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                    <text>Nazi-revival
aa?lenakt door FBI
/ vA il Ik

Nadat een rechtbank in cfrge
deze week een lid van een racistische bende veroordeelde, heeft
de Amerikaanse justitie een speciale eenheid samengesteld om
de nazi-revival onder jongeren
te bestrijden. Voor het eerst
wordt in de VS de landelijk opererende FBI benut om de bizarre
renaissance van de Hitler-adoratie bij jonge blanken aan te pakken.
De eerst klus van deze speciale
groep is het onderzoeken van
drie andere moorden die worden
toegeschreven aan de jongeren
- door de Amerikanen steeds
aangeduid als skinheads - met
nazi-sympathiën. Justitie heeft
echter ook aangekondigd dat de
eenheid op een veel breder terrein zal gaan opereren dan het
onderzoeken van moorden,
-want racisme "is een serieus nationaal probleem geworden".
Kenneth Measke, lid van een
bende in'Portland genaamd East
Side White Pride, kreeg in Oregon levenslange gevangenisstraf
opgelegd wegens moord op een
Ethiopische student. Measke
ontkende niet en vertelde dat hij
zijn slachtoffer met een honkbalknuppel had bewerkt "alleen
vanwege de huidskleur". Measke zei met datzelfde argument
tijdens het winkelen een zwarte
beveilingsagent te hebben neergestoken.

speciale eenheid. Het gevolg
daarvan was dat een negentienjarig lid van de K u Klux Klan nu
een straf van tien jaar uitzit voor
zijn aandeel in die gebeurtenissen van Dallas' Kristallnacht. De
19-jarige verdachte bracht de
rechter de Hitlergroet toen zijn
veroordeling werd uitgesproken. Het proces bood een navrant kijkje in de gedachtenwereld van dergelijke groepen.'
Op een strooibiljet van een groep
die zich de Confederate Skins
noemen was te lezen: ,,Wij verwerpen het kapitalistische en
communistische tuig die proberen onze ooit-trotse natie te vernietigen. We realiseren ons ook
dat de joodse parasieten, die de
massamedia controleren, de
kern van het probleem vormen.
Net als de verraders van ons eigen ras die willoos toegeven aan
wat de joden willen. We zijn
blanke strijders. Steun ons gevecht om de blanke erfenis te
redden voor die voor altijd verloren gaat."
In feite zijn de tot nog veroordeelde skinheads afkomstig uit
middle class milieus en soms ook
goedgesitueerde gezinnen, waarbij onderzoekers aantekenen dat
ze doorgaans niet behoren tot de
categorie jong &amp; geslaagd. Over
het algemeen verwerpen ze
drugs, maar veel van hen drinken behoorlijke hoeveelheden
alcohol. Rockmuziek is een verIn Dallas is in oktober vorig jaar, bindende factor, vooral de Britse
nadat de plaatselijke synagogen bands Final Solution en Romanwerden beklad met hakenkrui- tic Violence.
sen, de situatie plotseling geëscaleerd. Op een nacht trok een Tot op heden is er nog geen lanbende door de stad, sloeg de rui- delijk opererende racistische
ten van een synagoge in met bende ontdekt, hoewel veel inknuppels, vuurde schoten af in formele banden tussen de diverhet gebouw en trok vervolgens se groepen bestaan. Veel van de
verder de stad in om hun agres- groepen beschikken over tekssie uit te leven te herhalen bij ten en documentatie van een oreen moskee. ,,Ze creëren een at- ganisatie die zich WAR noemt
mosfeer van vrees in de samenle- (White Aryan Resistance), die
ving. Mensen weten niet hoe ze Californië als thuisbasis heeft.
veilig hun godsdienst kunnen WAR is opgericht door ene Tom
belijden", zegt Briskmann, voor- Metzger, die met de grondwet in
zitter van de plaatselijk joodse de hand pleitte voor vrijheid van
meningsuiting en daarom vond
beweging in Dallas.
Volgend op die gebeurtenissen dat lokale tv-stations zijn racistivormde de politie in Dallas een sche praatjes moesten uitzenden.

�</text>
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                  <text>Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection</text>
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                  <text>Termaat, Adriana B. (Schuurman) </text>
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                  <text>Collection contains genealogical, personal, and family papers and photographs documenting the lives and interests of Adriana and Peter Termaat. The bulk of the materials are related to family history and genealogical research carried out by the Termaats, including research notes and materials about places in the Netherlands that were significant to the Termaat and Schuurman families, such as the city of Alkmaar.&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>Newsweek article about World War II.</text>
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                    <text>THE

ARTS

BOO KS

AWar to Remember
Looking back at the
causes of conflict and
the horrors of combat
B Y JIM M ILLER
t 4:45 on the morning of Sept. 1,
1939, the city of Danzig (now
Gdansk) awoke to explosions and
the roar of gunfire. While German
Stuka dive bombers screeched
overhead, salvos from German battleships
pounded the port. Shortly afterward Berlin
radio broadcast a proclamation by Adolf
Hitler, announcing the invasion of Poland-and the onset of World War II.
The catastrophe that began ~n Danzig 50
years ago eventually engulfed five continents, leaving few people untouched and
an estimated 50 million dead (box). Cities
were leveled, nations dismembered, terrible new instruments of mass destruction
perfected, from the concentration camps to
tlie atomic bomb. The unprecedented-scope
and brutality of the war oblige us not to
forget it. And so, to mark the 50th anniversary of its onset, publishers are offering
readers a host of new works that endeavor,
with varying success, to commemorate, explain and put the conflict into some kind of
historical perspective.
Among the many new reference works,
the most striking is The Times Atlas of the
Second World War (256 pages. Harper &amp; Row.
$45, to be published in October) edited by
John Keegan, author of "The Face of Battle" and "Six Armies in Normandy." Plotting the course of the war in its far-flung
theaters, from the deserts of North Africa
to the jungles of Burma and the steppes of
Russia, the book's lucid text and spectacular full-color maps, designed by the staff of
Times Books in London, offer a sweeping
and vivid overview. At a glance, the reader
can see the impact of German CT-boats on
Allied shipping in the Atlantic between
1939 and 1941, the Japanese mastery of
combined sea and air operations in the East
Indies in 1942, the devastating effect of the
Allied breakout from Normandy in 1944.
Leafing through this atlas, the war sometimes seems like a grand, larger-than-life
chess game. This illusion vanishes after
consulting the Encyclopedia of the Second World
War by the British military journalists Ian
Hogg and Bryan Perrett (447 pages. Presidio. $40). The 3,000 entries and 500 photo-

A

64

NEWS WEEK: SEPTEMBER 4 , 1989

The Murderous Wages of 'Total War'
The horror of World War II was unique.
I As the estimated death toll in several
countries shows, civilians as well as combatants died in unprecedented numbers.
COUNTRY

DEATH TOLLS
CIVILIAN
MILITARY

Britain

264,000

61,000

China

1,325,000

6,000,000

France

206,000

173,000

3,300,000

3,600,000

Greece

16,000

155,000

Italy

262,000

93,000

Japan

1,140,000

953,000

Poland

320,000

6,028,000*

Soviet Union

13,000,000

7,000,000

United States

292,000

6,000t

Germany

"INCLUDES 3 MILLION JEWS. tlNCLUDES MERCHANT
MARINES.
SOURCES; GILBERT'S 'THE SECOND WORLD WAR'; PERRETT
AND HOGG'S 'THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR'

ROBERT CAPA-MAGS.UM

Terrible destruction: What it all led to

�Acatastrophe
of unprecedented
brutality,
the second
world war began
with the
invasion of Poland:
Stuka dive
bombers (above)
zero in on
targets, Hitler's
Army enters
Danzig in
triumph

ofan age to have lived through the events of
1914-18, let alone to have fought in them,
could, wittingly, wish to go to war again."
War, however, was precisely what some
veterans yearned for. They missed the idealism and camaraderie of wartime, the
thrill ofliving dangerously and the license
to kill. Such were Hitler's lusts. "He did
not fall into war," concludes Watt, "nor
was he pushed. He leapt into war, past the
warnings of his more cautious advisers,
past the efforts to appeal to his love of
peace, past the clear statements from the
British and French Governments."
As Watt points out, this is not a reassuring interpretation of Munich and its aftermath. Implying that no course of action
could have stayed Hitler's hand, he concludes that a world war requires only "the
will or miscalculation of a ruler or ruling
group intent on global hegemony to the
point of unreason and mental instability."
In The Second World War: A Complete History
(800 pages. Holt. $29.95, to be published in
No vember), the Oxford historian Martin

Gilbert, best known for his official biography of Winston Churchill, picks up the story where Watt stops: with the invasion of
Poland. Gilbert's flowing narrative is
spiced with anecdotal details culled from
diaries, memoirs and official documents.
He is especially skillful at interweaving
summaries of military strategy with vignettes of civilian suffering- the genocide
of the Jews is never far from view.
Still, in some respects this is a disappointing work. Phlegmatic in tone and often numbingly dull, it makes little effort to
graphs, maps and diagrams, arranged in the British prime minister for his "almost explain the calamitous events it describes.
alphetical order, run from the A-4 rocket petulant egoism" and tendency to dither, It also fails ultimately to convey the horror
(German, with a mean range of 183 miles) Chamberlain's fear of plunging Europe of the war. That Gilbert must so often reto Zyklon-B (a cyanide gas compound used into yet another bloody war he considers sort to mute statistics to summarize the
in the "showers" at Auschwitz). With its entirely creditable. Almost all of Europe's carnage offers ironic testimony to one of
dry descriptions of innumerable, often leaders, Watt reminds us, shared his fear. the war's greatest triumphs: the transforfiendishly clever weapons, the book makes Anxious to remain flexible, their action mation of millions of men into faceless cogs
for somber reading.
was "predicated on a model of how war in vast, impersonal machines of war .
Why, so soon after the hecatombs of the might come, constructed from what they
Commenting on this transformation in
Somme and Passchendaele in 1916 and believed to have happened in 1914, rein- his important new study of Wartime (330
1917, did the world plunge back into war? forced by a sense of incredulity that anyone pages. Oxford. $19.95), Paul Fussell points
out the popularity in America
That riddle is illuminated as
of the sobriquet "GI Joe." "The
never before in How War Came
proud anonymity of the [sol(736pages. Pantheon. $29.95) by
dier's] uniform," according to
Donald Cameron Watt. A proan American editorial in 1945,
fessor at the University of Lon"demanded a name as proud
don, Watt draws on a lifetime of
and as anonymous as itself and
archival research. With somegot it in 'GI Joe'. "
times withering wit, his new
With its telling recourse to
book brings brilliantly back to
the oxymoron "proud anonymlife the politics and diplomacy
ity," this passage offers the kind
of the 11 months between Nevof cultural evidence-offbeat
ille Chamberlain's notorious
and inadvertently revealingsurrender of Czechoslovakia to
that Fussell glories in. A proHitler at Munich on Sept. 30,
fessor of English at the Univer1938, and England's declarasity of Pennsylvania and the
tion of war on Sept. 3, 1939.
author of "The Great War and
Watt's research has led him
Modern Memory," a classic
BETTMANN ARCHIVE
to a major reassessment of
Chamberlain. Though he faults Pyrrhic peace: Chamberlain (left) with Hitler at Munich, 1938 study of the impact of World
N EWSWEEK : SEPTEMBER 4, 198 9

65

�T

H

E

A

R

T

S

War I on English literature, Fussell in his
new book seeks to evoke "the psychological and emotional culture of Americans
and Britons during the Second World
War." He also wants to splash cold water
on readers accustomed to other, more
"sanitized and romanticized" accounts.
"In unbombed America," he writes, the
suffering of the war "was wasted. . ..
America has not yet understood what the
Second World War was like."
This bitter generalization is not entirely
convincing. Fussell altogether ignores
such influential works as John Hersey's
"Hiroshima" (published in 1946) and Hannah Arendt's "The Origins of Totalitarianism" (published in 1951). No matter. His
passionate convictions drive his book to a
furious, disturbingly effective climax. And
in his final pages, in what may be his finest
feat as a critic, Fussell introduces the reader to a hitherto unsung but remarkable
author named Eugene B. Sledge.
In 1981 this former Marine published a
neglected memoir, With the Old Breed at Peleliu
and Okinawa. Still in print (344 pages. Presidio. $15.95), this book richly merits a wider
audience. It is, just as Fussell says, "one of
the finest memoirs to emerge from any
war." In some of the passages singled out by
Fussell, Sledge recalls watching a comrade
in the aftermath of combat carving out the
gold teeth of a wounded Japanese soldier,
slicing open the cheeks of the living victim.
One Marine officer routinely relieved himself by urinating into the mouth of the
nearest available Japanese corpse. During
the bloody Okinawa campaign, fresh reinforcements arrived and disappeared with
mechanical regularity, so quickly killed or
wounded that they seemed "like homeless
waifs, unknown and faceless to us, like unread books on a shelf."
"We were expendable," writes Sledge.
"It was difficult to accept. We come from a
nation and a culture that values life and
the individual. To find oneself in a situation where your life seems of little value is
the ultimate in loneliness. It is a humbling
experience."
The searing honesty of these words
makes them, as Fussell recognizes, a fitting epitaph for the ordeal that began in
Danzig 50 years ago. When the killing was
done, countless survivors knew all too
much about the "ultimate in loneliness."
Japan lay in ruins. Europe, in the words of
Watt, had committed "suicide," in the
process destroying irreplaceable buildings, paintings, sculptures-the patrimony of 2,000 years of Western civilization.
As a matter of policy, Germany had
exterminated roughly 70 percent of Europe's Jews and an even higher percentage of its Gypsies. "A humbling experience" indeed-important to recollect
and, as this latest outpouring of books
suggests, essential to comprehend.
•

66

NEWSWEEK: SEPTEMBER 4 , 1989

In Lieu of

'Chatterton'
First Light. By Peter Ackroyd. 328 pages.
Grove Weidenfeld. $19.95.

I

magine "Abbott and Costello Meet the
Mummy" with a New Age piano score by
George Winston and you'll have a pretty
good idea of Peter Ackroyd's new novel.
"First Light" is clearly by the same author
as last year's "Chatterton"-it has to do
with the grip of the past on the
present-but it's different, too,
in an unsettling way. It's as if
Ackroyd had concluded that his
success with "Chatterton," a
complex and brilliant comedy
of ideas, was a fluke. A farce
might be safer this time out,
with cartoons for characters:
preposterous London lesbians
rubbing up against coarse
country farmers-that kind of
thing. As for ideas, well, New
Age romantic treacle about
star maps reflected in our blood plasma
might be easier to digest than playful questions about art, forgery and the ambiguous
border between them.

husband,"

MIRIAM BERKLE\

Off into the ozone: Ackroyd
tries to blend farce,
creepiness and mysticism
ill." "Dykes, dear," the old trouper repliei
Had Ackroyd wanted to make "Fin
Light" a frisky social comedy, he mig}
have brought it off, too-but that's not h
intention either.
Apparently what he wants is to combi
the creepiness and the farce with an ov
lay of dreamy mysticism. One of the mis
is a failed astronomer who promotes a lo
chatter like this: "Our bodies are made
of dead stars. We carry their light inside
So everything goes back. Everything is r
of the pattern. We carry our origin wi
us, and we can never rest until we }
returned." Thoughts of such gravity w
put even Shirley MacLaine to sleep.
Any story that features a promi
tomb must stand or fall on it. Ad
keeps his tomb pretty much constan
sight: it is not what it seems to be. Tr
course, is what we look for; disappoin
sets in when we learn that this 1
ground warren is considerably les,
what we'd expected. Even the di!
reader will guess its secret long befo
royd is moved to spell it out. For
tiresome characters, "First Light
some clever scenes-but Ackroyd
implausibilities as well. His stor
men ts-the hoary old tomb, the elf
&lt;loners and the pulpy metaphysics
cohere as they should. It might see
were taking on too much in this n
that's not quite right. "Chatterton
us what Ackroyd can do with a
characters and themes. Here he's
too little.
PETERS

�</text>
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&#13;
Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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            <element elementId="45">
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                <elementText elementTextId="810184">
                  <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Special Collections &amp; University Archives</text>
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            <name>Creator</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812813">
                <text>De Boek, René</text>
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                <text>Strijbosch, Margreet</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>Duitsland Eerst</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812817">
                <text>Dutch magazine article about Franz Schönhuber. In Dutch.</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
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              <elementText elementTextId="812821">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1033001">
                <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Lemmen Library and Archives</text>
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  <item itemId="42469" public="1" featured="0">
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                  <elementText elementTextId="812811">
                    <text>BUITENLAND

I

I
De schaamteloosheid van Franz Schönhuber
Het bruine verleden
vergeten, de jeugd weer een
toekomst geven en
Duitsland niet als
immigratieland laten
voortbestaan. Bij de
Europese verkiezingen
behaalden de rechtsradicale Republikaner in de
deelstaat Beieren bijna
vijftien procent van de
stemmen. En als het aan
lijsttrekker Franz
Schönhuber ligt, zal het
daar niet bij blijven: 'Het
politieke landschap zal
volledig worden
omgewoeld.' Een verslag uit
het hol van de leeuw.
RENÉ DE BOK EN MARGREET STRIJBOSCH

D

e leider blikt met ogen die niets
ontgaan de zaal in . In de Löwenbräukeller aan de Stiegmayerplatz in
hartje München vloeien 's morgens om elf
uur liters bier en gaan de zoute krakelingen van hand tot hand. De Republikaner
ontmoeten de internationale pers, vijf dagen na de Europese verkiezingen die in de
Bondsrepubliek op een rechts-radicaal
succes uitliepen. De Duitse journalisten
zijn naar het stamcafé van de Republikaner (he~hoofdkwartier ligt een paar straten
verder) gekomen om hun vooroordelen
bevestigd te zien. Een van hen mompelt
tussen twee slokken bier door: 'ln die
krakelingen zit vast wel een hakenkruismotief. Als je maar even zoekt.'
De partijvoorzitter van de Republikaner, Franz Schönhuber, 66 jaar oud, beseft
dat hij met een zaal bloedzuigers te maken
26

heeft, zijn zelfverzekerdheid lijdt er niet
onder. Hij heeft zich omringd met getrouwen die hem als een goeroe vereren.
Rechts van hem zit Frau Hirsch, die het
partij-apparaat runt, een Zwarte Lala-achtig type, twintig jaar geleden nog een
femme fatale, nu een pronte dame met
heerszuchtige oogopslag. Aan zijn linkerhand zit de partijvoorzitter van de deelstaat
Beieren en tevens woordvoerder Harald
Ne ubauer, geflankeerd door de plaatsvervangend voorzitster, Frau Johanna Grund.
Terwijl Schönhuber in zijn betere ogenblikken associaties oproept metArchie Bunker,
lijkt Grund het evenbeeld van Edith, onderdanig, maar met emancipatorische oprispingen , zwak in het agressieve en agressief
in het zwakke.
Schönhubers getrouwen leiden het optreden van de leider in. Harald Neubauer:
'Het succes van de Republikaner is voor een
belangrijk deel toe te schrijven aan het
Schönhuber-effect. In de verkiezingscampagne is er geen andere politicus geweest
die zoveel mensen in hun ziel heeft beroerd.
In de Olympiahalle in München kwamen
achtduizend mensen op hem af, terwijl de
bondskanselier en CSU-prominenten op de
Mariaplatz niet meer dan drieduizend mensen trokken.'
Neubauer, modieus pak, snelle bril, het
type van de yuppie uit de boulevard-pers,
heeft de ultra-rechtse staat van dienst (bij de
Deutsche Volksunion en de NPD), die hem
in staat stelt een schaamteloze slalom langs
de feiten te maken zonder zijn trefzekere
woordkeus te verliezen: 'Het is aan de Republikaner te danken dat het rechtse extremisme op 18 juni bij de Europese verkiezingen geen kans heeft gekregen en dat het
imago van de Bondsrepubliek onbeschadigd is gebleven '

SCHURKEN
De toon is gezet en nu neemt Franz Schönhuber het woord. In een klein half uur veegt
de Führer van de Republikaner het gehele
politieke establishment in de Bondsrepubliek van de kaart. Politieke tegenstanders
worden tot schurken verklaard. Schönhuber bestrijdt hen 'met hun eigen wapens'. 'lk
vind het amusant,' zegt Schönhuber, 'om te
zien hoe iedereen om ons met elkaar over
-

ELSE

V

IER-

het tapijt rolt. De algemeen secretaris van de
CDU Geissler heeft gezegd dat men een
psychologisch klimaat zou scheppen
waatin het fatsoenlijke mensen onmogelijk
zou worden gemaakt om zich kandidaat te
stellen voor de Republikaner. Dat zijn methoden waarvan de propagandaminister
van het Derde Rijk Joseph Goebbels zich
bediende.'
Schönhuber noemt de Beierse CSU-minister van binnenlandse zaken Stoiber een
racist ('elke Beierse huisknecht heeft meer
tact dan hij'), bestempelt SPD-leider Schöfberger als een verbale 'radikalinski', en beklaagt zich vervolgens omstandig over het
feit dat hij, als meest bedreigde politicus
van Duitsland, een vergeefs beroep deed op
politiebeveiliging. Geroutineerd zet Schönhuber de zaken op hun kop en ook al is zijn
relaas een lang lint van contradicties, het
deen hem niet. Om politiebescherming
maalt hij natuurlijk helemaal niet, zijn ordebewakingsdienst kan royaal putten uit
politiemannen, soldaten en leden van de
Grenzschutz. Zijn populistische redenering
waarin halve waarheden en halve leugens
tot een politiek programma aaneen worden
gesmeed bezit de dwingende kracht van het
pistool op de borst.
Is in Beieren een nieuwe Hitler opgestaan, of zelfs maar een in zakformaat? Met
Hitler heeft Schönhuber gemeen dat hij in
het begin van zijn politieke carrière door de
meeste opinieleiders voor een te verwaarlozen politieke factor werd uitgemaakt. Net
als Hitler heeft hij een goed ontwikkeld
gevoel voor het ongenoegen van de Spiessbürger zonder zijn banden met andere belangengroepen te verwaarlozen. Interessant
is zijn houding tegenover het bruine verleden van de natie. Aan de ene kant is hij er
trots op, in zijn 55-memoires Ich war dabei
schrijft hij : 'Eindelijk kwam de oproep.
Daarop stond Berlijn-Lichterfelde als bestemming, met de naam van de troep: Leibstandarte 55 Adolf Hitler. Ik kon het nauwelijks begrijpen . Dat was voor mij de elite van
de elite. Het dragen van de mouwstreep
Leibstandarte 55 Adolf Hitler was het zichtbare bewijs dat men tot het gardekorps
behoorde, een pretoriaan is geworden.'
Aan de andere kant is Schönhuber niet
zo naïef om nazi-misdaden te ontkennen of
1 - 7 - 1989

�FOTORINUSOE HIISTER

Franz Schönhuber, leider
van de Republikaner:
'Wij gaan het hele
politieke landschap
omploegen'

goed te praten. Hij geeft er de voorkeur aan
over het nazi-verleden te zwijgen.
BOULEVARDBLADEN
Voordat Schönhuber in 1981 zijn memoires publiceerde werd hij tot de vriendenkring van Franz Josef Strauss gerekend. Na
zijn botte in boekvorm verschenen zelfrechtvaardiging keerden Strauss en diens
CSU zich van hem af. Daarna koos Schönhuber voor een rechts-radicaal isolement,
het eindstation na een lange reis die hem
van de linkervleugel van de SPD via een
liberaal tussenstation en de behoudende
CSU naar een bestemming bracht waar de
oprichting van een nieuwe rechts-radicale
partij, de Republikaner, het logisch vervolg
was.
Als journalist deed Schönhuber ervaringen op in het bespelen van de menselijke
emotie; zijn werk als verslaggever en later
1 - 7 - 1989

als columnist van boulevardbladen hadden
hem inzichten verschaft die hem als politiek leider zeervan pas kwamen. De schuldvraag waarmee naoorlogse Duitse generaties waren belast zag Schönhuber als een
comfortabel voertuig naar een politieke
ideologie die stemmen moest opleveren,
zowel bij de oudere als bij de jongere generaties. Daarbij appelleert hij aan twee, niet
te verwaarlozen groepen in de Duitse samenleving: zij die zich niets willen herinneren en zij die zich niets kunnen herinneren omdat zij tot de naoorlogse generatie
behoren. De eerste groep koestert in stilte
de overtuiging dat Schönhuber hen niet als
een schandvlek van de natie beschouwt,
integendeel.
Een 'streep onder de historische rekening' werd het politieke credo van Schönhuber, gecombineerd met het verwijt dat de
gevestigde politieke partijen de belangen
-ELSEVIER-

van de Kleinbürger verkwanselden en dat
ze te laf waren om de 'werkelijke misstanden' bij de naam te noemen, zoals het
vraagstuk van de toenemende immigratie.
In het spoor van de zondebok volgt het
ideaal van de Duitse hereniging.
TOELOOP VAN JONGEREN
Dat ouderen zich verwant voelen met een
politiek leider die het nazi-verleden tot een
afgesloten hoofdstuk verklaart is begrijpelijk, minder voor de hand liggend is de
toeloop van de jongere generaties. De gemiddelde leeftijd van de Republikaner is
achtentwintigjaar.
Wilhelm Heitmeyer, docent aan de pedagogische faculteit van de universiteit van Bielefeld, noemt bestaansangst de voornaamste bron van rechts-extremisme onder jongeren: 'Angst om de controle over het eigen
leven te verliezen, over de planning van het
27

�FOTO'SRINUSDEHILSTER

bestaan. Van jongeren wordt vandaag in het
onderwijs en in het beroep een aanpassing
geëist, die velen onzeker maakt. Niet iedereen kan dat oplossen en men gaat dan
zoeken naar zekerheden, in de vorm van
ideologieën waarin alles duidelijk schijnt te
zijn, wat boven en wat beneden is, wat een
hogere waarde vertegenwoordigt en wat
minderwaardig is.'
In een hoofdartikel in Die Zeit van vrijdag 23 juni scherst Robert Leicht het succes
van de Republikaner als een symptoom van
de vervreemding waarvan de Duitse burger
vandaag het slachtoffer is. Die staat niet
alleen vreemd tegenover de buitenlanders,
de asielzoekers, maar hij is ook een
vreemde in eigen huis, waar hij geen raad
weet met de nieuwe uitdaging van de hightech maatschappij, de veranderde waarden
in een gecompliceerde dieµstensamenleving, de · onzekere politieke dimensies in
Europa en de economische competitie op
wereldschaal. En dat alles in een tijd, waarin
de traditionele vijandbeelden verbleken.

Het bier vloeit rijkelijk no het
surces van de Europese
verkiezingen. Moor de
Republikoner staan met grote
groepen van de samenleving op
voet van oorlog. Immigranten
zien Schönhuber als de
personificatie van de
vreemdelingenhaat in de
Bondsrepubliek. Ook worden ze
als neo-nazi's aangeduid. Toch
zet Schönhuber zijn campagne
voor de nieuwe orde yoort en
dan kt hij het Duitse volk voor het
vertrouwen dot het in hem stelt

30

-ELSEVIER-

VADERLANDSLIEFDE
De vervreemding lijkt niet het exclusieve
bezit van de Duitse burgers, ook de Republikaner staan ver van de maatschappij, die zij
voor de ondergang zeggen te behoeden. In
de kantlijn van Schönhubers confrontatie
met de internationale pers geeft Johanna
Grund haar visie op het programma van de
Republikaner: 'De partij is opgericht met het
doel het nationaal bewustzijn van het
Duitse volk, dat in de afgelopen decennia
zeer geleden heeft, weer op te bouwen. We
hebben bewust geappelleerd aan gevoelens
van vaderlandsliefde, ook voor het Duitse
volk Dat deden we met de leus: We hebben
respect voor ieders vaderland, maar we
houden van ons eigen vaderland.
Daaraan was in de Bondsrepubliek een
ernstig tekort. Wij hebben heel lang geleden
onder die twaalf verschrikkelijke jaren in
onze geschiedenis. Maar wij zeggen nu: er is
een hele generatie overheen gegaan. Op dit
ogenblik heeft het grootste deel van ome
bevolking daar niets meer mee te maken,
die mensen zijn pas na de Tweede Wereldoorlog geboren. Wij kunnen de geschiedenis van het Duitse volk niet minimaliseren
tot die twaalf jaar. De Duitse geschiedenis is
veel rijker, veel grootser. Elk volk op deze
wereld kent meer en minder glorieuze perioden in zijn geschiedenis. Dat geldt ook
voor het Nederlandse volk, voor elk volk'
Kunt u zich voorstellen dat er angst heerst
voor uw nationalisme?
Grund: 'Wij streven naar een nationaal
staatsdenken, maar we willen absoluut niet
dat dit verwordt tot nationalisme. We kunnen dit in de hand houden door het patriottisme te verbreiden zonder het chauvinisme te bevorderen. Met dat patriottisme
1-7-1989

�willen we weer een normaal volk, een hele
gewone democratie worden. Ik heb nog
altijd het gevoel dat Hitler dit land vanuit
zijn graf regeert Alles wat gedaan en gezegd
wordt, meet men af aan die tijd. Alles wordt
onderzocht op: zit daar nog iets van het
oude denken in of niet? Wij leven voor de
toekomst. Daarom hebben we ook veel
jonge leden.'
Wat maakt de Republikaner voor jonge-

ren aantrekkelijk?
'Wij bieden die jongeren een perspectief. Dat no fature-denken van de jeugd
komt voort uit het bandeloze materialisme,
dat de plaats heeft ingenomen van betrouwbaarheid, eerlijkheid, fatsoen en geloofwaardigheid. Wij willen die begrippen weer
ingang doen vinden. We zeggen: "Als jullie
niet alleen materialisme en genot nastreven,
maar ook je plichten nakomen, dan hebben
jullie een toekomst. Wij houden de jongeren die naar ons toekomen ver van decadente westerse verschijnselen als alcoholisme en heroïneverslaving. Daarom organiseren we jeugdgroepen waarmee we de
bergen intrekken, we laten die jongeren de
schoonheid van het vaderland zien en leren
de jeugd onze volksliederen.'

'LEBENSRAUM'
Terwijljohanna Grund haar heil en dat van
de jongeren in de bergen zoekt, trekken de
andere Repubikaner met leuzen de wereld
in. De Europa-brochure van Schönhubers
partij is royaal van kordate uitspraken en
handreikingen voorzien.
'beutsch!and z.uerst!'

'.Ja tegen Europa, nee tegen deze EG! '
'De Bondsrepubliek is de betaalmeester
van de Europese Gemeenschap. Geen andere EG-staat betaalt zo veel en ontvangt er
zo weinig voor terug. Wij hebben geen
behoefte aan het Europa van de bureaucraten en het Europa van de grote ondernemers, geen Europa van de monopolies en
de egalisatie, maar we hebben een Europa
nodig van vrije volkeren, staten en burgers.'
Het politieke gedachtengoed van de Republikaner kan gemakkelijk op één foliovel
worden vastgelegd. Het hoofdpunt vormt
de staatkundige en nationale eenheid van
Duitsland door een vredesverdrag en een
hereniging. Nummer twee is: het behoud
van het Duitse volk en zijn ecologische
Lebensraum. Daartoe behoort de bescherming van het ongeboren leven maar ook de
bewaking van het milieu en de beperking
van het asielrecht en de beroepsmatige bedrijvigheid van buitenlanders. 'Wij Republikaner houden van Duitsland, ons vaderland en onze Heimat. Duitsland moet het
land van de Duitsers blijven en mag daarom
geen immigratieland worden.'
De Duitse journalisten zijn niet geïnteresseerd in Schönhubers kijk op de wereld
1 - 7 - 1989

en de oplossingen die hij in verbijsterende
eenvoud aan de hand doet. Zij roeren liever
in de brij van onverkwikkelijkheden waarin
de partijleider zich bevindt.
Hoe zit het met de geruchten over financiële manipulaties waarbij uzelf zou zijn betrokken?

'Allemaal laster.'
Is het juist dat woordvoerder Neubauer
communisten ooit als geestelijke misdadigers
en potentiële moordenaàrs heeft betiteld, en
het communisme slechts de speelruimte
gunde die de gehangene tussen hals en strop
bezit?

'Uit zijn verband gerukt. Communistische leugens. Herr Kollege, u kent ze toch?'
Wordt u in het Europese parlement een
tweederangs ster in een fractie waarin JeanMarie Le Pen zit?

'Als u mijn karakterstructuur kent weet
u dat het mijn natuur niet is om op de
tweede plaats te staan.'
Wat klopt er van de verhalen dat u in
Amerika extremisten hebt ontmoet?

'Niet formeel, één keer.'
Onderhoudt u contacten met de Oostenrijkse rechts-radicaal Haider?

'Ik heb hem één keer ontmoet. Ik acht
Haider hoog. Hij is een verstandige man,
een dynamische man. Maar ik pas er voor
om te zeggen dat ik hem weer zal ontmoeten, ik moet rekening houden met de Oostenrijkse gevoeligheden.'
De CDU onderzoekt uw privé-leven.

