© Beeldbank WO2 / Oorlogs- en Verzetsmateriaal Groningen
Nol Escher - ‘I’m one of the boys who had the most shrapnel’
‘I’m one of the boys who had the most shrapnel. That’s because in our neighbourhood there is lots of of anti-aircraft artillery guns and there isn’t any in the posh neighbourhood where my school is. I put my cigar box in my school bag. The old pieces I put in the drawer in my cupboard. With a bit of luck I’ll leave school this afternoon with some nice new pieces.
Just before I leave I have to go up to the flat roof. Sometimes lying in bed you can hear the shrapnel landing on the roof. It sounds just like someone is throwing pebbles. Sometimes they’re even still warm when you collect them the next day. Beautiful the shrapnel, at least the big pieces are. If you’re lucky you find big pieces. As long as two fingers. But wider with strange pointed bits and sometimes slightly rusty. Sometimes they smell nice. Much more valuable than the smaller pieces that you so often find.’
Source: Extract from Nol Escher, Trompetten in de verte: een novelle, written by Emilie Escher, daughter of the author Nol Escher.
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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