitations and performances during the long train journey. From Marseille people traveled on by boat to try to reach the then English mandate area Palestine.

In November 1939 Wijsmuller was arrested and molested by the French in Marseille, suspecting she was the much-wanted German spy "Erika". Due to a lack of evidence she had to be released.

May 1940: The children from the Burgerweeshuis to England edit

On 10 May 1940 Wijsmuller was in Paris to take a child away when she heard of the German invasion of the Netherlands. Within three days she traveled back to Amsterdam, where she immediately was arrested and questioned by the Dutch police, on suspicion of espionage. After her release she went to the orphanage Burgerweeshuis to see the children. The local garrison commander passed a request on to her from London to arrange for the Jewish children at the orphanage to travel as fast as possible to the coastal town of IJmuiden so they could catch a boat to England on time.

Wijsmuller brought along as many children as possible on the way, bringing a total of 74 children to the very last boat, the SS Bodegraven", that left the harbor. Minutes later the Dutch government surrendered. The Bodegraven sailed for England, but due to the German nationality of the children, at first they were not allowed to disembark. Eventually the ship moored on 19 May at Liverpool.

The children spent the war with foster families and in various institutions in England. Wijsmuller decided to stay in the Netherlands. She wanted to be with her husband and besides she found there was more work for her to do.[20]

May 1940-1943: More help in wartime edit

 
Wijsmuller, standing on the left, looking at the children from the Burgerweeshuis. Made before May 1940, photographer unknown.

After the capitulation of the Netherlands Wijsmuller traveled to Brussels. There she consulted with the Belgian Red Cross and the Belgian Children's Committee. In Paris she had also contact with the French Red Cross and with the OSE (Oeuvre Secours aux Enfants, a Jewish aid organisation for children). During this period Wijsmuller devoted herself to uniting families. She took children to their parents who had escaped to Belgium and France. On her way back she brought children with her whose parents remained in the Netherlands. Sometimes she brought children to their parents in Germany. She placed children of Jewish women with other, safe families shortly after birth.[21] In Brussels she made contact with Benno M. Nijkerk,[22] a Dutch-Belgian businessman. They agreed to bring as many children as possible to the south, legally or illegally.

Nijkerk had false identity cards forged in Brussels. He was the treasurer[23] of the "Comité de Defense des Juifs", a Belgian Jewish resistance group. Later he became a member of "Dutch-Paris" which was an underground network of the Dutch, Belgian and French resistance. Wijsmuller smuggled the false identity cards with information about the escape route to Holland. This work continued until at least 1943.

In June 1943 she traveled for the last time with Jewish children in the direction of the Spanish border.[24]

Till March 1941: Help with the Amsterdam Red Cross in France edit

With the Amsterdam Red Cross she traveled with food and medicine to the Gurs and St. Cyprien internment camps in the south of France. The financing was partly organised by Wijsmuller. She obtained the required German travel and passage permits via the Amsterdam and Belgian Red Cross. Whenever possible she took along Jewish children and smuggled them to Vichy France or Spain. This help came to an end in February 1941, when the Dutch Red Cross terminated her travel permits after Wijsmuller made her criticism known about their representative in Paris.[25]

End of 1941 till June 1942: travels to Spain edit

From May 1941 till June 1942, Wijsmuller was involved in refugees on behalf of the Hoymans & Schuurman's agency and other stakeholders . At the SS' s request, Wijsmuller functioned as the liaison between the SS, the Jewish Dutch and the agency. She accompanied groups who still had permission from the Nazis – having to pay them a lot of money – to leave Europe through Spain and Portugal. Wijsmullers' condition to cooperate was that Jewish children could travel free of charge. With this she helped bringing about 150 people to safety. The travels to Spain continued after May 1942. Thanks to the efforts of several people involved a total of 341 people escaped the Nazis.

Contacts with Nazis edit

With the Nazis, Wijsmuller had contacts from high to low. She used it when she wanted something done from them. For example, she received travel documents for Jewish children to leave the country from a Gestapo employee[26] who believed that children belonged with their parents. Before that she had accepted his invitation to have a drink with him on an Amsterdam terrace. He saw her walking in the street and recognized her. Previously he was a border official during the "Kindertransport".

In May 1941 the SS-er Rajakowitsch called her to The Hague. She had to write down what she was doing and stop her help. Otherwise it would be her end. Wijsmuller pretended ignorance and not understanding how serious the situation was.

Wijsmuller later has praised German officers for helping her in dire situations.

1941 till June 1942: Help for French soldiers edit

From 1941 till June 1942 she arranged help for French soldiers who wanted to flee. At Nijkerks' request and for this purpose she made contact with a German just across the Dutch border. She provided with others civilian clothing, an escape route and a shelter in Nispen. There the soldiers had to say that they were from "Madame Odi": the alias of Wijsmuller.[27]

May 1942: Wijsmuller arrested edit

In May 1942 Wijsmuller was arrested and put in custody in the prison on the Amstelveenseweg in Amsterdam. The Gestapo suspected she was helping Jewish refugees to flee the Netherlands to France and Switzerland. A group of Jews and their hiding people were arrested at their hiding place in Nispen. Wijsmuller had provided them with false identity papers and escape routes, which she smuggled from Brussels to the Netherlands. But the refugees only knew her pseudonym "Madame Odi". Her husband came to plead her innocence with the Nazis. Wijsmuller was released after a few days due to a lack of evidence. She kept in contact with Nijkerk. At the end of 1943 travelling abroad became impossible.

1942-1944: Food help edit

Since 1942 Mrs Wijsmuller was also a member of Group 2000, a resistance group led by Jacoba van Tongeren. Her position was head of the Red Cross Services. She focused on sending food parcels. All children in Westerbork received a package at Christmas 1943. After that Mrs Wijsmuller worked three days a week with others in the Nieuwe Kerk to prepare and send food parcels. First to people in Westerbork, and from February till September 1944 to people in the Bergen-Belsen and Theresienstadt concentration camps. A total of 7000 parcels were sent by name. ".....but it is thanks to Mrs Wijsmuller that this work has taken such a flight".[28] People also brought food to her house to distribute. An egg merchant from Landsmeer brought her about 1000 duck eggs every week. Mrs Wijsmuller then delivered them to elderly homes and hospitals in the city. She called this work the "foodbusiness".

September 1944: Children from Westerbork. edit

In September 1944 Wijsmuller discovered that 50 "orphans" (Jewish children taken up without their parents) from Westerbork would be deported. She regularly had brought food to a number of these children in the Amsterdam Huis van Bewaring (house of detention). Alarmed by this news, she went to the Nazis. She claimed that she knew these children were not Jewish, but born out of Dutch non-Jewish mothers and German soldiers. According to the law these children were Dutch. To prove her point she showed a Dutch bill which she had manufactured herself. She insisted on "special treatment" for the children. The children traveled on to Theresienstadt, stayed together as a group and returned after the war.[29][30][31]

Hunger 1944-1945 edit

Hunger became a serious issue in the Dutch cities. When it was no longer possible to send food parcels to the camps, Wijsmuller, as a member of an interconfessional group, organized the evacuation of 6,649 famished children[5] from Amsterdam across the IJsselmeer to the countryside. The children were able to recuperate there.

