Teacher
who saved hundreds of Jewish children dies at 107
Johan
van Hulst, a former Dutch senator and teacher renowned for his efforts to save
hundreds of Jewish children during the Holocaust, died March 22 at the age of
107, the Dutch Senate announced this week.
As principal of the Reformed Teachers
Training College, van Hulst found himself at the center of a growing operation
to smuggle Jewish children out of Amsterdam to protect them from Nazi
persecution during the Second World War.
The college garden bordered that of a
Jewish day-care center, from which hundreds of Jewish children were passed over
the garden fence to be temporarily hidden by van Hulst before being collected
by members of a children's rescue organization and smuggled to safety.
"Try to imagine 80, 90, perhaps 70
or 100 children standing there, and you have to decide which children to take
with you.... That was the most difficult day of my life," he remembered of
the period in 1943 when the Jewish day-care center was due to be cleared out, according to Yad Vashem,
the World Holocaust Remembrance Center.
"You realize that you cannot
possibly take all the children with you. You know for a fact that the children
you leave behind are going to die. I took twelve with me. Later on I asked
myself: 'Why not thirteen?'"
Following the end of the Second World War, he became an
active member of the Christian Democratic Appeal Party and later became a
senator.
Ankie Broekers-Knol, president of the
Dutch senate, told CNN in a statement that van Hulst "led an extraordinary
life. He will be remembered as an icon of democracy. He dedicated both his work
as an educator as well as his work in the Senate to the democratic values of
freedom and equality. He serves as an example to us all."
Ruth Peetoom, chairwoman of the
Christian Democratic Appeal party, described van Hulst as "an icon of
justice."
"Van Hulst was intelligent,
courageous and modest," she said in an email to CNN. "In his long
life he has meant a lot to others in different ways."
He was honored by Yad Vashem in 1972 as
Righteous Among Nations, in recognition of his resistance to the Nazi
persecution of Dutch Jews.
Yad Vashem spokesperson Simmy Allen
said van Hulst will be remembered by "the entire Jewish people for his
valiant efforts in the rescue of Jews during the Holocaust."
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
paid tribute to van Hulst during a trip to the Netherlands in 2012.
"We say those who save one life
saves a universe. You saved hundreds of universes. I want to thank you in the
name of the Jewish people, but also in the name of humanity," Netanyahu
told the senator, according to The Times of Israel.
The Dutch ambassador to Israel, Gilles
Beschoor Plug, told CNN that van Hulst "will be remembered especially as a
hero of the Dutch resistance during World War II. His passing is a great loss.
His courageous acts saving many Jewish children remain an inspiration for
generations to come."
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