'Wij zullen die politieke analfabeten
aanvallen en verdelgen. Maar ze gooien ook
hun eigen glazen in. Het zijn de beste propagandisten voor de Republikaner. Het grote
publiek doorziet hun streken. Het publiek
ziet graag clowns op de bühne, maar niet in
de politiek.'
U acht uzelf boven elke kritiek verheven.
Maar ieder mens heeft toch een duister hoekje
in zijn bestaan?

'Kritiek is goed. Maar als men beweert
dat ik kleine kinderen opvreet, is dat niet
waar. Water in Duitsland aan de gang is, dat
is de grootste naoorlogse lastercampagne.'

NIET SERIEUS
De zaal stroomt leeg. De buitenlandse pers
blijft nog na om Schönhuber te laten praten
over het nationalisme, het Duitse verleden,
het vraagstuk van de buitenlanders. De
Duitse media geloven het wel, in het besef
dat Schönhubers woorden minder interessant zijn dan zijn daden, en dat het officiële
partijprogramma er minder toe doet dan het
onuitgesproken, ongeschreven Republikaner-partijprogramma van het gesundenes
Volksempfinden waarachter de Republikaner-kiezers zich hebben geschaard: iedereen is schuld aan de ellende behalve de
Duitse burger zelf.
-ELSEVIER

-

De afkeer van de Duitse verslaggevers voor
de frasen van Schönhuber is verklaarbaar
maar roept ook pijnlijke herinneringen op
aan de ontvangst die het fenomeen Hitler
indertijd in de Duitse pers ten deel viel: als
een onbelangrijke agitator werd hij terzijde
geschoven, hij zou nooit in staat zijn de
grote politiek naar zijn hand te zetten.
De Duitse pers neemt Schönhuber nog
altijd niet serieus. Maar de politiek doet dit
inmiddels wel, in binnen- en buitenland.
Zelfs in de DDR wekt Schönhuber opschudding. Joachin Herrmann, lid van het politburo van de communistische partij, zag het
verschijnsel Schönhuber als een argument
om de Berlijnse Muur overeind te houden .
'Misschien zullen de Westduitse sociaaldemocraten en de groenen nog eens beschutting achter die muur zoeken tegen
mensen als Schönhuber.'

ROYEMENT
Nog groter is de opwinding in eigen land.
FDP-voorzitter Otto Graf van Lambsdorff
noemde Schönhuber een neo-nazi, bondskanselier Kohl waarschuwde voor de geval·gen van contacten tussen CDU-leden en
Republikaner.
Bondsdagafgevaardigde
Lummer hangt intussen een royement boven het hoofd, omdat hij een gesprek met
de Republikaner opportuun achtte. De verhouding tussen de christen-democratische
partijen CDU en CSU staat ook onder druk.
Binnen de CDU overheerst de afkeer van de
Republikaner, bij de CSU groeit het besef dat
een confrontatie-politiek tegenover Schönhuber averechtse effecten kan hebben voor
een partij die toch al niet meer over het
charismatisch gezag van FranzJosef Strauss
beschikt.
Wanneer de Republikaner nog een paar
procenten in aanhang toenemen, dreigt het
gevaar dat zij de sleutelpositie in de Duitse
politiek, die jarenlang voor de liberale FDP
was gereserveerd, zullen overnemen. Dat
zal grote spanningen in de Duitse politiek
veroorzaken die tot in lengte van jaren
verlammend kunnen werken.
'Wij rukken nu op naar het noorden,'
zegt woordvoerder Neubauer. 'Bij de gemeenteraadsverkiezingen van het voorjaar
1990 zullen wijjlachdeckend antreten.' 'Het
politieke landschap zal volledig worden
omgewoeld,' voegt Franz Schönhuber eraan
toe. 'Noordrijn-Westfalen en Hamburg zijn
de nieuwe doelwitten.'
Het is de euforie van de oorlogsretoriek.
Terwijl in Neurenberg en Keulen jongeren
demonstreren tegen de discriminatie-politiek van Schönhubers volgelingen, laten de
Republikaner in hun stamcafé de Löwenbräukeller grote glazen bier aanrukken. Het
geschreeuw dat hun opmars vergezelt
klinkt huiveringwekkend, niet gehinderd
door enig schaamtegevoel.
•
31

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                    <text>F,rench Nazi collatiora or

captured in Catholic priory

r.

e Washington Post

t f{, j/

PARIS - Paul Touvier, a notorious pro-Nazi French militia leader
accused of crimes against humanlity during World War II, was arrested Wednesday at his hideout in a
fundamentalist Roman Catholic
priory in Nice.
I Touvier, 74, was flown to Paris
Wednesday afternoon for questioning, and his arrest raised the
prospect of another courtroom reexamination of the troubled history
of Nazi repression and French collaboration in the Lyons area during
German occupation. Klaus Barbie,
a German officer who headed the
Gestapo in Lyons, was sentenced
o life in prison two years ago.
Applauding Touvier's arrest, Lyons Mayor Michel Noir said the
collaborator "formed along with
Klaus Barbie an infernal duo for
e Lyons Resistance." Like Baroie, Touvier was called the "butch?r of Lyons" by resistance memers against whom he gathered in'ormation for use by the Gestapo.
The site of Touvier's arrest also
ignited a longstanding controverr over the Roman Catholic
hurch's role in protecting those
ccused of association with Nazi
rimes. "Everybody knows there
/Vas a channel with part of the
atholic hierarchy that protected
ouvier," said Yves Jouffa, head of
e League of Human Rights.
The Rev. Jean-Michel Di Falco, a
kesman for French bishops,
oted that the priory where Tou·er was arrested is outside the auority of the bishop of Nice. He
eclined to say whether Touvier
as accorded protection by French
relates after the war, saying he

·

Paul Touvier, shown in file photo,
is accused of crimes against
humanity.
did not know enough to answer
questions on the subject.
Touvier, Lyons intelligence chief
for the collaborationist militia, was
arrested when France was liberated in 1944, but he escaped. He was
twice convicted in absentia and
sentenced to death for war crimes,
once in Lyons in 1945 and again in
Chambery in 1947. He stayed in
hiding until the sentences expired
in 1967 under France's 20-year
statute of limitations.
President Georges Pompidou
then pardoned him in 1971, which
cancelled other penalties such as
confiscation of his wealth and a
ban from French soil. The outcry
was so great after that, however,
that Touvier went back into hiding.
He was charged in 1981 with

crimes against humanity, to which
the statute of limitations does not
apply in France. The charges were
based on crimes other than those
cited in his earlier trials, opening
the way for new proceedings.
Witnesses told French reporters
that Touvier was taken into custody early Wednesday morning in
the Saint Francois Priory in the old
quarter of Nice on the French Riviera. The Nice city hall said it donated the building in 1987 to the Sacerdotal Fraternity of Saint Pius X,
which has used it as a chapel and
rest house.
The religious group is headed by
Msgr. Marcel Lefebvre, a fundamentalist bishop headquartered in
Switzerland who recently was excommunicated for ordaining bishops against Vatican orders and refusing to heed changes in church
practice.
Henry Amouroux, author of a
history of France under German
occupation, said Touvier is likely to
be brought to trial and that the new
proceedings will show "the role
played by the Church in the protection that it accorded him."
Although histories vary on this
point, one widely reported account
has suggested Touvier was sheltered by prelates in the Lyons area
in recognition of his role in saving
42 French hostages who were
about to be shot by Nazi soldiers
retaliating against a Resistance attack.
Pierre Merindol, a journalist who
has specialized in the history of the
Lyons Resistance, wrote that Cardinal Pierre-Marie Gerlier, the
wartime archbishop of Lyons,
made the promise to whoever
could prevent the retaliation.

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                <text>Rabbi Avraham Weiss is dragged from the convent by workman</text>
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                <text>Weiss, Avraham</text>
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                    <text>(_/_g_?______

=_G_RA_N,_D_,RA_P_io_s_P_RE_ss
____
ri_Ji_,

-""'----[l

AP PHOTO

Rabbi Avraham Weiss is dragged from the convent by workmen.

�Workers at convent
near Auschwitz heat
American protesters
The Associated Press

OSWIECIM, Poland - Workers
at a Roman Catholic convent on the
edge of the Auschwitz concentration camp punched, kicked and
dragged out an American rabbi and
six students who occupied the
grounds Friday to demand the
nuns leave.
About 20 people, including uniformed and plainclothes police,
watched as the workers ripped up
the demonstrators' signs and assaulted them.
Rabbi Avraham Weiss of the Hebrew Institute of New York said his
group suffered bruises, scrapes,
bleeding noses and lips. Their
clothes were tom and they were
forced to leave the convent
grounds.
Weiss said the nuns watched
from a window and did not try to
op-the- worke .
ers could
see women inside watching, but
they were not dressed in habits and
appeared not to be nuns.
"It's extraordinary that in Auschwitz 50 years later, something like
this could happen," said Weiss. "I
demand an apology from these
nuns."
The incident occurred five hours
after the men climbed a 7-foot
wrought iron fence and occupied a
porch of the convent, located in a
former Nazi warehouse on the perimeter of the camp where 4 million people died from 1940 to 1945,
an estimated 2.5 million of them

Jews.

Weiss's group called the convent

a "desecration" of the Jews' mem-

ory and protested the failure of
Catholic authorities to meet a Febnaary deadline to relocate it.
The group went to nearby Krakow but said they would return
Sunday.
"What occurred today is going to
strengthen our resolve all the more
now," said Weiss. "People should
µnderstand what peaceful non-violent protest is all about. I cannot
accept that the nuns would be looking through the window and not
help us."
The men had planned to occupy
the convent until the end of the

Sabbath on Saturday night and
then stage more demonstrations
Sunday against Roman Catholic
Cardinal Franciszek Macharski of
Krakow.
Under a 1987 Geneva declaration, signed by 18 Roman Catholic
and Jewish leaders, the cardinal
was to transfer the 14 Barefoot Carmelite nuns to an interfaith prayer
and education center to be built
farther from the camp.
The controversy surroundlng tbe
convent has become m m emotional since the deadline for moving the nuns passed on Feb. 22.
The European director of B'nai
B'rith said in June he was confident
the situation was headed for a resolution based on new assurances by
Macharski.
The cloister, founded in 1984, is a
few feet from the barbed wire fence
and guard towers of the death
eam . 'I'he convent-lawn,witlHt-2-3
foot wooden cross in the middle, is
a former gravel pit where political
prisoners were gunned down by
Nazi executioners in 1940 and
1941.
Jews have condemned the presence of the convent at the concentration camp as a deeply offensive
intrusion of Christian religious
symbols. In May, 300 women from
27 countries held a peaceful protest
in front of the convent organized
by the Women's International Zionist Organization.
Weiss appealed to the Polish
government, the independent Soli-,
darity union and the Polish people
to exert pressure to move the convent. He said that despite the February deacl,line, it appeared the
nuns were refurbishing the building and grounds.
"Qur patience has run out," said
Weiss, whose Hebrew Institute is
in Riverdale in the New York City
borough of the Bronx.
After climbing the convent fence
Friday, the rabbi and his students
said prayers, sang religious songs
and donned prayer shawls.
The men knocked on the convent
door, but the nuns did not emerge.
Instead, workmen on the second
floor doused the group with water,
jeered and told them to leave.

�</text>
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                  <text>Termaat, Adriana B. (Schuurman) </text>
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                  <text>Termaat, Peter N.</text>
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                  <text>Collection contains genealogical, personal, and family papers and photographs documenting the lives and interests of Adriana and Peter Termaat. The bulk of the materials are related to family history and genealogical research carried out by the Termaats, including research notes and materials about places in the Netherlands that were significant to the Termaat and Schuurman families, such as the city of Alkmaar.&#13;
&#13;
Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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                  <text>1869 - 2012</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812774">
                <text>RHC-144_Termaat_NWS_1989-05-15-US-protesters-in-EU-332</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812775">
                <text>1989-05-15</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812776">
                <text>Nazi-revival aangepakt door FBI</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812777">
                <text>Dutch newspaper clipping about the resurgence of Nazi ideology in United States. In Dutch.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812778">
                <text>Neo-Nazism -- United States</text>
              </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812779">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812781">
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                  <elementText elementTextId="812773">
                    <text>What was Word War II all about?
Washilliton Post Writers Group ,

LONDON - In White~all, a·steady trickle of tourists shuffles through thf&gt; subterranean rooms where
Winston Churchill and his war cabinet conducted
business while the bombs fell. Taped voices of Neville
Chamberlain and Churchill and Hitler echo through
the concrete corridors.
Across the river in the Imperial War Museum, visitors must make reservations for "The Blitz Experience," a simulation complete with smoke, sounds of
air-raid sirens and make-believe bomb concussions. It
is very popular. It lasts eight minutes.
A recurring theme in modern thought, in writings as
diverse as those of Freud and Proust, is the insistent,
disturbing prompting of uncontrolled memory. And a
recurring political task is the recapture of the past
through cultivated memories, those mystic chords that
bind people into communities. However, commemorations, such as those of the events of 50 years ago,
can give false clarity to the past.
What really began in September 1939? The late
A.J.P. Taylor was a contrarian, but he had a point
when he said the Second World War began in April
1932 when Mao Tse-tung and Chou Teh declared war
on the Japanese in the name of the Kaingsi Soviet.
Taylor said the war in the European theater began in
March 1938 when the army of a great power, Germany, crossed a frontier - Austria's - to force political
change.
John Lukacs says that what began 50 years ago was
"the last European war." As a European war it lasted
until December 1941 at which point it became a world
conflagration and the fate of Europe fell into the hands
of the United States and the Soviet Union.
What certainly began on Sept. 1, 1939, was the
quick conquest of Poland. By December 1939 only two
European states were really involved in combat - the
Soviet Union and Finland. British and German troops
did not meet until April 20, 1940, in Norway. And as
Taylor wrote, until 1942 a wife in London was more
apt to be a war casualty than was her husband in the
army.
The outcome of the war was settled in the first week
of December 1941 on Dec. 5, when the Red Army
launched a general offensive on the Moscow front,
and on Dec. 7, when America was dragged into the
war.
No one knew what the world was slipping into 50
years ago. A Washington Post headline of Sept. 3,
1939, said: BOTH SIDES AGREE NOT TO BOMB CIVIUANS. The war that in its first month featured
charges by Polish horse cavalry ended with two atomic blasts. In 1941, the U.S.Army had20,000 horses, the
most since the Civil War.
Paul Fussell, in his quirky, dyspeptic, fascinating

new book, ''Wartime," is an archeologist of the American and British psyches, unearthing evidence of their
conditions during the war. He confirms the judgment
that it was a war in which disillusionment set in before
the first shot was fired.
In 1914, Rupert Brooke spoke for many when he
thanked God for the outbreak of war, rejoicing in it as
an awakening from "a world grown old and cold and
weary," relishing war as a cleansing, invigorating experience, "as swimmers into cleanness leaping."
However, the nations that turned wearily to the Second World War had read "All Quiet on the Western
Front," and seen the movie of it, as well as "Grand
musion." They had read Dos Passos' "Three Soldiers," Hemingway's "A Farewell to Arms," Robert
6raves' "Good;tye to All That," and other literatur
conveying the taste of ashes from the last war.
The Second World War was, Fussell says, a war of
impersonal forces, shaped by developments in mass
production and propaganda. It was Krupp against
General Motors, a war in which anonymity, the annihilation of individuality, was underscored by the name
given to the men who conquered the ground: G.I.
(government issue) Joes.
Eugene Sledge, a Marine whose memoirs Fussell
has rescued from obscurity, recalls Okinawa, where
replacements were killed before their units learned
their names. "They were forlorn figures coming up to
the meat grinder and going right back out of it like
homeless waifs, unknown and faceless to us, like unread books upon a shelf."
Yes, of course the war was a ghastly experience, a
maelstrom of modern forces that a poet has called
"the conspiracy of the plural against the singular." But
it was waged on behalf of singularity. Suppose our
side had not won.
As Lukacs writes, it is inconceivable that in the First
World War, a nationalist war, a bar of German music
(the first bar of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony - three
shorts notes and one long note: Morse code "V'' for
victory), could have been adopted as a call of defiance
by the nations fighting Gei:many. But the Second War
War was waged in defense of a civilization of which
Beethoven is an exemplar. It was a war worth winning.

1

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              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>Collection contains genealogical, personal, and family papers and photographs documenting the lives and interests of Adriana and Peter Termaat. The bulk of the materials are related to family history and genealogical research carried out by the Termaats, including research notes and materials about places in the Netherlands that were significant to the Termaat and Schuurman families, such as the city of Alkmaar.&#13;
&#13;
Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
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                <elementText elementTextId="810180">
                  <text>Netherlands</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="810181">
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                <elementText elementTextId="810182">
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              <name>Publisher</name>
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              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="810184">
                  <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Special Collections &amp; University Archives</text>
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                <text>RHC-144_Termaat_NWS_1988-Why-WWII-327</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812761">
                <text>Will, George</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Date</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>1988</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="50">
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              <elementText elementTextId="812763">
                <text>What was World War II all about?</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>Newspaper clipping of Washington Post Writers Group article about World War II fiction and reality.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812765">
                <text>World War, 1939-1945</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="812766">
                <text>World War, 1939-1945--Fiction</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812767">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812769">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"&gt;In Copyright&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                    <text>U.S. holds document
linking Waldheim to
Greek deportations
The Associated Press

· UNITED NATIONS - While
serving in the German army, Kurt
Waldheim fmwarded a request for
the mass deportation of Greek civilians to labor camps in 1943, according to a Nazi document.
The authenticity of the document, found in the U.S. National
Archives and made public Monday,
was confirmed by U.S. Justice Department spokesman John Russell.
He said it was among the crucial
documents on which the gqvernment based its decision to place
Waldheim, now Austria's president
and formerly U.N. secretary-general, on a list barring him from entering the United States.
Under the Nuremberg Charter
adopted at the end of the war, deportation of civilians is both a war
crime and a crime against humanity.
When the U.S. Justice Department barred Waldheim .from the
United States, it said he had "assisted or otherwise participated" in
"mass deportation of civilians."
Waldheim has repeatedly declared he is innocent of any war
crimes.
The document is a message between German army officers in the
Balkans in World War II and indicates the information was received
by radio by Waldheim, who signed
its transcription and forwarded it
on Aug. 15, 1943.
Waldheim at that time was a lieutenant serving as deputy operations officer of the German General Staff attached to the 11th Italian Anny in Athens.
The communication from a German army field officer was addressed to his h~adquarters and
said there is "hope of success only
, if all male civilians are seized and
deported" in the area in northern

---- -

Greece where his division was op'erating.
It also said "'cleansing operations
are deemed necessary."
Nazi "cleansing _operatiops" often meant the destruction of towns
and deportation or execution of
their inhabitants.
The captured Nazi document
was made available to The Associated Press by the World . Jewish
Congress in the original German
text, with excerpts in English. Justice Department sources concurred
in the translation.
Gerold Christian, Waldheim's
spokesman, said today he had no
comment on the document.
The document apparently has
been used before, according to
Manfred Messerschmidt, a West
German historian who was a member of an international commission
that investigated Waldheim's
World War II past.
The historians' commission and
a White Book published last year ·
by Waldheim's aides both reviewed
what seems to be the same document, Messe_rschmidt said.
The commission's report, released Feb. 9, contradicts the
White Book, saying Waldheim's
initials on the Aug. 15, 1943 document indicate he must have known
about persecutions of civilians in
Greece.
The White Book says Waldheim's initials signify "nothing but
his certifying the correctness of a
copy of the rp.essage for inclusion"
in the official war diary of his unit.
The World Jewish Congress said
Waldheim did not authorize the deportation of the Greeks to labor
camps in Germany but that he was
aware of the plan.
It also said a deportation order
later was countermanded by an
Italian commander whom the congress dtd not identify.

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                  <text>Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection</text>
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              <name>Creator</name>
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                <elementText elementTextId="810175">
                  <text>Termaat, Adriana B. (Schuurman) </text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="810176">
                  <text>Termaat, Peter N.</text>
                </elementText>
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&#13;
Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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                  <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection, RHC-144&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="810180">
                  <text>Netherlands</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="810181">
                  <text>Netherlands--History--German occupation, 1940-1945 </text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="810182">
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              </elementTextContainer>
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              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="810190">
                  <text>eng</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812744">
                <text>RHC-144_Termaat_NWS_1988-Waldheim-314</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812745">
                <text>The Associated Press</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812746">
                <text>1988</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812747">
                <text>U.S. holds document linking Waldheim to Greek deportations</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812748">
                <text>Newspaper clipping about the documents relating the war crimes charges against President Kurt Waldheim of Austria.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812749">
                <text>War criminals -- Germany</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="812750">
                <text>Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Europe</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="812751">
                <text>Waldheim, Kurt</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="812752">
                <text>United Nations. Secretary-General (1972-1981 : Waldheim)</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812753">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812755">
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            <name>Language</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812758">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1032996">
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                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="812743">
                    <text>/{ cl0 0-~'-' l '1/ /~ IS'o

Holocaust nightmare remains for three honored heroes
By TODD TREMLIN
There is no oompcnsat ion monetary or
otherwise - that could
make up for the fear and
horror experienced by
those condemned to German death camps during
World War 11, or those

who risked their lives
hiding themselves ind
others from the wrath of
the Third Reich and its

SSmcn.
But last Wednesday,
Grand VaUey State University recognized the
courage of Grand Rapids
residents David Mandel,
and Pieter and Adriana
Tennaat with Doctor of
Humane Letters degrees
at a highly emotional
public ceremony in the
Kirk:hof Center.
But while the awards
are sweet, the three insist
that their stories and the
truths about the
Holocaust and German
atrocities is the most
effective revenge.

THE TERMAATS
Pieter and Adriana
Tennaat were leaders of
the Dutch underground
resistance movement
during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands.

They printed underground
~ewslellers, forged ration
and identificlnion cards,
and found hiding places
for hundreds of Jews,
allied forces pilots who
had been shot down
behind enemy lines, and
Dutch men who fled the
Nazi's forced labor
camps.
The Termaats had been
married only a year and
had an infant son in 1940
when the Nazis invadl!d
the Netherlands. Their
memories are vivid. The
sight of refugees streaming off the trains in their
small village north of
Amsterdam to escape the
advance of German
troops is clear in
Adriana's mind.
..This was a very difficult time in our lives,
when everything seemed
, without a future," Pieter
said.
The refugees were

Pieter TermHt (lelt), his wile Adriane; and David
M1nd1l, received honorary Doctor of Humane Letters
d1grNs trom Grand Valley Stile University 11 an
emotional ceremony lasl Wednesday. The recipienls are
survivors - or helped other survive - the Holocaust.
taken in by Dutch fami- were part of . the Dutch
1i es, and soon the resistance.
In the spring of 1944,
Termaats had a family of
an informant told the
eight living with them.
That was their in- Gestapo, the Secret Nazi
troduction to the war that police, that Pict.er was
would envelop the entire part of the resistance.
world, and leave it reeling Luckily, resistance leadcrs
five years later. For the karned of thc betrayal in
Termaats, it was five time 10 gel Pi.:tc:r mto
years of constant fear of hide.ling.
being caught, along with
Nothing in their liv.:s
thousands of others who pu:parl!J the Termaah for

the hmrihk: expcricm:e of
the Na1.1 oa:upa11on nothing prepared them for
the circumstances i1110
which they had been
thrw,1. They lived day 10
day, and will never forget
the horror of that time.
..The Jews had been
concentrated in a11
Amsterdam ghello, and
forced to wear the Star of
David,"said Pieter.
He said that at the
beginning of the occupation there were J 50,000
Jews in the Neth.:rlands.
At the end in 1945, only
IO percelll remamcd. Tiu:
rest had been killed by the
Nazis.
In I986, Yad V,,shem,
the Holocaust Martyrs
and Heroes Remembranc.:
Authority of lsrad,
awarded lhc Terrnm11s the
Mal.ii of the R1ghu:ous
Gentile - thal coulllry's
high.:st a"'ard - for 1h.:1r
Pliilse

ill

HEROES, P191 16

�60

?."3. 19?

r. todd .r:- 1.:.n
c/o -ivanco .
Jear

r. _ro'1.iri ,

r s. ier~ st and~ w nt to xprass our thnnk ~
for yll l!' e;__,r sit t ve \ ,.~ ll:~c r.r.qt
,., "'?'
of the -~c~~ber 7, 19{2 ;c~v¢c~t~~ •.
t0 :ro'l

·, r')

L ~,..

l i i·A to .-:x t an:'l cur 1-:cst wishes for vour c.gr

•,j :--

�</text>
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                    <text>'02 •

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11. 1988

• THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS

O

•

0 0

.Key Gennan official
guits after furor over
J(ristallnacht speech
The Associated Press

BONN, West Germany - The
president of parliament resigned
today after being bitterly a,ttacked
for saying on the 50th anniversary
of Kristallnacht that many Germans initially found Hitler's rule
"glorious."
The furor overshadowed West
Germany's carefully organized ceremonies marking Kristallnacht, the
night of terror against the Jews that
signaled the start of the Holocaust.
Parliament President Philipp
Jenninger announced he was step. ping down as assembly leader after
meeting with other top-ranked
members of the governing Christian Democratic Union.
The conservative politician's
speech Thursday, which also called
the early years of the Nazi's Third
Reich a "triumphal procession,"
set off waves of outcries throughout the country and abroad.
· His speech, at a special session of
the Bundestag, or parliament, triggered a walkout by about 50 lawmakers and calls for his resignation from opposition Greens and
Social Democrattc parties.
"My speech was not understood

by many listeners the way I had intended it to be," the. ,56-year-old
politician said in ·a written statement to the news media. "I am
deeply sorry and I am very hurt, if I
have offended the feelings of others."
He added: "During my whole political career - most recently as
president of the German Parliament - I have been active in working for reconciliation with the Jews
and for the vital interests of the
state of Israel."
"I always have been an uncompromising foe of every type of totalitarian rule," Jenninger said .
Jenninger said he was stepping
down as Bundestag president because he wanted to avoid any damage to the office itself and because
he believed he lost the trust of
many colleagues.
The statement did not say whether Jenninger would remain a member of Parliament.
Jenninger had been the No. 2
West German official after President Richard von Weizsaecker, under the nation's rules of diplomatic
protocal.
A member of Chancellor Helmut
Kohl's Christian Democratics, Jen-

AP PHOTO

Philipp Jenninger said many
Germans initially found Hitler's
rule "glorious."
I

ninger has been a lawmaker since
1969 and was one of Kohl's closest
aides before he was elected Bundestag president in November
1984.
In his speech Thursday, Jenninger talked at length about the
positive feelings of many ordinary ; Germans early in the Hitler dictatorship.
"Didn't Hitler bring to reality
what (Kaiser) Wilhelm II had only
promised, that is to lead the Germans to glorious times?" Jenninger
asked.
'
"Wasn't he chosen by Providence, a Fuehrer such as is given to
a people only once in a thousand
years?" he continued.

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                    <text>t,.il -13

Documents said
to link Waldheim
to crimes in war
The New York Times

serving "as an interpreter" at:
tached to the Pusteria Division in
WASHINGTON - The Justice May 1942. But in a book entitled
iWaldheim's
Wartime
Department based one of its princi- "Kurt
pal charges against President Kurt Years," published on his behalf last
Waldheim of Austria, possibly September as a rebuttal to charges
making him an accessory to war that he had been involved in war
crimes, on captured German docu- crimes, the authors state "he was
ments that point to his involvement not involved in combat operations
in the deportation of 488 Yugoslav or the deportation of civilians."
civilians to slave labor camps in
The deportation of the Yugoslav
1942. The documents were cited in civilians in 1942 and Waldheim's
support of the department's deci- purported •role in it were reported
sion to bar Waldheim from the last week.in The -New York Times
on the basis of Yugoslav docuUnited States last year.
Knowledgeable administration ments and interviews conducted by
officials said the 49 pages of docu- Bozidar Dikic, a Belgrade journal­
ments concerning the episode ist. It was not known then that the
show that Waldheim, then a lieu- Justice Department had built part
tenant assigned as liaison officer to of jts case against Waldheim on the
the Fifth Italian Alpine Division, same incident on the basis of sepa­
nicknamed Pusteria, was informed rate documents in the possession
about the roundup of the Yugoslav of the United States government.
civilians - reportedly all males
Waldheim has called for the re­
over the age of 14 - and their lease to his government of the doc­
transfer to the authority of "the uments reportedly incriminating
higher SS and Police Fuhrer, Bel- him; the Justice Department re­
grade, for forced labor in Norway." fused.
The officials said further that on
The Justice Department has said
the basis of the documents, assem- that it did not want to set a prece­
bled mainly from German army dent by making public "an internal,
headquarters records in Belgrade pre-decisional document." The de­
from the first three weeks of May partment has also said that nearly
1942, the Justice Department con- all of the material cited in those in­
cluded that he must have facilitated ternal documents was available
the deportation operation in his ca- · through other sources.
pacity as liaison officer. The docuNow, in the case of the Yugoslav
ments cite Waldheim by function deportations, an administration of­
ficial cited a series of captured Gerbut not by name.
Last April 27, the Justice Depart- man Anny documents in the Na­
ment announced that Waldheim tiona}Archives. The documents are
had been placed on a list of people available to the public on micro­
barred from entering the United film.
States on the ground that he had
Examination of the cited docu­
"participated in activities amount- ments shows that, while they might
ing to persecution" of civilians dur- lead a prosecutor to conclude that
ing his service in the Balkans from Waldheim had been an accessory
1942 to 1945. At the time, depart- to a war crime, they do not provide
ment officials cited, as one of its direct evidence to that effect.
charges against Waldheim, the
An
administration
official,
transfer of civilian prisoners to the speaking on condition he would
not be identified, said, "In legal
SS for exploitation as slave labor.
Article 6 of the Charter of the In- proceedings you never have every­
temational
Military
Tribunal, thing" that would lead to a sure
adopted by the United States, Brit- conviction. He said that the Justice
ain, the Soviet Union and France Department's specialists in the his­
on Aug. 8, 1945, defined "ill-treat- tory of World War II had "looked at
ment or deportation to slave labor the military practices, functions
or any other purpose of civilian and responsibilities" of Waldheim
population of or in occupied terri- and that "they had no doubt he
tories" as a war crime.
would have had to be involved" in
Waldheim has acknowledged the Yugoslav deportations.

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&#13;
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              <elementText elementTextId="812698">
                <text>The New York Times</text>
              </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812699">
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              <elementText elementTextId="812701">
                <text>New York Times article about President Kurt Waldheim of Austria, and his possible involvement in the deportation of 488 Yugoslav civilians to slave labor camps in 1942.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                    <text>THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS

•

MONDAY1NOVEMBER 21 1987

g \9

Jews 'deserved to die,' says Nazi in Syria
The Associated Press

CHICAGO - Convicted war criminal Alois
Brunner, a top target of Nazi hunters for decades, is living in Syria and still believes his
involvement in the mass murder of Jews was
correct, a newspaper reported.
"All of them deserved to die because they
were the devil's agents and human garbage,"
Brunner was quoted as saying by the Chicago
Sun-Times. "I have no regrets and would do it
again."
The newspaper said Sunday one of its reporters interviewed Brunner, 75, from Damascus last week in a brief telephone conversation in front of a witness.
After making his comment and confirming
he had been living under the name of George
Fischer, Brunner hung up, the newspaper re-

ported.
French Nazi hunters Serge Klarsfeld and
his wife, Beate, first reported that Brunner
had fled to Egypt and then to Syria after
World War II. He has apparently been living
in Damascus since 1955, a year after he was
sentenced to death in absentia in France for
crimes against humanity.
Brunner, reputed chief aide to Adolf Eichmann, was held responsible for the deportation to death and slave labor camps of at least
128,500 Jews from Nazi-occupied territories.
Eichmann, architect of the Nazis' "Final Solution" for the Jews, was captured in Argentina by Israeli agents and tried and hanged by
the Jewish state.
Brunner is being protected by the Syrian
government in exchange for service in "security matters," the Sun-Times said, quoting

one of Brunner's relatives living in Austria it
did not identify.
Syria for years denied that Brunner was living in Damascus, and continues to rebuff extradition attempts by West Germany, saying
he has committed no punishable crimes, the
newspaper reported.
"Syria is continuing to ignore our requests,
but we know he is there and well guarded,"
said Alfred Streim, senior prosecutor for war
criminals in West Germany.
Evidence at Eichmann's trial in Israel in
1961 identified Brunner as an SS chief who
specialized in brutality against children and
"humiliation before death."
Records with the United Nations and in
American militaiy files show Brunner was responsible for deportations of Jews from Vienna, France, Slovakia and Salonica.