On 7 April 1945 the Amsterdam police informed Wijsmuller that 120 Allied soldiers were being held in a monastery in Aalsmeer. They were in a bad way. Wanting to help, Wijsmuller cycled to Aalsmeer, the first time with medication, and managed to get in. She threatened the Germans that they could be charged after the war. Immediately after the capitulation of Germany Wijsmuller sought contact with the Germans in Utrecht, who knew her by her nickname "die verrückte Frau Wijsmuller"[32][33] ("the crazy Mrs. Wijsmuller") due to her help to Jews. They referred her to the Canadians in Hilversum. The latter sent cars and Wijsmuller delivered the soldiers to them.[4]

After World War II edit

 
Wijsmuller after World War II

After the war Wijsmuller traced displaced children in Germany, as member number 1 from the KVV and as a UNRRA (a precursor of the UN) employee. This was followed by the organisation of trips to England, Switzerland and Denmark of malnourished children from the Netherlands.[34] From 1945 until 1966, she was a member of the Amsterdam city council for the liberal party (VVD). She was involved in social work and many social projects in the Netherlands and abroad.

Soon she was on about 12 boards and committees. For example, she was involved in the creation of workplaces for the disabled in Amsterdam and the founding of a hospital in Suriname. She was one of the founders and a board member of the Anne Frank House. Most of the Jewish children found that their parents did not survive the Shoah, but some were reunited with their families. Until her death Wijsmuller kept in touch with children she saved, from Enkhuizen[35] to England and Israel.[36]

Joop Wijsmuller died on December 31, 1964. Cietje Hackman lived together with Wijsmuller until her death on August 30, 1978. Wijsmuller left her body for scientific research.

In an advertisement after her death she was described as the "Mother of 1001 children, who made her job of saving Jewish children ".

Memories of Wijsmuller edit

Wijsmuller has been described[37][38] and remembered[39][40][41] as an impressive personality, a lady with a powerful voice, and someone who radiated warmth and energy. She was a resolute, practical woman with a big heart for children. Very cheeky but never rude. She was able to convince people, even overwhelm them with her boldness. She could improvise in challenging situations and negotiate and bribe whenever necessary. She had a talent for networking and organising. It was her preference to work on her own, as she considered that safer. Wijsmuller never accepted money for her work.

In the months and years following the outbreak of the war she never ceased to go wherever work needs to be done.[42]

In the postwar years she was also characterized as a headstrong and dominant woman,[5] and, looking back, like an adventurer.[43] In Amsterdam she was nicknamed both "tante Truus/Auntie Truus" and "stoomwals/steamroller".[44]

Monuments edit

  • A sculpture of her, made by Herman Diederik Janzen [nl], was unveiled in 1965 in the sanatorium "Beatrixoord" in Amsterdam. Into the plinth was carved: "G. Wijsmuller-Meijer, member of the Amsterdam City Council 1945-1966. Bellatrix, Vigilans, Beatrix". When "Beatrixoord" was closed, Wijsmuller took the statue home. After her death in 1978 it was reinstated on the Bachplein in Amsterdam. A plaque at the foot mentioned: "Mother of 1001 children, who made rescuing Jewish children her life's work". In 2019 a new plaque was placed with information about her rescuing work before and during the war and the medals she received.[45]
  • On 30 November 2011, a monument in Hook of Holland was unveiled by Mayor Aboutaleb, commemorating the 10,000 Jewish children that left for England from there. The monument was designed by Frank Meisler, one of the children on the transports. He made four other monuments that are located in Gdańsk (2009), Berlin (2008), London (2006) and Hamburg (2015).
  • Streets have been named after her in Amsterdam, Gouda, Leiden, Pijnacker, Coevorden and Alkmaar. In Leiden a tunnel bears her name.
  • In Amsterdam bridge number 793 is named after her.[46] Truus Wijsmullerbrug [nl]
  • Asteroid number 15296 is named "Tante Truus" ("Auntie Truus") after her.
  • On March 8, 2020 "Truus' Children" was released, a documentary by Pamela Sturhoofd and Jessica van Tijn from "Special Eyes". It is an ode to Wijsmuller, with interviews with more than 20 "children" she saved 80 years ago.
  •  
    Hoek van Holland, Monument Kindertransporten
    A statue of Truus Wijsmuller and the "1001 children" she helped saving was unveiled on 1 July 2020 in her hometown of Alkmaar. The tribute was an initiative of the Historical Society of Alkmaar. The statue was made by Annet Terberg-Pompe and Lea Wijnhoven.

