- The Jewish Community of Wijk bij Duurstede
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Jewish life in Wijk bij Duurstede in the 17th and 18th centuries
List of names of genealogical relevance mentioned in the
article (in order of appearance):-
Abraham Marcus Frank, Jacob Davidsz, Isack Salomons
(Salomon Isaacqs, Isaac Salomons), Meijer Franken,
Hertog Hertogse, Eliaser van Buren, Abraham
Samuels,Jacob Abrahams, Nahum van Aalten, Jacob Tobias,
Abigail Nathan, Hertogh Jacobs, Adolphus Jacobs, Abraham
Jacobs, Jacob Levi,
Isaac Hijmans, Cristje de Vries,
Isaac
Auerbach , Wolf Cohen ,Abraham Mozes Levits ,Rabbi David
Hes, Louis Worms.
Family trees of relevance:- Heyman, Hakkert
Data
sources
There
is a dearth of archive material concerning the Jewish
community of Wijk bij Duurstede during the 17th and 18th
centuries, or even of the number of Jews among its
population. Data can nevertheless be derived from more
general material such as the 1792 registry of taxes, the
minutes of the Wijk magistrate's court of law (1592 -
1794), the roster of the guild of pedlars, and a tax
cahier of 1749.
The
oldest Book of Citizens of Wijk bij Duurstede mentions
the first Jewish immigrant in 1675, and lists by name a
total of 19 Jewish immigrants who took the oath of
burghership according to Jewish custom (more judaico).
One of these immigrants is Jacob Salomon, who took the
oath on the 10th of May, 1746
The
magistrate's minutes, which complement the Books of
Citizens to some degree, offer more information on the
entering of Jews into the burgher community, and in
addition they contain a wealth of information concerning
the comings and goings of the Jewish citizenry. In these
minutes we meet by name and designation those citizens
that were remiss in maintenance of their property and
were called upon to make amends. Noted for instance is
Beligje Jacobs, widow of the banker Abraham Marcus
Frank. From 1729 onwards she receives regular notice
that a new drain has to be installed on her house, and
that the wall of her 'court' is in lamentable condition.
Also 'Lijbe the Jew' who resides in 1743 in the
Peperstraat is admonished to repair his eave
('luijfel'). Regrettably, personal data are often
missing, and Jewish citizens were simply referred to as
'the Jew'. In the spring of 1782 part of Jacob Davidsz'
house wall had collapsed into the sewer. Jacob Davidsz
was unable to pay the cost of the commissioned
carpenter, and in January 1789 the Municipal Beadle is
requested to sell the house in the Peperstraat with
subtraction of the outstanding payments. Incidentally it
is notable that Jewish householders owned five of the
eleven houses on the Peperstraat.
Available is a roster of the guild of pedlars
[kramersgilde], containing accounts of the
Pedlars' Guild over the 1746- 1797 period.
Jewish members are mentioned separately from 1764
onward, and it transpires that during 1746-1797 some 21
Jews were registered with the guild.
Thus
for instance we see that Isack Salomons was a continuous
member (with the exception of 1766) from 1746 till 1771.
Possibly he was related to the oldest Jewish resident,
Salomon Isaacqs. Moreover, this would imply that said
pedlar Isack Salomons represents the fourth generation
of this family (the first known Salomon Isaacqs
of 1671, his son Isaac Salomons, then another
son, again named Salomon Isaacqs, and finally Isack
Salomons who in 1739, when quite young of age, joins the
guild of pedlars).
On
the eleventh of September 1775 the municipal council of
Wijk deals with a request by 'the housewyfe of Jacob
Davidsz', Jewe' to be allowed to open a lodging house
for 'decent individuals of the Jewish nation and
Christians'. The wording of this request reflects the
position of the Jewish community within the township
Wijk bij Duurstede: it is conscious of its own identity,
but does not live in separation. Already early in the
18th century Jews apparently took active part in the
economically and socially so important life of the
guilds.
Demographic data and wealth status.