1

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                    <text>21e jaargang 18 - 3 mei 1985

7

Jaap Frederiks

Bevrijding
langs een omweg
De bevrijding van 5 mei 1945
werd niet binnen onze eigen
grenzen maar in Duitsland
bevochten. Na de verloren slag
om Arnhem werd Nederland voor
de geallieerden van secundair
belang. Hoewel daarvoor de prijs
van een hongerwinter moest
worden betaald, bleef ons land
daardoor een vernietigende
veroveringsoorlog bespaard.
Jaap Frederiks reconstrueert het
militaire verloop van de laatste
maanden van de oorlog.

Voor de Nederlanders kwam er op 6 juni
1944 een keer in de oorlog. De geallieerden
landden in Normandie en zouden ongetwijfeld snel naar Ned~rland oprukken. Voor
generaal Eisenhower, de Amerikaanse opperbevelh_ebber van de 'Allied Expeditionary
Forces', lag ons land echter wat bezijden de
route. Hij wilde over een breed front primair
het Duitse rijk in het hart aanvallen. Slechts
de noordelijke vleugel van zijn strijdmacht,
voornamelijk Brits en Canadese troepen onder generaal Montgomery, diende op weg
naar het Ruhrgebied en Hamburg terloops
Nederland te bevrijden. De opmars verliep
boven verwachting voorspoedig: al op 25
augustus rolden zijn tanks door de straten van
Parijs; op 3 september waren ze in Brussel en
reeds de dag daarop viel de haven van
Antwerpen onbeschadigd in Engelse handen.
De bevrijding van Nederland moest voor de
deur staan. Het land werd tenminste overspoeld door afgeladen Wehrmachtvrachtwagens met soldaten die in alter ijl Belgie de rug
toekeerden. Alles wat Duitsgezind was, kreeg
het op zijn zenuwen. NSB'ers pakten hun
biezen, en op veel.plaatsen begon de bezetter
al archieven en legervoorraden te vernietigen. Die stemming· liet het volk niet onberoerd. Op 5 september (dolle dinsdag) werden in Haarlem de vlaggen uitgestoken en in
Amsterdam kwam het illegale blad De Baa11breker zelfs met een bevrijdingsnummer,
waarin de namen van alle medewerkers stonden afgedrukt. Maar het grootste dee! van

Ors. J. A. Th. Frederiks is docent geschiedenis.

Nederland wachtte in september vergeefs op
de bevrijding.
Onder de indruk van de snelle vorderingen in
Belgie, waren op het geallieerde hoofdkwartier de gemoederen ook verhit geraakt.
Montgomery wist Eisenhower te winnen voor
de gedachte om het zwaartepunt van de
opmars naar zijn noordelijke sector te verleggen. Hij presenteerde een vermetel plan,
waarin het Britse 2e leger, door luchtlandingstroepen ondersteund, een diepe bres in
de Duitse verdediging zou slaan, om tangs de
lijn Eindhoven-Nijmegen-Arnhem door te
stoten naar Westfalen. Op deze manier
hoopte hij met een verrassingsaanval het
Ruhrgebied vanuit het noordwesten af te
grendelen en te omsingelen. Het hele westelijke front werd voor deze 'operatic Market
Garden' praktisch stilgelegd. Montgomery
kreeg alle voorraden toegewezen.
Al spoedig bleek dat de ineenstorting van de
Duitse legers zwaar was overschat. Uit de
ongeregeld teruggetrokken soldaten waren
nieuwe eenheden gevormd en tangs de grote
rivieren waren duizenden 'spitters' (ter
plaatse gerecruteerde dwangarbeiders) ingezet om stellingen te bouwen. In oost-Brabant
kwamen de Britten maar moeizaam vooruit:
de tegenstand was groot en het bleek dat hun_
zware materieel buiten de gebaande wegen
onherroepelijk vast kwam te zitten. Weken
later dan was voorzien kon Nijmegen worden
bereikt (26 september), maar de luchtlanding
bij Arnhem was een brug te ver geweest.
Door deze vastgelopen aanval was ·eind september een grillige frontlijn door zuid-Nederland komen te !open. Het uiterste zuiden
van Limburg was bevrijd, maar Noord-Brabant bleef bezet gebied - behoudens de diepe

corridor waarvan de uiterste punt iets boven
Nijmegen lag; hier ontstond een soort niemandsland. Met het oog op een nieuwe aanval
hadden de Duitsers op verscheidene plaatsen
de rivierdijken doorgestoken. Uitgestrekte
stukken van de Betuwe kwamen blank te
staan. De meeste inwoners trokken weg naar
het vrije Nijmegen; alleen de boer .zelf bleef
meestal achter op zijn bedrijf. In de late herfst
kon hij zowel Duitse als Engelse patrouilles
zijn erf op zien komen. Geregeld waren er
bloedige schermutselingen als ze toevallig op
elkaar stuitten of wanneer de bezetter merkte
dat burgers door de linies heen naar bevrijd
·gebied trachtten te 'crossen'.
Nijmegen zelf groeide snel uit tot een' echte
frontstad met tienduizenden militairen. De
geallieerden waren met groot gejuich ontvan- gen, ondanks de grote verwoestingen die hun
komst met zich mee had gebracht. Ze hielpen
mee de ergste schade voor de winter te
herstellen, en de gestadige aanvoer van
voedsel maakte veel goed. Maar toch, zoveel
vreemde soldaten zo ver van huis. Al op 5
oktober 1944 verscheen in De Gelderlander
een hoofdartikel over 'De Nederlandsche
Jonge Vrouw en de Nationale Eer', waarvan
de strekking precies die was, die u zich
daarvan voorstelt.

Ultstel
In heel het bevrijde gebied bleven militairen
de dienst uitmaken. Iedereen moest zich in de
eerste plaats richten naar de bevelen van de
geallieerde bevelhebber. Maar in zijn spoor
verschenen onmiddellijk ook Nederlandse
officieren. Het Nederlandse kabinet in Londen had voor het bevrijde gebied een overgangsregering gevormd: het Militair Gezag

�,.. ._ .....

d

_·

_. ,._ .........

,._

... .

••

1

I

21 e jaargang 18 - 3 mei 1985

BevrlJding
langs_een omweg

onder leiding van generaal Kruis. Dit nood- ~
bestuur kon in de korte tijd dat het bestond de &lt;
meest impopulaire maatregelen nemen,
waarna de ministers ongecompromitteerd
met een schone lei konden beginnen.
Doch Nederland werd niet in enkele dagen
tijds bevrijd en in het zuiden regeerde dit door
niemand feitelijk gecontroleerde gezag vele
maanden tang. Daarbij liet het zich weinig aan
regels gelegen liggen bij de omgang met de
burgerautoriteiten of de justitie. Velen die
Kruis na de oorlog - terecht - een te groot
eigenmachtig ' optreden verweten hebben,
gaan er echter aan voorbij hoe chaotisch de
toestand na het vertrek van de Duitsers was.
Voor het nog bezette gebied waren in Londen
eveneens maatregelen genomen. De georganiseerde verzetsgroepen werden samengebracht in de Binnenlandse Strijdkrachten
(BS) onder leiding van prins Bernharc,l, en een
college van Vertrouwensmannen werd benoemd om in het geheim de bevrijding bestuurlijk voor te bereiden. Het college kon
nadenken over een proclamatie en de allernoodzakelijkste benoemingen.
Boven de grote rivieren bleef de toestand zeer
gespannen. Verzetsgroepen voerden de sabotage-acties op, maar de Duitse vergelding
werd eveneens grimmiger. De represailles na
een aanslag op enkele soldaten bij Putten
vormen misschien het meest spectaculaire
voorbeeld. Talrijke huizen werden opgeblazen en de mannelijke inwoners naar Duitse
concentratiekampen weggevoerd. Op bescheidener sch_aal gingen echter in het hele
land de executies door. Met spanning zagen
de mensen uit naar het zuiden, wachtend tot
een nieuwe aanval op Arnhem zou komen.
Maar het geallieerde opperbevel had anders
beslist. Montgomery had uit 'Market Garden'
een lering getrokken die voor het oorlogsverloop in Nederland van grote betekenis
was. Kort na de bevrijding deelde hij een
verslaggever van Het Vrije Volk mee, 'dat de
gebeurtenissen in Arnhem hem de overtuiging hadden gegeven dat er, indien hij het
gehele gebied (west-Nederland) strijdend zou
moeten veroveren, geen steen op ·de andere
blijven zou ·. Inderdaad moeten we er niet aan
denken wat er gebeurd zou zijn, als Arnhem
wel was genomen en de honderdduizend
Duitseis de vesting Holland van stad tot ·stad
hadden verdedigd of de dijken hadden doorgestoten. Het westen zou de hongerwinter
bespaard zij_n gebleven, maar tegen wat voor
een prijs.
Om Nederland voor deze ramp te behoeden
en omdat het in het natte polderland met
tanks toch moeilijk opereren was, besloot het
geallieerde opperbevel om de bezetters in de
Randstad niet aan te vallen, maar hun overgave · op een slagveld elders in Europa te
bedingen. Oat gold voor de kwetsbare Randstad, maar evenzeer voor Denemarken,
waarvan de verovering met al die eilanden
ook een moeilijke zaak zou warden.
Hoe hard het er in Holland aan toe had
kunnen gaan, kregen de Zeeuwen in oktober
1944 te merken. Hier konden de g·e allieerden ,
de confrontatie n"iet uit de weg gaan. Op 3
september was triomfantelijk de verovering
van Antwerpen gemeld, maar in de feestroes
was over het hoofd gezien dat het gebruik van
de haven stond of viel met het bezit van de
Scheldemond. Aanvankelijk had dit gebied
een !age prioriteit op het hoofdkwartier. De
blik was op het oosten gericht en bovendien
eiste Montgomery alle middelen voor de slag
om Arnhem op.

L .. ---- ---- ---- -- -

9

·" '
.

Montgomery en Patton

_/ .

havenstad goed bewust en waren vastbesloten
de Scheide tot het uiterste t~ verdedigen.
Daartoe waren ze uitstekend in staat. De
Canadezen hadden langs de Kanaalkust het
Duitse 15e leger voor zich uit gedreven dat,
ruim honderdduizend man sterk, in
Zeeuws-Vlaanderen vast kwam te zitten.
Langs het kanaal" Brugge-Gent ging het in
stelling en het bleek ongenaakbaar. Aan
organisatorisch talent ontbrak het al evenmin: de bevelhebber generaal Von Zangen
speelde het klaar om met, meest ter plaatse
gevorderde, vaartuigen en onder voortdurende luchtaanvallen in tweeeneenhalve
week tijds 86 000 manschappen, compleet
inet zesduizend voertuigen en zeshonderd
kanonnen, van Breskens ilaar Vlissingen te
verschepen.
Ongeveer veertienduizend man bleef achter
in west Zeeuws-Vlaanderen. Zij' slaagden
erin, toen de aanval kwam, om achter elke
dijk of sloot een nieuwe zeer effectieve
stelling op te werpen. Met vlammenwerpers
en hevig mortiervuur moest het half ondergelopen polderland meter voor meter warden
veroverd. Dicht onder de kust bij Cadzand
kregen de bezetters dekking van de zware
kustbatterijen. Er was bijna geen doorkomen
aan. De balans van een week strijd, van 6 tot
13 oktober: 533 doden en gewonden en een
terreinwinst van anderhalve kilometer. Maar
de Scheide moest open, onverschillig de
verliezen en verwoestingen. Pas op 3 november gaven de Duitsers zich hier over.
Aan de overkant· van de Westerschelde was
op Walcheren iets dergelijks te verwachten,
maar hier werd' voor een andere tactiek
gekozen. Op 3 oktober hoorden de inwoners
van West-Kapelle de Engelse bommenwerpers naderen. Doelwit was de zeewering.
Verkenningen hadden de geallieerden geleerd dat veel Duitse stellingen op het lage
deel van het schiereiland lagen. Door nu zelf
de hele zaak onder water te zetten, konden ze
Scheide
die vijandelijke ·versterkingen onbruikbaar
Ten onrechte, bleek spocdig, want het gehele maken en het slagveld bijna decimeren. Het
westelijke front dreigde vast te komen zitten was triest voor de bevolking, maar die zou bij
bij gebrek aan brandstof en munitie. De hele felle gevechten minstens zqveel te lijden
bevoorrading kwam nog steeds uit Norman- krijgen.
die en deze aanvoerlijnen werden met de dag Alie Duitse troepen werden door het stijgen(anger. Het leger schreeuwde om een haven
de water naar de smalle kuststrook gedreven.
met een grote capaciteit, die zowel dicht bij
Daar werden ze eerst op l november door
Engeland als dicht bij het front lag. Eisenhow-. enkele slagschepen zwaar onder vuur genoer zag de bui gelukkig op het laatste men en vervolgens kwam er een landing van
ogenblik hangen. Hij gebood Montgo·mery, commandotroepen. De operatie stond onder
wiens gedachten meer bi_j de Rijn waren, Canadees bevel, maar er waren eenheden van
uitdrukkelijk eerst alle aandacht op de Schei- . allerlei nationaliteiten bij betrokken: Britten,
de te richten. Met enige tegenzin moest hij Fransen, Belgen, Nederlanders en zelfs Nozijn troepen in de Brahantse corridor west- ren. Sommige kustbatterijen verdedigden
waarts dirigeren, richting Tilburg en Zuid- zich tot het laatst, en ook in Vlissingen kwam
Beveland. Ook het bi_i Antwerpen liggende het tot felle straatgevechten, doch _de tegenCanadese leger kwam weer in beweging.
stand, was niet in die mate als in Zeeuws. D.e. Quitsers ~~ar.en .,zjcb_dc; _h-&lt;:;.ts!_t~~i~ Y~&lt;J!l QC: _ _YJl.lllJJOereo. Na cen week was · d~ strijd

I

gestreden, en nadat de Scheide van de vele
mijnen was ontdaan, kon al op 26 november
het eerste militaire convooi Antwerpen binnenvaren.

Naarde Rljn
De slag om Arnhem en die om de Scheide
hadden twee maanden het westelijk front
beheerst. In oost-Frankrijk was weinig of
niets gebeurd. De legers kregen bij tijd en
wijle nauwelijks genoeg toegeleverd om hun
posities te handhaven, laat staan dat ze grote
initiatieven hadden kunnen ontplooien. Aan
die schaarste kwam nu een eind. Eisenhower
bepaalde dat de -Rijn het volgende .doe! was.
Hij wilde geen wilde planneri meer zien· met·
spectaculair geslagen bruggehoofde_n; eerst
moest de bele linkeroever in handen zijn,
voordat aan de overkarit kon warden gedacbt.
Voor Nederland betekende dit, dater weinig
aan de frontlijn zou veranderen. West-Brabant_was tijdens de strijd in Zeeland veroverd,
en nu ging het offensief niet noord- maar
oostwaarts. De geducbte Duitse Westwall
(ook Sigfriedlinie genoemd) moest worden
doorbroken en ~en uitloper daarvan· lag iets
ten westen van de Limburgse Maas. In de -Peel
en voor Venlo vonden hevige tankslagen
plaats. Het is niet toevallig dat juist in
Overloon bet oorlogsmuseum is gevestigd; de
ter plaatse gestrande tanks zijn er nog te
bezichtigen.
Half december was bijna overal de Maas
bereikt. Er kwam net een beetje scbot in de
zaak, toen een nieuwe born barstte, die alle
middelen aan bet westelijk front opeiste.
Volkomen onverwachts ontketende het
Duitse leger op 16 december een massale
tegenaanval via de Ardennen. Het eerste doe I
was Antwerpen. Op die manier werd een
diepe wig tussen de verschillende geallieerde
legers gedreven en tegelijkertijd kon, bij het
begin van de winter, de bevoorrading onderbroken worden.
De voorste Amerikaanse linies werden onder
de voet gelopen. Alleen op enkele strategische punten konden ze zich handhaven. Generaal Patton moest van de ene op de andcre
dag zijn opmars in het Saarland afbreken om
het gat te dichten. Spoedig bleek dat de vijand
over onvoldoende materieel en manschappen
beschikte om het offensief over een langerc
tijd vol te houden, maar toch zorgde het
ervoor dat de Amerikanen half januari nog
even ver waren als begin december. Hoewel,
misschien is dit toch wat te negatief uitgedrukt, want ofschoon de terreinwinst bescheiden was, hadden ze wel de beste Duitse
troepen die nog in West-Europa voor handen
waren, vernietigende verliezen toegebracht.
In Mord-Nederland hield iedereen zijn hart
vast. Zo dichtbij waren de Canadezep, en toch
· '. zo veraf.-£0 veraf bleven ze; want Eise~how-

�-~

21e jaargang 18 - 3 mei 1985

11

Ardennen-offensiet Arnerikaanse troepen nabij
Malmedy

Bevrijding
langs een omweg

er had geen enkele reden zijn plannen te
provisorische IJsselstelling opgeworpen om
pardon doodgeschoten. Hetzelfde lot trof de
wijzigen: eerst naar de Rijn. Uitdrukkelijk
de Veluwe, de toegang tot de vesting Holland,
meeste gevangengenomen Georgiers zelf. Ze
had hij zijn onderbevelhebbers geboden geen
zo lang mogelijk te verdedigen, maar verder
voelden dat al aankomen en vochten zich
eigen acties aan de overzijde te ondernemen.
trok hij zich weinig aan van de onzinnige
daarom liever dood bij wanhopige pogingen
Hij zag al aankomen dat Montgomery aanbevelen over tegenaanvallen die hij dag in dag
enkele versterkte plaatsen in handen te houzienlijk minder tijd nodig _had om van Nijmeuit van het Fiihrerhauptquartier kreeg toegeden. Tegen de met opmerkelijk groot fan agen het Duitse Wesel te bereiken dan Patton
stuurd. Hij wist dat de weg naar het noorden
tisme vechtende Duitsers was geen kruid
voor de lange weg naar Mainz. Montgomery,
van het land openlag. Plaatselijke commangewassen. Ook de hulp van een tweehonwieris prestige- een flinke deuk had gekregen, danten boden soms nog harde tegenstand en
derdtal plaatselijke verzetssti-ijders mocht
nan1cnu het zekere voor bet onzekere. Hij,had
de verw.oestingen waren dan dienovereenniet _l;&gt;aten. Op 21 april moest bet laatste
tweehonderdduizend man bij Nijmegen en ·komstig. Illustratief is dat Doetinchem al.opJ
bolwerk .worden opgegeven: de vuurtoren.
als eep wals rold~,!_leze troepenm~cht,richting · april'wef d·bevrij~,.maar •Doesburg pas· op&lt;!~ Maar groepjes Georgiers en Duitsers bleven
Kleef. Alles wat•hij op zijn WC?,g_tege_nkwam, -16e.
nog jacht QP elkaar maken tot de Canadezen
werd letterlij~ verpulverd: legers, steden•en Overigens'heten1de bcvrijders zich niet op,uiteindeiifk op 20 mei arriveerdc;n . Texel
bossen. Een maanlandschap met diepe· bornhouden door zul\ce verzetshaarden., Het
kende op ·5 niei geen bevrijdingsdag. Slechts
kraters liet hij achter. Op 9-maart was hij bij
zaak zo snelmogclijk naaralle·tioclc:en.van ;bet '250 opstandelingen overleefden de helse
de.resten van Wesel. Het duurde tot de 23e
land. door te .stoten, want elke·gevechtspauze strijd:.
voor Mainz was bezet en hij zijn oude idee van
gaf de Duitsers tijd voor hergroeperingen.
een omsingeling van het Ruhrgebied kon
Om belangrijke bruggen te veroxeren werden
Hongersnood ..uitvoeren.
op 12 en 13 april nog Franse en Belgische
Voor de Canadezen'· in de derde week van
·Begin maa,rt was bij toeval e_e n brug bij
paratroepen rieergelaten.- Vee l meqewerking - april de Veluwe op konden tr~k~e~, ·had een
Remagen, iets ~en zuiden van Bonn, intact in
kwam eveneens van de kant van het vefzef. Jn
slag:om Arnhem op,het programma gestaan.
Amerikaanse handen gevallen. Terec_h t
de chaotische sit~atie. was het vaak rrio~elijk
Alleen"ipsychologisch al stoi:Jd er veel op het
m_eende de Duitse bevel~ebber generaal M9- _ dat verzets,lieden d~rde g~vechtslini_e s trokspel. De hele zriidelijke toegang tot de stad
del. dat het zwaartepunt ·van bet geallieerde ·· ken en de gealli!:erden precies op cte •hoogte
w~s door de verdedige!"s onder ·water gezet,
offensief van d~( reeds geslagen bruggehoofd ·stelden van de beste verkeersverbindingen en
het oosten - waar de. aanval •kwam - Z\\:'aar
zou komen. Hij had 325 000 man in Sauerde locatie van Duitse stellingen. In Friesland
versterkt. De burgerbevolking, die zich nog
land verzameld om de aanval op bet Ruhrgetroffen de Canadezen zelfs Parijse tonelen
goed kon herinneren wat straatgevechten
bied af te wachten. Hij wachtte tevergeefs.
aan; evenals in de Franse hoofdstad hadden
waren, had de stad grotendeels verlaten .
Zowel Montgomery. in het noorden als genede !eden van de Binnenlandse Strijdkrachten
Blijkbaar waren de geallieerde commandanraal Simpson in het zuiden ·trokken met een
steden als Sneek en Bolsward al in handen
ten hiervan op de hoogte, want zonder enige
boog om het industnegebied heen. Hun letoen de geallieerde tanks er aankwamen.
schroom lieten ze een ongekend artilleriegers vormden een tang die zich op 1 april bij :ongevaarlijk waren deze acties niet. De
bombardement op Arnhem neerkomen. De
Paderborn slooi. Model restte slechts de
Duitse soldaten stelden alles in het werk om
Duitsers moesten letterlijk wezenloos geniet in handen van de verzetslieden te vallen,
overgave. Ondertussen ging de geallieerde
schoten worden. De opzet slaagde, want toen
in de Canadezen hadden ze aanzienlijk meer
hoofdmacht richting Leipzig. Op 25 april
de Engelsen en Canadezen op 13 en 14 april
vertrouwen.
de stad binnentrokken, stuitten ze slechts hier
werd het eerste contact met de Russen bier
en daar op enig verzet. Ze kregen een
gemaakt. Het Duitse rijk was in tweeen
Bij zo'n plaatselijke poging om de macht over
spookstad in handen: rokende puinhopen en
gesplitst. leder van de geallieerde mogendhete nemen, ging bet op Texel helemaal mis. Op
instortende huizen, mensen ontbraken.
den kende zijn taak bij het opruimen van de
het eiland lag een ·garnizoen van ongeveer
Al v66r de val van Arnhem was generaa l
laatste verzetshaarden. De Russen namen
achthonderd Georgische militafren. Ze waren
Berlijn voor hun rekening, de Engelsen rukBlaskowitz begonnen met de strategischc
aan het oostfront krijgsge;angen. gemaakt,
terugtrekking op de vesting Holland, die met
ten op naar de Duitse Noordzeehavens en de
min of meer geprest om in ·het Duitse leger
Amerikanen concentreerden zich' vooral op
de oude Grebbelinie uit 1940 samenviel. Op
dienst te nemen,''cJoch voortdurend uitziend
midden- en zuid-Duitsland.
1
I 9 april was bijna heel noord- en oost-Nenaar een 'ka"ns ertusse~uit te knijpen. Die
derland bevrijd. De Randstad hield de adem
gelegenheid leek op 6 april gekomen. Met zijn
Verzetshaarden
in voor wat ·volgen zou. Maar er volgde niets.
achthonderden moesten ze bet opnemen teEn Nederland? In het spoor van Montgomery
Kort voor Amersfoort kwam de opmars van
gen goed vierhonde_rd Duitsers en dat in een
waren Britse en Canadese legers bij Wesel de
de geallieerden tot staan. Het bevel luidde:
hun gunstig gezinde omgeving. Van begin af
Rijo overgetrokken, om dfrect daarna af te
geen aanval op west-Nederland.
aan liep het echter mis. De beide kustbatterijbuigen naar J:wente en de Achterhoek. Het is
Voor de mensen daar was het nauwelijks te
en op de nooid,- en zuidpunt, die _samen bet
tekenend voor de bescheiden plaats op Eibevatten. Het moest toch bekend zijn hoe
hele eiland bestreken, bleven oncJanks versenhowers prioriteitenlijst, dat deze legers de
groot de ellende was, dater een hongerwinter
woede .aanvallen' stevig in Du_itse handen.
Nederlandse grens pas op 29 maart overwas geweest, dat - nu de Randstad ook nog
schreden; twee dagen erna had de hoofd~ .Evenmin-ko~ worden verhinderd dat_reeds de
van oost-Nederland was afgesneden - er
eerste dag uit Den Helder Duitse versterkinmacht het hele Ruhrgebied i i• omsingeld.
helemaal niets meer te eten was. Op 7 april
gen werden aangevoerd. Op 8 april waren dat
Verwonderlijk is het natuurlij_k niet: alleen in
had ir. Louwes, directeur-generaal voor de
er al tegen de vierduizend en ,dat i,tantal werd
Duitsland kon de beslissende slag geleverd
voedselvoorziening, de situatie gekenschetst
warden.
· steeds grater.
als de overgang van hongersnood naar honHeroverde delen van bet eiland werden letVoor de Duitse commandant in Nederland,
gerdood. Vanuit de Binnenlandse Strijdterlijk huis voor huis uitgekamd; mensen die
generaa l Blaskowitz, viel er weinig eer te
krachten en het College van Vertrouwenservan werden verdacht hulp·aa~ de opstandehehalen aan de strijd. Hij had met dwangarmannen (het illegaal opgezette noodbestuur
lingen te hehben verleend, werden zonder
heiders op bet laatste ogenblik nog een
dat kl aar stood om de macht over te ne men en

; as·

--:-

::

�-------~--~-~-~--------~--~-----------------~---------~
-~
--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-;
Ir

-~

.'

.

21 e jaargang 18 - 3 mei 1985
.,.

Bevrljdlng
langs een omweg .

.

.

,.,.

-.~ . . ........
-·
. {&lt;

...,..

...

De Duitse bevelhebber in Nederland, generaal
Blaskowitz (rechts in het midden) ondertekent in
hotel De Wereld de capitu/atlepapieren ten overstaan van de Canadese generaal Foulkes

13

~., ......

.,

dat steeds.. openlijker aan de dag k_on treden) -i
werd een drjngend beroep gedaan op rijks- ~
commissaris · Seyss-Inquart om 9e nood te ~.
leriigen. Na overleg-met Blasko.wffz !_ooiide
hij zich b~reid een officieuze Yt'.apenstilstand·
met de geallieerdt;n te sluiten. Ge_dureilde die
tijd zouden er dan geen executies of_,,vernielingen meer plaatsvinden en kon er voedsel en
stee'nkool worden aangevoerd·. De vertrou- •
·wensmannen Neher en Van dcr Gaag kregen
toestemming op 13_april door de linies been·
naar Breda.te reizen, waar enige Nede~laildse
ministers aanwezig waren. Hef·voors~el werd
bier erg gunstig ontvangen. Het- ~esten WH
dus nog van de h·ongerdood:te·redden, maar
cian moest er we! heel snefworden gehandeld.
:Elke;dai,' ja elk uur werd de toestand-~r_itie~
ker,
..
.,.
Toen kwam de kater. Bij de geallieerden vie!
~het:voorstel erg slecht: Pe stelregel was dat ~
met Duitsers uitsluitend over onvoorwaar~
delijke capitulaties we:i:o onderhandeld. Wa'·penstilstanden kwamen in dit draaiboek niet
vM r. Premier Gerbrandy deed alles orri
.Churchill aan het verstand te brengen dat
~tienduizenden mensenlevens op het spel
stonden. Dagen gingen voorbij. Washingtcin ~
werd geraadpleegd, Moskou van het voorsf~l 1
op de hoogte gesteld en ond_ertussen gin gen ;in ;: L ______.__...,..._..-_
Holland de terechtstellingen door. Qe Prlns Be(!'hard in het bevrl/de Deventer
~liaarste werd steeds nijpender. De Duitser~
zelf voelden het einde eveneens na·deren en 'riuiarschalk schikte hen te ontvangen. Op zijn
werden onberekenbaarder in hun reacties.
vraag wat ze wilden, deden ze het verzoek om
Qe discipline nam af en de onderdelen waren
drie legers in het noordoosten van Duitsland
nauwelijks meer door de legerleiding in de aan de Britten te mogen overgeven in plaats
hand te houden. Eindelijk kwam het verlos- van aan de Russen, van wie ze na het
sende bericht. Eisenhower had toegestemd in beestachtige optreden van de SS in Oosteen gesprek tussen Seyss-Inquart en zijn
Europa weinig goeds te verwachten hadden.
stafchef, generaal Bedell-Smith. Ze ont- Maar Montgomery peinsde er niet over. Ze
moetten elkaar op,30 april 0in Achterveld bij
moesten zich aan hun ·directe tegenstander
Amersfoort. De voedselaanvoer was snel o~ergeven. Het enige waar hij zelf over,.wilde
geregeld, maanoen Bedell-Smith een pog!ng praten was een slagveldcapitulatie van de
waagde om de rijkscommissaris tot ca"pitulatie Duitse strijdkrachten in zijn sector van :-het
te tiewegen, wefd dat ·resoluut verworpen. front. Als 1d~ar niet onmiddellijk t~ besloten
Oat- was een zaak voor het Oberkommando werd, dreigde hij,zelfs geen vluchtelingen.uitder Wehrmacht; d1;1t kor:i alleen Berlijn-be- het oosten meer doorgang ,te verleil~n.
Verslagen keerde de deJegatic terug naar
slissen.
Flensburg, waar Df&gt;nitz zijn regeringstep"'"'
trum had ingericht; Er was geen .keus. I&gt;e".
Cepltulatle
·
Eh in er.lijn viei cle beslissing. D~genlang volgende- Hag al was Von Friedeburg· weer
vochten de Russen·;zich een weg aaar de tenig. H_ij: was gemachtigd toe te stem men in
Fiihrerbuitker. Toen ,ze tot·op enkele•honder- de onvoorwaardelijke overgave,van de Duitse
den meters waren genaderd, pleegde Hitler strijdlfrachten· ii! de noordwestelijke sector
op_30 _april zelfmoord. De.verant~oordelijk- .van het front, inclusief het nog bezette deel
heid over zijn totaal vernietigde Grootduitse
van Nederland, Denemarken en Noorwegen.
rijk droeg hij over aan admiraal Donitz. Deze Op 4 mei gaven de Duitse troepen in Nedermaririe-officier was ook voor de ·geallieerden land zich dus over. Wat op 5 mei in Wagenineen aanvaardbare gesprekspartner. Donitz gen gebeurde, was een bevestiging hiervan en
had weinig keus. Hem kwam de twijfelachtige de feitelijke capitulatie ter plaatse. Daar
eer toe de oorlog tot een goed einde te verscheen aan het eind van de middag in
brengen en hij was realist genoeg om te Hotei De Were Id generaal Blaskowitz aan het
beseffen dat 'goed' een spoedige capitulatie hoofd van de Duitse.delegatie; Seyss-Inquart
betekende.
was kort daarvoor per schip naar Flensburg
Op 3 mei verscheen rond het middaguur een gevlucht. Ten overstaan van de Canadese
Duitse militaire delegatie onder leiding van genera al f oulkes en onder aanwezigheid van
admiraal Von Friedeburg bij"Montgomery op prins Bernhard tekende de Duitse bevelhebde Lilneburger Heide. Ze konden zich opber de capitulatiepapieren. Nederland was
stellen onder de Britse vlag tot het de veld- vrij dank zij de overgave in de sector van
1

Montgomery, maar daarme~ was de oorlog
nog niet voorhij.
Na deze capitulatie was admiraal Von Friedeburg overgebracht naar het geallieerde
hoofdkwartier in Reims. Hier waren alle
papi~ren ·voor·. een volledige capitulatie van
alle Duitse strijdkrachten al klaargemaakt,
doch de admiraal bleek hiertoe geen instructies te ..liebben-ontvangen. Donitz werd telegrafi~ch:geraadpleegd. Hij zegde toe generaal
Jodhtaad~.eims te sturen, maar toen deze op
6 niei- arriveerde beschikte hij evenmin over
die macht~ging. Eisenhower zag in wat de
~uitse,legerl~iding van plan was. Ze wilde de
·definitieve overgave uitstellen om nog zoveel
m9gelijk militairen in de gelegenheid te stellcn ·naar het westen te vluchten en zo uit
fumden van de Russen·te blijven. De Amerikaanse generaal'had er·geen enkel belang bij
hieraan meete werken en zich de ergernis van
iijn boitdgenoten op de hals :te halen.
Joell kreeg een halfuur,bedenktijd, metachter
· de deur dezelfde stok·waarmee Montgomery
twee dagen eerder al had gedreigd: werden de
geallieerde eisen tot een onvoorwaardelijke
capitulatie niet ingewilligd, dan zouden alle
westelijke linies voor mensen uit bet oosten
worden gesloten. Op 7 mei om half twee 's
morgens kwam de telegrafische machtiging
uit Flensburg binnen in Reims. Jodi kon de
capitulatie tekenen, ingaande op 8 mei te
middernacht. Deze plechtigheid werd op 8
mei in Berlijn nog eens herhaald. Uitdrukkelijk moest Duitsland ook buigen voor de
Sovjetunie. Pas toen dit achter de rug was,
werd de capitulatie officieel bekendgemaakt.
Over nazi-Duitsland was het dock gevallen. [lJ

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                  <text>Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection</text>
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                  <text>Termaat, Adriana B. (Schuurman) </text>
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                  <text>Termaat, Peter N.</text>
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&#13;
Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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                  <text>1869 - 2012</text>
                </elementText>
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            <element elementId="48">
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                  <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection, RHC-144&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="810180">
                  <text>Netherlands</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="810181">
                  <text>Netherlands--History--German occupation, 1940-1945 </text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="810182">
                  <text>World War, 1939-1945</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="810183">
                  <text>World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Netherlands</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="811643">
                  <text>Dutch</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="811644">
                  <text>Dutch Americans</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="810184">
                  <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Special Collections &amp; University Archives</text>
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              </elementTextContainer>
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              <name>Identifier</name>
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                  <text>RHC-144</text>
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              <elementTextContainer>
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              <elementTextContainer>
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            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="810190">
                  <text>eng</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="810191">
                  <text>nl</text>
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            </element>
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                <text>RHC-144_Termaat_NWS_1985-05-03-Intermediair-Liberation-by-a-detour</text>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812669">
                <text>Intermediair</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812670">
                <text>1985-05-03</text>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Bevrijding langs een omweg</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812672">
                <text>Article about the liberation of Nazi-occupied Netherlands at the end of World War II. In Dutch.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Netherlands</text>
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                <text>Netherlands -- History -- German occupation, 1940-1945</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812675">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Lemmen Library and Archives</text>
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                    <text>_ _ _ _ _ THE PEOPLES OF AMERICA _ _ _ __
Second in a series on the ethnic minorities who make up what President
John F. Kennedy called "This nation of immigrants."