Distinctions edit

References edit

  1. ^ wijsmuller, truus (1913). "regionaal archief alkmaar (engl. Regional Archive of Alkmaar)". regionaal archief alkmaar.
  2. ^ Regionaal Archief Alkmaar, Archief Handelsschool (Hogere) HBS-A, Notulen 1911-1912/ ( engl. Regional Archive of Alkmaar, Archives of School of Commerce)
  3. ^ NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A G. Wijsmuller-Meijer, pag. 1 "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer" ( engl. page 1 "Report of a conservation by Mrs Wijsmuller recorded on gramophoon records").
  4. ^ a b Vrooland, L.C. (1963). Geen Tijd voor tranen (engl. No time for tears). Amsterdam: Em. Querido Uitgeverijen NV. pp. 182–183.
  5. ^ a b c D'Aulnis, Madelon (1993). ""So reinarisch und dann so verrückt" (Engl. "So 100% Aryan and then so crazy")". Ons Amsterdam. mei 1993: 121–124.
  6. ^ Harris and Oppenheimer, Mark Jonathan and Deborah (2000). Into the arms of strangers. US: Warner Bros. p. 11. ISBN 0-7475-5092-1.
  7. ^ NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A G. Wijsmuller -Meijer "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer", p 9
  8. ^ NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A G. Wijsmuller-Meijer "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer"', p 9
  9. ^ Wasserstein, Bernard (2013). Gertrude van Tijn en het lot van de Nederlandse Joden" (in Dutch). Amsterdam, Holland: Nieuw Amsterdam Uitgevers. pp. 56, 76, 81, 88. ISBN 978-90-468-1435-2.
  10. ^ NIOD "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek Mw.Wijsmuller-Meijer", pag 13-14, (engl. "Report of a conversation by Mw. Wijsmuller recorded on gramophone records")
  11. ^ "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek met mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer", pag 12
  12. ^ "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek met mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer", page 12
  13. ^ Henriëtte Boas "Het begon in 1938", NIW 12-12-1938
  14. ^ L.C. Vrooland, "Geen tijd voor tranen", (Dutch) 1963 Emm. Querido Uitgevers, Amsterdam, p 90
  15. ^ "Jewish Refugee Children in the Netherlands during World War II: Migration, Settlement and Survival", Miriam Keesing, Peter Tamnes and Andrew J. Simpkin, Published online by Cambridge University Press, 28 August 2019
  16. ^ "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer" NIOD Archiefcollectie 1934A, p 21
  17. ^ "Joodse kinderen op reis naar de vrijheid 1938-1943", D'Aulnis, Madelon, 1987, NIOD Bibliotheek, p 52
  18. ^ L.C. Vrooland, Geen tijd voor tranen, P.N. van Kampen & Zoon , 1961
  19. ^ Barley, Ann, Patrick calls me mother, Harpers & Brothers, New York (1948), p 118
  20. ^ Miriam Keesing, "De kinderen van tante Truus", Dagblad Het Parool, 1 mei 2010
  21. ^ NIOD "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek met mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer", p 90 (engl. "Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller-Meijer recorded on gramophone records", page 90)
  22. ^ NIOD Bibliotheek, Madelon D'Aulnis "Joodse kinderen op reis naar de vrijheid 1938-1943", 1987, p 26-27, en 36-37-38 (engl. "Jewish children on a journey to freedom 1938-1943", page 26-27, page 36-37-38)
  23. ^ Koreman, Megan (2016). Gewone helden (engl. "Ordinary heroes"). Amsterdam: Boom Amsterdam. p. 86. ISBN 978-90-5875-556-8.
  24. ^ D'Aulnis, Madelon "So reinarisch und dann so verrückt" (engl. "So 100% Aryan and then so crazy"), Ons Amsterdam, may 1993
  25. ^ NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A, Documentatie I, 1934A "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer", pag 81-82, 84, 88-91 (engl. "Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller-Meijer recorded on gramophone records", page 81-82, 84, 88-91
  26. ^ NIOD "Verslag van een op grammofooplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer"pag. 93-94 (engl." Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller-Meijer recorded on gramophone records")
  27. ^ NIOD "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer ", pag. 96 (engl. "Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller-Meijer recorded on gramophone records")
  28. ^ Van Tongeren, Paul (2015). Jacoba van Tongeren en de onbekende verzetshelden van Groep 2000 (engl "Jacoba van Tongeren and the unknown resistance heroes of Group 2000"). Amsterdam: Uitgeverij Aspekt. p. 417. ISBN 978-94-6153-483-5.
  29. ^ NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A, "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer ", p.108-111
  30. ^ H.Boas, NIW 6, 06-02-1953
  31. ^ " Geen tijd voor tranen ", L.C. Vrooland, 1963, p 177
  32. ^ L.C. Vrooland, "Geen tijd voor tranen" (engl. "No time for tears"), Tweede druk Em. Querido Uitgeverij Amsterdam 1963 pag. 171
  33. ^ NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A "Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw. Wijsmuller-Meijer",p 110 (engl. "Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller-Meijer recorded on gramophone records", page 110)
  34. ^ Henriëtte Boas "Het begon in 1938" (engl. "It started in 1938") in NIW 06-02-1953
  35. ^ Rogier van Aerde "Tante Truus een reuze vrouw" (engl. "Auntie Truus a giant woman"), in "Margriet"18, 14-05-1979, pag 14-18
  36. ^ L.C. Vrooland "Geen tijd voor tranen"(engl. "No time for tears") Uitgeverij P.C. van Kampen & Zonen, Amsterdam 1961, pag 185 and 189
  37. ^ L.C. Vrooland, "Geen tijd voor tranen", (engl. "No time for tears") 1961, P.N. van Kampen & Zonen (auto) biography
  38. ^ Barley, Ann, "Patrick calls me mother", page 89, 1948 Harper & Brothers New York
  39. ^ "Truus' Children". Truus' Children. Retrieved 2019-06-03.
  40. ^ Harris and Oppenheimer, Mark Jonathan and Deborah (2000). Into the arms of strangers. New York: Warner Bros. p. 11. ISBN 0-7475-5092-1.
  41. ^ Niod Library,D'Aulnis, Madelon "Joodse kinderen op reis naar de vrijheid 1938-1943", (eng. "Jewish children on a journey to freedom 1938-1943) 1987, NIOD Bibliotheek, pag. 52
  42. ^ Henriëtte Boas, "Het begon in 1938", (engl. "It started in 1938"), Nieuw Israëlietisch Weekblad 12-12--1952
  43. ^ L.C. Vrooland, "Geen tijd voor tranen", (engl "No time for tears") Tweede druk 1963, page 110, Em. Querido Uitgeverij N.V. Amsterdam
  44. ^ "heijmerikx.nl | Genealogie en Streekgeschiedenis". www.heijmerikx.nl. Retrieved 2016-06-01.
  45. ^ "Art in the open air".
  46. ^ "Alle Amsterdamse bruggen". www.bruggenvanamsterdam.nl.

Literature edit

  • NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, archiefcollectie 299, 1934 A, Documentatie I, G. (Truus) Wijsmuller-Meijer, "Archieven Yad Vashem, Copie," Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van mw Wijsmuller-Meijer", 114 pagina's, ongedateerd/niet geautoriseerd (engl. Archives Yad Vashem "Report of a conversation recorded on gramophone records from Mrs Wijsmuller -Meijer", undated. Not authorized. Documentatie 2 G. Wijsmuller -Meijer, Artikelen 42, 1957–1971, e.g. "Tante Truus een reuze vrouw", (engl. "Aunt Truus a giant woman") Rogier van Aerde, "Margriet" 04-05-1979
  • NIOD Library, D 'Aulnis, Madelon, "Joodse kinderen op reis naar de vrijheid 1938-1943",- Truus Wijsmullers' werkzaamheden voor gezinsvereniging in en emigratie uit West-Europa- (ongepubliceerde) afstudeerscriptie nieuwe geschiedenis UvA, 1987 (engl. "Jewish children on a journey to freedom 1938-1943"- Truus Wijsmullers' work for family reunification in and emigration from Western Europe- Unpublished graduation thesis University of Amsterdam, New History, 1987)
  • Archief Raadsgriffie Gemeente Amsterdam, enkele artikelen/verslagen (engl Archives Council registry of the municipality of Amsterdam/ some articles and reports)
  • Stadsarchief Amsterdam [nl] 934, Geertruida Wijsmuller-Meijer, 1 (trouwboekje 1899 en 1922), 2,3,19 (engl City Archives of Amsterdam, marriage certificate 1899 and 1922)
  • Regionaal Archief Alkmaar [nl], geboorteakte Geertruida Meijer, gezinskaart Jacob Meijer, Archief Handelsschool (Hogere) HBS-A 1911-1912 en 1912–1913, (engl. Regional Archive of Alkmaar, birth certificate and family card, and Trade School Archives, Records 1911-1912 and 1912–1913)
  • Barley, Ann, "Patrick calls me mother", 1948, Harper & Brothers, New York
  • Boas, Henriëtte, "Het begon in november 1938", - Een interview met mw. Wijsmuller in vijf afleveringen- , Nieuw Israëlietisch Weekblad 12-12-1952, 02-01-1953,16-01-1953, 30-01-1953, 06-02-1953 (engl. It started in 1938 - An interview with mrs Wijsmuller in 5 episodes- Nieuw Israëlietisch Weekblad 12-12-1952, 02-01-1953, 16-01-1953, 30-01-1953, 06-02-1953)
  • By the journalist L..C.Vrooland, Truus Wijsmuller-Meijer: "Geen tijd voor tranen" (No time for tears ),. Amsterdam 1961 Not authorized biography, based on conversations with Wijsmuller, among other things. And Tweede druk 1963 Emmanuel Querido Uitgeverij NV Amsterdam
  • Presser, J. "De ondergang", deel I, Staatsuitgeverij 's Gravenhage 1977, ISBN 90-12-01804-8 pag. 12 (engl "The downfall", part I)
  • Madelon d'Aulnis, 'So reinarisch und dann so verrückt', Ons Amsterdam, mei 1993, page 121-124 (engl "So pure Aryan and then so crazy")
  • Mark Jonathan Harris and Deborah Oppenheimer, 2000 "Into the arms of strangers" , Warner Bros, ISBN 0-7475-5092-1
  • Miriam Keesing, "De kinderen van tante Truus", Dagblad Het Parool, 1 mei 2010 (http://www.dokin.nl/publications/het-parool-children-of-tante-truus)
  • Bernard Wasserstein, 2013 "Gertrude van Tijn en het lot van de Nederlandse Joden", Nieuw Amsterdam Uitgevers ISBN 0-7475-5092-1, (engl Bernard Wasserstein "The ambiguity of virtue"- Gertrude van Tijn and the fate of the Dutch Jews, 2014. Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-28138-7
  • Lida Boukris-Jong "Truus Wijsmuller - een vrouw uit duizenden- ",(engl "A woman in a thousand") Tijdschrift "Oud Alkmaar", jaargang 39, nr 2 2015, pag. 39-45
  • Paul van Tongeren "Jacoba van Tongeren en de onbekende verzetshelden van groep 2000" Uitgeverij Aspekt, Amsterdam 2015 ISBN 978-94-6153-483-5 9 (engl "Jacoba van Tongeren and the unknown resistance heroes of group 2000")
  • Megan Koreman, "Gewone helden" - De Dutch Paris ontsnappingslijn 1942–1945, (engl "Ordinairy heroes"-The Dutch-Paris escape line- , Uitgeverij Boom, Amsterdam 2016 ISBN 978-90-5875-556-8)
  • David de Leeuw: 'De kinderen van Truus',(engl "Truus'children", In: Nieuw Israëlietisch Weekblad 04-08 2017 nr 39, page 20–25
  • "Truus Wijsmuller-Meijer, a forgotten heroine", www.dokin.nl (2017)
  • Kanselarij der Nederlandse Orden (engl Chancery of the Dutch Orders)

