© Stadsarchief Amsterdam
Nol Escher - “They’re taking them away” a man next to me says
‘The day after the bombs fell on the Euterpestraat I can see when I leave school that the entrance to this street from the Beethovenstraat is closed off. Something is going on. I can see German uniforms in the distance, vans and a lot of walking to and fro. I push past the people and stand at the front. The men around me look on in silence at what’s happening in the distance. Their faces are empty and they are wearing tatty old herringbone patterned suits. “They’re taking them away” the man next to me says. Another shouts: “Of course it’s because of the bombs yesterday.”
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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