© Privécollectie familie Escher
Nol Escher - ‘Where have the people gone to?’
Nol Escher is 8 years old when war breaks out. In December 1942 he moves to an apartment in Amsterdam where previously Jews lived.
‘It’s an apartment on the Noorder Amstellaan that has just become vacant. A week before, people were still living there. “And those people then?” I ask my mother and father as I enter the apartment for the first time, “where have the people gone to?” “They’ve gone. They had to go.” Says my mother as she looks out of the window. “They’re Jews.” “Oh, Jews.” I say. I don’t really understand.
Everything is small in the new house. Above every door there are brass cylinders with rolls of paper inside them. When everyone is out I climb on a chair on top of a table with my brother and get the rolls of paper out. The writing is in letters that I don’t understand. From the previous occupants. My younger brother doesn’t understand. I place the rolls of paper back in the cylinders.

Source: Extract from Nol Escher, Trompetten in de verte: een novelle, written by Emilie Escher, daughter of the author Nol Escher.
Jewish Monument Community
The Noorder Amstellaan is now called the Churchilllaan. More information about the apartment on the Noorder Amstellaan and other houses where Jews lived can be found on the Jewish Monument Community.
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Nol Escher
Nol Escher is eight years old when war breaks out. Because the coastal region is evacuated he moves from Bentveld, a village in the dunes near Zandvoort to Amsterdam. Christmas 1942 the Escher family move into a house where Jews had previously lived on the Noorder Amstellaan number 190. In June 1945 they move back to Bentveld.
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