External links edit

  Media related to Truus Wijsmuller-Meijer at Wikimedia Commons

  • Statue on Bachplein, Amsterdam: Truus Wijsmuller
  • Truus and the Bodegraven, dokin.nl 2015
  • www.heijmerkx.nl 2015
  • Geertruida Wijsmuller-Meijer profile, yadvashem.org
  • Kindertransport Association
  • http://www.dokin.nl/publications/het-parool-children-of-tanta-Truus[permanent dead link] (Miriam Keesing, De kinderen van tante Truus, Dagblad Het Parool. 1 mei 2010)
  • A documentary about Truus Wijsmuller with the children she saved: www.truus-children.com

geertruida, wijsmuller, meijer, april, 1896, alkmaar, august, 1978, amsterdam, dutch, resistance, fighter, brought, jewish, children, adults, into, safety, before, during, second, world, together, with, other, people, involved, kindertransport, saved, lives, m. Geertruida Wijsmuller Meijer 21 April 1896 in Alkmaar 30 August 1978 in Amsterdam was a Dutch resistance fighter who brought Jewish children and adults into safety before and during the Second World War Together with other people involved in the pre war Kindertransport she saved the lives of more than 10 000 Jewish children fleeing anti Semitism She was honored as Righteous among the Nations by Yad Vashem After the war she served on the Amsterdam city council Wijsmuller in 1965 Contents 1 Early life 2 Social and political work 3 From 1933 onward help for Jewish children 4 December 1938 Meeting Eichmann 5 December 1938 September 1939 Kindertransport 6 March 1939 Children in the Burgerweeshuis 7 June July 1939 Refugee ships 8 September 1939 December 1939 Last journeys from the German border 9 September 1939 May 1940 Journeys to England and southern France 10 May 1940 The children from the Burgerweeshuis to England 11 May 1940 1943 More help in wartime 12 Till March 1941 Help with the Amsterdam Red Cross in France 13 End of 1941 till June 1942 travels to Spain 14 Contacts with Nazis 15 1941 till June 1942 Help for French soldiers 16 May 1942 Wijsmuller arrested 17 1942 1944 Food help 18 September 1944 Children from Westerbork 19 Hunger 1944 1945 20 After World War II 21 Memories of Wijsmuller 22 Monuments 23 Distinctions 24 References 25 Literature 26 External linksEarly life editGeertruida Wijsmuller Meijer known as Truus to her family was born in the city of Alkmaar She was the firstborn child of Jacob Meijer who worked in a drug store and Hendrika Boer a self employed dressmaker For two years she attended the School of Commerce 1 Her teachers described her as a desperate case even though she is diligent But gradually things got better 2 In 1913 the family moved to Amsterdam Her parents taught her to stand up for people 3 and after World War I set an example of helping the needy by taking in a homeless Austrian boy A year later she got her first job at a bank where she met her future husband the banker J F Joop Wijsmuller They married in 1922 and went to live on the Nassaukade in an apartment on the third floor Wijsmuller stopped working as was usual at the time When it became clear that they were not having children Wijsmuller became involved in social work 4 Her husband supported her in all her activities From 1933 they could always count on their live in assistant Cietje Hackmann 5 She did her administration and took care of children if they stayed with them when Wijsmuller was away from home nbsp Wijsmuller date and photographer unknownSocial and political work editWijsmuller took on several unpaid jobs as a social worker For example she was a coordinator for an association for homecare and administrator for a daycare center for children of working women From 1939 on she was a board member of Beatrix Oord a sanatorium in Amsterdam After the war she had it converted into a general hospital where abortion was also possible She joined the Vereeniging voor Vrouwenbelangen en Gelijk Staatsburgerschap Association for Women s Interests and for Equal Citizenship There she met chairman Mies Boissevain van Lennep who would later become a resistance fighter In addition to this work Wijsmuller was nominated as number 6 on the list of Liberal candidates for the Amsterdam city council elections in 1935 Because of the threat of war she founded the Korps Vrouwelijke Vrijwilligers KVV Corps for Female Volunteers in 1938 which she managed from her home Soon she had an extensive network of people From 1933 onward help for Jewish children editFrom 1933 onward Wijsmuller traveled to Germany to fetch family members of Jewish acquaintances and bring them safely to the Netherlands She did so for many years to come After the Kristallnacht in 1938 rumours reached her that Jewish children were wandering unattended in the woods so she went to the Dutch German border to see what was going on there She smuggled a Yiddish speaking Polish boy across the frontier under her skirts and took him to Amsterdam On 17 November 1938 she took her first group of 6 children from the crowded waiting room of the Dutch consulate to the train But customs attempted to remove them from the train Wijsmuller however had noticed that the Dutch Princess Juliana was on the coupe next to her Children comb your hair and wash your hands and she threatened to take the six of them to the princess After which customs backed down December 1938 Meeting Eichmann editIn November 1938 the British Government decided to let Jewish children under the age of 17 from Nazi countries enter the United Kingdom for a temporary stay Various organisations started working together in the Refugee Children s Movement 6 RCM to take care of these children On December 2 Wijsmuller received a request to come to the newly established Dutch Children s Committee in Amsterdam During this visit Norman Bentwich from England was also present He asked her to travel to Vienna to meet a certain Dr Eichner which they believed was the name of Adolf Eichmann She left to Vienna the same day Eichmann then was the Nazi official handling the forced emigration of Jews It was thought that Wijsmuller as a non Jewish woman might be able to get permission from the Nazis for the children to travel to Britain Eichmann snarled at her but Wijsmuller was imperturbable and fearless She told him why she came Unbelievable so rein arisch und dann so verruckt 7 so purely Aryan and then so crazy Eichmann concluded He responded by giving her permission to travel with 600 children but it had to happen by the upcoming Saturday on Shabbat a deadline he seemed to assume she would not be able to make First she reserved trains at the station Then the parents the Jewish organisations and Wijsmuller succeeded in letting 600 children leave Vienna on 10 December The journey from Vienna to Hook of Holland took around 30 hours One hundred of the children received shelter in the Netherlands while 500 traveled on to Britain In England Wijsmuller had contact with Lola Hahn Warburg a chairwoman from the RCM who asked in astonishment but you were only sent to talk 8 when Wijsmuller arrived with 600 children and others In the Netherlands she cooperated with the social worker Gertrude van Tijn 9 from the Committee for Special Jewish Interests nl nl belonging to the Committee for Jewish Refugees Mies Boissevain van Lennep and many others Wijsmullers vigour was fuelled by the degrading way she had seen Jewish inhabitants treated in Vienna In the Netherlands however nobody