- Document ID: 132710947
- Document Collection: 7-14-1 Documentation of the CLI
- Link to Online Archive: https://collections.arolsen-archives.org/de/document/132710947
https://www.joodsmonument.nl/nl/page/465034/child-of-salomon-sachs-and-his-family
her father, Salomon
-wrong link deleted , thx @carola.b -
http://www.stolpersteinegemeentestadskanaal.nl/de-dorpen/40-stadskanaal.html
Your second link seems to refer to another person. Please check, @velthove1
Louise Sachs survived in hiding as Wiesje de Bruin in Winkel thanks to Cor and Maartje Lodder-Dikstaal and in Hoensbroek thanks to Jochum and Tony de Vries-van Kalsbeek
See:
https://www.hollandskroon.nl/erfgoed/oorlogsmonumenten/ (click on Oorlogsmonument Nieuwe Niedorp)
Some days later, another child, six-year-old Louise Sachs, arrived holding her doll. She had been living with her parents in Stadskanaal (prov. Groningen), where her father had a senior position with the Postal Service. With the onset of the deportations, Louise’s father was arrested. Louise was taken to a temporary hiding place by the Amsterdam Student Resistance Group, and from there contact was made with the Lodders. When she arrived at their home, she was a frightened little girl, suffering from nightmares. However, she soon found a nice playmate in Ans, the Lodders’ daughter, and started to feel comfortable in her new environment. Louise was to respond to the name Wiesje and was introduced as a child of parents who were living in the city where there was not enough food. An arrangement with immediate neighbors took care of an escape route if needed. After informing the headmaster of the local school, Louise was allowed to enroll. The Lodders received food coupons for Louise through the same student resistance group. In the summer of 1943, word reached the Lodders, that a Loesje Pinto, a Jewish girl in hiding with their good friends Jacob andWijntje de Vries*, had been betrayed and arrested. Afraid of further betrayals, Louise was immediately removed from the Lodders and taken elsewhere after an emotional farewell. After many temporary hiding addresses, she arrived by the end of 1943 at the home of Jochum and Tonie de Vries*, where she stayed until the liberation. On March 18, 2001, Yad Vashem recognized Cornelis Lodder and Maartje Lodder-Dikstaal, as Righteous Among the Nations.
(…)Louise was initially moved between various hiding places before arriving at the de Vries family in Hoensbroek, Limburg. (…)
Jochum and Tony de Vries taught Louise at home because it was unsafe for her to leave the house. In times of danger, they took her by bicycle to stay with nearby relatives. After the war, Louise’s mother, who had survived in hiding in Friesland, found her daughter’s name on a Red Cross list. She contacted the de Vries family, who had intended to adopt the girl if no living relatives claimed her. With infinite patience, they persuaded Louise to return to her mother. The two families remained in close touch and the de Vrieses stood by Amalia Sachs and her daughter in the difficult years that followed the war. On May 26, 1981, Yad Vashem recognized Jochum de Vries and his wife, Tony de Vries-van Kalsbeek, as Righteous Among the Nations.
Your second link seems to refer to another person. Please check, @velthove1
Father:
Salomon Sachs - Westerbork Portretten