TheJews Among Us
Their manifold contributions to
the country's vitality and inventiveness constitute
a sparkling chapter in American history

BY LEO ROSTEN

W

E CROSSED

Liberty ; and my
mother carried me
down the gangplank
to Ellis Island , the
magic portal to the
new, free world.
We waited in large,
caged rooms for five
endless days to hear
our name called. The
place was packed
with wrinkled Russian women in babushkas , Greeks in
funny hats , gypsies
who gave me candy, and gentle Jews
who prayed three times a day .
When at last the $25 my father had
saved and sent from Chicago arrived, my mother led me on the ferry
to the mainland , whose twinkling
lights we had marveled at each
PHOTO : ERICH FRE AKING
153

the Polish
border at
Cz~stochowa, and
my mother clutched
my hand. We shivered in the train to
Berlin, where we
were "deloused,"
even though my
mother was cleaner
than the scary , smelly
guards ; and then
somehow she found a
train to Hamburg ,
from which we sailed. She was only
22; I was three.
Ten people were jammed into our
suffocating cabin , far below deck,
and the sea was very rough. On the
14th day, I was held up above the
throng on deck to see the Statue of

�THE JEWS AMONG US

night. I sensed that a miracle had nancial assistance throughout ' the
come to pass.
_
long years of the rebellion came
Pushing the Frontier. My parents from Jews like Haym Salomon of
and I were but three of the millions Philadelphia. Indeed , James Madiof Jews who have sought freedom in son recorded his profound indebtthe United States. The first to come edness to Salomon, who refused
were 23 Portuguese Jews who fled to take a promissory note, or to
the Inquisition in Brazil to New Am- charge interest , for successive loans ,
sterdam in 1654. Jews were accepted and who "obstinately rejects all
in America , especially by the Puri- recompense."
tans, who appreciated the Hebraic
The Jews who arrived after 1820
foundation of Christianity .
· were artisans and· small traders .
The Founding Fathers greatly re- Many were peddlers , their knapspected the Jews . John Adams said, sacks stuffed with pins , needles,
"They are the most glorious nation thread , buttons , cloth. These Jews
that ever inhabited this earth." Ben- walked the land and slept in barns
jamin Franklin and Thomas Jeffer- and open fields. In time, they bought
son proposed as the great seal for the wagons, and added pots, pans , ketnew republic a depiction of the He- tles , bedsteads to their wares. The
brews crossing the Red Sea, crowned Jewish peddler became a welcome
by this legend: " Rebellion to Ty- figure in America's rural areas and
rants Is Obedience to God . ~ And the helped push the frontier westward.
Jews never forgot George as fi mg- Some opened trading posts or dryton's letter to their congregation m goods stores. They moved into newNewport, R . I.: " [Our governmentl ly opened territories, across the
gives to bigotry no sanction , to per- Mississippi , over the Rockies, to the
West Coast.
secution no assistance ."
Some of these resourceful men
From 1654 to 1800, some 3000
Jews had immigrated to America, a laid the foundations for great departminuscule group compared with the ment stores and retail chains : GimEnglish, Scots, Irish or Germans. bel, Saks, Altman, Straus (Macy's)
Often they settled in the flourishing of New York City; May of Los Anseaport cities of Charleston, New geles; Magnin , Strauss and Haas of
York and Philadelphia, where trade San Francisco; Neiman and Marcus
was spurred by already established of Texas. Perhaps the most famous
Jewish merchants.
was Levi Strauss. He created an inConsidering their small numbers, ternational phenomenon called blue
Jews played a significant role in the jeans, for California gold miners
American Revolution. Thomas Jef- who wanted trousers of the utmost
ferson used David Franks, a Jew , as durability. Levi had only very tough
his diplomatic courier. Critical fi- tent canvas; he used copper rivets to
strengthen pockets crammed with
LEO ROSTEN , PH.D. , politic a l sc ienti s t ,
tools or nuggets. To his surprise,
screenwrit er , humori st , is author of 31 books,
miners poured into his shop, asking
including Th e Joys of Yiddish , Treasury ofJ ewish
for " them pants of Levi 's ."
Quotations, Captain N ewman, M .D . a nd Th e
Edu cation 0J'Hy111w1 Kap/an .
Jewish pioneers scattered all over
1 54

�THE JEWS AMONG US

the expanding nation and live on in
dozens of American place names:
towns like Castroville and Kaufman, Texas ; Solomonsville, Ariz.;
Levy, Ark. ; Mayersville, Miss.
A Jew named Sigmund Schlesinger was a famous Indian fighter and
hero of the Battle of Beecher Island
in Kansas. Philo Jacoby founded a
Jewish newspaper in San Francisco,
and became the champion rifle shot
of the world. San Francisco's pioneers included the Fleishhackers,
Koshlands , Schwabackers , Hellmans. In Cincinnati, the Freibergs ,
Fleischmanns and Friedlanders
stamped the city with German-Jewish influences, as did the Baers and
Stixes in St. Louis, and the Lazaruses in Columbus .
Lovers of tantalizing trivia will
relish the fact that one of the Old
West's legendary figures , Wyatt
Earp, is buried in the Jewish cemetery of Colma, Calif. Earp married
Josephine ("Sadie") Marcus of San
Francisco, an actress, after the famous shoot-out at the O.K. Corral,
and the two spent the next 48 years
prospecting for gold , gambling, and
running saloons in Colorado , Texas ,
Mexico and Alaska.
A Sacred Commandment. While
American Jews prospered, Jews in
Eastern Europe suffered. Pogroms,
wholesale massacres organized by
Czarist regimes, brutalized Russian
Jews . In Germany and Austria, restrictions had forbidden Jews to own
land, vote , enter colleges or professions, even to travel or marry
freely .
New waves of refugees fled to
"golden" America and sent New
York's Jewish population soaringfrom 500 in 1825 to 60,000 in 1880. In

1881 another explosion of pogroms
in Poland and the Ukraine drove
thousands more westward. At one
point, 100,000 Jews a year were arriving on our shores. By 1930 one of
four New Yorkers was Jewish.
The newcomers had little in common with older Jewish settlers. Jews
whose ancestors had come from
Germany, Spain or Holland could
not easily communicate with Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazim from
Eastern Europe . Older settlers were
now thoroughly acculturated , and
they feared that the bearded ,
"medieval" refugees would offend
American sensibilities and ignite
anti-Semitism.
Nonetheless , New York's Jews
organized to help "our poor cousins. " A Jew does not "give" to
"charity." (Indeed, there is no word
for "charity" in Hebrew or Yiddish.)
He fulfills a sacred commandment to
care for his fellow mortals . Certainly
one reason the newcomers succeeded was because the Jewish community was so energetic in caring for its
people. New York's Jews helped immigrants get jobs , open stores, start
businesses. German Jews supported
free night schools that offered
courses on citizenship, English , hygiene and medical care .
The Ashkenazim also helped
themselves. "The Jews had their
own values," notes economist
Thomas Sowell in Ethnic America.
"And they took those values into
and out of the slums." By religious
precept, Jewish respect for the law
and the closeness of Jewish family
life set strong boundaries for moral
behavior. Generally , the crime rate
among Jews was low , and their children had lower truancy and juven-

157

�1HE JEWS AMONG US

ile-delinquency rates than others.
Jewish families were child-centered and moved heaven and earth
to get their children a good education. Upon arriving in New York's
slums, a Jewish mother would hasten to the public library, where she
would hold up one, two, three fingers-the number of children for library cards . Returning from their
first day at school, many Jewish
youngsters would find cookies
baked in the form of letters of the
alphabet.
Jewish immigrants planned to settle permanently; they did not want
their children to suffer the poverty,
terrors and humiliations they had
known. And they became Americanized fast.
Tyranny of Quotas. By the turn of
the century, however, the paradoxes of America's competitive system
produced social tensions and fanned
old hatreds carried from Europe. Industry flourished , but depression
and unemployment periodically recurred. The sheer speed of social
change sparked blind hostilities: in
the West against Chinese; in steel
towns against Poles; in many places
against Catholics . And now the Jews
often encountered the dreadful bacillus of anti-Semitism.
Housing covenants forbade the
sale of homes to Jews in many
places; "gentlemen's agreements"
kept them out of banking, shipping,
the better clubs. Many a country
club sprouted such signs as: NO
JEWS OR DOGS ALLOWED. In the
early 1920s prestigious private universities attempted to limit Jewish
enrollment. Many graduate schools
discriminated against Jews. At the
University of Chicago I was advised
158

by a friendly dean not to enter graduate work in English, history or philosophy: "Jews can't get teaching
posts in those fields."
I had begun to feel the lash of
prejudice as a child in Chicago. Our
neighborhood was periodically invaded by Irish or Polish hoodlums,
who tore the beards of elders and
smashed store windows. Frequently, I was taunted, chased or stoned. I
was called a "kike," a "sheeny."
World War I and the Great Depression fueled the fires of prejudice.
Harshly restrictive immigration laws
were passed in 1924. When Hitler
came to power, Jews sought to flee
to the United States, but a stringent
quota system was in effect. In all
the 1930s, only about 200 ,000 Jews
got into the United States-but
among them were people who
transformed American science. A
handful of refugees from NazismEinstein, Teller, von Neumann and
Franck-led America into the nuclear age.
The democratizing experience of
an immense army and work force,
united to fight racist dictators during
World War II, made prejudice go out
of favor. Racist theories, allegedly
"scientific," were exposed as silly.
The basic incompatibility of democracy with discrimination became
indisputable.
In the past 40 years, new Jewish
immigration has shrunk to a trickle.
Today there are about 5,700,000
Jews in the United States, around
2.5 percent of our population.
Judaism in America is split into
three branches: Orthodox (about a
tenth), Conservative (about a third),
Reform (about a quarter). But the
connection of many to a synagogue

�THE JEWS AMONG US

or temple is so tenuous that perhaps
50 percent of American Jews are
"secular." Only a small minority observe kosher laws. Roughly 35 percent of the Jews who get married
today marry non-Jewish partners .
"Jews have become more American
than Jewish," says Rabbi Marc Tannenbaum of the American Jewish
Committee. "And this has caused a
great ambivalence. They want to be
a part of the mainstream, but they
also ask themselves what price they
will pay for this in their survival as a
people."
Yet even the self-described agnostics or skeptics have a strong
identification with Jewish history
and values. Above all they feel the
moral-ethical obligations of the Jewish tradition.
The ethos of Judaism rests in part
on the idea of study, which is sacred.
Every synagogue had a "house of
study" attached, open day and night
for discussion and argument.
Certainly the Jewish population
has made spectacular contributions
to human knowledge and welfare.
More than 28 percent of the Nobel
Prizes awarded to Americans have
been given to Jews. Jews today are
also significantly "over-represented" in ·medicine, mathematics and
law .
Faith and Reason. Jewish talent is
just as conspicuous in the arts. Playwrights include George Kaufman,
Moss Hart, Ben Hecht, Lillian Hellman, Arthur Miller, Neil Simon.

Music and musical comedy were
transformed by George Gershwin,
Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, Leon-,
ard Bernstein, Richard Rodgers and
Oscar Hammerstein. With brilliant
contributions by Jack Benny,
George Burns, the Marx brothers,
Woody Allen and Mel Brooks, the
liberating lunacy of Jewish wit revolutionized American humor. Movies
were pioneered by men named Zukor, Lasky, Mayer, Fox, Goldwyn,
Warner, Selznick. But the vast majority of Jews in America are not
intellectuals, scientists or artists.
They are ordinary people, burdened
by everyday problems .
A favorite saying among Jews is,
"Only in America." No more is said,
because no more need be said. Human history has never before seen
so astonishing a phenomenon as this
nation's creative hodgepodge of
races, religions, cultures, creeds .
And since this "melting pot" does
not entirely melt, what our republic
has created is a politically open society in which variety can flower in
unprecedented richness.
The Americanization of the
Jews, and their manifold contributions to our health and education,
to our economic vitality and inventiveness, to all the sciences, art,
entertainment, constitutes but one
sparkling chapter in the story of
American civilization.
For information on reprints -'~c
"' of this article, see page 235 ""···

.•. ,!.-',..._

&lt;WHEN my son turned 16, he took his driver's test. Afterward, I asked
him if he had been nervous. "I was while waiting to drive," he replied .
"But once the examiner got in the car, I just pretended he was Dad and
ignored him."
-Contributed by Rose Marie Price
160

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                    <text>Eight Area Residents Hailed

In Holocaust Remembrance
By Theresa D. McClellan

Berendina Erlich, 62; was a young woman looking forward to
marriage when she became involved in the Dutch resistance movement to help a Jewish co-worker living in the Hague.
That was before her fiancee, Haans, was executed by the Gestapo for his resistance work.
Erlich was among eight resisters from western Michigan honored Sunday by the state and the Men's Club of Congregation Ahavas Israel, 2727 Michigan St. NE, in commemoration of National
Holocaust Remembrance Week.
"My work was to get (phony identification) cards for my Jewish
friends so they could move from different places," said Erlich, of
2610 Ramona St. SE "The Gestapo came to my parents' house
every two to three weeks."
Uke the other resisters, the slight greying woman credits her
faith for keeping her active in tbe movement, despite the constant
fear of being discovered.
"I was terrible scared they would find out who I was, and as a
young girl I was often disappointed in my Christian friends who
had such little faith."
Besides Erlich, others honored were Jan Dirkmaat, 181 Lantern
Drive NW; Albert K. Flikkema, 1071 Village Lane, Jenison; Pieter
N. and Adrianna Termaat, 1730 Westlane Drive NE; Johan Weerstra, Holland; Johannes Witte, 2216 Edgewood Ave. SE; and the late
Marten Weestra, of Holland.
The program also serves as a rebuttal to "revisionist historians"
who claim the crimes against Jews during World War II never
happened, said Professor Dwayne Cole of Grand Rapids Baptist
College.
"There are people out there who will believe what they want to ·
believe despite the facts. The horror is when our younger generations begin doubting this ever happened," said Cole.
Witte remembered his Netherlands home as a land of freedom
for everyone until "May 10, 1940 when the Germans entered our
borders and forced our young people into the labor camps to be reeducated in the Nazi philosophy." The events of the Holocaust in which an estimated six million
Jews were slaughtered are "bard to comprehend now, and were
incomprehensible then," said Witte. "There were signs and rumors
and even newspaper articles, but we could not comprehend such a
thing."
Even now it is difficult for Erlich and others to speak of the
deaths without being visibly moved. "I just pray," said Erlich, "that
we will never be subjected to that kind of horror, ever."

Pieter N. Termaat

Berendlna Erlich

• This week's gathering in Washington, D.C., of an estimated

18,800 U.S. and Canadian survivors of Nazi death camps should

serve as a reminder to the world that what happened during World
War II can happen again, an !)rganizer says. Page SC.

Johannes Witte

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                  <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection, RHC-144&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="810182">
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                <text>RHC-144_Termaat_NWS_1983-Ahavas-award-345</text>
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          <element elementId="39">
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            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812639">
                <text>McClellan, Theresa D.</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
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                <text>1983</text>
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                <text>Eight Area Residents Hailed in Holocaust Remembrance</text>
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>Newspaper clipping about members of the Dutch resistance movement living in Grand Rapids.</text>
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                <text>World War, 1939-1945 -- Netherlands</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812647">
                <text>World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews -- Rescue</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Lemmen Library and Archives</text>
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                    <text>Prins Bernhard heeft gisteren op paleis Soestdijk bij wijze van v e ~
uitgereikt gekregen. W. van Lanschot, voorzitter van het Nationaal Comi · ,·,·a,retsll;JS'ê~::kingskruizen, speldde hem de onderscheiding op tijdens een informe e ontTimJ:r.st.
Soestdijk. Prins Bernhard was zichtbaar geëmotioneerd door de ondersciheidin.g
prinses Juliana kon haar ontroering nauwelijks de baas.

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                  <text>Termaat, Adriana B. (Schuurman) </text>
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&#13;
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                  <text>1869 - 2012</text>
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              <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>RHC-144_Termaat_NWS_1982-10-photo-of-Prince-Bernhard-receiving-Resistance-Remembrance-Cross</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1982-10</text>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812624">
                <text>Prins geroerd bij ontvangst Verzetskruis</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812625">
                <text>Newspaper clipping about Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands bestowing the Resistance Rememberance Cross. In Dutch.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812626">
                <text>Netherlands -- Awards</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="812627">
                <text>Dutch Americans</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="812628">
                <text>Netherlands--Kings and rulers</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812629">
                <text>	
Bernhard Leopold</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812630">
                <text>World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews -- Rescue</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812631">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812633">
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                    <text>'!'lit.: WAStuNtil'UN POST

By Thomas O'Toolc
Soon after Dutch resistance fighter Teengs Gerritsen was put in the
concentration camp at Natzweil~r by
the Gestapo in 1943, he fell ill with
pneumonia and was placed in a hospital with five members of the
French Maquis who had just been
caught by the SS.
"One of them was already dead
and two of the others had bullets in
their lungs but they began to softly
sing the 'Marseillaise' together," Gerritsen recalled recently at Washington's Army and Navy Club. "When
the Gestapo guards heard them, they
filled hypodermic needles with gasoline and injected and murdered ·
each one of the Frenchmen on the
spot. I never got the injection and to'
this day I don't know why. I would
have liked to have met that Gestapo
fellow after the war and ask him why
he didn't inject me."
Another time, Gerritsen said he
hid himself in a toolshed when the
concentration camp commandant
ordered the prisoners to appear at
roll call on Christmas Day. Gerritsen
remembers that the commandant
was drunk and picked out six prisoners to be hanged that night.
"One of them was the man standing in my place," Gerritsen said.
"They never noticed that I was missing and that is why I am alive today."
Gerritsen, a legend in The Netherlands because of such stories, came
to the United States to help. celebrate the 200th anniversary of
Dutch-American friendship and to
honor the members of the Dutch
resistance and the U.S. Office of
Strategic Services who lost their lives
in Holland during World War II.
Gerritsen wasn't the only Dutch
resistance fighter to make the trip.
Men with names like van den Heuvel, Hofmeester, Hergarden, Zeegers,

(

Peijnenburg and van Lamichot also
came and told their storiei1. Among
the many listeners were Prince Bernhard, Dutch Amhasi1ador J.H. Lubbers and Central Intelligence Agency
Director William J. Casey, who had
been liaison chief between the OSS
in London and the Dutch resistance
during the war.
Dutch resistance was stronger
than most of the rest of occupied
Europe. Three inonths after the war
began, Queen Wilhelmina, from exile
in London, ordered the Dutch to
resist. More than · 10,000 Dutch resistance fighters were captured and
killed by the Germans, fully half the
Dutch resistance force.
Gerritsen was caught in a scene
that could have come right out of
the movie "Casablanca." Two men
wearing black leather overcoats
showed up one day at his office in
the Ministry of Import and Export,
showed him their papers and took
him off to prison. "Most of my
friends were already there when I
was brought into the prison," Ger~
ritsen said. "We had a traitor in our
ranks. I suppose you can't avoid it."
But one Dutchman who managed
to avoid the Gestapo all through the
war was Cees (pronounced Case) van
den Heuvel, who was the intelligence
chief for the Dutch resistance during
the war. While Gerritsen worked in
The Hague until he was caught, van
den Heuvel did his job in Rotter•
dam.
"Rotterdam was the best place to
be in Holland during the war because it was the most chaotic," van
den Heuvel said. "The Hague was a
company town like Washington
where everybody was recognizable
and Amsterdam was overrun with
Gestapo because that's where they
thought all the Dutch spies would
be."
Van den Heuvel escaped capture
by changing his identity and disguis-

~" 1n.:-n ,, A 1

Thumlav, Oeleler 28, l98Z

Visions of the
~ars of Danger
Dutch Resistance Members Recall the Nightmare
, ing himself. Only 25 when the war · Channel to Great Britain.
"We soon discovered we couldn't
began, van den Heuvel said he managed to look 40 by never being clean- start the boat's engine without its
shaven, wearing old people's clothes distributor," van den Heuvel said.
and his hair a little long, and walk- ''The 10 sailors who'd left the boat to
ing stooped, with his coat collar up.
go to lunch on shore had taken it
"Nature helped me, too," he said. with them."
To this day, van den Heuvel
"I never had too much to eat and if
you look thin you look older."
thinks he's alive because the tied-up
His job was estimating German sentry told his comrades he'd been
military strength and movement in attacked by a squad of British comHolland. He had 600 agents scat- mandos. At least, that was the story
tered across the country, watching that circulated through Rotterdam
the roads and the railways. The all the next day.
agents checked the repair shops
Like van den Heuvel, Gerritsen
where the Germans took their tanks had some good fortune. Captain of
and trucks when they broke down. the Dutch ice hockey team before
Among the agents were young the war, Gerritsen took his entire
women who took advantage of Ger- team with him into the resistance.
man soldiers drinking in the pubs.
He decided to go to work for the
Van den Heuvel discovered that Ministry of Import and Export, as
any time a German soldier died, he . he put it, because there had to be a
was buried in a local Dutch lot of good information there. Said
graveyard with his rank, company, Gerritsen: "Only Germans came in
battalion, regiment and army group and only Dutch goods went out. The
marked ·on his cross. Into the Germans were so organized they put
graveyards at night went van den lists out through the ministry of exHeuvel's agents, for fresh intelli- actly how many troops, how many
gence on German troop movements.
tanks and how much petrol they
"That stopped when one of our brought into the country."
couriers was arrested and his
How did Gerritsen get that inforgraveyard report confiscated," van mation? He asked the director to
den Heuvel said. "The next day, all give it to him. Gerritsen said the dithe German crosses were gone from rector told him: "Every Friday, I will
the graveyards."
leave the papers in my desk drawer,
Van den Heuvel had his share of give you the key to my office and
close calls. Once, he and four other drawer before I leave and you may
resistance fighters stormed aboard a .come in and copy what you wish."
German "schnell" boat at the enGerritsen and his hockey players
trance to Rotterdam harbor, killed used to meet every Friday in a hotel
one of the sentries left on board and bar across the street from what is
tied up the other before preparing to now Holland's Disneyland. Charlie,
run the boat across the English the barman, would see to it that the

From left: Kees van den Heuvel, Teengs Gerritsen, Gerard Peijnenburg " 1
·
&amp; William Casey; by Lucian Perkins-The Washington Post ,
1·

bar would close down for an hour
every Friday evening between 6 and
7 o'clpck. German officers frequented the bar but Gerritsen said that
was an advantage.
"It was good cover," he recalled.
"The Gestapo would never check out
a bar that German field officers
drank in."
It all ended when Gerritsen was
arrested in May 1942 and locked up
for five months in a tiger cage by
himself. Twice transferred to Dutch
prisons, he was finally sent the next
year to the concentration camp at
Natzweiler, which had the reputation of being the worst camp in occupied Europe. Gerritsen said that
when he got there, 150 people a day
were being murdered by the Gestapo
guards. 1He was almost in tears as he
told the story.
"You have no idea, you have no
idea of how they killed people
there," he said. "People were being
shot and hanged and killed by dogs.
If you've ever seen a man with his
hands and legs tied together and
being killed by dQgs, it's the most
horrible sight you can see."

When the war ended, Gerritsen .·
and van den Heuvel went to work
for the Dutch Federal Bureau of'Investigation hunting down Dutchmen
who collaborated with the Nazis and :1
Germans who served in Holland
with the Gestapo. Gerritsen was· .
questioning one former S.S. officer ·. .
in a Dutch prison when he was told '
Hanns Rauter, the one-time German
general who had been S.S. chief. in
Holland during the war and who ..yas in the same prison, wanted to see
him.
.
Rauter had saved Gerritsen's ~ife
when he was first taken prisoner because Rauter had played in the 1936
Olympic Games for Germany and
had met Gerritsen in Berlin where '
the games were played that year. .
"He was a fearful bastard, 6-foot,6
and murderous," Gerritsen recalled.
"Do you know what he said to me?
He said, 'I'll tell you, Gerritsen, the
only way to stop Germany · is ·to
shoot us and disarm us for the rest
of time. Germany will one day try to .
win a war, they want someday to ·win ,
a war. That is what Germany is .all .
about.'"
·

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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812608">
                <text>O'Toole, Thomas</text>
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          <element elementId="50">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Visions of the Years of Danger: Dutch Resistance Members Recall the Nightmare</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Article about the Dutch Resistance Movement in The Washington Post. </text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                    <text>-,

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The Grand Rapids Press

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Friday, October 8, 1982

Seven From Area
To Be Honored
For Resistance

Work in WWII
By Elizabeth Slowik

Peter and Adriana Termaat sat at
the dining room table in their
Northeast Side home, o,·erloolcing a
wooden deck, a clutch of pine trees
and autumn Dowers in the back
yard.
There is little in the well-kept
home that points back to the Termaats' five years in the World War
II Dutch resistance movement,
when they risked their lives to become part of the underground railway to London and to recapture the
freedom they lost to the Nazis.
Married Just a year and with a
newborn son when the Netherlands
was invaded, the Termaats belonged
to a resistance group known as
, Trouw, which means faithful or loyal.

They helped to find hiding places
for Jews, Allied pilots who had been
shot down and Dutch men escaping
the forced labor of the German war
machines. They hid some of them in
their own home.
"If we speak of it now, it affects
· us deeply," said Peter Termaat, 68,
a retired auditor and credit manager. "It's amazing, after all these
years, it's still only skin deep."
The Termaats are two of 38 former Dutch resistance workers now
living in the United States who will
receive Resistance Remembrance

Cross medals today from the Nationaal Comite Verzetscherdenkin~kruis of the Netherlands.
Seven West Michigan residents,
the largest group from any one area
of the nation, will receive the
awards.
Presenting the medals at a 5 p.m.
ceremony at the home of Dutch
Ambassador Y.H. Lubbers in Washington D.C. will be Prince Bernhard, husband of former Queen Juliana and father of Queen Beatrix of
the Netherlands.

Some of the T·e rmaa\s' memorabilia of wartime.

who said she once macfe underwear
from a bedspread.
Radios and newspapers were outlawed, travel was restricted and
curfews imposed from 8 p.m. till 6
a.m. Telephone conversations were
tapped by Nazis and their sympathizers.
"It is so hard to imagine, I think,
Also receiving the medals will be . for anyone living in this country,"
Berendina Roelofina Hendrika Er- added Weerstra, a 68-year-old relich andlohn Witte of Grand Rapids; tired real-estate broker. "Suppose
John Dirkmaat of Comstock Park; you had a law in this country, that
Albert Flikkema Sr. of Jenison; and you would have a minority group,
John Weerstra of Holland.
and any kind of help you extend to
Termaat said he and his wife are this minority group would be punaccepting the award on behalf of ishable by death, without any pro
many others. "There were so many cess, without any trial. How man
people participating at our level, people would extend a helping hand
even more at another level, cooper- in one way or another? Our freeating, hiding people. So many of us dom is worth the price."
did not survive. The honors are givBerendina Erlich entered the
en to the entire movement," he movement when she and her fiance
said.
tried to help a Jew with whom she
The resistance operated in condi- worked in The Hague.
tions that made it difficult just to
"The Gestapo came right away to
eat, the Termaats said.
the home of my parents, in the midRation cards at one point limited dle of the night. They had very
meals to 665 calories per day, so heavy material against me. I could
housewives traveled to rural areas not be ·where I was living because
to find food on farms. Clothes were they were hot on my trail," said the
hard to find, according to Adriana, 62-year-old mother of two.

Erlich went underground, using ,
false names, stolen identification
cards, rarely staying in one place
more than a few nights. She slept in
her clothes, lest the Gestapo come
after her at night.
Her fiance and another leader of
their group were executed.
She was arrested while transporting false identification cards needed by downed pilots to slip out
of the country - in an envelope
slipped into her brassiere._
"I was terribly scared. If they
found out who I was, it could have
been the end of me," Erlich said.
The Termaats' home was raided
while they were hiding a 17-year-old
Jewish boy. A Dutch woman spying
for the Nazis betrayed them.

Adriana Termaat sent the boy now a patent attorney in the Netherlands - into a hiding place and fabricated a story for her son, then
three, so that be would not give
away their secret.
The Gestapo did not find the boy,
but Peter Termaat went underground for his own safety.
For all their dangerous efforts,
the Dutch resistance could save

Press Photos by HOYT E. CARRIER Ill

Peter and Adriana Termaat of Grand Rapids, who are being honored
for their work in the Dutch resistance movement in World War II.

only 10 percent of the Netherlands'
150,000 Jews.
·
'
Last spring, the Termaats trav~
eled to Jordan, Israel, and Egypt.

"It's still going on," Peter Termaat said. "Victory (in) Europe did
not bring a final solution to peace.
It's all temporary."

�</text>
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&#13;
Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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                    <text>-

THE LESSON OF

~BLIN

On August 2, 1943, at one of the most infamous of all Nazi death camps,
600 victims staged a revolt that redefined heroism for this century
TERRENCE DES PRES
B ecause so many vzctims p erished th ere (three to four
million), and because it was th e la rgest of th e Nazi
concentration camps, , Auschwitz has become alm ost
syno nymous with the H olocaust itself B ut whereas
Ausch w itz served many purposes-it was a source of
slave labor and a transit camp as well-th e smaller
"killing cent ers" now seem in a more naked and
brazen way the pure apotheosis of evil. For in Sobzbor,
B elzec, M aidanek , Chelmno, and especially in T reblinka, th e entire existence of these places was designed/ or, and dedicated to , death for death 's salre .
Wh en mass extermination of the J ews began in
Treblinka on J uly 23 , 1942, the Na zis jneserved the
lives of some prisoners to do the actual work of "jJro cessing " the oth ers. But on August 2, 1943, against
incalculable odds, th ese ajJproximately 600 "work
J ews" armed themselves with stolen weapons, attack ed th e guards, burn ed down th e camjJ, and fl ed
into th e nearby Polish f orests . T he Germans, to hide
th eir cnm e, leveled w hat remain ed of th e camjJ. 1h e
Ukranian farm er who I/lo ved zn was instructed to say
th at h e an d his family had lived th ere always.
Of the 200 J ews who lived through the revolt, a.few
more than 40 survived th e war. Th ey claim that, at the
very least, 800,000 men , women, and children died in
Treblinka. But Franciszek Z abecki, w ho was tra(jic
superviso r at th e Treblin ka railroad station and also a
member of the Polish underground, ihinks dUJerently .
Th e methodical Germans ha-d marked numbers on th e
outside o.f arriving cattle cars to indicate how ma ny
victims each car contained. B y keeping a record of
these numbers, Zabecki was able to tell Gitta Seren y ,
autho r oflnt o That Darkn ess , " Th e number of peojJle
kllled in Treblinka was 1,200,-000, and th ere is no
doubt a/Jo u/ it w hatever."
'l'/11' 1w111h!'r.1 rl,,/)(Jli' is / )()mtl1•.1.1 . G1·11" ci1!1' is !.lit•
1.1.1111' onrl wh o/ UJ(' 11cerl lo lmuw is 1/() u, it lir1/1/Jl'lll'lf-th e story of 'f'reblm lw and how the uictilll .1· tlu:111.1·el1Je.1
reuo ft eri. '/ he testzm ony of th e suruiuorsfonns th e basis
of Treb linka, by J ean -Frnnc;ois Stein er. Treblinka
was originally published in Fran ce in 7966; it ap p eared in this coun try in 7967 but has been ou t of pnnt
for five years. This month , it is bezng rep ublished by
N ew Amerzcan L ibra1·y. Th e following article by
T en ence Des Pres, author of The Survivor: An Ana tom y of Life in the Dea th Camps, was written as a new
introduction to th e book.