believed what she had seen December 1938 September 1939 Kindertransport editSee also Kindertransport From then until the outbreak of World War II on September 1 1939 Wijsmuller organised children s transports with children up to 17 years old from Nazi Germany and the annexed territories mainly to Great Britain but also to the Netherlands Belgium and France The trains from the south east arrived via Emmerich on Tuesdays and Wednesdays the trains from the north east passed Bentheim on Thursdays 10 After the first large transport the work involved became more structured and a maximum of 150 children per transport was agreed upon Several times a week Wijsmuller traveled to Germany and Nazi occupied territories to pick up children and arrange things on site with the organisers involved The children were allowed to take one suitcase 10 German Marks and no photos or valuables Mostly but it was not always allowed Jewish companions traveled with the children to the UK border provided they all returned Otherwise the transports would have ended Once a group of weakened women and children of Sudeten Germans traveled with them It was an exceptional operation carried out under great pressure that required the cooperation of parents guardians and various committees with volunteers in many cities and countries It was mainly women who took care of the travel and accommodation of the children Wijsmuller was convinced of the urgency of these transports and gave momentum to the Kindertransporte as the evacuations came to be called She maintained contacts with all of the parties involved in several countries including the main committees in Vienna Hamburg Frankfurt and Berlin from March 1939 in Prague and Dantzig 11 and also the train and boat companies She always carried in her handbag a toothbrush a bar of soap and a towel as she could be asked at any time to travel Wijsmuller took responsibility for the travel documents when traveling She arranged that the border police and customs controls were carried out as much as possible on the way before the border And under her guidance or under that of one of the other Dutch women That prevented delays 12 On August 24 1939 Wijsmuller was met at the border by a delegation from the Gestapo with a brass band She was forced to celebrate with them that she had crossed the border at Bentheim for the 50th time Wijsmuller was later quoted saying that the success of the operation was mainly due to the Jewish committees in Vienna Frankfurt Hamburg Berlin and Breslau and later in Prague Dantzig and Riga 13 A miracle of self control in her eyes because she realized how afraid people must have been to send their children into the world 14 Other people organised transports too for example Nicholas Winton and Recha Freier Ultimately 10 000 children up to 17 years old were saved from a certain death by being transported on a route via the Netherlands into Great Britain Approximately 1800 refugee children from nazi countries remained in the Netherlands 15 The outbreak of the war between Great Britain and Germany in September 1939 put a stop to these transports as from then on the borders to the UK were closed March 1939 Children in the Burgerweeshuis editFrom March 1939 onwards Wijsmuller was on the board of the Amsterdam orphanage Burgerweeshuis now the Amsterdam Museum which started to accommodate the refugee children Wijsmuller and her husband were very involved with the children The children came in small groups to stay overnight at the Wijsmullers Joop Wijsmuller took them on outings for example to Artis the Amsterdam zoo The children called Wijsmuller Tante Truus Auntie Truus June July 1939 Refugee ships editIn June 1939 international negotiations took place in Antwerp among European countries about the distribution of nearly one thousand Jewish refugees on the MS St Louis Wijsmuller was part of the Dutch delegation who boarded the ship and welcomed the 181 refugees on their arrival in the Netherlands In July 1939 Wijsmuller was involved in the departure of children on the cargoship the Dora which eventually landed with 450 refugees in the then English mandate territory Palestine September 1939 December 1939 Last journeys from the German border editThe mobilisation disrupted train traffic and the border at Bentheim in Germany was closed On 31 August Wijsmuller was told that a group of children from the Youth Aliyah was stuck in Kleve She arranged travel documents picked the children up in buses and took them to the boat in Hoek van Holland On 1 September she received a telephone call from Germany that Orthodox boys were stranded at the station of Kleve The Dutch Railways put together a train for her consisting of dining cars At the station at Kleve she also found a group of 300 Orthodox men from Galicia She told the Germans that after all these are also boys 16 and got permission for them to leave It was the last group to leave Nazi territory via Vlissingen to England In November and December 1939 she regularly collected Jewish refugees in Bentheim from Vienna and other places who had papers for America They left with the Holland America Line from Rotterdam September 1939 May 1940 Journeys to England and southern France editFrom September 1939 till May 1940 Wijsmuller helped Jewish children and adults stranded in the Netherlands Belgium Denmark and Sweden She traveled with them to England and the unoccupied parts of France and Spain In Danmark she arranged an airplane and gasoline for the refugees On these journeys by plane to Amsterdam and from Amsterdam by plane to England and by train to Marseille she accompanied the refugees She arranged all the while the necessary but hard to get travel documents Wijsmuller was described as a born tour conductor 17 18 19 being able to reassure the refugees and to unearth all the talented children aboard for songs recitations and performances during the long train journey From Marseille people traveled on by boat to try to reach the then English mandate area Palestine In November 1939 Wijsmuller was arrested and molested by the French in Marseille suspecting she was the much wanted German spy Erika Due to a lack of evidence she had to be released May 1940 The children from the Burgerweeshuis to England editOn 10 May 1940 Wijsmuller was in Paris to take a child away when she heard of the German invasion of the Netherlands Within three days she traveled back to Amsterdam where she immediately was arrested and questioned by the Dutch police on suspicion of espionage After her release she went to the orphanage Burgerweeshuis to see the children The local garrison commander passed a request on to her from London to arrange for the Jewish children at the orphanage to travel as fast as possible to the coastal town of IJmuiden so they could catch a boat to England on time Wijsmuller brought along as many children as possible on the way bringing a total of 74 children to the very last boat the SS Bodegraven that left the harbor Minutes later the Dutch government surrendered The Bodegraven sailed for England but due to the German nationality of the children at first they were not allowed to disembark Eventually the ship moored on 19 May at Liverpool The children spent the war with foster families and in various institutions in England Wijsmuller decided to stay in the Netherlands She wanted to be with her