© Kryn Taconis / Library and Archives Canada
Nol Escher - ‘My neighbour Ernst has just turned 16 and risks being picked up’
‘My neighbour Ernst has just turned 16 and risks being picked up because he hasn’t registered for the Arbeitsdienst. If he hears that they are going to search houses for boys and men then he sleeps in our spare room. My father has a huge desk which was his grandfather's. The desk has cupboards on both sides for papers. Ernst sleeps in one of these cupboards.
We have already practiced how long it takes for him to get here if they call. Uncle with his stopwatch. I knocked on the front door, nothing, then another hard knock. Then the rope is pulled and the front door opens. I rush up the stairs, wait for a moment in the hall then go into the dining room where the desk is. Everyone looks at me, except Ernst, because he’s in the desk. Uncle looks concerned, it’s got to be quicker. Ernst is sitting there with his knees up against his chin and his head bowed. We tried every position, him on his knees with his head down, but try doing that for half an hour, all the blood rushes to your head.’
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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