T

h e particul a rs of the H olocaust are end less.
Blunt shove ls as a preferred method for hacking
prisoners to dea th. C hildren dumped into living
ditches of fl a me. Medical expe rim ents. L a mpsh ades .
So perverse a re such detai ls th at simply to mention
them seems shameful. Sta tisti ca lly the Holocaus t is
less imm edi ately sickenin g because less sharply seeab le; but here, too , rea lity ta kes on a fee ling of unreality which terrifi es . Extermination of m ore than
11 ,000., 000 people in 11ve years, at leas t 6,000 ,000 of
th em J ews, 1,000 ,000 of them children. D eath camps
so effi cient that 20 ,000 human beings cou ld be ''processed" -turn ed from fl es h to smoke-each day. Th e
boast of Treblinka was " from door to door in 45
minutes ," from open ing th e cattle ca rs to slamming
shut th e gas cha mbers . As a n itemi za tion of ev il truly
demoni c, the record of th e H oloca ust g0es on a nd on ,
nor ca n we sum its mean ing, nor does it cease to hau nt
us deeply .
At Ya le U ni ve rsity in th e ea rly 1960s, for exampl e,
socia l psychologist Sta nl ey M ilgram performed his
famous "o bedience experiments" to determin e at
w h a t point a person would r es ist "officia l" directi ves
a nd refuse to continue in a process of obvious cruelty.
The resu lts were un ex pected . Two-thirds of iv1ilgram's voluntee r participa nts (people of di verse ages
a nd jobs) did exactly as they w ere told : und er the guise
of a " learning Lest" th ey followed th e in stru ctions of a
ma n dressed as a "scienlist" a nd appli ed high er a nd
hi gher ch arges of electri ca l shock to "subjects " who
were fa iling to " lea rn " properly . This process went
on , in some cases, until the "s ubjects" a ppeared to be
h av in g heart a ttacks . Th e whole thing was faked,
including the electri ca l cha rges, but th e volunteers ,
who were the real subj ec ts, did not know this.*
On e of 1hc pcnili ;1ri1ics nl' 1hc experiment was th ;11.
111 ;111 y v11lu11tccrs lcnd cd lo su ffer increasin g ly l'rolll
stress as th e vo lta ge appea red to be in creasing, yet
the y were un a ble to stop. In some cases they bega n to
la ugh h ys terica ll y, la u ghter so pain ed a nd j agged th at
*The "s ubjects," who were trained acto rs, were st ra pped into
cha irs, a n electrode a ttached lo each wrist. The volunteers read
a loud li sts of sim ple word pairs w hi ch th e subjects were required to
remember a nd repeat on dema nd . Wh en the su bjects did not a nswe r
proper ly, the scienti sts , or a uthority figur es, ordered the volunteers
to adm ini ster shocks up to 450 volts, Milgram concluded th a t
" rela ti vely few people have the reso urces to resist a uthority ," even
when they believe their obed ience is producing evil.

Copyright © 1979 New Ameri can Library

Qi

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a a

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JUNE

a

4

..

,

15

�Their aim? To bear witness. To rise
up and fight against impossible odds so
that at least one person among them
would survive to tell the world.

thus, by some mad logic, remain pure and remote
from their own evil.
The great killing centers were six: AuschwitzBirkenau, M a idanek , Ghelmno, Belzec, Sobibor, and
Treblinka , all of them named for rural villages near
which , in the occupied territories of Eastern Europe,
they were built. A camp like Auschwitz murdered
very large numbers of human beings daily , but it also
served as an administrative center for the camp system
as a whole a nd likewise as a source of slave labor for
industries producing war materiel. Other camps,
Treblinka in particular, were designed for one thing
on ly: to kill as many peop le as possibl e, as fast as
poss ible. These cam ps, often referred to as "death
fa ctories ," embody a principle I would call demonic
rather than merely in sane, for insanity has neither .
firm structure nor a steady goal. What went on in the
killing ce nters was highly organized, and the goal was
very definite indeed: routines were established; different methods of killing were experimented with; solid
bureaucratic systems implemented the extermination
process at every stage of its operation; and large
numbers of men an d women went daily a bout their
jobs fully awa re th at the ent ire a im of this gigantic
underta king was murder , that the main and final
produ ct of this modern ized fa ctory system was dea th .
The dedi cation of life's energi es to the production of
death is a demoni c principle of the first degree.
Concomitant with it is a second , similar principle,
na mely, that unlike any example of genocide I can
think of from the thi ck history of mankind's inhum a nity- the slaughter of the American Indians 5 for exampl e, or the decim a tion of cities that dared to resist this
or th a t "world co nqueror" (as Genghis Khan liked t.o
ca ll hiin se lf)- t he destruction of the European Jews
had no ra tion a l moti ve whatsoever, neither politics
nor plunder, neither military strategy nor the moment 's blind expediency.
The demonic irrationality of this policy becomes all
th e more apparent when we observe th a t if the killing
ce nters were geographically remote, they were neverth eless connected by a massive railway system th a t
shipped "cargo" mar ked "s pecial treatment" from al l
corners of Europe , as far east as Greece. This geographic "swee p" involved the crossing of many national borders a nd is again a n indication of the apocalyptic dimension of the Holocaust. For here, too , the
point was not to get rid of this or that group, this or
that popul at ion which had come into pol itica l or
tact ical disfavor , but to re,1ch as far across the earth as
poss ibl e in order th ;1t death , for the Jews , mi g ht be
abso lut e. The frenzy ;ind obsessiveness of this drive
m ay be gauged from the fac t th at during the last days
of the war , when Hitler 's Reich was clearly collapsing
a nd every soldier and every piece of a rtillery was
desperately needed to defend what was left of the
homeland , trains that mi ght have been used to transport troops and war supplies were in stead·, and without objection, employed to ship the last large community of Jews - those of Hungary-to Auschwitz.

the soul itself seemed torn. But the worst and most
revealing part of their experiment cam e later, when
they were inform ed of the ro le they had innocently
played. Disturbed by what they ha d don e, some felt
compelled to judge the·mselves and they did it in term s
of the Holocaust. They suddenly saw themselves as
men and women who could indeed behave as Hitler's
SS troops behaved-only following orders to be sure,
but fol lowing orders nonetheless. And a lthough it is
ludicrous to compare a clini cal experiment a t Ya le
with events in the death camps, the fact that we do
m a ke such spontaneous connections reveals a central
truth of our time. At some unconscious level, the
image of the Holocaust is with us-a memory that
haunts, a sound in g boa.r d for all subsequent evil.
For the vict im s of the Holocaust I cannot speak.
Th eir ago ny, wh ich to this day is visible in the
millions of scratches made by fingernails on the ceilings of th e gas cha mbers , is theirs with a finality none
of the li ving ca n know . But for us who dwell in its
aftermath, th e most awful thing about the Holocau st
is simply that it happened. h entered the world not of
fantasy or science Gction but of fact , of history , the
world that is real a nd present a nd ours. And judging
from things like the Milgra m experiments , from the
perpetual fascination with Hitler a nd the Nazis , from
the sudden eruption of interest in the Holoca ust itself,
its prese nce in memory has not only lasted but-40
years after the event-has grown in force and authority. Simply as a fact and as a precedent , it mocks our
desire to affirm life' s goodness and undermines our
hope th a t never again will huma n beings gather in
such vas t and well-ordered numbers to commit mass
murder. It sta nds as proof of the hum an potential for
ra di ca l evil a nd therefore also as a prophecy of our
possib le future . Which is to say th a t after the Holoca ust , we know, we know full we ll , that life ·can be
governed by death .

T

he first N azi camps, which were set up soon after
Hitl er came to power in 1933, were d esig ned as
places of dete ntion a nd as training g rounds for the SS.
Dachau and Buchenwald were among the most notoriou s, and , although we cannot forget that thou sa nds
of people peri shed in these places , we shou ld alsn keep
in m ind th at ca mps of this kind were not intended or
equipped to be instrum ents of genocide , nor were
Jews their only victims. After the outbreak of the war,
however , a nd as the N azi po li cy of mass extermination took shape w ith the Jews as primary target, the
major " killing centers ," as they came to be called,
began to operate. And all of them were located outside
the Reich itse lf-as if in this way the Germans co uld
indulge in atrocity without tainting German soil a nd

JUNE

.

-

.

.

,.,,_

17

~

- . -~ ..... - '

�Th e H oloca ust is an unpar a ll eled exa mple of
power run wild , whi ch is to sa y th a t once evil on this
scale pi cks up enough momentum , once it esta bli shes
itself in a system of fun ctioning structures, it ca nnota fter a ce rta in cru cia l point - be stopped by any
counterforce within itself. Th e worst thing th a t can be
said of vas t power is not tha t it in evita bly co rrupts its
agents , but th a t a fter som e point its depl oy ment
becom es grea ter th a n th e w ill of th e m en wh o serve it.
Wh at ca n be d es troyed , will be destroyed , a lesson the
H olocaust confirms a nd which w e, with our B- 52s
a nd nuclea r subma rines, our ta lk of " death yi elds"
a nd " ove rkill ," might wi sh to remember.

l "l Th en we think of the N az i camps (of whi ch , by

I

VV the w ay , there w ere hundreds) , w e tend to think
of the m ost notoriou s exa mples , Auschwi tz in par ti cula r , a nd furth er to think in terms of a few compelling
images . In th e mind 's fea rful eye, we see long lin es of
men a nd women digging th eir own graves. We see Dr.
M engel e, immacul a te in his SS uniform , sta nding
before endless column s of peopl e on a r ail way ra mp,
sl owly moving a single fin ger of hi s g loved ha nd to th e
rig ht (d eat h) , to the left (tempora ry life). W e rem ember , from frag m ents of docum enta ry film , open ove ns
full of as h a nd bone a nd , perh a ps most per sisten tly,
th e giga nti c pil es of the dead being bulldozed into pits .
All of this is true , of co urse , bu t such im ages ar e
themselves so overwh elming, so fin a l in their a utonom ous horror , th a t the mind stops, defea ted in its effort
to comprehend . The dra m a ti c na ture of th e H oloca ust, th a t is to say, a nd es pecia ll y wh en it becomes
ma nifest thro ug h iso la ted images, obscures one of its
most importa nt as pects.
F or th e co ncent rat ion ca mps w ere not only fac tori es of dea th , they were w orlds in whi ch m a ny thousands of m en and women lived, th eir ra nks co ntin ua lly depl eted by dea th from sta rva ti on , from bea ting,
from r a ndom killing, from sickn ess a nd exh a usti on ,
a nd sometimes from shee r suffocation in horror , bu t
ra nks imm ediate ly r efill ed with oth er pri so ners w ho
th en w ent on with the wo rk o f runnin g th e ca mp ,
la boring in the fa ctories , sorting the tons a nd tons of
clothing a nd utensil s left behind by the victim s. The
dea th ca mps we re a world unto themse lves , a nd the
wor st thing a bout exi sten ce in such a pl ace, a pa rt from
th e filth a nd pa in a nd consta nt da nger , was th a t those
pri so ners wh o ha d been "chose n ," who had bee n sent
to a wo rk deta il ra th er th a n th e gas cha mber , stayed
a li ve onl y by in volvem ent in th e process of killing.
Wh en we try lo im ag in e such a wo rld , three qu esti ons of furi ous signifi ca nce a ri se: I low did th e
inm a tes of th e dea th ca mps stay a li ve a t a ll ' Wh a t did
li vin g und er such co nditi ons do to th eir so ul s, th eir
sense of th em se lves as hum a n beings' And w h y did
th ey go on w ith th eir horrid wo rk w hen , as survivo rs
tell us, it was so mu ch eas ier lo die a nd th e tempta tion
to slip into pe rm a nen t ob li vion or deli berately ge t
oneself kill ed w a s infinitely m ore a ppealing th a n the
w ave ring will to go on '

18

QUEST /79

C hi ef a mon g th e virtues of J ean-Fra n c;oi s Stein er's
T reblinka is that it a nsw ers th ese ques ti ons. N ot in
their enti re ty , perh a ps, nor to ever yo ne 's sa ti sfacti on,
bu t w ith a degree of passiona te a ttention that provides
a n overa ll pi ct ure of th e death camp as a world of its
own . !vlore th a n th a t, however, from a mid such da rkness T reblinka p roj ects a n im age of hum a n streng th
a nd hum a n goodn ess so fra il ye t stu bbornl y persistent , so ravaged a nd mutil a ted yet rebelli ous again st
its own defea t, its own extin cti on , th a t th e H olocaus t
itself begins to loo k different wh en the story of this
camp beco mes known .
Th ere a re ma n y studies of the conce ntra tion camp
system (Euge n Kogon 's T he T heory and Practice of
H ell is es pecia ll y in st ru cti ve), m a ny m a ps a nd sta ti sti cs , a ll of them va lu a ble. There a re a lso ma ny excellent , indeed in va lu a bl e, acco unts by survivors themselves, persona l ac ts of bearing w itness th a t a llow us to
see , if onl y na rrowl y a nd in fragm ents, wh a t survivo rs
them selves sa w a nd experi enced. But , so fa r as I
know, exce pt fo r J ea n-Fra nc;•- is Ste_iner 's T reblinka
there exi sts no story , p resent ed from th e inside, of the
orig in , th e busin ess-as- usua l, a nd th e fin a l dem ise of a
m aj or dea th ca m p. By "s tory" I mean ex act ly wha t
Ari stotl e m ea nt : a hum a n ac ti on throu gh whi ch the
age nts th emselves are d efin ed , a n ac tion with a beginning, a middl e , a nd a n end , w ith a ll its pa rts-i~ thi s
case a ll th ose free-Fl oa ting im ages th a t ha unt ussubordin ated to a w holeness th a t g ives th e de ta il s a t
least some degree of perspecti ve a nd mea ning.
Stein er ma nages to reco nstruct the rea lity of one of
th e p rin cipal killing ce nters by giving us th e story of the
men w ho b uil t it , th e men wh o ra n it , th e m en a nd
women who dest royed it. H e did thi s by perso na ll y
interview in g a ll th e survivors he was a bl e to find or wh o
wo uld permit th emselves lo be fo und -a di stin cti on I
ma ke only to suggest th e diffi cult y of Stein er 's und erta king, sin ce to thi s day th ere is un ce rta inty abo u t th e
p recise nu m ber of peop le w ho ca me ou t of T reb linka.
Th e num ber is somew here aro und 40. Fo rt y out of th e
1,000 ,000 inm ates. Fo rt y out of th e 600 w ho revo lted .
The number is pitiful , ye t w ithout thi s tin y remn a nt
th e fac ts abo ut T re blink a would never be know n . Th e
whole thing would neve r have happe ned . Wh ere th er e
is no story, th ere is no rea lity.
This meth od has its dra w.bac ks a nd , sin ce it s publica ti on in Fra nce in 1966, T rehlin lw has rema in ed
co nt ro versial. Bcc;iu sc tellin g th e stor y from in sid e
rc4uircs noveli sti c techni q ues , St ein er free ly portrays
d1 ;1racte rs, rcconstit ut cs co11 ve rs;1tion s, a nd (ill s in
mi ss in g dc1;1il s in o rcln to co n vey the csse nti ;il s pirit o f
th e events on w hi ch th e sto ry depe nd s. I le a lso sulist itu les fi cti ona l na m es lo pro tect the na m es of su rv ivors
(th e na mes of th e kill ers a re not cha nged), a nd th ere
has bee n hea ted deba te ove r parti cul a r cha racte ri za ti ons. But th ese a re not, I fee l, se riou s obj ecti ons so
long as th e st ru ct u re of the story as a w hole re(Da in s
tru e to know n facts. And in thi s respect, 'T reblinka is
as cl ose to th e fac ts as we a re lik ely to com e. A more
vigorou s criti cism has been S tein er's insistent th eme

l

�of J ewi sh passi vity in the face of impending disaster.
But aga in , the centra l event whi ch sets the story of
T reblinka a part a nd m a kes the book spe_cia l-the
eventu a l revolt of th e p ri soners a nd .the destruction of
the ca mp- tempers if not boldl y contradi cts the theme
of in action .
N ew inform a ti on has com e to ligh t sin ce T reblin ka
w as publi shed , but none of it di scredi ts or se ri ously
qu a lifi es th e stor y Stein er has give n u s. The possibl e
exce ption is S teiner 's depi ction of the m eti culous care
w ith w hi ch the " techni cia ns," as he ca ll s th em , went
abo ut perfecting th eir infern a l m ac hin e. The arc hitects of th e death camps a ppear as m as ter pl a nners
w ho, exce pt for th eir mi sjudgm ent of the J ewi sh will
to resist, r a n th e camps with a techni ca l expertise a t
once detac hed , controll ed , a nd precise. T o some extent
thi s was tru e, a nd Stein er uses hi s portra it of th e
" techni cia ns" to give us a se nse of th e deliberate ness,
th e fa mous Germ a n at tention to order a nd efficiency
w ith whi ch the higher offi cia ls- men not th em sel ves
directl y in volved in th e d ay- to-day m adness-oversaw th e opera ti on as a w hole.
W e now kn ow , how ever, th a t a gr ea t deal of sloppiness, of tria l a nd error, a nd a lso mu ch heavy d r inking
undermin ed th e powe r of these na m eless m en wh o
we re once thoug ht to be so full y in comm a nd . Th e
most va lu a bl e ev id ence com es from Gitta Ser eny 's
se ri es of in terviews w ith F ra nz Sta ngl, w ho had bee n
th e comm a nd a nt of Treblink a a t th e tim e of th e re volt.
H av ing Aed to Brazil by way of th e so-ca ll ed " V a tica n
E sca pe R ou te ," Stangl was extradited in 1967 (th e
year a ft er Treblinka ap peared ) a nd sen tenced to life
im p ri sonm ent in Du sseldorfR em a nd Pri son . During
th e las t days of hi s life he ag r eed to ta lk w ith Sereny,
and Into That D arkn ess, the record of th ei r encounter,
revea ls a m a n for whom fear a nd bew ilderment had
a lways been s pr ings of behav ior . Intelli gent a nd in
so me ways ge n u in ely hum a ne but neve r sure of
him se lf, S ta ngl was a man w ho was onl y, a nd oft en
with mu ch hesita ti on , doing hi s job as a dmini stra to r- a _job w hi ch in volved pa perwo rk more th a n
ac tion but w hi ch a lso, in S ta ngl's case , required a
la rge g lass of bra nd y so tha t slee p might com e after th e
stench a nd outcry of a ty pi cal da y in Treblinka .

I

T
The stages through which the prisoners
passed on their way to open revolt
can be seen as a regeneration of spirit
amounting a lmost literally to resurrection.

her e a re, as I have indi ca ted , sca tte red acco unt s
of surviva l in T reb link a. But onl y in S tein er 's
boo k do we get th e stor y of th e ca mp fro m its beg innings in th e su111111 er of 1942 to it s a brupt end on
Au g ust 2, 1943. And wh;1t m;ik es thi s story importa nt
is ;i hovc a ll it s endin g. So n ea tl y docs our ha bit o!'
bl a ming victim s mes h w ith th e idea that th e J ews
"we nt to their dea th lik e shee p" tha t ev id ence to the
cont ra ry goes unnoti ced . Bruno Bette lh eim , himse lf
a n "ea rl y" survivor of Bu chen wa ld and surely not a
sheep , has co ntribu ted more tha n a n yo ne else to thi s
mi sta ken noti on by in sisting th a t ca m p pri son ers
could not "see th emselves as full y a dult pe rsons," th at
th ey fell into an "a non ymous m ass" a nd be haved lik e
" in competent children ." S uch p rocla ma tions ignore
J UNE

19

�th e ca refull y ca lcul a ted , full y a dult tac ti cs th a t, ever ywhere in th c· concc ntra ti o n ca mps, th e pri so ne rs u sed
to cre;1tc und e rgro und o rga ni za tion s a nd ne two rk s of
res istance , thu s sav in g th ou sa nd s of lives. Ce rt ;1inl y
th e 13 ette lh c im th esis does no t acco unt fo r th e s m a ll
revolts w ithin va ri o u s ca mps, a ll of th em doom ed fro m
th e sta rt , not to m e ntio n th e W a rsaw G h etto upri sin g,
th e des tru ction of Sobibor , or th e hope less r evo lt of th e
Au sch w it z Sondercn mmando , w hi ch was ab le, be fo re
ba tta li o ns of SS troo ps m ac hin e-g unn ed th em down ,
to bl ow u p o ne of th e m a in crem a to ri a .
Th e stor y of Tre blink a not onl y di sc redits th e
"s hee p " th eo r y, it in stru cts u s a new in th e ca pacity of
th e hum a n s pirit to e ndure. 1'v1 en a nd wom e n brut a lized beyo nd hum a n recogniti on , ho pe less as we sha ll
never be ho pe less, a nd with a bso lutely no h elp or
en co urage m ent from o utsid e fo rces- th ese peo pl e
w e re neverth e less ab le to rega in a sen se of th eir own
worth as hum a n be in gs, o rga ni ze a sys tem of underg round res ista nce, suffer setback a ft e r se tback as
me mbe rs we re kill ed , secure a rm s und e r very ti g ht
su rveill a nce, a nd th e n m ove togeth e r , w ith o ne spiri t
a nd o ne a im , to su ccess full y shoot down th eir ca pto rs
a nd blow up th e ca mp . Th e ir a im ::' Th e " mi ss io n "
th a t ca rri ed them throu g h month s a nd m o nth s of
des pa ir in a project tha t from th e beginnin g seem ed
in sa ne? T o bea r witn ess. To rise up a nd fi g ht aga in st
im poss ibl e odd s so th a t o ne-a t leas t o ne pe rso n
a m o ng th e m -wo uld survive in a bsolute o bliga ti on to
te ll th e w o rld wh a t th e n a m e " Tre blinka" ha d com e to
sig nify .
· C o nsid e r th e cos t, the m ora l d a m age, of such a n
u nd ert a kin g. /\ su ccessful ba ttl e could ta ke pl ace onl y
throu g h th e co ll ecti ve act io n of pri so ne rs w ho ha d
stayed a li ve lo ng eno ug h to orga ni ze th em se lves in to
ri go ro us fi g hting units. You ca nnot wage w a r w ithout
pl a nnin g , w ith out lea ders, wi th out a strik e for ce
di vid ed into specia li zed squ a ds, each w ith its _a ppoin ted tas k. But a n y su ch o rga ni zati on , es p ecia ll y if
it mu st sta rt from nothin g, ta kes tim e , a nd tim e in
Treblinka mea nt o ne thing onl y: surviva l. Pri soners
sta yed a li ve by killing others so th a t th e killin g it self
rn uld be sto pped a nd th e crime be m a de kn ow n . Th e
logic of thi s p redi ca m e nt w as as te rribl e as th e pl ace
itself, a n in to le ra bl e to rm ent som e how to be bo rn e if
life and res ista nce we re to support each oth e r.
G ivc n th e cxtrc mit y of th e ir initi a l dcg ra d a t io n , the
stages throu g h w hi ch the pri so ne rs passed o n the ir
way lo open revol t ca n he see n as a rege ne rat ion of
spirit ;1111ounting almost lite ra lly to res urrection . Th e
first st;1gc of revo lt , th e first hum a nl y pos iti ve an in
thi s de rnoni c;1ll y perver ted world , was sui cid e. i\t
so m e point , pri son e rs bega n to see th a t by ta kin g th e ir
own li ves th ey co uld th e reby say No lo Treblink a, a nd
durin g th e ea rl y m onth s th e re w e re m a n y su icides
each ni g ht. But th e n the second s tage asse rt ed itse lf.
/\s pri son ers bega n to kno w a nd tru st each o th er ,
esca pe beca me poss ibl e. Tra in s loaded w ith th e clo thing a nd possess ion s of th e dead we re co ntinu a ll y
lea ving th e ca mp , a nd , with th e coo rdin a ted he lp of

I

20

QUEST/ 79

co mra des, a p r iso ne r could co ncea l him se lf in a loa ded
boxca r . Or , aga in w ith th e h elp of o th e rs, a p ri so ner
co uld m a ke hi s way to the o pen dit ches wh ere th e dead
we re pil ed a nd , lying th e re as if dead , a w a it ni g htfa ll
to craw l from th e g rave, slip und er th e w ire (not
e lect rified as in Au schwitz), a nd brea k for th e for es t.
So m e a tte mpts fa il ed , o th ers su cceeded , a nd t heir
su ccess tell s us two thin gs. P eop le o utsid e th e ca mp
ce rta inl y did kn ow w hat was go ing o n in sid e. But a lso,
in thi s seco nd ph ;1se of defi a nce . small unit s of coopera ti on beca m e es ta bli shed a m o ng the pri so ne rs. w hi ch
not o nl y ge ne ra ted a reb irth of hope but sta rted th e
process of tru st a nd coll ective orga ni za ti o n w itho ut
whi ch th e third a nd fin a l stage could neve r have
occurred . i\nd just as esca pe rul ed o ut sui cid e, th e
stage of a rm ed revo lt rul ed ou t esca pe. Wh ere th e help
of eve r yo n e w as needed , sui cid e and esca pe beca me
person a l lu x uri es. To burn down th e camp a nd
release pri so ner s in numbers la rge e noug h to in sure
th e sur viva l of ;tt leas t a few, no thing less th a n a n
absolu te comm u nit y of ~tru gg le, tra nscending per o na l ho pe, beca m e th e o ne w ay to victory.
And hence th e va lu e of Freblinka , its hi storica l
impo rt as a slory . Th ro ug h tim e a de finite sequ ence of
ac ti o n g rew a nd asse rted it se lf, culmin a tin g in o ne of
th e m os t unlik e ly triumph s in the hi sto r y of hum a n
stru ggle. And with th e sto r y com es a new definition of
h ero ism . F o r if, in thi s age of to ta lit a ri a n gove rnm ent
a nd m ass murd e r , we a re tcrs pca k of h eroi sm a l a ll , it
m a kes sense on ly in te rm s of co ll ecti ve ac ti on deli bera te ly a nd oft en ho peless ly pitt ed aga in st e normous
stru ctures of ev il. I t ca nn o t be fr a m ed in te rm s of the
old he roi c ethi c, w h ere in th e indi vidu a l, as a n indi vidu a l, de fi es powe r a nd w illin gly di es fo r a g lo ri ous
ca use . The re is no g lo r y a nd , in a w o rld w he re death
rul es, d ying fo r a n ything at a ll becom es stu pid ,
becom es a bdi ca ti o n . V e ry few of th e pa rti cipa n ts in
th e Treblinka revo lt survived , but w ha t th ey foug ht
fo r was life.
W e li ve in da rk tim es a nd th e sto r y of Tre blinb is
wo rth kn ow ing . It is w o rth holding to w ith a ll th e
soul 's streng th . It is, th at is to say, a n exa mpl e of w ha t
a ha ndful of hum a n be ings can do, of s piritu a l da m age
susta in ed without ca pitul a tion , a nd lik ew ise of a bsolut e power w hi ch tu rn s o ut to he less tha n a bso lute.
i\ nd it re mind s us, les t we o ve rlook a s ig nifi ca nt fan,
that in th e Mil g ra m ohccli e ncc ex pe rim ents, w hi ch I
m e ntion ed ea rli er , if two-third s of t he voluntee rs did
as th ey we re o rdered , o ne-third did no l.
Th e st ru ctu res of ev il g ro w m o re sop hi stica ted ,
m ore finel y tuned a nd orga ni zed . Th ey proli f'c r;ttc
a nd int e rl ock and a id c;1ch o th e r and cove r th e pl ;1tH'l
a nd beg in , lik e th e I l o loca ust, to a ppea r overw he lming. Wh en gove rnm ent s ac ross th e face of th e ea rth ,
no t ex cluding o ur ow n , a re p re pa red to sac rifi ce
po pul at io ns a nd s hoo t clow n protest in a n y form ,
w hen da rkn ess begin s to see m to ta l, proo f to th e
co ntra r y beco m es in va lu a bl e. Wh a t hap pened at Trebl ink a is proof lo th e contra r y, a nd on su ch ha rd ra re
p roof o ur hum a nness de pe nds.
~

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Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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                  <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Special Collections &amp; University Archives</text>
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l

•

·'

Nixon Found a Close ·Friend ·in Hom.anian _Nazi
United Feature Syndica te

•

_,_,

ANOTHER BLACK chapter in
Richard Nixon's history has been hidden in secret government files for
~~ nearly three decades. As a California
senator in 1951, Nixon eagerly assist" ed one of Europe's most notorious
and wealthy Nazi collaborators to rel
main in the United States and keep
. the Midas-like fortune he had reaped
· · from the suffering of his persecuted
countrymen during World War 11.
The mysterious Nazi was a fabulously rich Romanian industrialist
named Nicolae Malaxa, whose farflung financial empire provided
tanks and guns tc the vicious Iron
Guard, noted for its zealotry in perse., cuting the Jews and maintaining Hit7
Ier's reign of terror in Romania.
Malaxa was a Howard Hughes-like
business wizard whose character included equal parts of amoral ruthlessness and unbridled Just for money. He fled to the United States in
September 1946 and remained here
until his death in New Jersey in 1965.
His real-li fe adventures In the United
States were more bizarre than any
fictional account.
This column followed Malaxa's
double-dealing, including his ties
. with Nixon, from the · moment the
Nazi sympathizer first alighted on
l ·u.s. soil. Now the shameful history of
Malaxa'i, collaboration with top
American officials has been fully
documented in recently declassified
files obtained by Sen. Max Baucus, DMont., who is investigating Nazi ac_tivities in the United States.
Malaxa's fiight to America was dis• •honorably aiped by a host of highranking U.S. government officials,
diplomats and Wall Street lawyers,
many of whom actually went to work
for Malaxa, although they knew
about his · fascist, money-grubbing
background.
To their shame, -immigration
bosses schemed to allow Malaxa to
stay in the United States, ·even after
&lt;

}·

I

· -.after visiting Canada, Nixon .tobbiec
· hard for Malaxa's cause.
1:
Pennis.sion was initially ptt&gt;pe_rl)
denied, but Malaxa won an appeal
and the favorable decision was af•
•firmed by then-Attorney General Wil•
.
Uam •Rogers, .another Ni_xon 1rieild.
.
. ,curiously, after Malaxa . got'&gt;,- back
being briefed by th~ CIA on his unsa- . through the border, .•plans "Jor.' ~e
vory background, according to these- ,plant slowly faded into obUVion. _ ·
cret files. · ·
'
. ~he late FBI chief J:.Edgar Hoover
In one confidential memo, .then- ,and ·othet' intelligence bosses :were
CIA Assistant Director Lyman Kirk- -: also - aware- of Ma:Iaxa's unsavory
patrick told Immigration executive past, but took no action against him.
W.W. Wiggins tha~ "(Malaxa) ls con- · .. An Internal Revenue Service insidered entirely ,pnscrupulous • · · a. vestigation disclosed that Mala,pi had
,dangerous type of man ,1rom the given fancy Cadillacs to as many ,as
standpoint of ~Ing an op.~~nent of a ,; ,. '56 'influe·ntial people, ,1ncluclirig th~
truly democratic regime .JD R~ma- , , ,wife of,one leading Washington ,offinia.
·
cial,. puring the days when some of
The CIA further divulged that Ma- the same "red baiting" ~polltic~ans.
laxa gained his own ends "through were publicly pillori~ State J)epartbrlbery" and "ls positlv~ly known to merit clerks and movie stars for ~eir
have thrown his support _a t on~ .time alleged Communist c:~nnections. :
or another, to the warious totalitarian · · In the end Malaxa's' blood-tairtted
regif!les" which ruled oppr~d Ro- _. golden hoard spoke -iouder ~:.the
mama.
,
•few olficials protesttng the notonous
Malaxa found American greed as Nazi's presence in a country where
hospitable as the Nazis. He regained - thousands of families had lost loved
a large portion of ~is huge fort~me . _pnes t.o the unspeakable -cruelties of
and used it to stay in the United the vicious Iron Guai:d Malaµ so fa•
States, with ~e friendly belp o~ .a natically supported.
number of congressmen, lncludmg
).., •
cronies of Nixon's, who introduced
private bills on his behalf, sources
told our associates Jack M1tcheH and
Gary Cohn.
.
The documents reveal "that when
Nixon was a senator, he was unduly
concerned about Malaxa's fin~cial
progress. Jn 1951, for example, he
urged the Defense D~partment to
permit the Western Tube Company to ·
build a plant in California to manu- ·
facture seamless tubing for oil wells.
Western Tube'Streasurer, curiously,
was none other than Malaxa, and the
vice president or µie com~any was an
old Nixon friend.
When the Romanian Nazi found
himself ·10 danger -of being banned
from re-entry into the United States

•

Jack
Anderson

--------

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                    <text>ZATERDAG I JUNI 1954

TIEN JAAR GE:LEDEN:

..
.Een gra.ndzoze

·z·t "

mi, ,z. a,i .re

·.. ; i--"-. ~-

----

' INVASIE-

opera t·
.ze

bracht dageraad der vrijheid
Op het uur-H werd de Atlantik
Wall doorbroken
(Van ~en onzer redacteuren}

V

OOR MIJ liggen drie tekeningen. Het zijn impressies van voedselbren•

gende vliegtuigen, grote in de lucht zwevende pa;k.~ette!}, L ~gertrucks
,van de Canadezen. Ze werdèn gemaakt, nu negen Jaar geleden, op een
Noordhollandse dorpsschool door Piet Broekhuizen, Antje Willemsen e~ · Kees
J aruen. Antje kleurde in de linke~bovenhµe;k. een grote rood•- wit-hliluwe vlag.
Kees schreef onder de leger~agens met- hoekige letters WELC0ME. Piét en
Kees heb ik na die laatste Meidag~ n van 1945 niet meer gezien. Antje is misschien wel get'l:.ouwd, al wilde ._ze t!)en graag verpleegster worden. Maar de drie
tekeni~g~ zijn mij lief geworden om.dat ze ontstonden op zo'n ,•hijzo~der
momen,t, omdat·ze wellicht nooit gemaakt zouden zijµ zonder D-day, juiiit op .
die zesde Juni 1944, omdat ze nooit op die geliniëerde velletjes zouden zijn gekrabbeld als Hitler&amp; bluf géén bluf was gebleken, als .de Führer eerder over
zijn vliegende hommen had k~nnen beschikken en zijn gelee;rden hij hun
pogingen ait'oomwapens te coDBtrueren meer geluk hadden gehad.

