Auntie Truus: A Holocaust Savior to Thousands of Children
Written By Savvy Auntie Staff Writers
By Fiona Hurley
In December 1938, a 42-year-old Dutchwoman met with Nazi lieutenant Adolf Eichmann to negotiate the transport of Jewish children out of Vienna. Her name was Truus Wijsmuller Meijer, but to thousands of children she would be known as "Tante Truus" – Auntie Truus.
Truus Meijer was born into a wealthy banking family and was working in the bank when she met her husband, Joop Wijsmuller. She and Joop loved children and were saddened when they couldn't have their own. Truus left the bank and started doing social work in Amsterdam. This brought her in touch with the Committee for Special Jewish Interests, who alerted her to the desperate situation of German and Austrian Jews.
The Kindertransport
By 1938, following the attacks of Kristallnacht in Austria and Germany, the Jewish population feared for their lives. Many tried to get asylum abroad, but few countries were willing to take large numbers of refugees. An exception was Britain, which allowed for the temporary entry of unaccompanied children. So began a rescue effort called the Kindertransport, in which Truss was a pivotal figure.
Because she was non-Jewish and spoke fluent German, Truus was sent to Vienna to meet Eichmann. He initially treated her with disdain, saying he was not used to dealing with women. "I'm sorry, sir,” she told him. “But I forgot to bring my husband; you'll have to do with me." When she refused to give up, he allowed her to take 600 Jewish children with the agreement that they would leave within four days.
He thought she would never be able to accomplish this undertaking. He didn't know Auntie Truus! She gathered the children, organized the paperwork and the trains, and had a welcoming committee meet them with apples and chocolate when they reached the Netherlands. 500 children sailed immediately for England, with the remaining 100 leaving on later boats.
The later transports were smaller and more orderly. Truus travelled to Germany several times a week and helped to arrange 49 transports. She used charm, stubbornness, and occasional bribery to get the children through.
Transport from central Europe became more restricted with the outbreak of war in September 1939. Many Jewish children remained in the Netherlands, which was still neutral. The orphanage in Amsterdam had become a refugee camp, and Auntie Truus was a popular figure there. She and Joop visited regularly, entertained the children at home, and brought them to the zoo on Sundays.
In May 1940, Germany invaded the Netherlands. Truus was in Paris, but she crossed troop lines to return to Amsterdam. There she collected Jewish children from the orphanage and foster homes, and arranged for coaches to get them on the last boat for England. The children hoped that Auntie Truus would come with them, but she didn't want to leave Joop and so she waved them goodbye from the dock.
In all, 10,000 children entered Britain on the Kindertransport. Some would eventually be reunited with their parents, but sadly many were the only survivors from their families.
Righteous Among the Nations
During the occupation of the Netherlands, Truus continued to smuggle Jewish people into Spain and Switzerland. She was arrested by the Gestapo in 1942, but released through lack of evidence. She sent thousands of food packages to Westerbork transit camp, where Jews and other prisoners were held before being sent to other concentration camps.
In 1944, she found out that a group of young children were to be sent from Westerbork to Auschwitz, where they would be killed immediately. Truus persuaded the guards that these were not Jewish children, but the Aryan offspring of German soldiers and Dutch women! The children were sent to a different camp, Theresienstadt, and almost all of them survived the war.
After the war, Truus Wijsmuller Meijer was recognized by Israel as one of the Righteous Among the Nations, a title given to non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews from the Holocaust. Her obituary in 1978 read: "Mother of 1001 children, who made rescuing Jewish children her life's work." An asteroid was named "Tantetruus" (Auntie Truus) in her honour.
This courageous woman embodied the best spirit of aunthood, loving and risking her life for children who were not her own. She deserves to be more widely known.
Further reading
The Kindertransport http://www.kindertransport.org/
The Children of Tante Truus http://dokin.nl/tante_truus_eng.html
Photo: Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-S69279 / CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Germany
Published: July 31, 2013