My wife Susan and I are currently in Amsterdam, visiting friends and celebrating the Christmas and Hanukkah seasons.
My wife Susan and I are currently in Amsterdam, visiting friends and celebrating the Christmas and Hanukkah seasons. Yesterday we met up with 88-year-old Rudy Klijnkramer, a long-standing family friend who as a young Jewish boy of eight years old was rescued and harbored by my parents during the Holocaust. Rudy’s parents were hidden on a farm near Alkmaar and the family was reunited after the war. But more than 100,000 of Amsterdam’s Jews did not make it.
The other day Rudy took us to the memorial wall at the Jewish Museum, which contains the names and ages of all the Jews who were murdered by the Nazis. He particularly wanted me to see the name Sigmund Boekdrucker, a Polish Jew who was part of a resistance group with my parents – Gerald (Theo) and Gerta Van Raan — and others who firebombed a Nazi administration building that housed the identification records of the city’s Jewish population.
Sigmund was arrested and eventually executed but he never gave up any names. I am named after him, definitely a legacy of honor as well as a legacy of emotions.
In 2012 my parents were honored as Righteous Gentiles by the State of Israel for their part in the rescue of Jewish children and the resistance movement against the Nazis.
At the Jewish Museum, Rudy also took us to a spot where there are at least 20 names of Klijnkramer, all related to Rudy as cousins, uncles, aunts and distant relatives — ranging from four years old to 85 years old at the time of their murders.
Rudy put on his yarmulke and took out a paper with the Kaddish prayer. After reading a few lines, he stopped and started weeping. My wife Susan, who is also Jewish, took over the prayer reading.
As I stood watching, listening and remembering, I was reminded that holocausts happen, wars happen, in particular when we start forgetting.
After the museum visit, we went to dinner and Rudy recounted a story about a Christmas Eve he spent as a young boy with my parents in The Hague in 1943. It was a festive evening with my father’s nine siblings all in attendance. But Rudy described being sad and sullen. He missed Hanukkah, spinning the dreidel, lighting the menorah. He missed his parents.
When Rudy and my parents arrived home that night in 1943, my father asked Rudy and my mother to wait outside for a few minutes while he attended to something. When he called them inside and brought them into the dining room, they saw a small Christmas tree lit with candles, and beneath it a Christmas creche. Next to the tree was a menorah, made of a coat hanger and tin foil.
My mother grew anxious, Rudy said, knowing that displaying a menorah could get everyone arrested or worse. My father said not to worry, that the Nazis were all too drunk with their Weinachten drinking and singing.
On the floor under the menorah were presents. Rudy told us at dinner that the sight filled him with joy. My father then gave him a match to light the candles and Rudy said the prayer or as much as he knew: “Baruch A ton Adinoi. And they all lived happily ever after.”
Rudy opened his presents and received some coloring pencils, a blank book to make drawings, an orange and some chocolates. There was also a present his parents had somehow managed to smuggle to him: a small wooden barn that opened from the top and contained tiny wooden animals. Rudy placed them in front of baby Jesus in the creche and said that they would protect the baby from the bad soldiers.
Rudy told us he could still recall how cold that night was, and that while my father shoveled another bit of coal in the furnace, he snuggled on the couch with my mother who was pregnant with my older sister.
It was a cold Christmas Eve and the world was at war. But it was also Hanukkah for Rudy.
In Amsterdam, we toasted this memory, along with the photos Rudy shared of his family: two daughters, six grandchildren — all with husbands, wives or partners. There are great-grandchildren on the way, he added.
Sig Van Raan lives in West Tisbury.

Comments
Such a moving and beautifully
Carol Hymowitz NYCSuch a moving and beautifully written essay. Thank you Sig for reminding us what is important and celebrationg Rudy and your righteous and brave parents.
A beautiful story containing
Shirley Watkins West VirginiaA beautiful story containing many life lessons. The entire story could most likely become a book and movie. In the U.S. the month of May is American Jewish Heritage Month. I hope this story will continue to be shared in communities and schools.
What a beautiful remembrance!
Robert Skydell Essaouira, MoroccoWhat a beautiful remembrance! You transported me, Sig.
Sig thank you for sharing
Valerie Sonnenthal ChilmarkSig thank you for sharing this important story. How amazing you all can celebrate together and shine light into the darkness that continues to exist for so many.
‘Tis the season for family
HARRY SEYMOUR Oak Bluffs‘Tis the season for family gathering, the spirit of giving and reflection of why it should be so, exemplified beautifully in Sig’s historical account of two different religious holidays merging humanely in such a poignant and significant way.
Harrowing and wonderful, Sig.
John F ChilmarkHarrowing and wonderful, Sig. Thank you.
Dear commentators - Thanks so
Sig Van Raan West TisburyDear commentators - Thanks so much for the kind words. It means a lot to me, at this time of the year, to acknowledge and celebrtate the memory of my parents. They were humble working class people who came to America in 1951 and lived the American Dream. They never thought of themselves as heroic rescuers. As I recall, they always referred to the little boy who lived with them during the war. In response to the question "Why did you do this", she said "That is not the right question. The real question should be "Why didn't more do what we did?"
A very moving and
Ginny Jones wtA very moving and inspirational piece -- and why don't more do what the Van Raans did -- there are fartoo many opportunities even in our own community! Maybe, in the New Year we can welcome some Ukrainians...
Always helps to know there
suzanne russin Santa Cruz caAlways helps to know there are good people who do the right thing. And lucky you to know and learn what happened. Thanks, Sig
Dear Sig: Displaying your
Carlos Sluzki Washington times two: DC and MADear Sig: Displaying your exemplary parents' story as faithfully as you have been doing keeps their quest and humanity alive and helps us remember that solidarity is, in fact, a daily stance. You are a great branch of that great tree.
Gimme a call, will ya, when you return?
Love,
Carlos
Would love to reconnect with
Deborah M Costello RichmondWould love to reconnect with you
Sig, this really is such a
Gabriel Petlin ChilmarkSig, this really is such a beautiful yet harrowing remembrance. I felt transported. Thank you for writing this and reminding us all how precious life is. I thought of all my relatives that I will never know who perished in the Shoah.
Sig, how wonderful to read
Debra Moore St. Petersburg, FLSig, how wonderful to read this. In case you don't recognize the name, I am you godson Luke's mother. Stay well, my old friend.
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