,,
· Dit is Johnny Parks uit Mill
Creek in lndiana (USA). Ook liij
kwam ·naar Normandië. Deze foto
werd genomen .t ijdens een gevechtspauze, toen Johnny even
uit zijn tank was gestapt. Hij
vocht met veel succes, doch viel
later in de strijd. voor een vrij
Europa, voor ons.

Angst -omknelde ons ·hart, maa,r he·t. moes t

werdèn aangevallen. Dat wordt je 'dood
bij daglicht, dacht ik, toen ik in de
·
• ,
, kó1:?alt~lauwe, lucllt dè_ l:io!11fflen uit de
vliegtuigen zag neerzwaBlen. De apKEES EN PIET en ook René Legrange uit Caen zouden op dit moment misschien voor de Duitse heer~-~sl 1P~l,roene zee als ~en vulkaan omhoog·
b 'd
·h
'• · d
· b
b
p
l · d'
b k d B •
l /!Poot. Ik ·had gelijk het gevoel of de
d wangar
ei verric ten in e som ere ossen van ommeren a I niet ie twee on e en e , . nt,e so • tw:~eld én mijn hart bleven stilstaan. ·I k
daten vele maanden vóór D-day in een kleine bàot, de dood trotserend, naar de Normandische kust waren &gt;hoorde nog in de onbarmhartige \vóesop de . stranden •zandmonsters te halen opdat kon worden vastgesteld waar uiteindelijk ,tij~ oij Tobroek de gr!lnaten· 'vlakbij
g eroeid om daar
.
.
.
' · · _
· • mij ontploften. Je kreeg een gevoel
de zware geallieerde tanks· aan land zouden kunnen rollen. Als niet ontelbare kikvprsmann,;n in de · over je, al.sof je, zoals ·een Londénaàr
vroege uren van D-day binnen vijf uur ond~r de ontstelde ogen vdn de vijand meer dan 3000 ,tälen ver- 'he~ z_o u . uitdrukken, ,,spiernaakt de
·
· d
• • d -k · h dd •
bl
·
,P!.çc.~dil!Y ~reus ci;vèr~ak". Ook deze
1perrmgen in e _zee ~oor • e u,t a . en opge azen.
.
.
.
•
. '.tQclit droeg m_e t zich d~ aµgst in allerlei
Europa zou misschien nog gebukt liggen onde_r _de ·knoet van de SS al, de Brit Hughe, Hallett niet op h~t 1g~gl\anten. • Je wist, dat er geen uitgeniale idee was gekomen om een machtige, drijvende haven van .beton te doen construeren om later voor' -w~g was.. ?et .zou onvermijdelijk zijn
"k
k
k
~ d
als het guillotme-mes.
·

,onzichtbaar bleef. Wij zouden ze spoedig genoeg zien ....
pichter de kust ·naderencl, hoorden
wij reeds de. scheepskanonnen bulde.ren. (Zes~onderd kanonnen schoten elken· 10 mmuten 2000 granaten af op de
Duitse bastions, die de nacht tevoren
al door de RAF waren gebeukt. met
5200 · ton bommen)._. Al ga1;1w werden
gele en rode flikkermgen zichtbaar en
zagen wij de granaten een grijze en
.en: groenbruine kleur uitspuwen in àe
,vijaµdelijke verdedigingswerken
en
heuvelen. Achter elkaar vuurden de
grote oorlogsschepen.·
~achtig hieven de negen 630 m.,.m.
kanonnen van de "Rodney" hun enorde F ranse k ust h. et noo d za k eliJ e wer te unn,en oen.
.
.
me, vlammende lopen. Onder de béHet ilagen van D-day was afhankelijk van talloze kleine toevalligheden. Eén enkele ogenschijnlijk ge• INk een ~g-zag-;:1f' vo!gde: wij ~nz~ sclierming. van een rookgordijn voeren
ringe mi&amp;rekening kon de gehele operatie doen mislukken Da~ waren d 70.000 tran_
· sportwagens ~er• , oers.. t,oven _ed .w a der Frmg een ,kl\~et: •w:ij ~lan~aam nadl;!;· Ons . tankontl~:
..
.
.
. ••
•
·
e
..
•
.zomermis waar oor e
anse• us dingsschip hees ziJn amphieboten. WJJ
geefs bi1eenge~racht in de i1_!schepingshaven,, dan had de enor!"e armada va~ bi1na 5000 schepen .geen,
,klommen 'er in en bevonden _ons spoerd
zin gehad. Enorm wa, daarom de ápanning in de kleine, witgekalkte villa in Cot,wold Hill's, waar Eisen• De machtige ·ve edigingswerken, ,dig op _het Wl\tei:; Onder het yijandelijk
'
' h
"d
'"d
t k
" 'l tb
k'
h d·
D ••
• -l
l'
d b -l' ,
welke de Duitsers tot ile Atlantilc
vuur ronkten wij naar de kust. Het
h.. ower
zie v~n tiJ . tot tiJ terug ro _om ZtJn ~- q e1p~e ingen te ou en. aar vie ten, otte e es iumg Wan hadden samengesmeed, wáren ,s~eepsgeschut bleef dreunen. Schepen
over de landingsplaatsen en de aller. belangrifkste, die van de datum, van het uur-·H.
niet bestand.. tegen de veren'iiîde Ivan allerlei klasse voeren aan. Amphi.
: aanvalskracht der We,telijke : geát~ fbie~tánks niet snelboten, kruisers, .t orlieerden. -Deze Duitse foto van Hein- . 'pefij?a~, •s~öepen vol-- mansçhappe,n;
enorme g!!v,olgen kon .hebben ten go.ede ·sp. erde vaargeulen w!'-r.en dank__ zij del· riêh en een. ,,dikke Bèrthä'1 11»ilile
·sleepbooten, lichters.
of ten· kwade... .
o_pnamen der ver_ltenru
_ ·n-gsvliegtuigen· de onoverwint_
ijkheid der, ncizi'j
.
lli
.
.
M
.
d
Wij t ·1d
d '
d
1
.;,...
l Iru,de nacht werden in .P.ortsm~en•l . ~kend! Tweehonderd
mijnenveg~s;,
·-,W:1i:#ic?c~#,zi~ev~fJ:};
e ba;:._.._0.:: v.eo.·.1 ,~lfo~ 0
......,-......_ _ _ _ _ _ _....,13u.~ rJ;~;..iU1.:1u;;:11e. __ _ _ ,in~yn,lOutli" ef! '\!~ ;Wd~~ .h11,vens a~ 1:&gt;~!!l!!ll,d '. met
·~~~e~:n~Ld::·:::-~ ~~-!ili•'~ ej_...:.:::::::.==::=::S::::::::::::::::::=:::::::.1"t:l'.S:::i~ !:S-..::=:- ~ ..._U~ë:,l.à=.

naar

~

1

:t:f!!I:J!~e

Zodra .de landingsvaartuigen hun
posities hadden ingenomen en
·
met
de bodem 1chuurden over
·
hét ruwe zand voór de Nonnanische kust, sprong de infanterie
te water om d9or de branding de .
vaste wat te bereiken, of ... soms
direct door vijandelijk vuur getroffen, neer te vaUén. Anderen
namen de plaats der gesneuvelden in. De deur in· de vesting
. werd. geopend.:

:derzeese ve~sperringen, leg~en_ wU aan
op het strand. De eerste ,redode Duitser hadden wij á.llanr achter ons &amp;'e•
_laten. De granaten suisden onophoudelijk over ons heen. Eén· raakte een

met g-eweren ,reladen vaartuig. Een ander sloer in een benzine-tankschip,
waarvan ter~tond ho,re v;uurs en rookzullen op11te,ren. Bebloed en verminkt
verdwenen Uclulmen lp i!,.e zuigln,r dt!r

golven. . Deze jonge doden worden verreten als niet ie~d erièlul .op de wereld ~~ ,r~'bed voor lien doe_; misschien wel · op het ogenblik zelf· van
'h · · d d
un oo .
,h'e.~wae
, ~~IDl'
_! ·.hi~blerwe~en
. r.erl·uidl!):àldeo
·~o-ll···.d
_..ho'oe!_

:~--n'fufJr'::.~·-

•

oe&gt;:

-

-

• - - - -•

�ALLES was gereed, doch het weer
scheen tenslotte de overtocht nog
onmogelijk te maken, De zee was t~
onstuimig. Als dat op 5, 6 en 7 Jum
zo zou blijven, zou de aanval moeten
worden uitgesteld, zou het ganse plan
van de invasie kunnen uitlekken en
wat dan? Pas in de morgenuren van
de vijfde Juni kon Eisenhower z~jn
besluit nemen. Nog was de zee met
kalm genoeg, maar het moest! Zes Juni
zou D-day zijn. Zes Juni zou in d~ volle
betekenis van het woord beshssend
worden. Om hal! zeven in de morgen
dienden de eerste landingen op de
Normandische kust te beginnen. En
voor daarná was alles bijkans van minuut tot minuut uitgestippeld. Zelden
in de wereldgeschiedems had één man
een besluit moeten nemen, dat zulke

Goebbels beweerde, dat de bevrijders door de Franse bevolking
( z.g. in verband met de verliezen
onder de burgers en de verwoestingen) met v erachting werden
gemeden. Hoe het werkelijk was,
laat de ze foto zien. De "tricolore:'.
hangt na zo vele jaren weer vr1J
aan de gevel. Zie de verheugende
boerin eens! Frankr ijk werd bevrijd en het voelde. zich dolge•
lukkig.

trossen losgesmeten, klonk uit één van'
de landingsboten de gramofoonplaatstem van Bing Crosby, die zong over
Sweet Leilani" en ging het voor~aarts. De mannen, de Britten, de
Amerikanen, de kanonniers van de
N~erlandse oorlogsschepen "Soemba"
en "Flores", zij wilden doen wat er te
doen stond. Zij voelden in hun hersenen de opdracht trillen van de Opperbevelhebber, die hij hen meegaf in de
strijd: ,.De ogen van gans de wereld
zijn op U gevestigd. De gebeden va_n
alle vrijheidslievende volken begeleiden U. Wij gaan tesamen de overwinning tegemoet. Wij zullen niet meer
halt houden voor de beslissende eindoverwinning. Laten wij Gods zegen afsmeken voor dit grote en goede werk".
En zij, de mannen, zij begrepen het.
Zij zouden volhouden, zij zouden het
klaren.
.
De vloot 'voer door de nacht. Vierduizend schepen onder escorte van
twaal! grote slagschepen, tachtig torpedojagers, tientallen kruisers, onderzeeboten en torpedoboten. Op weg naar
de monding van de rivier de Orne en
St. Laurent sur Mer op het schiereiland Cotintin. Op weg naar de
stranden, welke de namen Utah, Omaha, Gold, June en Sword hadden gekregen. Op weg met talloze divisies,
tanks
munities,
voedselvoorraden,
. benzi~e. geneesmiddelen. De niet ver-

an öormensen, . allèn
,
hadden in het Kana!ll zoveel inogelilk l
onderwaterprojectielen opgeruimd. De
vloot kon komen.
DE oorlogscorrespondent van . ,,United
Press" Richard Mac Millan, aan
boord van één der tanklandingsschepen schreef over die ogenblikken:
"Boven onze hoofden gonsden al de
luchtarmada's met de parachutisten
(drie divisies). Het waren de moedige
mannen, die ik in Normandë zou ontmoeten, de ik zou weerzien in de onvergetelijlte nachten en dagen in Holland bij Nijmegen en Arnhem en in
de Ardennen. De mannen hier liepen
onrustig rond op het dek of leunden
over de railing, uitziende naar de eerste
glimp van de Normandische kust. Anderen speelden kaart of schreven een
brief naar huis" Maar aan allen drong
zich de gedachte op: Waar zijn wij
morgen om deze tijd? Wij stelden ons
van alles voor: Misschien zijn velen
van ons dan gedood of gewond, misschien ben je er zelf bij .. Ik herinnerde mij het onzalige gekkenhuis van 1
schietende scheepskanonnen en kruisers, toen wij bij het doorbreken van 1
de Middellandse Zee-blokkade naar
Malta, uit de lucht bij volle maan

De man aan
de top

Onkreukbaar en
onwankelbaar
trouw
}N die veldtocht bewees
Eisenhower (om zijn eigen
woorden te gebruiken) ,.dat
de geallieerden onder een
éénhoofdig bevel als één
natie oorlog kunnen vo eren". In 1944 voerde .hij als
opperbevelhebber bij
de
operaties tegen de kust van
West-Europa het bevel over
acht legers en vloot- en
luchtstrijdkrachten van acht
verschillende naties.
Hij
maakte er het hechtste militair verbond van, dat de
geschiedenis heeft gekend.
In het rapport, dat Eisenhower later over de periode
van 6 Juni 1944 tot 8 Mei
1945 voor
de verenigde
chefs van staven, die hem
zijn opdracht hadden ver. strekt, uitbra:::ht. concludeert hij: .,De Ver, Stalen

,!

. . . . ... .......

LATER werpt Richard MacMillan
( Van D-dag tot V-dag", Elsevier,
Bru;sel) nog een blik op de gevechtsterreinen. Hij zegt dan: ,.Waar de Britse luchtlandingstroepen waren neergekomen, lagen over de korenvelden en
langs de heggen de wrakstukken van
de zweefvliegtuigen. (Er namen 1400
van dergelijke toestellen aan de operatie deel. Elk toestel vervoerde 120 volledig uitgeruste mannen, Allen tezamen
vormden deze vliegtuigen een stoet
van 80 km). De geraamten van de
toestellen staken nu vreemd af tegen
de lucht. Beneden ons zagen wij de
Schotse troepen vechten in' een weide,
die vol lag met dode en stervende
paarden. Het deed denken aan liet
slagveld van Waterloo .... Op de rechterflank gingen Amerikaanse amphibie-tanks bij het bruggenhoofd Carentan in vlammen op. Daar vielen de do•
den bij massa's toen de Duitse geschutsstellingen van bovenaf met kanonnen en machinegeweren het zand
doorwoelden".

DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER

GENERAAL Dwight D. Eisenhower, de man, die ~e
teugels van de enorme operatie "Overlord", de invasie
op de kusten van Frankrijk in handen hield en daarna
de opt,·ekkende geallieerde strijdkrachten n~ar de over•
winning leidde, was een opperbevelhebber m de meest
volstrekte zin des woord,. In Decembe'. 1941_, toen
Amerika in oorlog kwam, was de toe?t!fl~hge . luitenantkolonel Eisenhower al 26 jaar beroepsmilitair. In het leger
had hij de manschappen opgeleid, legerzaken .. beh_andeld
en eschiedenis bestudeerd. Dit laatste was zi;n liefhebberiÎ Hij was als hoofdojficic!r nóóit bij de troep ge~eest.
E!f ~aunden later voerde hij het bevel over de geatlteerde
invasie van Noord-Afri~a, toes no17 de. grootste onderneming van die,i aard m de geschied1mis,, •

J

· ·1\'arcn àp I&lt;'ran..°" bodem. WWûrölf&amp;'~
de Vestinr Europa binnen. Het llchl
der vrijheid becon te cloren!"

en Groot Brittannië hebben
niet slechts als bondgeten samengewerkt, doch als
één enkele natie, al hun
hulpbronnen,
mens.€:n ~-n
materiaal hebben ZIJ gel!Jkelijk tegen Duitsland in de
strijd geworpen. De expeditielegers, die ik de eer
heb gehad te mogen leiden,
zowel op de slagvelden
rondom
de Middellandse
Zee als in Noordwest Europa, werden beheerst door
een geest van samenwerking die zijns gelijke niet
heeft in de wereldgeschiedenis".
Naijver
voortsp~iten?e
uit nationale gevoehghe1d,
kon niet altijd worden vermeden
maar was niettemin hoge uitzondering. En
de wrijving, die zich nu en
dan voordeed, was bovendien merendeels het gevolg
van invloeden van buitenaf.
HET geheim van E!senl~?wers succes lag m z1.1n
pc,·soon. Hij is bescheiden,
openhartig en vlug van be-

sluit en even bereid anderen te prijzen als zijn eigen
:fouten te erkennen, aldus
een artikel in het door de
Amerikaanse Voorlichtingsding in ons land uitgegeven blad "Kijk". Toen de
Amerikanen bij de Faid-pas
in Afrika waren verslagen,
werd er bitter geklaagd, dat
Amerikaanse en Britse afdelingen door elkaar waren
gelopen. Toen hem dit ter
ore kwam, verklaarde Eisenhower "Als de afdelingen
door elkaar hebben gelopen rlan treft de blaam mij".
Eisenhower kon streng
zijn. Hij stond er op, ~~t
zijn troepen er behoorhJk
uitzagen en was nauwgezet
in kwesties van etiquette.
Maar zijn vriendelijk en
informeel optreden hebben
hem bemind gemaakt bij de
troepen van alle naties. In
een rede, welke hij kort na
het einde van de oorlog in
Europa uitsprak, schreef hij
zijn eigen succes toe aan de
mannen, die onder hem
hadden gediend. Dat tekende hem. En hij voegde er
aan toe: ,.Ik weet wat zij
willen, zij willen vrede.
Ieder onzer met goed begrip
wenst, dat gewone mensen
in de gemeenschap der geallieerde volken de gelegenheid zullen hebben voorwaarts te gaan naar grotere
welvaart, niet voor óns rond
deze tafel, maar voor de
volken, die wij vertegenwoordigen.
Dát betekent
vrede".
In "The Illustrated Londen News" schl'eef Cyril

Falls in dat eerste jaar na
de oorlog: ,.Het zal over
jaren gemakkelijker zijn
Eisenhowers plaats te bepamaar niemand kdn twijfe-

len aan zijn geschiktheid,
als strateeg en tacticus.
De geschiktheid van de generaal berustte niet slechts
op zijn talent als organisator, doch tevens op zijn onkreukbaarheid en onwankelbare trouw".

HARD en bloedig was de strijd. Op
die zesde Juni, 's middags om
twaalf uur stelde Churchill het Lagerhuis formeel in kennis van de bevrijding van Rome en de landingen in
Frankrijk. .,Tot dusverre melden de
. bevelhebbers, dat alles volgens plan
verloopt." In de middag stelde hij ook
Stalin van de actie op de hoogte. De
maarschalk antwoordde prompt uit
Moskou, dat het grote zomeroffensief
in het Oosten, zoals in Teheran was
afgesproken, op 22 Juni zou beginnen.
Na 24 uur van bittere gevechten
leverden eenheden van het Britse
Tweede Leger en de Canadese Derde
divisie straatgevechten in Bayeux. Het
Amerikaanse Zevende Corps rukte
met tanks landinwaarts en men had
radio-contact
gemaakt
met
de
Amerikaanse en Britse parachutisten.
die zes uur vóór de landingen al waren afgesprongen om vernietigingsacties tegen geschutsstellingen uit te
voeren en bruggen voor vernietiging te
beveiligen. De toestand op de oeven
van het riviertje de Vire, landingsplaats van het Amerikaanse Vijfde
Corps, was onri..stwekkend, maar niet
zorgbarend. Na vijf dagen waren reeds
16 geallieerde divisies in Normandië
geland. Op 12 Juni was 120 km. van de
kust in geallieerde handen. Hier en
daar was · men al 30 km, het land
binnengedrongen.
In een langdurige slag bij Caen wist
Montgomery de Duitse hoofdmacht
vast te houden en talloze Duitse tanks
werden er voorgoed onschadelijk gemaakt. Het zou nog twee maanden
duren eer Parijs bevrijd kon worden.
En nog schreef een onbekende dichter
in het bezette Nederlandse gebied,
dat zo verlangend naar de vrijheid, een
barre winter tegemoet zou gaan:
.Wij zijn zo moe van te lang
wachten, God,
Zo moe van te lang strijd en
te lar1g smeken.
Maar zo Gij ons alsnog verlost,
o God,
Geef, dat wij vóór die dag
niet zijn bezweken.

�..-~-•

-------- ---- . --------·

ZATERDAG lS JUNI 19154

Vrij Nederland

Trouw

Het Paro·ol

Das Reich

"Erg vervelend dát we nu niet uit
Duinkerken weg kunnen"

Times

Reacties van verdrukt volk en
onderdrukker op de invasie

ZOWAS
MONTY

_,, Voor 'teerst hebben wij weer 1 ,
het licht gezien''

WAT IS MONTY voor een
man? Met enkele typeren~e
voorbeelden van zijn optreden
kenschetste A. P. Herbert,
M.P. in de "Daily Telegraph"
• van 28 Maart 1945 deze mili•
tair, die onder generaal Eisen•
hower het · bevel voerde over
de geallieerde expeditionnaire
legers, die aan de invasie op de
kust van Normandië deel•
namen. Misschien mag ik pro•
beren, aldus Herbert, hierop
een antwoord te geven.