husband and besides she found there was more work for her to do 20 May 1940 1943 More help in wartime edit nbsp Wijsmuller standing on the left looking at the children from the Burgerweeshuis Made before May 1940 photographer unknown After the capitulation of the Netherlands Wijsmuller traveled to Brussels There she consulted with the Belgian Red Cross and the Belgian Children s Committee In Paris she had also contact with the French Red Cross and with the OSE Oeuvre Secours aux Enfants a Jewish aid organisation for children During this period Wijsmuller devoted herself to uniting families She took children to their parents who had escaped to Belgium and France On her way back she brought children with her whose parents remained in the Netherlands Sometimes she brought children to their parents in Germany She placed children of Jewish women with other safe families shortly after birth 21 In Brussels she made contact with Benno M Nijkerk 22 a Dutch Belgian businessman They agreed to bring as many children as possible to the south legally or illegally Nijkerk had false identity cards forged in Brussels He was the treasurer 23 of the Comite de Defense des Juifs a Belgian Jewish resistance group Later he became a member of Dutch Paris which was an underground network of the Dutch Belgian and French resistance Wijsmuller smuggled the false identity cards with information about the escape route to Holland This work continued until at least 1943 In June 1943 she traveled for the last time with Jewish children in the direction of the Spanish border 24 Till March 1941 Help with the Amsterdam Red Cross in France editWith the Amsterdam Red Cross she traveled with food and medicine to the Gurs and St Cyprien internment camps in the south of France The financing was partly organised by Wijsmuller She obtained the required German travel and passage permits via the Amsterdam and Belgian Red Cross Whenever possible she took along Jewish children and smuggled them to Vichy France or Spain This help came to an end in February 1941 when the Dutch Red Cross terminated her travel permits after Wijsmuller made her criticism known about their representative in Paris 25 End of 1941 till June 1942 travels to Spain editFrom May 1941 till June 1942 Wijsmuller was involved in refugees on behalf of the Hoymans amp Schuurman s agency and other stakeholders At the SS s request Wijsmuller functioned as the liaison between the SS the Jewish Dutch and the agency She accompanied groups who still had permission from the Nazis having to pay them a lot of money to leave Europe through Spain and Portugal Wijsmullers condition to cooperate was that Jewish children could travel free of charge With this she helped bringing about 150 people to safety The travels to Spain continued after May 1942 Thanks to the efforts of several people involved a total of 341 people escaped the Nazis Contacts with Nazis editWith the Nazis Wijsmuller had contacts from high to low She used it when she wanted something done from them For example she received travel documents for Jewish children to leave the country from a Gestapo employee 26 who believed that children belonged with their parents Before that she had accepted his invitation to have a drink with him on an Amsterdam terrace He saw her walking in the street and recognized her Previously he was a border official during the Kindertransport In May 1941 the SS er Rajakowitsch called her to The Hague She had to write down what she was doing and stop her help Otherwise it would be her end Wijsmuller pretended ignorance and not understanding how serious the situation was Wijsmuller later has praised German officers for helping her in dire situations 1941 till June 1942 Help for French soldiers editFrom 1941 till June 1942 she arranged help for French soldiers who wanted to flee At Nijkerks request and for this purpose she made contact with a German just across the Dutch border She provided with others civilian clothing an escape route and a shelter in Nispen There the soldiers had to say that they were from Madame Odi the alias of Wijsmuller 27 May 1942 Wijsmuller arrested editIn May 1942 Wijsmuller was arrested and put in custody in the prison on the Amstelveenseweg in Amsterdam The Gestapo suspected she was helping Jewish refugees to flee the Netherlands to France and Switzerland A group of Jews and their hiding people were arrested at their hiding place in Nispen Wijsmuller had provided them with false identity papers and escape routes which she smuggled from Brussels to the Netherlands But the refugees only knew her pseudonym Madame Odi Her husband came to plead her innocence with the Nazis Wijsmuller was released after a few days due to a lack of evidence She kept in contact with Nijkerk At the end of 1943 travelling abroad became impossible 1942 1944 Food help editSince 1942 Mrs Wijsmuller was also a member of Group 2000 a resistance group led by Jacoba van Tongeren Her position was head of the Red Cross Services She focused on sending food parcels All children in Westerbork received a package at Christmas 1943 After that Mrs Wijsmuller worked three days a week with others in the Nieuwe Kerk to prepare and send food parcels First to people in Westerbork and from February till September 1944 to people in the Bergen Belsen and Theresienstadt concentration camps A total of 7000 parcels were sent by name but it is thanks to Mrs Wijsmuller that this work has taken such a flight 28 People also brought food to her house to distribute An egg merchant from Landsmeer brought her about 1000 duck eggs every week Mrs Wijsmuller then delivered them to elderly homes and hospitals in the city She called this work the foodbusiness September 1944 Children from Westerbork editIn September 1944 Wijsmuller discovered that 50 orphans Jewish children taken up without their parents from Westerbork would be deported She regularly had brought food to a number of these children in the Amsterdam Huis van Bewaring house of detention Alarmed by this news she went to the Nazis She claimed that she knew these children were not Jewish but born out of Dutch non Jewish mothers and German soldiers According to the law these children were Dutch To prove her point she showed a Dutch bill which she had manufactured herself She insisted on special treatment for the children The children traveled on to Theresienstadt stayed together as a group and returned after the war 29 30 31 Hunger 1944 1945 editHunger became a serious issue in the Dutch cities When it was no longer possible to send food parcels to the camps Wijsmuller as a member of an interconfessional group organized the evacuation of 6 649 famished children 5 from Amsterdam across the IJsselmeer to the countryside The children were able to recuperate there On 7 April 1945 the Amsterdam police informed Wijsmuller that 120 Allied soldiers were being held in a monastery in Aalsmeer They were in a bad way Wanting to help Wijsmuller cycled to Aalsmeer the first time with medication and managed to get in She threatened the Germans that they could be charged after the war Immediately after the capitulation of Germany Wijsmuller sought contact with the Germans in Utrecht who knew her by her nickname die verruckte Frau Wijsmuller 32 33 the crazy Mrs Wijsmuller due to her help to Jews They referred her to the Canadians in Hilversum The latter