- Introduction
- Rabbi Baruch G.
- Rachel G.
- Christa M.
- Col. Edmund M.
- Edith P.
- Marion P.
- Helen R.
- Peter S.
- Anna W.
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Testimony Excerpts :: Marion P.
A Dutch rescuer explains her decision to help
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Excerpts copyright © 1996, Yale University Library.
Marion P. was born in 1920 in Amsterdam, Holland. Her father was a judge.
She spent time in Britain, since her mother was English. She notes the
Dutch tradition of offering refuge to victims of religious persecution
and the arrival of many Jewish refugees as Hitler rose to power. Although
not Jewish, her father was disappointed that the Dutch government did
not make it easier for Jewish refugees from Europe to enter Holland. She
describes the German invasion on May 10, 1940, which was a magnificent
spring day, contrasting with the events taking place. As anti-Jewish laws
were gradually implemented, she encouraged her Jewish friends to go into
hiding, although no one imagined the "final solution." She describes the
event that led her to begin actively hiding Jews.
"When I was on my way to classes
at the school of social work, and I saw a truck being loaded with Jewish
children from a Jewish home. I mentioned earlier about these two Dutch
women, and there were others who brought Jewish children to Holland. This
was one of the small group homes. These children ranged in age from about
two to ten. And the way those Germans treated those children, again, on
a sunny day like today--at nine o'clock in the morning, you're on your
way to work and you see, on the sidewalk, adult males laughing and joking
around while they're picking up small children by their arms, their legs,
their hair, and throwing them in a truck--it helps you believe that they
could do anything at all. There were two women who attacked the Germans,
tried to stop them, and they were thrown on the truck too. And that was
when I decided to become, more active, shall we say."
Marion P., often risking her own life, saved many Jews in Holland. She
has been designated one of the "Righteous among the Nations" by Yad Vashem.
After the war, she worked as a social worker in displaced persons camps.
She married an American GI who was an administrator at a displaced persons
camp.
Marion P. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-754). Fortunoff Video Archive
for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library.
The length of the complete testimony is 1 hour, 56 minutes.
A catalog
record is available for this testimony in Orbis, the Yale University
Library online public access catalog. Please see the Catalog
and research guide section of this site for more information. A second
interview (HVT-1097) and an interview with Marion and Anton P. (her husband)
together (HVT-1099) are also available.
Excerpts from this testimony are available in Parallel
Paths, an edited program available for loan
to schools and community groups.
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