HET IS ongemeen boeiend thans, nà tien jaar, te lezen welke de reacties waren op de eerste berichten van de inva.sie in Normandië,
zowel in de ondergrondse pers als in oHiciële Duitse bladen. Tenslotte
_willen wij even stilstaan bij de wijze, waarop het bekende Britse dagblad
de "Times'' zijn lezers het grote nieûws mededeelde.
Met ingehouden adem wachten wij
het ogenblik af, waarop het burgerlijk
verzet in Nederland gekoppeld zal
kunnen worden aan de militaire aanval. In straffe zelftucht en in stipte
gehoorzaamheid aan de orders der regering en de bevelen van het geallieerd opperbevel, en zó alleen, zal ons
volk, zowel door DOEN als door
QNDER de juichende kop: 6 Juni 1944: LATEN, medewerken aan de bevrijDecision Day. De legers der bevrij- ding.
ding bestormen West-Eur'opa. De be&amp;lissende aanval is -begonnen. De grootste militaire ondernemnig van alle tijden is aan de gang, schrijft VRIJ NE·
DERLAND in die eerste Junidagen o.a.:
Strijdend en hopend zijn wij tezamen
de duistere nacht van de Duitse heer- ~ VOOR de samênstelling van ~
schappij doorgetrokken. Hoop en wan- ~
deze pagina's hebben wij ~
hoop hebben elkaar in de jaren 1940,
o.a.
mogen putten uit de ~
'41, '42 en '43 afgewisseld, maar than5t
op de vroege morgen van de zesde Jum ~ grote hoeveelheid uniek ma- ~
1944 weerlicht de rode ochtendgloed ~ teriaal voorhanden in het ~ offers van een' mijnramp, aldus Pieter
~ 't Hoen. moesten wij wachten tot ons
van de vrijheidsdag boven West- N
Rijksinstituut voor Oorlogs- ~ van buiten hulp geboden werd. De redEuropa. De soldaten der geallieerden be•.
~
d
t
·
A
d
~
ders daarginds hadden echter een moeistormen de Atlantic-WaH. Van uur tott
ocumen atie te mster am.
lijk en langdurig werk. Terwijl zij hun
uur zijn onze gedachten en gebeden met ~ Ook
diverse hier gepubliceer- ~ voorbereidingen troffen, steeg ons het
de jonge mannen, die voor deze groo~~e
maar moeilijke en bloedige taak ZlJ!l ~ de foto's, waarvan sommige ~ water in de nood bijna tot aan de lip.t
d
d
~ pen en brachten ontelbare offers. Reeds
opgeleid. Laten wij naast onze vreugde N
over de komst van de bevrijdingslegers N me eer er on er ogen van ~ wanhoopten sommigen, ma~r dan wer9plaats geven aan de ernst van dit ver- ~ het publiek kwamen, werden ~ ploU!eling OI? de. zesde Jum, het eerst!:
schrikkelijke gebeuren. Er zal verbit- ~ ons door het Instituut in ~ g_~t m de g~1mm1ge muur geslagen. WIJ
.
.
.. .
~ z1Jn nog met ~~red, ~aar VO?r het
terd en bloedig gevochten moeten ~
worden, maar de troepen zij~- b~ter ~ bruikleen afgestaan. W11 wi!• ~ eerst _hebben WIJ weer hcht gezien. De
getraind en bewapend dan V!Jf Jaar N len op deze plaats voor die ~ bres is geslagen en zal steeds groter
..
~ ~orden, tot de volkeren van Europa
geleden en meer dan ooit overtuigd ~
~ medewerking "gaa~ne . onze ~ zich df:! weg kunn~i:i ~al!~n naar een
van de noodzaak van hun "hard job".
~ leven in zon en vr1Jhe1d.
De prijs voor de vrijh~id is ho~~• ~ grote erkentel11kheid uiten.
~
Ook Pieter 't Hoen wijst op het grote
maar ieder, die eenmaal m deze vr1J- ~
1belang van een weldoordacht verzet
~~~~~~~'s..~~/ZZZZ~~z.
heid geleefd en gewerkt heef~, weet,
dat · geen prijs te hoog kan z1Jn. Dat
hebben ook duizenden Nederlanders
bewezen, voor de executie-peleto~s, in
de martelkampen en de gevangeruscellen en in de dagelijkse strijd tegen de
onderdrukker. Dat zullen wij in de koTWHOII: IRITll
EERSTII: AMERIIC. LEGER
mende dagen, weken en maanden op'
LEGER
nieuw bevestigen. Jong en oud, vrouw
en man zullen daartoe zeker nog alle
gelegenheid krijgen. Heft uw hoofden
op volk van Nederland. Aan de kusten
va~ Normandië bulderen de kanonnen
der geallieerde vloten de eerste maten
van uw vrijheidslied.

!®c1&amp;rnl
l ~
I

Het Rijksinstituut

N

Toen rukten wij op, de Britten om
de Noord (bij Falaise), wij (de ·
Amerikanen) om de Zuid. Tevoren
waren dè Duitse colonnes op deze
weg door onze luchtmacht gebombardeerd. Zo ge ziet, met succes • ••

N
N

l

*

Nimmenneer zullen wij slaven ~-ijl!,

zijn ·moet worden afgewacht Mogelijk
is het een afleidingsmanoeuv·re. Mogelijk komt er nog een vierde, vijfde
front op de Europese kust. De vij_and
bezorgde ons 2een verrassing. De v)Jandelijke luchtlandingstroepen
hebb!';n
het zwaar. te verantwoorden en ZlJn
deels al opgeruimd."
Op zeven Juni zegt ditzelfde blad:
,,Het Duitse volk is er van overtuigd
dat het een zaak van leven en dood is.
De vijand speelt al zijn militaire kracht

I
I

Het verloop van de invasie in Normandië
1111 Gnlllnnll 11'!1111 op alddtrftaclll

.&amp;7J•t11,,
i1111110J1nltH•
AtlJVftltt«
- - - Grn1 ,tUUID flct lrflH trt

Aacrlkeo"•• leger

IOk

1

.,.

*

NADAT hij landde in Normandië
met een atlas in de zak en een
uitgewerkt plan voor de overwinning in zijn hoofd, is mij de eer te
beurt gevallen de veldmaarschalk
aan het front te mogen bezoeken.
Dit was in de week van de Fa•
. laise-saillant. Het hoofdkwartier,
een klein trailerkamp, bevond zich
in de buurt van het Bois de Cerisy,
een idyllisch plekje. Hoge bomen,
heerlijke zonneschijn. Door de dich•
te varens liepen konijntjes. Montgomery's dwaze honden: Rommel,
Keitel, Hitler en Co., waren aan het
stoeien .op een grote hoop camouflagenetten - en in de trailer van
de generaal zong een kanarie het
hoogste lied. Na ' twee maanden
van vliegende bommen boven Londen
was dit hoofdkwartier te velde een
vredige haven en ik genoot val) de
eerste rustige nacht ...
En tóch had de Chief, zoals zijn
ondergeschikten hém noemden, orders gegeven om voor het eerst die
nacht de Falaise-saillant onder
vuur te nemen. Langzaam maar
zeker werd het tenondergang gedoemde gebied van de wereld af•
gesloten.
In tegenstelling tot hetgeen men
zou verwachten. heerste er op dit
hoofdkwartier koortsachtige bedrij·
vigheid. Montgomery is van oordeel
dat de voornaamste taak van de
opperbevèlhebber is te denken.-:en hij staat erop dat daarvoor tijd
en gelegenheid 1s. En zo dineerd.~n
wij dan die avond, toen onder Z)Jn
bevel een van de bloedigste slagen
van de oorlog werd geleverd, in
een omgeving, die uiterlijk een vol•
komen rust ademde. Toch zaten we
nu niet wat men noemt gezellig bij
elkaar. Verre van dat. Deze onbe•vangenheid is welbewust en wetenschappelijk.
Na het nieuws van negen uur
gingen we naar de kaartenwagen
om te horen wat "de jongens" te
vertellen hadden. Deze "jongens"
~ij n_ de adj~ dan!~~. en de J~E;a~i~_:

van hem uit, maar hij is ook vol
van een gemoedelijke soort humor.
Later bv. gedurende het onverwachte offensief van Von Runstedt
in de Ardennen liet zijn humor
hem geen ogenblik in de steek. Op
het hoogtepunt van de crisis, want
een crisis wás het, zei hij bv.
's morgens aan het ontbijt: .,Erg
vervelend dat we dit keer niet uit
Duinkerken weg kunnen, want daar
zitten de Duitsers nu". · Als het
slecht gaat, is Monty op zijn beat.

,.NOOIT heb ik Montgomery zekerder van zichzelf gezien dan
op het ogenblik", schreef de Britse oorlogscorrespondent Alan Moorehead in zijn boek "Eclipse" over
de vierde Mei 1945 toen op een
woeste heuveltop op de Lüneberger Heide, in een tent de capitulatie van Duitsland een feit werd.
Het was even na vijf uur. Terwijl
het vuren langs het front wegstierf, werd een stilzwijgende wapenschorsing in acht genomen. In
de voorafgaande dagen waren al
onderhandelingen met de Duitsers
gevoerd. Nu riep Monty de oorlogscorrespondenten in zijn tent bijeen om hen de toestand uiteen te
zetten. De generaal was rustig, bijna opgewekt.

Toen hij halfweg was gevorderd,
-k :W~l'!L een koloriel binnen om te

�· God zelf ·zat onze · haven

.wären

zun . , • · · ·

HET NUMMER van TROUW van midden Juni 1944 lezen wij onder de
kop. ,.De Atlantik·'\\'.'~11 door,b ro~en".
Duitsland heeft al ziJn troeven uitgespeeld. De geallieerde hebben hun kaarten op tafel gelegd en zij hebben llet
sterkste spel. Dat is de betekenis van
de invai;iedag. West-Europa zal" a~n
zichzelf worden teruggegeven. VriJheid
Wij zijn optimist, omdat wij met
en Chr'..atelijke beschaving zullen weer Gerbrandy b id d e n om de overwinlevenskansen krijgen. Het Westen zal nir. g.
de overhand bekomen en - daar moeten wij voor zorgen - behouden over
Op wagens, paarden en op helden
dat afschuwelijke monster uit MiddenZij onze vijand stout
Europa, het Duitse Rijk.
Wij zullen de eer en grootheid
melden van God die ·01ts behoudt.
Teneinde zich tijdig meester te
kunnen maken van vitale punten
in het achterland, werd met een
lange reeks zweefvliegtuigen een
soort luchtlift van Engeland naar
Normandië ingesteld. De toestellen vervoerden elk 120 geheel uitgeruste manschappen. Een verlaten zweefvliegtuig (ze werden
door "motor"-vLiegtuigen gesleept)
in de buurt van het riviertje de

Orne.

UIIP~®l
....,

VIII) ONVERVEERD

...,.

JN HET PAROOL (no. 67 - 19 Juni
1944) ook al die vreugdevolle .. k~p
De invasie is begonnen - De vr]Jheid
~adert - Weest bereid". Als de slacht-

tegen de vijand. ,,Wij zullen moe~en
strijden met alle kracht, met alle list,
met alle kameraadschap die in ons is.
Deze oorlog maakt ons harder, droever
en wijzer. De hardheid is voor onze
vijanden, de droefenis is vooo.- onze
gevallen makkers. De wijsheid diene
ter voorkoming van zulke rampen voor
onze kinderen".
DE "DEUTSCHE ZEITUNG in den
NIEDERLANDEN" van 6 Juni 1944
toont hoe goed het verrassing~eleme1;1t
van de invasie werkte. Men wist nl. m
het kamp van de vijand op D-day nog
niet waar men eigenlijk aan toe was.
.,D-dag is begonnen". aldus dit naz_iblad . .,De spanning, die sedert weken m
Europa heeft geheerst, begint te v:erminderen. Het derde front vormt zich.
Of de landing op de kust. van. Normandië werkelijk de grote invasie zal

je-ep telkens ~grote , afstarièfen afleg-; ·
ieruggékeerd mët hun antden •om de situatie op te nemen.
woo'rd. Daarvan zou afhangen- of
Nu · komen ze ieder op hun beurt
er al dan ·niet een einde zoµ komen
naar de grote kaart aan de wand
aan tweeduizend dagen van dood,
om de Chief verslag te doen. ,,Het
vernietiging en ellende. ,,Zeg hun
21ste is het bos door . . . Bij de mote wachten" zei Montgomery en het
len is het een beetje modderig, de
volgende half uur ging hij voort
brug is opgeblazen, maar ze hopen,
met ons te spreken. De Duitsers
dat ze het met de ducks kunnen
hadden te wachten. Montgomery
klaarspelen. Het 44ste valt aan om
eindigde zijn oorlog precies zoals
0400 uur". Zo gaat het door .. . De
hij die begonnen was, volkomen
Chief stelt een paar vragen, m~ar
overtuigd dat hij gelijk had en dat
geeft weinig commentaar. Het liJkt
de dingen zouden marcheren zoals
haast of het zijn zaak niet is. Maar
hij dat wenste.
dit zijn de mensen door hem zelf
"En nu" zei hij tenslotte, ,,gaan
gekozen, die volgens zijn method_e
wij het laatste bedrijf bijwonen.
werken en men kan het met weiDe Duitse officieren zijn teruggenig woorden af.
keerd. Wij zullen gaan zien wat
hun antwoord is." Hij ging ons
HOE IS MONT~? Ik wilde wel dat
voor naar zijn stafwagens op de
heuveltop. De Duitsers stonden in
ge met hem mee had kunnen rijeen halve cirkel bij de conferenden zoals ik het op een middag heb
tietent met nauw aangehaalde riegedaan door Normandië, om te zien
men,
stram, zwijgzaam en zenuhoe de soldaten hem groeten, Halfwachtig. Toen Monty langs ons
naakte, zwetende pioniers aan het
kwam, mompelde hij goedgehuwerk langs de stoffige wegen kijmeurd: ,,Dit is een groot moment".
ken op, herkennen hem. schieten
Hij begaf zich -rustig naar de tent
overeind en groeten meestal zó buitenmodèl alsof ze willen zeggen:
en ging aan het hoofd van de tafel
zitten, die bedekt was met een
"Dit is m ij n speciale groet voor
mijn generaal". Hier voelde men
legerdeken. De voorlezing van de
de diepe betekenis van het militaire
capitulatie-formule duurde drie misaluut.
nuten. Toen hij geëindigd had, nam
Er is zo veel gesproken en ge&amp;chre•
Montgomery een ongeverfde postven over de zgn. .,asex?tische fikantoor-pen op, doopte deze in de
guur", die aan Cromwell zou doen
inktpot en zei tot de om de tafel
jdenken, die noo~t rocict ,en niet
zittende Duitsers: ,,Thans zult gij de
drinkt, die de Spreuken leest en
stukken tekenen".
de Bijbel aanhaalt, dat ik vermoed
Het zou dagen, weken, misschien
dat velen zich een verkeerd beeld
jaren duren voor wij de betekenis
van hem hebben gevormd. Deze
van deze dag in ons leven volkoman is niet gestreng. Er gaat zonmen naar waarde zouden kunnen
der twijfel een sterke geestkracht
schatten.

uit. Het Duitse volk brengt al zijn
ijzeren vechtlust, fanatieke beslotenheid en onbuigzame wil tot overwinnen in de strijd en zal deze voor zich
en voor Europa beslissen",

DAS REICH
D 1t U T I C. H t

W

1)

C II E N /1. lt I T tl N G

• • U llW ,._ lf&lt;IVU" I •

Nóg bluffende.r uiteraard is de taal
van dr Goebbels. Op 11 Juni 1944
schreef hij in zijn lijfblad "DAS
REICH": Nu hebben zij hun avontuur!
Ondanks alle eigen aarzeling hebbenzij het tenslotte onder Mciskou's eis
van een nieuw Westelijk front er op
gewaagd .. Zij namen daarbij een onberekenbaar risico op zich. Nu zijn ze op
de verenigde kracht van de Duitse
weermacht gestoten. Doch de Wehrmacht is volkomen klaar om ook deze
hoop van de Westelijke staten, door een
directe aanval op l!:uropa Duitsland
ten val te brengen, te verpletteren.
Op 25 Juni, toen toch wel duidelijk
werd, dat dit .. verpletteren" van de
geallieerde strijdkrachten geen peuleschil zou zijn, ook niet v.oor de "superieure" Duitser, . toen in de bezette
landen een kreet van vreugde was opgegaan over de nu toch naderende bevrij ding, wist Goebbels in "Das Reich"
te vertellen, dat hij berichten had ontvangen, dat de bevrijders in het reeds
door de geallieerde veroverde deel van
Frankriik "met koele verachting" waren ontvangen. ,,Onze kracht zal blijken onoverwinnelijk te zijn", zo vervolgde Josef G . .,Tenslotte zullen wij
zegevieren. Wel is ons front hier en
daar ingedrukt maar nergens doorbroken. Men hèeft de laatste troef uitgespeeld. Vele jonge mannen van de
vijand zullen nog in het gras moeten
bijten voor en aleer Churchill en Roosevelt zullen beseffen, dat ook deze
onderneming tot mislukken gedoemd
is .. .''

EN NU DE TIMES. Op de dag van
de invasie bevatte de editie van dit
oerdegelijke, statige Lo r. dense dagblad
nog geen enkel bericht over het grote
gebeuren. Wij vonden er slechts enkele
regels in ove-.r luchtbombardementen
op de Fran~e kust. En wie !!edacht zm1
hebben, dat de "Times" dan op de
zevende Juni het goede 1: ieuws met
vette letters op de voorpagina zou brengen, vergist zich evenzeer. Volgens,
wij zouden bijna zeggen eeuwenoude
1 traditie toonde de voorpagina ook nu
weer het gebruikelijke beeld van louter kolommen kleine vnl. familieadverterities. Slechts náást de kop van de
1Times stond de swniere mededeling

I

"Het gaat goed met de grote aanval".
Meer nieuws over de invasie kon men
eerst vinden op pagina vier van dit
nummer. Welk een tegenstelling met
de hoogborstige taal in de Duitse pers!
Maar wellicht was de bedachtzaamheid
en de kalmte van diezelfde Times een
afspiegeling van de weloverwogenheid
en de zekerheid van de zege, welke
rotsvast in de harten van de Britten
verankerd lag.
1

Waar zo bitter en soms wekenlang
om bepaalde punten in het landingsgebied moest worden gevochten, kon verwoesting van dorpen
en steden (Caen, St. Lo) niet uitblijven. Ook deze fraaie kerk met
prachtige altaren en schilderstukken ging verloren. De prijs was
hoog, maar voor bevrijding van de
onderdrukker moest alles worden
gewaagd om alles te winnen.

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•

/

'

•

/ ALiiMAARSCH.E EDITIE,

DllGB,llD VOOR

•
Deze

courant verschijnt dagelijb.
Abonnementsprijs per 3 maanden bij
voo1 uitbetaling voor Alkmaar .f 2.10;
fran co door het gebeele Rijk / 2.63.
Losse llt1.1JUDers 5 cents.' ·
Tel. Administratie (abonn., adver t.)
3320, Redactie 3330.

Prijs der gewone advertentlën ; / 0-10
per m.M" minimum 14 m.M.
1.40,
elke 31/• m.M. meer J 0.35. î al'ieve11
op aanvrage. Brieven aan de Uitg.
N.V. Boek- en Handelsdrukkerij v/h.
Her ms, Coster &amp; Zoon, Voordam . 9,
Alkmaa,r, postgir o 37060.

NOORD-HOLLAND
-:-::-:--:----:::--:--:-:---------.;.__--__,;,----------------,------------- 1ftfte Jaargang No. 168

% pagina's

Geme~nschappelijkheid
in front en doel.

ACHTERVOLGING DER
SOVJETS,- IN VÓLLEN
GANG.

r/ .

:Bolsjewistische colonnes
bij Rostof I vernietig~,

\

•

'

"

Redevoeringen van Haupt•
dienstleiter Schmidt en
van Geel.k erken.
Strijd tegen den sluikhandel.

( Pant,entrijdkrachten ln Egypte bult~n
\.gevJcht gesteld.

Spoorwegdoelen bij Moskou
aang eva Il en.
(

Duitsch legel'bericht.
HOOFDKWARTIER VAN DEN
~'UHRER, 20 -uuli (,D.N.B.) Het opperb~vel der weermacht maakt bekend:
In het Zuiden van het Oostelijk
~front zijn de achtervolgingsge, vechten in z. en o. richting weer
in vollen gang, na er een eind is
gekomell' aan den regenval.
Formaties gevechts- en slagvliegtuigen hebben vijandelijke colonnes
ten 0. van Rostof vernietigd, belangrijke etappe-verbindingen van
den vijand bij den mond van denDon vernield en de achtervolgingsgevechten in de bocht van den Don
doeltreffend gesteund ..
De vijand heeft ook gisteren met
sterke strijdkrachten het bruggehoofd Woronesj · aangevallen. Alle
pogingen tot herovering van de
stad werden in zware gevechten
afgeslagen, ten deele in tegenaanvallen met succesvollen steun van
de luEh~acht. Hierbij werden
van 60 aanvallende tan1's 36 vernietigd. .
·
In de omgeving van Moskou zijn
ove1·dag en 's nachts spoorwegdoelen met vernietigende uitwerking
aangevallen. Ten Z. van het 11.menmeer mislukten plaatselijke aanvallen van den vijand. Bij deze gevechten ~e_rd eei\ bolsjewistische groep
vermetlgd en 19 vijandelijke tanks
werden kapotgeschoten.
Het ~avengebied van Mq,ermansk
werd gisteren met bijzonder succes
gebombardeerd. In haveninstallaties:
autoparken en benzineopslagplaatseri
ontstonden groote branden. Jachtvlie~t1.tigen schoten hierbij boven de
ba_ai van Kola 17 ,vijandelijke v licgttagen neer.

Dinsdag 21 Juli 1942

Hoofdredacteur!\, R. JONKER, Alkmaar

In Noord-Afrika
wederzijdsche
gevechtsbedrijvigheid- van plaatselijke beteekenls.
Ten N.O. van Londen heeft een
gevechtsvliegtuigen overdag voltreffers geplaatst op een belangrijke
wapenfabriek.
In
h et
Duitsch-Nederlandsche
grensgebied heeft een Britsch vliegtuig gisteren enkele bommen laten
vallen op woonwijken. Het vliegtui~
werd omlaaggesèhoten.
De Britsche
luchtmacht heeft
's nachts met vrij zwakke , strijdkrachten 'n aanval gedaan op enkele
plaatsen aan de Duitsche bocht,
vooral de steden Bremen en Oldenburg. De burgerbevolking leed verliezen. Drie vijandelijke vliegtuigen
werden neergeschoten.
_
Bij de succesvolle afweergevechten op het bruggehoofd Woronesj
heeft een Silezische divisie. infanterie zich bijzonder onderscheiden.
Het jachteskader Udet heeft zijn
2500ste overwinning in de lucht behaald.
Italiaansch legerbericht.
ROME, 20 Juli (Stefani.) Het Italiaansche wcennachtbericht luidt als
volgt:
VijandelijJ,e aanvalspogingen zijn
afgeslagen j,1 den N. en Centralen
sector van onze stellingen aan het
Egyptische front. Ecnige gepantseràe strijdmiddelen · van den v~jand
werden vernield. Duitsche jagers
hebben een krachtige formatie Hmricanes aangtwallen en er 7 van
neergeschotc1,. Slechts atmosferische
omstandigheden beperkten de operaties tegen het eiland Malta,' waar
desondanks ('Cnjgc belangrijke doelen werden getroffen.
t

Timosjenko's nederlaag.

.

Prov. Kantoor van den Landstand 1n
N oord~l1olland.
neu worden. Alles, wat de La.ndOfficieele opening door den sta11d
tot nog toe deed, was slechts
boerenleider Roskam.
een voorbereiding, om de geheele

Een goed geontillee1·d gebouw,
waa,r in allen, ongeacht hun
gezindheid, die de boereneer
willen verdedigen, en voor
het boerenrecht willen opkomen, de v1·iendcnhand 1v-0nlt
gereikt.

leiding, van de voedselvoorziening te kunnen overnemen.
In kamcraadschappeJjjken

g·eest.

RO'I'TERDAM, 20 Juli. Wanneer 1
Vóór de officieele· opening hield
de politieke leiders der N. S. D. A.P.
de stafleider, de heer A. A. Roze11en N. S. B. iederen Zondag, nu eens
daal een rede, waarin hij betoogde,
1
in deze, dan in gene plaats in Nedat diegenen, die de toegestok~
derland, elkander in g"roote schohand nog steeds afwijzen, wel onder
lingsdemonstraties ontmoeten, dan
Gister(Maandag)middag werd. het zware narcose moeten staan, want
komt daarin de gemeenschappelijke
doelstelling van hun strijd, vooral gebouw van den Ned. Landstand in het ls onbegrijpelijk, dat zij nog
met hel oog op de groote taken, tai Noordholla.nd, dat gevestigd is in steeds niet tot de ontdekking zijn
uitdrukking, dte uit ~ groot-Ger- het voormalige Alkm;Jarsche burge• gekomen, dat de Landstand er niet
maansche gemeenschap reeds thans, meestershuis aan den K ennemer- is om hen dwars te zitten, maar
en vooréd in de toekomst, voort- straatweg 23, officieel geopend, in gaarne bereid is, ondan!i:s alle µiis-vloeien. De grootheid van die laak tegenwoordig'heid van den Presse- kennihg, die zij totnç,gtoe ondervormt de hechte en onverwoestbare referent voor Noordh1Jlland, Eggert, vond, op kameraadschappelijke wijbasis van vastberaden nationaal- den Landwirtschaftrat Ufer, den ze ook met hen den nieuwen opbot1,w
socialistischen wil. Op den voo}·- boerenleider Roskam, den prov. boe- ter hand te nemen. BlijKbaar wachgrond staat daarbij de beveiliging renleider J. Saal, de lundbouw-, vee- ten zij op het oogenblik, dat hun
van de Europeesche ruimte tegen de teelt- .en tuinbouwconsulenten, de overwinning komt en Wij, ·aldus :.pr.,
(Polygoon-ZeylemakerJvernielende krachten van het bolsje- leden van den próv. raad en dé lei- onze matjes kunn~n oprollen. Ik kan
ders ,van de bedrijfsgroepen. Ter
DE VERJAARDAG VAN DEN wisme en de beveiligin_g . van. hei eere van deze feestelijkheid w.1pper- hen echter de / verzekering geven,
Westen tege11 democratie en rmpe- tiè een aantal Landstandvlaggen mat dat zij dit oogenblik niet zullen be- \
leven en dat het niet zoo heel lang
RI.T"KSCOi\T..\llSSARIS .
rialisme. Onbegrijpelijk is het derdaarboven de Oranje-Blanje-Bleu- meer zal duren, vóór zij tot d e
Zijn levensloop. halve, dat er _nog steeds vel~ . mei:i- vlag van den gevel.
scl1Tikbarende ontdekking komen,
Op 22 Juli _ den verjaardag va•l schen, zijn, die ~e noodzakel!J~~eid
De officieele ope_ning ges_chiedde dat wij in den tijd, waarin· zij slieden Rijkscommissaris _ worden in v~. dezen
gei:neenschap_J?.ehJken door den boerenleider, hoofd van pen, onzen plicht hebben gedaan en
breéden kring beschouwingen aan str1Jd vo9rgeve1'. m et t~ - begriJpen of den Nederlandschen Landstand, den een werk tot stand zullen hebben
diens persoonlij kheid en iobpbain ook werkeliJk met beguJpen.
,heer Roskam, die betoogde, dat d_e
&lt;&gt;ewijd
l
•
Nadat des ochtends de plaatsver- internationale wereldmacht vanuit gebracht, waarvan zij versteld zullen staan. Spr. gaf den boerenleider
0 Dr. Seyss-Inquarl woonde in zijr vangende
s~h~l~gsleider Kullmann Londen .e n New-York, die ons boe- en den provincialen leider de verzejongensjaren in het oude marktdmu en de vormmgsleider der N. S. B., rendom liet zuchten onder de macht kering. dat de staf van het bt1Ieau
Stannern in het Duitsche bevd-- van Gen~chten, gesproken. hadden van grootkapitaal en wereldtnist, Alkmaar bereid is, zich voor de volle
kingseiland Iglau
over de idee van het natio~aal-so- voor goed voorbij is.
100 pct. voor dit werk in te z~tten
_'.-['oen de wereldoorlog uitbrak Wil$ cialisme, nam in de vergadering de_~
Op het oog,enblik hcerscht maar en dat zij onder alle omstandighe-&lt;
hJJ student in de rechten. Hij onder- middags h~t eerst de -plaatsve1 één wet voor het economische leven den, op dezen staf iullen kunnen re~~·ak_zifn studie en stond als keizer- vangend~ leider der N. S. B.. van en wel deze: de oorlog; moet gewor~- kenen. Spr. verzekerde, ervoor te
hJk Jager aan het Isonzo-fronl en ~-~ Geelkerken, het woord.
zullen waken, dat de geest op het
è!en 001:log v~ltooide hij zijn studie
Als een roode draad liep de nabureau er eene van kameraadschap
~n vestigde zich vervolgens als adnadruk op de gemenschappelijke de Duitsche legers ouk door dit ge- zal blijven.
,-ocaat te Weenen.
, t •·d
1· ht·
d •
d'
bied tegen het imperialisme fan het
Rede boere~leider.
Hij interesseerde!" zich dadelijk
s l'IJ verp ic mg
oor
iens
Westen strijdend moesten aantreden.
Het leven van den boer, aldus cle
sterk voor het politieke leven en
rede heen .
Hau}ltdienstleiter
Schmidt
boerenleider Roskam, wordt genam de~~ aan de. oprichting van den
Waarover echter debatieeri men
adeld door arbeid en stl'ijd. In strijd
OostennJksch-Duit schen volksbond. in Nederland:
s prak vervolgens ove1· de beveivindt de rechtgeaarde boer de ver.,.1
welke een Z?O nauw mogelijkcll
1. Wat gebeurt er met Nederland
liging van d~ levensmiddelen vulling van zijn leven. De Landband rnet , Du1tschland beoogde.
na den oorlog'/
voorziening in Nedel'land en . stand is gekomen, om de boeren er~P. 16 Febr. 1938 begon zijn gro·ote '2. Behouden wij onze diplon1aten
kondig·de den
a!Jerscherpsten
van te 'doordringen dat allee11 de da•
politieke laak toen hij benoem&lt;l en wat e1ebeurt er met de geëmigeli,jksc11e strijd ons recht op cei1
werd tot bondsminister_ ':'an _Binnen- greerde ~egeering?
sh'ijd tegen den sluikhandel
t·echtvaardig aandeel kan verschaffe~
l~ndsche Zaken en Veiligheid. Kort
Op de eerste vraag kan gezegd
aan.
op de goederen der aarde; want W~J
aaarop. trachtte Sehusclmigg een worden : W~i
nationaal-socialisten
Zich keerende· tot de Duilsche telen niet voor ons zelf, maar voo1·
staatsgreep te ondernem?n! waarna vragen niet, maar handelen. 12.0~0 partijgenooten zeide hij: Gij zijt, ons ~olk. En ~oot_ zijn de machten
Dr. Seyss-Inquart de leidmg nam onzer kameraden staan met de. Duit- zooais gij uit den mond van den in dat volk, ~_1e zich keeren tege11
van het lot der_ Ostmark door ah sche soldaten aan het Oosteli.jk front Rijkscommissaris vernomen hebt, •de den boer_ en z~1n re~ht._ Z?O was ~et
1
h~ofd __van de nieuwe Oos~~mijksc:h, · en strijden tegen he\ b~lsje":'isme.
~è~·lenging van zijn arm. K~i,kt ,d:-~: f ~~'" dien ,,l:b~,:a~l-~(a_pi~~.~::~;c~;~) -~d;
~~g~~u~t.• t;0 ;~e~,:?: ~,V. :":fZ_'Vt~\'.-_'ê\~'l!er deze striid ten emde is. zal

?.~

I

�</text>
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                  <text>Termaat, Adriana B. (Schuurman) </text>
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&#13;
Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="810182">
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                  <text>World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Netherlands</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="811643">
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                <elementText elementTextId="811644">
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            <element elementId="45">
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                <elementText elementTextId="810184">
                  <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Special Collections &amp; University Archives</text>
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              <elementTextContainer>
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                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="810189">
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                <text>Daglad voor Noord-Holland</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="812537">
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                    <text>SERVICE OF COMMEMORATION
KRISTALLNACHT
NOVEMBER 9, 1938 - NOVEMBER 9, 1988

PARTICIPANTS

Albert M. Lewis, Rabbi
Rev. Thomas Johnston, D.P.
Michael Rascoe, Rabbi
Rev. Donald J. Heydens, Pastor
Stuart Rapaport, Chazan
Robie Dan, Cellist

Congregation Emanuel
Campus Ministry, Aquinas College
Congregation Ahavas Israel
st. Thomas The Apostle Church
Congregation Ahavas Israel
Grand Rapids Symphony Orchestra

PARTICIPATING IN THE CANDLE LIGHTING CEREMONY

Glenn Barkan, President
Morton Hoffman, President
Peter O'Connor, President
Marni Holtzman, Vice ~resident
Jason Goldsmith, President
Joe Schmitz, Chairperson
Parish Council

Congregation Emanuel
Congregation Ahavas Israel
Aquinas College
Grand Rapids Temple Youth - GRTY
United Synagogue Youth - USY
St. Thomas The Apostle Church

Portions of this service were excerpted from "The Six Days of Destruction"
by Elie Wiesel and Albert H. Friedland er.

�NARRATOR
We begin our service in remembrance o= the Holocaust in silence.
Let us surround our worship, our community in prayer, with
silence, silence in preparation for the Presence of God.

SILENT MEDITATION
Silence does not just bring to a standstill words and noise.
Silence is more than the temporary renunciation of speech.
It is
a door opening before prayer, toward the very realms of the
spirit and the heart. Silence is the beginning of a reckoning of
the soul, the prelude to an account of the past and the
consideration of the present. May our shared silence lead us to
awareness of a time of total evil that degraded our most precious
values, the very meaning of religious existence, and life
itself. Our silence is to be a committed accounting for other
silences, that accepted persecut:i.ons and were indifferent to
debasement and crime. For there was a time when silence was a
crime. We think particularly of one night of silence, half a
century ago; Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Crystals, the 9th
of November, 1938. Then, all the synagogues in Germany rose up
in flame and smoke to the skies. The churches next to them stood
in darkness, and in silence. Glass littered the streets - the
broken shop-windows of the Jewish community. The neighbors
walked upon the crunching splinters and were silent. A few
prayed. Some churches courageously expressed their grief. But a
dark cloud of silence filled the .world. When will that silence
end? When will we speak out on behalf of suffering neighbors?
Not until we affirm God together; not until we acknowledge that
we are all God ' s children. From the silence of uncaring, let us
move on to the silence which is the search for God, the search
within ourselves. Then we can move beyond that silence: we can
affirm the One God, we can proclaim God's Name to the worldl
(congregation stands)

Reader:

Praise and proclaim God's Name, to whom all praise
is due!

Cong:

Praised and proclaimed be the Name of God, to whom all
praise is ?Ue, now and forever.

Hear, O Israel: the Lord is our God, the Lord is One!

Blessed is His glorious kingdom for ever and ever!

-1-

�NARRATOR
out of silence, out of darkness, the creative Word of God was
spoken.
It first took the form of wind, of ruach, God's spirit
hovering over the waters of chaos to control them, to hold them
back and make possible the goodness of creation itself. Through
the millennia, the process has continued, as humanity came to
share in the work of creation. Days of light and nights of
darkness were linked together. We turn back to those days of
creation; and we link them with the days of destruction in our
time, so that the ruach of God may drive back the darkness and
give us light.
READER
In the beginning of God's creating the heaven and the earth, the
earth was without form and void. And darkness hovered over the
face of the deep. And the spirit of God moved upon the face of
the waters. And God said: let there be light: and there was
light. And God saw the light, that it was good; and God divided
the light from darkness. And God called the light Day, and the
darkness he called Night. And it was evening and it was
morning: the first day.
SECOND READER

(Congregation joins in)

Lord God of Creation, we thank you for the light and for the
darkness, for the dark flame which engraved your letters into the
firmament of creation, for the unending light shining out of the
six Days of Creation. o Lord our God, help us to find that light
again in the Days of Destruction. Your daughter Hava looked for
it in vain. It was swept up as shards on the streets on a night
of crystal, it was lost in the chambers of advocates who killed
souls with stamps. There was no shining in the sky-lights of the
cattle-trains. It was dark there. Yet somewhere, underneath the
shells pushed back and forth in cruel sport, the light is
shining. Break the shells, o Lord; let the light come forth.
And help us to remember those who moved from light to darkness.
We praise You, Lord, Giver of light and darkness.
READER
And God said: Let the earth bring forth living creatures, each
of their kind, cattle and creeping things, beasts of the
earth ... and it was good. And God said: let us make humanity in
our image, after our likeness, and let it have dominion over
all ... in God's image, male and female created He them. And God
blessed them ... and God saw everything that He had made, and
behold, it was very good. And it was evening and it was morning,
the sixth day.
READER AND CONGREGATION
Then came the destruction. o Lord, how we have fallen.
In the
night of Sobidor, Treblinka, Birkenau, we have forgotten Your
blessing. We have lost our identity; but we have been cursed
with memories. o Lord, what will happen to us and to the world
when the days of destruction are finished? Will the kiddush of
rest become tne final kaddish? Will this world end? Will a new

world begin?

-2-

�We do not demand answers, God.
But if this is the last page of
the human chronicles, assure us that we had the right to ask.
And we will always glorify Your Name: yitgadal v'yitkadash
sh' may rabba •..

READER
These Hebrew words which glorify the Name of God come from the
Jewish tradition, from a people which have emerged from the
Shoah, that devastating, diabolic wind which scoured Europe and
left death and desolation in its wake, a chaos of destruction.
Six million Jewish men and women, one million children among
them, were taken into the death chambers to die in gas of fire.
Others died alongside them:

NARRATOR
Not only did Jews die; caught in the eddies and swirls of the
Holocaust, millions of Poles and Gypsies, Russians and other
Europeans also ended their lives as victims of Nazism's
diabolically efficient technology of death.
But to be Jewish in
Nazi Europe of itself meant alienation and death .

READER
Martin Niemoeller, a pastor in the German Confessing Church,
spent 8 1/2 years in a concentration camp. He wrote:
First they came fo r the Communists
and I did not speak outbecause I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the Socialists
and I did not spea k outbecause I was not a Socialist.
Then they came for the trade unionists
and I did not speak outbecause I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Jews
and I did not speak outbecause I was not a Jew.
Then they came for meand there was no one left
to speak out for me.
READER
Pope John Paul II, a Pole who knew well the heel of Nazi
inhumanity, prayed during his pilgrimage to Auschwitz in 1979:

-3-

�I kneel before all the inscriptions that come one
after another bearing the memory of the v i ctims
of Oswiecim ... In particular I pause with you,
dear participants inn this encounter, before the
inscription in Hebrew.
This inscription awakens
the memory of the people whose sons and daughters
were intended for total extermination. This
people draws its origin from Abraham, our father
in faith as was expressed by Paul of Tarsus.
The very people who received from .God the commandment
"thou shalt not kill," itself experiences in a
special measure what is meant by killing.
It is
not permissible for anyone to pass by this
inscription with indifference.
THE LIGHTING OF THE MEMORIAL CANDLES
NARRATOR
We now light six candles in memory of the six million. As .we
light these candles, we commit ourselves to responsibility for
one another, to build on this earth a world that has no room for
hatred, no place for violence . Together, we pray for the
strength to fulfill this vocation.
(Congregation stands)
PSALM 22
Cong:

My God, my God,
why have You abandoned me;
why so far from delivering me
and from my anguished roaring?

Reader:

My God,
I cry by day - You answer not;
by night, and have no respite.

Cong:

But You are the Holy One,
enthroned, the Praise of Israel.
In You our fathers trusted;
they trusted and You rescued them.
To you they cried out
and they escaped;
in You they trusted
and were not disappointed.

(Congregation be seated)

-4-

�TESTIMONIES
NARRATOR
Jewish voices were heard in reciting prayers and biblical texts,
on the trains to the concentration camps, at the doors of the gas
chambers, in hiding, in fighting the enemy, manifesting grief,
hope, despair, trust in God, faith.
One of those voices, Moshe Plinker, an adolescent hiding in
Belgium, expressed his religious fervor and commitment in verse
and prayer. One afternoon he wrote in his diary.
READER

"I am sitting at the window and readying myself for the Minha
prayer, I look out, and I see that all is red, and the whole
horizon is red. The sky is covered with bloody clouds and I am
frightened when I see it. I say to myself:
'Where do these
clouds come from? Bleeding clouds, where are you from?'
Suddenly everything is clear to me, everything is simple and
easily understood. Don't you know? They come from the seas of
blood. These seas have been brought about by millions of Jews
who have been captured and who knows where they are?
'We are the
bleeding clouds, and from the seas of blood have we come. We