sent cars and Wijsmuller delivered the soldiers to them 4 After World War II edit nbsp Wijsmuller after World War IIAfter the war Wijsmuller traced displaced children in Germany as member number 1 from the KVV and as a UNRRA a precursor of the UN employee This was followed by the organisation of trips to England Switzerland and Denmark of malnourished children from the Netherlands 34 From 1945 until 1966 she was a member of the Amsterdam city council for the liberal party VVD She was involved in social work and many social projects in the Netherlands and abroad Soon she was on about 12 boards and committees For example she was involved in the creation of workplaces for the disabled in Amsterdam and the founding of a hospital in Suriname She was one of the founders and a board member of the Anne Frank House Most of the Jewish children found that their parents did not survive the Shoah but some were reunited with their families Until her death Wijsmuller kept in touch with children she saved from Enkhuizen 35 to England and Israel 36 Joop Wijsmuller died on December 31 1964 Cietje Hackman lived together with Wijsmuller until her death on August 30 1978 Wijsmuller left her body for scientific research In an advertisement after her death she was described as the Mother of 1001 children who made her job of saving Jewish children Memories of Wijsmuller editWijsmuller has been described 37 38 and remembered 39 40 41 as an impressive personality a lady with a powerful voice and someone who radiated warmth and energy She was a resolute practical woman with a big heart for children Very cheeky but never rude She was able to convince people even overwhelm them with her boldness She could improvise in challenging situations and negotiate and bribe whenever necessary She had a talent for networking and organising It was her preference to work on her own as she considered that safer Wijsmuller never accepted money for her work In the months and years following the outbreak of the war she never ceased to go wherever work needs to be done 42 In the postwar years she was also characterized as a headstrong and dominant woman 5 and looking back like an adventurer 43 In Amsterdam she was nicknamed both tante Truus Auntie Truus and stoomwals steamroller 44 Monuments editA sculpture of her made by Herman Diederik Janzen nl was unveiled in 1965 in the sanatorium Beatrixoord in Amsterdam Into the plinth was carved G Wijsmuller Meijer member of the Amsterdam City Council 1945 1966 Bellatrix Vigilans Beatrix When Beatrixoord was closed Wijsmuller took the statue home After her death in 1978 it was reinstated on the Bachplein in Amsterdam A plaque at the foot mentioned Mother of 1001 children who made rescuing Jewish children her life s work In 2019 a new plaque was placed with information about her rescuing work before and during the war and the medals she received 45 On 30 November 2011 a monument in Hook of Holland was unveiled by Mayor Aboutaleb commemorating the 10 000 Jewish children that left for England from there The monument was designed by Frank Meisler one of the children on the transports He made four other monuments that are located in Gdansk 2009 Berlin 2008 London 2006 and Hamburg 2015 Streets have been named after her in Amsterdam Gouda Leiden Pijnacker Coevorden and Alkmaar In Leiden a tunnel bears her name In Amsterdam bridge number 793 is named after her 46 Truus Wijsmullerbrug nl Asteroid number 15296 is named Tante Truus Auntie Truus after her On March 8 2020 Truus Children was released a documentary by Pamela Sturhoofd and Jessica van Tijn from Special Eyes It is an ode to Wijsmuller with interviews with more than 20 children she saved 80 years ago nbsp Hoek van Holland Monument KindertransportenA statue of Truus Wijsmuller and the 1001 children she helped saving was unveiled on 1 July 2020 in her hometown of Alkmaar The tribute was an initiative of the Historical Society of Alkmaar The statue was made by Annet Terberg Pompe and Lea Wijnhoven nbsp Statue Truus Wijsmuller in Amsterdam nbsp Truus Wijsmulller statue in AlkmaarDistinctions editKnight in the order of Orange Nassau 21 04 1955 for social work in Amsterdam Medal of French Gratitude Reconnaissance Francaise silver medal for help to French soldiers Medals from the Dutch and German Red Cross ANV Visser Neerlandiaprijs nl in 1962 for assistance for Jewish children Righteous among the Nations in 1966 Truus Wijsmuller tree in Yad Vashem in 1966 Officer in the order of Orange Nassau 19 04 1971 as a treasurer of the Koningin Wilhelmina Fonds Honorary Citizen of Amsterdam Silver Medal April 1971 for her work for the cityReferences edit wijsmuller truus 1913 regionaal archief alkmaar engl Regional Archive of Alkmaar regionaal archief alkmaar Regionaal Archief Alkmaar Archief Handelsschool Hogere HBS A Notulen 1911 1912 engl Regional Archive of Alkmaar Archives of School of Commerce NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A G Wijsmuller Meijer pag 1 Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw Wijsmuller Meijer engl page 1 Report of a conservation by Mrs Wijsmuller recorded on gramophoon records a b Vrooland L C 1963 Geen Tijd voor tranen engl No time for tears Amsterdam Em Querido Uitgeverijen NV pp 182 183 a b c D Aulnis Madelon 1993 So reinarisch und dann so verruckt Engl So 100 Aryan and then so crazy Ons Amsterdam mei 1993 121 124 Harris and Oppenheimer Mark Jonathan and Deborah 2000 Into the arms of strangers US Warner Bros p 11 ISBN 0 7475 5092 1 NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A G Wijsmuller Meijer Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw Wijsmuller Meijer p 9 NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A G Wijsmuller Meijer Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw Wijsmuller Meijer p 9 Wasserstein Bernard 2013 Gertrude van Tijn en het lot van de Nederlandse Joden in Dutch Amsterdam Holland Nieuw Amsterdam Uitgevers pp 56 76 81 88 ISBN 978 90 468 1435 2 NIOD Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek Mw Wijsmuller Meijer pag 13 14 engl Report of a conversation by Mw Wijsmuller recorded on gramophone records Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek met mw Wijsmuller Meijer pag 12 Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek met mw Wijsmuller Meijer page 12 Henriette Boas Het begon in 1938 NIW 12 12 1938 L C Vrooland Geen tijd voor tranen Dutch 1963 Emm Querido Uitgevers Amsterdam p 90 Jewish Refugee Children in the Netherlands during World War II Migration Settlement and Survival Miriam Keesing Peter Tamnes and Andrew J Simpkin Published online by Cambridge University Press 28 August 2019 Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw Wijsmuller Meijer NIOD Archiefcollectie 1934A p 21 Joodse kinderen op reis naar de vrijheid 1938 1943 D Aulnis Madelon 1987 NIOD Bibliotheek p 52 L C Vrooland Geen tijd voor tranen P N van Kampen amp Zoon 1961 Barley Ann Patrick calls me mother Harpers amp Brothers New York 1948 p 118 Miriam Keesing De kinderen van tante Truus Dagblad Het Parool 1 mei 2010 NIOD Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek met mw Wijsmuller Meijer p 90 engl Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller Meijer recorded on gramophone records page 90 NIOD Bibliotheek Madelon D Aulnis Joodse kinderen op reis naar de vrijheid 1938 1943 1987 p 26 27 en 36 37 38 engl Jewish children on a journey to freedom 1938 1943 page 26 27 page 36 37 38 Koreman Megan 2016 Gewone helden engl Ordinary heroes Amsterdam Boom Amsterdam p 86 ISBN 978 90 5875 556 8 D Aulnis Madelon So reinarisch und dann so verruckt engl So 100 Aryan and then so crazy Ons Amsterdam may 1993 NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A Documentatie I 1934A Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw Wijsmuller Meijer pag 81 82 84 88 91 engl Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller Meijer recorded on gramophone records page 81 82 84 88 91 NIOD Verslag van een op grammofooplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw Wijsmuller Meijer pag 93 94 engl Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller Meijer recorded on gramophone records NIOD Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw Wijsmuller Meijer pag 96 engl Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller Meijer recorded on gramophone records Van Tongeren Paul 2015 Jacoba van Tongeren en de onbekende verzetshelden van Groep 2000 engl Jacoba van Tongeren and the unknown resistance heroes of Group 2000 Amsterdam Uitgeverij Aspekt p 417 ISBN 978 94 6153 483 5 NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw Wijsmuller Meijer p 108 111 H Boas NIW 6 06 02 1953 Geen tijd voor tranen L C Vrooland 1963 p 177 L C Vrooland Geen tijd voor tranen engl No time for tears Tweede druk Em Querido Uitgeverij Amsterdam 1963 pag 171 NIOD Archiefcollectie 299A Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van Mw Wijsmuller Meijer p 110 engl Report of a conversation by Mrs Wijsmuller Meijer recorded on gramophone records page 110 Henriette Boas Het begon in 1938 engl It started in 1938 in NIW 06 02 1953 Rogier van Aerde Tante Truus een reuze vrouw engl Auntie Truus a giant woman in Margriet 18 14 05 1979 pag 14 18 L C Vrooland Geen tijd voor tranen engl No time for tears Uitgeverij P C van Kampen amp Zonen Amsterdam 1961 pag 185 and 189 L C Vrooland Geen tijd voor tranen engl No time for tears 1961 P N van Kampen amp Zonen auto biography Barley Ann Patrick calls me mother page 89 1948 Harper amp Brothers New York Truus Children Truus Children Retrieved 2019 06 03 Harris and Oppenheimer Mark Jonathan and Deborah 2000 Into the arms of strangers New York Warner Bros p 11 ISBN 0 7475 5092 1 Niod Library D Aulnis Madelon Joodse kinderen op reis naar de vrijheid 1938 1943 eng Jewish children on a journey to freedom 1938 1943 1987 NIOD Bibliotheek pag 52 Henriette Boas Het begon in 1938 engl It started in 1938 Nieuw Israelietisch Weekblad 12 12 1952 L C Vrooland Geen tijd voor tranen engl No time for tears Tweede druk 1963 page 110 Em Querido Uitgeverij N V Amsterdam heijmerikx nl Genealogie en Streekgeschiedenis www heijmerikx nl Retrieved 2016 06 01 Art in the open air Alle Amsterdamse bruggen www bruggenvanamsterdam nl Literature editNIOD Institute for War Holocaust and Genocide Studies archiefcollectie 299 1934 A Documentatie I G Truus Wijsmuller Meijer Archieven Yad Vashem Copie Verslag van een op grammofoonplaten opgenomen gesprek van mw Wijsmuller Meijer 114 pagina s ongedateerd niet geautoriseerd engl Archives Yad Vashem Report of a conversation recorded on gramophone records from Mrs Wijsmuller Meijer undated Not authorized Documentatie 2 G Wijsmuller Meijer Artikelen 42 1957 1971 e g Tante Truus een reuze vrouw engl Aunt Truus a giant woman Rogier van Aerde Margriet 04 05 1979 NIOD Library D Aulnis Madelon Joodse kinderen op reis naar de vrijheid 1938 1943 Truus Wijsmullers werkzaamheden voor gezinsvereniging in en emigratie uit West Europa ongepubliceerde afstudeerscriptie nieuwe geschiedenis UvA 1987 engl Jewish children on a journey to freedom 1938 1943 Truus Wijsmullers work for family reunification in and emigration from Western Europe Unpublished graduation thesis University of Amsterdam New History 1987 Archief Raadsgriffie Gemeente Amsterdam enkele artikelen verslagen engl Archives Council registry of the municipality of Amsterdam some articles and reports Stadsarchief Amsterdam nl 934 Geertruida Wijsmuller Meijer 1 trouwboekje 1899 en 1922 2 3 19 engl City Archives of Amsterdam marriage certificate 1899 and 1922 Regionaal Archief Alkmaar nl geboorteakte Geertruida Meijer gezinskaart Jacob Meijer Archief Handelsschool Hogere HBS A 1911 1912 en 1912 1913 engl Regional Archive of Alkmaar birth certificate and family card and Trade School Archives Records 1911 1912 and 1912 1913 Barley Ann Patrick calls me mother 1948 Harper amp Brothers New York Boas Henriette Het begon in november 1938 Een interview met mw Wijsmuller in vijf afleveringen Nieuw Israelietisch Weekblad 12 12 1952 02 01 1953 16 01 1953 30 01 1953 06 02 1953 engl It started in 1938 An interview with mrs Wijsmuller in 5 episodes Nieuw Israelietisch Weekblad 12 12 1952 02 01 1953 16 01 1953 30 01 1953 06 02 1953 By the journalist L C Vrooland Truus Wijsmuller Meijer Geen tijd voor tranen No time for tears Amsterdam 1961 Not authorized biography based on conversations with Wijsmuller among other things And Tweede druk 1963 Emmanuel Querido Uitgeverij NV Amsterdam Presser J De ondergang deel I Staatsuitgeverij s Gravenhage 1977 ISBN 90 12 01804 8 pag 12 engl The downfall part I Madelon d Aulnis So reinarisch und dann so verruckt Ons Amsterdam mei 1993 page 121 124 engl So pure Aryan and then so crazy Mark Jonathan Harris and Deborah Oppenheimer 2000 Into the arms of strangers Warner Bros ISBN 0 7475 5092 1 Miriam Keesing De kinderen van tante Truus Dagblad Het Parool 1 mei 2010 http www dokin nl publications het parool children of tante truus Bernard Wasserstein 2013 Gertrude van Tijn en het lot van de Nederlandse Joden Nieuw Amsterdam Uitgevers ISBN 0 7475 5092 1 engl Bernard Wasserstein The ambiguity of virtue Gertrude van Tijn and the fate of the Dutch Jews 2014 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 28138 7 Lida Boukris Jong Truus Wijsmuller een vrouw uit duizenden engl A woman in a thousand Tijdschrift Oud Alkmaar jaargang 39 nr 2 2015 pag 39 45 Paul van Tongeren Jacoba van Tongeren en de onbekende verzetshelden van groep 2000 Uitgeverij Aspekt Amsterdam 2015 ISBN 978 94 6153 483 5 9 engl Jacoba van Tongeren and the unknown resistance heroes of group 2000 Megan Koreman Gewone helden De Dutch Paris ontsnappingslijn 1942 1945 engl Ordinairy heroes The Dutch Paris escape line Uitgeverij Boom Amsterdam 2016 ISBN 978 90 5875 556 8 David de Leeuw De kinderen van Truus engl Truus children In Nieuw Israelietisch Weekblad 04 08 2017 nr 39 page 20 25 Truus Wijsmuller Meijer a forgotten heroine www dokin nl 2017 Kanselarij der Nederlandse Orden engl Chancery of the Dutch Orders External links edit nbsp Media related to Truus Wijsmuller Meijer at Wikimedia Commons Statue on Bachplein Amsterdam Truus Wijsmuller Truus and the Bodegraven dokin nl 2015 www heijmerkx nl 2015 Geertruida Wijsmuller Meijer profile yadvashem org Kindertransport Association http www dokin nl publications het parool children of tanta Truus permanent dead link Miriam Keesing De kinderen van tante Truus Dagblad Het Parool 1 mei 2010 A documentary about Truus Wijsmuller with the children she saved www truus children com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Geertruida Wijsmuller Meijer amp oldid 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