have come to you from the place where your brothers are, to bring
greetings from your people. We are witnesses; we were sent by
your people to show you their troubles. We have come from the
seas of blood: we were brought into being by an inferno of
suffering, and we are a sign of peace to you' ... "
Young Moshe who died in Auschwitz was able to find hope in his
faith in God, and in the continuity of Jewish peoplehood:
NARRATOR
A
A
A
A
A
A
A

SONG:

Jew
Jew
Jew
Jew
Jew
Jew
Jew

CONGREGATION

in thought
in trouble
in speech
in arising
in God
in life
you were born

A Jew
A Jew
A Jew
A Jew
A Jew
A Jew
A Jew

El Moleh Rachamim

SPEAKERS:

Peter

&amp;

Jean TerMaat; David Mandel

-5-

in deeds
in joy
in silence
in sitting
in people
in death
you will die.

�NARRATOR

A popular Yiddish song expressed the Jewish people's
determination to stand up in the struggle against the oppressor,
and to affirm and reaffirm Judaism's covenant with God.
Zog nit
keyn mol is an example of human affirmation that can inspire us
today.
Let us read together the English translation.
NARRATOR AND CONGREGATION

So never say you now go on you last way,
Though darkened skies may now conceal the
blue of day,
Because the hour for which we've hungered
is so near,
Beneath our feet the earth shall thunder,
"We are here!"
NARRATOR

We remember the six million by reciting the Kaddish, the
traditional Jewish prayer for the dead.
This prayer is not a funeral hymn but an affirmation of God's
everlasting Presence and dominion, praising God's existence and
creative love. It is in this spirit that we pray the Kaddish
remembering the victims of the Holocaust. We also pray for the
survivors, whose faith in life enabled them to rebuild in other
countries their shattered lives,their destroyed worlds. Joining
together they brought about new life, they raised new families in
new lands, in defiance of absolute terror and despair, an
invincible hope. Exalted by that spirit of lifegiving and faith
we pray today.
(Congregation Stands)

-6-

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-7-

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�READER
Hallowed and enhanced may God be throughout the world. May God's
sovereignty soon be accepted, during our life and the life of all
Israel. And let us say: Amen.
CONGREGATION
May God be praised throughout all time.
READER
Glorified and celebrated, lauded and praised, acclaimed and
honored, e xtolled and exalted may the Holy one be, far beyond all
song and p salm, beyond all tributes which humanity can utter.
And let us say: Amen.
CONGREGATION
Let there be abundant peace from Heaven, with life's goodness for
us and for all the people Israel. And let us say: Amen.
READER
God who b r ings peace to the universe will bring peace to us, to
humanity, and to Israel. And let us say: Amen.
CONGREGATION
Exalted, compassionate God, grant perfect peace in your
sheltering Presence, among the holy and the pure, to the soul of
all the men, women and children of the house of Israel, to the
Righteous Gentiles, to the millions who died defending the right
to be dif f erent, at a time of madness and terror.
May their memory endure, may it inspire truth and loyalty in our
lives, in our religious commitment and tasks. May their memory
be a blessing and sign of peace for all humanity. And let us say
all together: Amen.
(Congregation Be Seated)
SONG:

El i , Eli

NARRATOR
We end our worship by reciting together the words found on the
walls of a cellar in Cologne , Germany, where Jews hid from the
Nazis:

-8-

�NARRATOR AND CONGREGATION
I believe,
I believe
even when
I believe
even when
I believe
even when

in the sun
it is not shining.
in love
feeling it not.
in God
God is silent .

NARRATOR

We have proclaimed together our faith in the One God, Ground and
Nurturer of us all. Before we go our separate ways again, let us
extend to one another a sign of reconciliation expressing our
hope for peace.
(Congregation Stands)
Please turn to those around you, share the blessing of peace,
wholeness, and life, and wish them Shalom!
CONGREGATION

Shalom!

-9-

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Q_}

-

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1880 gebouwd in een gebied dat viel onder de
zogenoemde Kringenwet. Deze wet stelde
beperkingen aan gebouwen rond militaire
vestingwerken. In dit geval was dat de kustbatterij
bij Diemerdam.
De plaats van de Batterij bij Diemerdam gaat terug
tot de 16e eeuw. In feite is het een verzameling
geschutsopstellingen en munitieopslagplaatsen.
Het was, met Batterij bij Durgerdam aan de
overkant, gebouwd ter verdediging van de toegang
tot de haven van Amsterdam over de Zuiderzee.
Batterij bij Diemerdam en Batterij bij Durgerdam
zijn het begin en het eind van de "Stelling van
Amsterdam" waarmee, volgend op de Vestingwet
uit 1874, in 1880 is begonnen .
De Zeehoeve viel onder een wet uit !853,
oorspronkêlijk gemöakt vcor de Nieuwe Hollandse
Waterlinie, waarin het gebruik van land binnen •• .
zogenaamde 'kringen' rondom de vestingen en'
forten was geregeld . Deze "Kringenwet" gaf
voorschriften over wat binnen bepaalde afstanden
van forten gebouwd mocht worden .
Voor de Zeehoeve, die ligt in de tweede of
middelbare kring van 300 tot 600 meter rondom
de batterij, betekende dit dat de boerderij zeer
licht en eenvoudig gebouwd moest worden; dit om
in geval van oorlog snel te kunnen worden
gesloopt.
Behalve het aller-noodzakelijkste metselwerk voor
fundering en schoorstenen, is de constructie en de
afwerking van de boerderij geheel van hout. In
tegenstelling tot de zware kolommen en balken
voor de constructie van de stal bij een "gewone
boerderij" is in deze "kringenwetboerderij" de
houtconstructie zeer licht uitgevoerd .

�5

'

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Verval
__!J:t;
De Zeehoeve heeft sinds de laatste bewoner in 1996 vertrok, ernstig te lijden
gehad van weer, wind en vooral verwaarlozing. Tijdens de storm van oktober
2002 is de gehele kap van de stal getild en verwoest. Eind maart 2003 is de rieten
kap van de hooiberg afgebrand.
Herstelling heeft toen gelukkig al zoveel mogelijk origineel materiaal en bruikbare
elementen veilig gesteld . Eind 2003 kon de Zeehoeve door Stadsherstel Amsterdam worden aangekocht.

Restauratie
Nadat Albert van der Lugt als toenmalig directeur Herstelling was benaderd door
Stadsherstel met de vraag of Herstelling met haar deelnemers in staat was een
bijdrage te leveren aan de herbouw en restauratie van de inmiddels vervallen
Zeehoeve. Toen daar positief op gereageerd werd kwam het proces in een
stroomversnelling .
Met medewerking van de gemeente Diemen, Amsterdam , Maatwerk Amsterdam,
Provincie Noord-Holland en na het realiseren van de benodigde subsidies en fondsen werd in 2003 een aanvang gemaakt met de restauratie door Hillen &amp; Roossen
met ondersteuning van deelnemers van de Herstelling en onder leiding van Stadsherstel.

1

Uiteindelijk idee was om de Zeehoeve te gebruiken als uitvalsbasis voor het management Herstelling en centraal punt van waaruit de administratieve ondersteuning plaats zou vinden. Dat Albert van der Lugt bekend stond als een visionair
kwam ook toen weer duidelijk naar voren. Bij het horen van de beoogde methodiek " Slagboom " waar collega's als Janneke Veldhuizen, Koos van de Burg, Rob
Moerbeek en anderen mee bezig waren en het zoeken van hen naar een passende locatie die deze methodiek recht kon doen, was de deal snel gemaakt.
DIT was de plek waar de pilot plaats moest vinden, een betere was er niet en de
plannen en de inrichting werden snel nadien aangepast aan dit voornemen. Dit
vroeg nogal wat aanpassingsvermogen en creatief financieel management van
betrokkenen . Het realiseren van een pand voor 25 permanent aanwezige deelnemers plus personeel en bezoekers, rekening houdend met alle regelgeving, vroeg
iets meer dan een kantoorachtige omgeving .

Ook de eigenaar is erg tevreden met
deze passende herbestemming. " Een
betere huurder kunnen we niet ;,vensen", aldus Stadsherstel. Als we het · ,
'boerenterrein' van de Zeehoeve
opkomen, dan worden we erg gelukkig van de heerlijk ru stige sfeer die er
hangt. Helemáál begin je van dit
project te glimmen als j e vriendelijk
gedag wordt gezegd door de jongens
en meiden van de Zeehoeve, die
bijvoorbeeld vol trots bezig zijn in de
moestuin en weer anderen die de
groenten en fruit verwerken in de
lunch . Het is net alsof j e bij een boerenfamilie op bezoek komt.

t

Stella van Heezik
Stadsherstel Amsterdam N.V.

Met alle inventiviteit, inzet en betrokkenheid van velen is dit uiteindelijk gelukt,
waarbij de "echte" samenwerking benoemd mag worden: deelnemers Herstelling ,
werkmeesters, werkvoorbereider, Stadsherstel, aannemer met medewerkers,
architect, gemeentelijke diensten en alle andere betrokkenen waren zeer coöperatief en realiseerden hiermee het prachtige sprookje van de huidige Zeehoeve.
De opening in 2005 door niemand minder dan Ahmed Aboutaleb, destijds wethouder in Amsterdam, samen met alle betrokken directeuren gaf aan dat hiermee
een gezamenlijk doel was bereikt.
Nu, vijf jaar verder en met de afronding van het laatste project de Hooimijt in· het
verschiet, is menig nieuwe deelnemer, bezoeker of participant nog steeds onder
de indruk van wat er toen uit die " bouwval" is gerestaureerd . Wij als bewoners en
gebruikers zullen het gebouw en de omgeving met respect en liefde blijven behandelen en in goede staat proberen te behouden voor die generaties na ons.

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&#13;
Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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                  <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection, RHC-144&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                  <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Special Collections &amp; University Archives</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://gvsu.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/719"&gt;Adriana B. and Peter N. Termaat collection (RHC-144)&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                    <text>GSEENHEDEN
EN UTRECHT
: 400.000
ebled dat zljn tl'lertol//fe w•rer
zee of op het ljuelmffr loost.
deze bart door •erschlllende
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rcerlnf weerrere•en (Waterland

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�A graat amou.nt of work has been performed by Y,rs,G.Beets-Zwa-4n
( whose mother was a Termaat) and Cornelis Barend Termaat (1918) .
Preface.
The research took place mostly in the city of lllkmaar' · tirchives ,
where the records of the city of fi.lkmaar and ether West-Frisian cities
are kept re baptism, marriage, burial and also the population
registers •
Mrs.Beets states that she has reached a nearly complete line of ancestors
fromts~ mother's fa.l'Jlily Termaat.
Her part begins when Barent Jansz. coming from Schagen settles in
the polder (diked-in lake) the "Schermer".
The part which deals with the prior Termaats in Vollenhove and
Blokzijl has been given to Yirs.Beets by Cormelis Barend Termaat
(1918) whose information has been incorporated in Mrs.Beets booklet.
Even though it proved to be nearly impossible to be complete,
every effort has been made to reach that goal.
Despite that, she is aware that errors may exist innames and/or
dates.
Work record.s have in many instances been copied frlbm the marriage
certificate. Often changes took place which have not yet been recorded.
Mrs. Beets entertains corrections and/or additional information.
She has expressed her thanks for assistance in gathering family
dataand for making pictures available.
A special thanks has been expressed by her to Mr.Bert C.Mantel
for his help in typing the manuscript and for his kind advice.
Mrs Beets wishes the readers of the Termaat geneology well.
December 1990.
THEME.
Time passes we say, but we are in error
Time stays and it is we who pass.
Introduction:

This book consists of 3 parts. The first has some
thoughts about our name and a short history of the city of Blokzijl
the place of origin. The second part contains the geneology which
.dates back to about 1550 and is brought up to date to December 1989.
Family members are written up in the family to which they belang •
The head of the family has been assigned a number consisting of 2 parts.
The Roman numeral indicates the generations counting from
. the
first forefather , who carries number I . The other figures indicate
the number of the family cou.nting from the first forefather.
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•
•

�The prioe of liberty is eternal vigilance.
" The elation of victory has become a memory of the elderly.
It should not be so"
'1hile the world is rid

of Hitler's physical presenoe,
still contend with his monstrous legacy.
Senator Biroh Bayh is aware that itlives in our country and that
f&gt;ap thy ani ignorance together will allow this cucer to be
eborn , to f ester and to grow •
e statect that this evil should be excised now
~ WAITED TOO LONG THE LAST TIME.

w

On January 29, 1989, the Republikaner Partei, which calls itself
11 a cleaner extension of the Nazi's
gained 11 seats in the City of Berlin's Senate.
Some party members have called themselves the "Zyklon B" group
after the chemical used with deadly effect in the gaschambers.
erner Zellien, a Berliner concludes :
" The on~ thing German;y learnt from the Holocaust was how to make
poison gas"
He was referring to the U.S.A. having to tell· the German Government
about the Libyan chemiohal plant scandal.
nd Newsweek juat report.ecl th&amp;t 2. German firms have d-eli~ed all
the becessary components to Pakistan to start produving atomie
bobs .
l ter Cronkite was scheduled as speaker for the award of the Spirit
o:f Liberty , of which he himselt had been the recipient •
nd gripping the arms of bis chair, he said in bis sonorous barito e-/i
I was just mad. I have been mad. Still am.
~nd he spoke these words:

�CONTINUED FROM Cl
ed enough to understand that a
newsman could wear several bats
and that we had the ability to turn
off - nearly, you can't say perf~1y but nearly - all of our preJudi~es and biases."
.
.
lt bas been a long tim~ sm&lt;:e
Cronkite sat in the anchor,f ch_atr
at the "CBS Evening News, whi~
he turned over to Dan Rather m
March 1981
With an a~nual salary reputed to
be $ 1 million Cronkite was given a
'
f direct
seat on the CBS board o
ors
and the title of special correspondent, under an exclusive agreement that ran through last Nov. 4,
the day he turned 72.
For the decade to follow, he was
to become a consultant to the network, at a sharply reduced salacy.

Unhappiness
crops up
,As

Nov. 4 drew closer, how_ever,
ess
d h. nh
Cronkite voice
1s u ap~m
~tb his status at CBS, as bis apr..earances on the "Evening News"
an
" -d other CBS pro~ms grew fewd af
er and ~e networ turned a e
ear to _h1s proposals.
tb
h d

be~~~: ~i h."~g';,

1

even leave the network - something CBS clearly didn't wish to see
happen.
Cronkite would not discuss the
financial terms of bis new agre~ment with CBS, other than to say 1t
is substantial.
It obligates neither hlm nor the
network to any specific projects,
which Cronkite said is just fine.
public on complicated t rues.
It allows him to work for the Pub- Cronkite said, "and that's one
lic Broadcasting Service, for cable the problems of putting issues o
television and, with some excep- that 23 minutes."
tions, other outlets.
lnsisting that people ought t
f
ti
ti
n
have
used newspapers and mag
And the process O renego a O
zines, as well as television and r
did get him back on camera; he was dio to get a full sense of the IS
there with Rather at the convend d .. },/
tions last summer, commenting on in the campaign, he ad e ,
the race for the presidency.
should have done an hour at
"lt's always hard, after you've once a week, minimumly, m y
been in command, to take a lesser more than that, in prime time, ru
role," he conceded.
marizing the campaign."
"But quite honestly, 1 wouldn:t
on the other hand, he could doi
have wanted to work that hard this bis director's bat and admit that h
year. 1 had my turn at that. I'm !lot understood whrthe networks r
·
reluctant
yield likely
primetotime
to
the slightest bit bitter
about h avt ng shows
thattoweren't
t ract.
a lesser role. 1 wouldn't have exdi
pected anything else."
large au ence.
Nevertheless, he regrette_d holdWH
gn C V
Confllctlng a ers
ing bis tongue about campat
~lndeed that conflict betweén
erage by the news media at e Walter cro' nkite the straight-atTOW
time of the debates between the
presidential candidates.
newsman and Walter Cronkite the
"Television is not an adequate corporat functionacy is one he bas
medium to
qua.1.if.::.orm=-=-:th_,,.._,n--=o'-t..:!.ye_t_fu_ll..;;,y_re_so_l_ve_d...._ _ _ __

ad

,, e '-S~Ue ofpubbc U.IM.t /zas been intensil:nd,
nk
by t,.LU::_ r'-Se ofsensationafism
'J«:
•.:0 lle sqys,
• • - part~Utar,ry
• J l thOSe progranzs
• teleV'-SW'!
oueradmg
a.s new1'-".
1
u
During his eight years on the
CBS board, the network and its
news division have been torn apart
by internal conflict, a takeover attemp~ by Ted Turner, a libel suit
brought by Gen. William C. Westmoreland and countless executive
changes.
"lt was very difficult for me, during strike situations, during the
takeover situations with Turner,"
he said, "I did find myself in conflict between the openness I would
like, the right of the public to know
and the board's responsibility and
the necessity to do some business
in the dark, if you please.

"1 fight against that all my life,
against anybody doing the public's
business in the dark, and yet, 1 find,
now that I'm in it, that there is a
necessity to do that to a degree."
Something else carne up during
the campaign, a/'ié hàs fn almost
ry election ear since Cronkite

commenced bis very public career:
the moves to draft him into polities.
He would not deny that he had
been tempted, hut he feit it would
have been wrong: "1 do sincerely
believe that anybody who's been
an anchorperson - even eig_ht
years after he's been an anchorperson - should not get involved in
polities. I've said this all along and the biels to run for office began
years ago. And they carne from
both parties, incidentally."
There was another issue for him,
· as well. Was Cronkite ever resentful of all the trust that had been
vested in him all those years?
"Resentful wouldn't be the
word," he said, rolling it around in
his mouth. "Appalled, maybe.
Somewhat frightened by it. 1 always have been concerned about
. the idolatry connected with anchorpeople on television. lt bothers
me a -great deal that people would
say, 'I believe every word you say.'
Heavens, that's terrible for them to
think."
The issue of public trust bas been
intensified, he said, by the rise of
·sensationalism on television - particularly those programs masquerading as news.
· He broached that subject in the
second of bis recent surprising
ubhc .statements, h1s one on Dec.

5, at a dinner in his honor given b
the Museum of Broadcasting.
Cronkite used the occasion 11
come out strongly against sensationalist television programs particularly those fflat parade 85
news.
Referring to that after-dinner
speech, he recalled the time when
"The CBS Evening News" trailed
NBC's "Huntley-Brinkley Report"
slightly in the ratings when Cronkite became the CBS anchor in
1962.
•
Even then, ratings were ve1y
much on the minds of the neiworks, and he told the netwoiit
bosses that greater numbers were
within easy reaeh, simply by "going tabloid." With someone else iri
the anchor's chair, of course.
"So, this is nothing new," Cronkite said. "What is new is that the
outlets are available."
His primary concern, he added,
was that the popular new tabloid
programs could ultimately influence network news broadcasts - a
vulnerability drawn in starker relief in this age of corporate ownership of ABC and NBC and a corporate sensibility at CBS.
"This will be the test, perhaps, of
this generation of owners of. the
networks as to their sense of rens1bih •"

�The

sheds neuirality,
speaks out Inore
By Jeremy Gerard
N,Y. Times News Service

N

~

'

.

EW YORK - Walter Cronkite had always
been more comfortable delivering the
news than making it. But sometbing was
gnawing at him, and when the opportunity arose
one evening not long after George Bush was elected president, Cronkite made a speech in defense of
liberal values.
It surprised people more than he cou.Id have
imagined.
Although it'Was nearly nine years since the most
welcome house guest in the country, Uncle Walter.
Old Iron Pants, the Most Trusted Man in America,
had relinquished bis anchor's chair at the ''CBS
Evening News," many still seemed to think; as
Cronkite put it, that he ought to go on being an
"ideological eunuch."
Those day~ are over.

Not so objective

,1
In recent weeks, a~r years of being the conduit
and never the conscie'hce of the news, Cronkite
bas begun speaking ou(.on issues that concern him
- issues mostly having t.o do with joumalism and
polities.
At the same time, he has carved out for himself
more personal time in a more private life. A renegotiated contract with CBS that pays hun a great
deal to do little more than stay away from the other
commen:ial networks will allow him time to develop projects and to begin work on a long-overdue
autobiography.
But don't expect him to drift too far trom the
camera's eye or the reporters notebook.
Un_packed dlrtons sit outside the door and
around the corner from Cronkite's new-Office on
the 24th floor of the CBS headquarters at 52nd
Street.
Inside, in bis shirt sleeves, he sat talking about
that speech, about the rise of so-called tabloid television and about his role as a director of CijS. the
company he joined in 1950 after 11 years as a re.
porter for the United Press.
On Nov. 17, he was scheduled to introduce Barbara Jordan toa gathering of People for the American Way, the nonpartisan group founded by the
producer Norman Lear in 1980 to focus on constitutional issues. Jordan, a former Texas Congresswoman and one of the Democratie Party's most
articu!ate advocates, was the recipient of the organization's annual "Spirit of Liberty" award.
Cronkit~, tl!e previous.Y-ea_rs winn~. ~there
to pass thé torch. In the fn'St araft of bis .introductory speech, he wrote that he was going to rèSist a
temptation. to digress , fn that much•abused subject, liberalism.
_
But then he Iooketf'Sf hVApeech. and at those
words, and he chan ed his mind.

emocratic . ss

t e e ection he said.._

..,....was the fäult Qf tQQ.nmi ~ T u ~ e i r iciK:es
stilled by not-SQ•8Y.btle.k 1)1.Qii.cal intimid~on.
_ ~ox instance. we know.. that u n i l a t ~
action in Grenada and Ttipoli was wrong. We

know that Stru'. Wars means unçontrollable escalatioiiofitïe_~nn race. We know that the real threat
JQ.iiemocracy is in half the 11ati9n in po-verty.
"We know that Thomas Jefferson was rii)lt
\rli.e.n..be said. 'A demöcracy, cannot be both ignorant and free.' We know, we know, that no one
.s.twuld teil
sb~ tQ..bear an qnwanted
.child. We lg}ow th
ligj.QUS belie.fs cannQtdefine.
patriotism.
"We know that it is not how one's ~ are
fo nned hut what they say. And we know thêre is
f~m.JQ..~_a™-.witn ·all or part of what I_'v_e_ _
just said.
"But God almightyJ. we've got to shout these
.truthsln which we believe from tlîerooftgps."
1

Gripping conviction
That is what C,ronkite said, and sitting in his
office as he recalled the speech bis body language
was as eloquent as his recollections were awncular. Without noticing it, he gripped the arms ofhis
chair as he remembered that night and the events
that had inspired him.
By the time he finished, bis grip on those arms
looked strong enough to crush coat into diamonds.
"l was just mad." he said in the famous baritone.
..1 have been mad. Still am."
Cronkite sai&lt;i that he bas spoken bis mind
throughout bis career, especlally during the years
on radio prior to becotning the anchor of the "CBS
Evening News."
.
_
, " .. ~
"Fot my whole life, long bëfore CBS, whèn l was
at United Press - and goodness knows, press.service reporters are supposed to be ideological
eunuchs if there ever were any. and I made public
speeches under the auspices of United Press. All
through my llfe, I have never disguised my sentiments about polities in genera!."
l
Well, maybe he had always registered as an independent so as not to appear partisan. Still, "lib•
eralism carne out in almost every -speech in one
way or another, on radio.''
.
As he continued to talk, however, Cronkite
seemed to arrive at bis own understanding of just
how significant the Roseland speech had been.
" On television, I tried to absolutely hew to the
middle of the road and not show any prejudice or
bias in any way," he said.
r
"I did not believe that the public was sophisticat•

se/! CRONKITE, C2

�CONTINUED FROM Cl
ed enough to understand that a
newsman could wear several bats
and that we had the ability to turn
off - nearly, you can't say perf~1y but nearly - all of our preJudi~es and biases."
.
.
lt bas been a long tim~ sm&lt;:e
Cronkite sat in the anchor,f ch_atr
at the "CBS Evening News, whi~
he turned over to Dan Rather m
March 1981
With an a~nual salary reputed to
be $ 1 million Cronkite was given a
'
f direct
seat on the CBS board o
ors
and the title of special correspondent, under an exclusive agreement that ran through last Nov. 4,
the day he turned 72.
For the decade to follow, he was
to become a consultant to the network, at a sharply reduced salacy.

Unhappiness
crops up
,As

Nov. 4 drew closer, how_ever,
ess
d h. nh
Cronkite voice
1s u ap~m
~tb his status at CBS, as bis apr..earances on the "Evening News"
an
" -d other CBS pro~ms grew fewd af
er and ~e networ turned a e
ear to _h1s proposals.
tb
h d

be~~~: ~i h."~g';,

1

even leave the network - something CBS clearly didn't wish to see
happen.
Cronkite would not discuss the
financial terms of bis new agre~ment with CBS, other than to say 1t
is substantial.
It obligates neither hlm nor the
network to any specific projects,
which Cronkite said is just fine.
public on complicated t rues.
It allows him to work for the Pub- Cronkite said, "and that's one
lic Broadcasting Service, for cable the problems of putting issues o
television and, with some excep- that 23 minutes."
tions, other outlets.
lnsisting that people ought t
f
ti
ti
n
have
used newspapers and mag
And the process O renego a O
zines, as well as television and r
did get him back on camera; he was dio to get a full sense of the IS
there with Rather at the convend d .. },/
tions last summer, commenting on in the campaign, he ad e ,
the race for the presidency.
should have done an hour at
"lt's always hard, after you've once a week, minimumly, m y
been in command, to take a lesser more than that, in prime time, ru
role," he conceded.
marizing the campaign."
"But quite honestly, 1 wouldn:t
on the other hand, he could doi
have wanted to work that hard this bis director's bat and admit that h
year. 1 had my turn at that. I'm !lot understood whrthe networks r
·
reluctant
yield likely
primetotime
to
the slightest bit bitter
about h avt ng shows
thattoweren't
t ract.
a lesser role. 1 wouldn't have exdi
pected anything else."
large au ence.
Nevertheless, he regrette_d holdWH
gn C V
Confllctlng a ers
ing bis tongue about campat
~lndeed that conflict betweén
erage by the news media at e Walter cro' nkite the straight-atTOW
time of the debates between the
presidential candidates.
newsman and Walter Cronkite the
"Television is not an adequate corporat functionacy is one he bas
medium to
qua.1.if.::.orm=-=-:th_,,.._,n--=o'-t..:!.ye_t_fu_ll..;;,y_re_so_l_ve_d...._ _ _ __

ad

,, e '-S~Ue ofpubbc U.IM.t /zas been intensil:nd,
nk
by t,.LU::_ r'-Se ofsensationafism
'J«:
•.:0 lle sqys,
• • - part~Utar,ry
• J l thOSe progranzs
• teleV'-SW'!
oueradmg
a.s new1'-".
1
u
During his eight years on the
CBS board, the network and its
news division have been torn apart
by internal conflict, a takeover attemp~ by Ted Turner, a libel suit
brought by Gen. William C. Westmoreland and countless executive
changes.
"lt was very difficult for me, during strike situations, during the
takeover situations with Turner,"
he said, "I did find myself in conflict between the openness I would
like, the right of the public to know
and the board's responsibility and
the necessity to do some business
in the dark, if you please.

"1 fight against that all my life,
against anybody doing the public's
business in the dark, and yet, 1 find,
now that I'm in it, that there is a
necessity to do that to a degree."
Something else carne up during
the campaign, a/'ié hàs fn almost
ry election ear since Cronkite

commenced bis very public career:
the moves to draft him into polities.
He would not deny that he had
been tempted, hut he feit it would
have been wrong: "1 do sincerely
believe that anybody who's been
an anchorperson - even eig_ht
years after he's been an anchorperson - should not get involved in
polities. I've said this all along and the biels to run for office began
years ago. And they carne from
both parties, incidentally."
There was another issue for him,
· as well. Was Cronkite ever resentful of all the trust that had been
vested in him all those years?
"Resentful wouldn't be the
word," he said, rolling it around in
his mouth. "Appalled, maybe.
Somewhat frightened by it. 1 always have been concerned about
. the idolatry connected with anchorpeople on television. lt bothers
me a -great deal that people would
say, 'I believe every word you say.'
Heavens, that's terrible for them to
think."
The issue of public trust bas been
intensified, he said, by the rise of
·sensationalism on television - particularly those programs masquerading as news.
· He broached that subject in the
second of bis recent surprising
ubhc .statements, h1s one on Dec.

5, at a dinner in his honor given b
the Museum of Broadcasting.
Cronkite used the occasion 11
come out strongly against sensationalist television programs particularly those fflat parade 85
news.
Referring to that after-dinner
speech, he recalled the time when
"The CBS Evening News" trailed
NBC's "Huntley-Brinkley Report"
slightly in the ratings when Cronkite became the CBS anchor in
1962.
•
Even then, ratings were ve1y
much on the minds of the neiworks, and he told the netwoiit
bosses that greater numbers were
within easy reaeh, simply by "going tabloid." With someone else iri
the anchor's chair, of course.
"So, this is nothing new," Cronkite said. "What is new is that the
outlets are available."
His primary concern, he added,
was that the popular new tabloid
programs could ultimately influence network news broadcasts - a
vulnerability drawn in starker relief in this age of corporate ownership of ABC and NBC and a corporate sensibility at CBS.
"This will be the test, perhaps, of
this generation of owners of. the
networks as to their sense of rens1bih •"

�The

sheds neuirality,
speaks out Inore
By Jeremy Gerard
N,Y. Times News Service

N

~

'

.

EW YORK - Walter Cronkite had always
been more comfortable delivering the
news than making it. But sometbing was
gnawing at him, and when the opportunity arose
one evening not long after George Bush was elected president, Cronkite made a speech in defense of
liberal values.
It surprised people more than he cou.Id have
imagined.
Although it'Was nearly nine years since the most
welcome house guest in the country, Uncle Walter.
Old Iron Pants, the Most Trusted Man in America,
had relinquished bis anchor's chair at the ''CBS
Evening News," many still seemed to think; as
Cronkite put it, that he ought to go on being an
"ideological eunuch."
Those day~ are over.

Not so objective

,1
In recent weeks, a~r years of being the conduit
and never the conscie'hce of the news, Cronkite
bas begun speaking ou(.on issues that concern him
- issues mostly having t.o do with joumalism and
polities.
At the same time, he has carved out for himself
more personal time in a more private life. A renegotiated contract with CBS that pays hun a great
deal to do little more than stay away from the other
commen:ial networks will allow him time to develop projects and to begin work on a long-overdue
autobiography.
But don't expect him to drift too far trom the
camera's eye or the reporters notebook.
Un_packed dlrtons sit outside the door and
around the corner from Cronkite's new-Office on
the 24th floor of the CBS headquarters at 52nd
Street.
Inside, in bis shirt sleeves, he sat talking about
that speech, about the rise of so-called tabloid television and about his role as a director of CijS. the
company he joined in 1950 after 11 years as a re.
porter for the United Press.
On Nov. 17, he was scheduled to introduce Barbara Jordan toa gathering of People for the American Way, the nonpartisan group founded by the
producer Norman Lear in 1980 to focus on constitutional issues. Jordan, a former Texas Congresswoman and one of the Democratie Party's most
articu!ate advocates, was the recipient of the organization's annual "Spirit of Liberty" award.
Cronkit~, tl!e previous.Y-ea_rs winn~. ~there
to pass thé torch. In the fn'St araft of bis .introductory speech, he wrote that he was going to rèSist a
temptation. to digress , fn that much•abused subject, liberalism.
_
But then he Iooketf'Sf hVApeech. and at those
words, and he chan ed his mind.

emocratic . ss

t e e ection he said.._

..,....was the fäult Qf tQQ.nmi ~ T u ~ e i r iciK:es
stilled by not-SQ•8Y.btle.k 1)1.Qii.cal intimid~on.
_ ~ox instance. we know.. that u n i l a t ~
action in Grenada and Ttipoli was wrong. We

know that Stru'. Wars means unçontrollable escalatioiiofitïe_~nn race. We know that the real threat
JQ.iiemocracy is in half the 11ati9n in po-verty.
"We know that Thomas Jefferson was rii)lt
\rli.e.n..be said. 'A demöcracy, cannot be both ignorant and free.' We know, we know, that no one
.s.twuld teil
sb~ tQ..bear an qnwanted
.child. We lg}ow th
ligj.QUS belie.fs cannQtdefine.
patriotism.
"We know that it is not how one's ~ are
fo nned hut what they say. And we know thêre is
f~m.JQ..~_a™-.witn ·all or part of what I_'v_e_ _
just said.
"But God almightyJ. we've got to shout these
.truthsln which we believe from tlîerooftgps."
1

Gripping conviction
That is what C,ronkite said, and sitting in his
office as he recalled the speech bis body language
was as eloquent as his recollections were awncular. Without noticing it, he gripped the arms ofhis
chair as he remembered that night and the events
that had inspired him.
By the time he finished, bis grip on those arms
looked strong enough to crush coat into diamonds.
"l was just mad." he said in the famous baritone.
..1 have been mad. Still am."
Cronkite sai&lt;i that he bas spoken bis mind
throughout bis career, especlally during the years
on radio prior to becotning the anchor of the "CBS
Evening News."
.
_
, " .. ~
"Fot my whole life, long bëfore CBS, whèn l was
at United Press - and goodness knows, press.service reporters are supposed to be ideological
eunuchs if there ever were any. and I made public
speeches under the auspices of United Press. All
through my llfe, I have never disguised my sentiments about polities in genera!."
l
Well, maybe he had always registered as an independent so as not to appear partisan. Still, "lib•
eralism carne out in almost every -speech in one
way or another, on radio.''
.
As he continued to talk, however, Cronkite
seemed to arrive at bis own understanding of just
how significant the Roseland speech had been.
" On television, I tried to absolutely hew to the
middle of the road and not show any prejudice or
bias in any way," he said.
r
"I did not believe that the public was sophisticat•

se/! CRONKITE, C2

�NATIONALSOZIALISTISCHE MILITÄR- UNO ZIVILVERWALTUNG
IN DEN EROBERTEN GEBIETEN IM WESTEN

ff17·PS
1.

Be r 1 c b t

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über dl• Lage u~d Entwlckluag 1n den beaetzteD
u1ederliànd1acben Gebietec
Berlcbtazelt 29.llai bie 1,.Jull 1140
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ltelch1kouhaar ht du lui'\rac

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ln labrung der l11terea1e11 dN lelcbea die Bffectllche
Ordn1112g UDd du Dffentltcbe tebe11 etcbern1telle11,
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dle au, Cröaden der Erbaltwig der 11ederl1Dd11cb.-llldtscbe11 Geblete UDA'bblllgic su balt•Dll•n llederlande abpsehen TOD den a111tlrtachen S1cherunge w1111ohaftl1ch

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l)leae Aufgabe lat n u,..... HDD u pltngt, dne po11thcb•
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der llederlande aa du lelch ale Aua!ld dN Willena des D1e4erläncl 1cdlen Volk•• erachetnen 11st.
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�</text>
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Other materials in the collection are related to the Termaats' experiences on the eve of and during the Second World War, especially the German occupation of the Netherlands and the Termaats' participation in organized resistance to the Nazis. Also included are materials that document the family's post-war life in the United States, including their public efforts to recognize, commemorate, and honor people and events significant to World War II.</text>
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