Regrettably, only very few data are available on the
number of Jews in Wijk bij Duurstede before the 18th
century. It can be established that there had been about
50 Jewish persons in town, but it is not clear whether
they lived there for long periods. Of these fifty Jews,
30 came to the town as immigrants between 1671 and 1795.
Accurate population figures for the year 1749 may be
derived from the register of 'tax per head', also known
as
'consumption money'. According to this tax register
there were 28 persons belonging to 6 Jewish households
in 1749, representing 2.7% of the total population.
Based
on said 1749 tax register we know that the population of
Wijk was divided into eleven classes for the purpose of
per-head taxation. This classification shows one Jewish
family to belong to the lowermost, untaxable population
stratum namely Meijer Franken with his wife and three
children, who resided in the quarter of Cloosterbuurt.
To the lowest taxation class belonged the
already-mentioned pedlar Isaq Salomon and the household
of Hertog Hertogse, an immigrant from Lithuania who
settled in Wijk in 1744. The Hertogse family soon came
into dire straits, as appears from Hertog's request from
the town magistrate for an affidavit, which would state
that he has been "since 1744 a citizen of this town, and
that by today he has been reduced by extreme destitution
to a lamentable condition". Why did he request an
affidavit? Presumably because it would give him the
right to apply for public dole.
In
the fourth class we find the banker Eliaser van Buren
and his 5 children, residing in the Peperstraat, and
Abraham Samuels from the Oeverstraat quarter. Top income
and property among the Jewish community belonged to the
childless couple Abrahams who lived in the Waterspoort
quarter. Jacob Abrahams had obtained citizenship in 1746
and was a butcher by trade. Beside that he served as the
congregation's parnas (synagogue superintendent).
The tax register also allows inference about some Jewish
citizen's standard of living. The case is on record of
Nahum van Aalten, who in 1732 converted to 'the true
Christian faith'. His family was reduced to such poverty
that he was allowed to collect alms among 'the Christian
congregation who would be willing to give'. Possibly
this conversion was instigated by the hope for some
special betterment.
Professions and professional organizations
It is
not possible to establish the various professions of the
Jewish inhabitants that were identified by the present
research, since the professional guilds, except for the
guild of pedlars, did not keep lists of members. Five of
the Jewish citizens owned loan banks, two were
physicians, three were glaziers, and two of the five
Jewish butchers, who dealt in hides, were also members
of the shoemakers' guild.
The
pedlars' roster shows that 21 Jews had been members of
this guild. In 1749 this amounted to over 6% of the
membership (Jews numbered only 2.7% of the total
population), indicating that Wijk's body of pedlars
professed tolerance toward non-Christians brothers in
trade. Less
tolerance, however, was shown toward "blacklegs", i. e.
individuals who traded in goods outside the guild's
monopoly. In June 1771 Jacob Tobias was caught selling
coffee beans in the Peperstraat. It appears that said
Jacob Tobias and his wife Abigail Nathan were regular
troublemakers. Jacob did jail time several years later,
and Abigail got into conflict with the guild because she
sold seamstress goods without having registered as a
member. When the court's beadle came at last to her
house to collect the fine, she scolded him for 'knave'
[schelm]. After much ranting and raving she gave in to
the guild's insistence and applied for membership.
Unlike at other communities, Amsterdam among them, no
limit was set on the number of Jews admitted to the
guild, nor did they have to pay higher dues.
On
the other hand, Jews were not eligible for directoral
functions within the guild, which by 1785 was already on
the verge of disbanding, and the matter became
irrelevant after the guild's demise in 1797.
The
bankers
During the final decades of the seventeenth and the
first half of the eighteenth century, Jewish lessors of
the Bank of Loans were active in the town. Jews ran this
line of business from 1674 to the end of 1751
continuously.
The
first Jewish banker to be mentioned is Hertogh Jacobs,
who came to Wijk bij Duurstede in 1674. The municipal
management decreed that Hertogh Jacobs, apparently as a
special concession, would be exempted as much as
possible from the 'billet payment' (a charge for housing
a garrison within the town).
He also was granted permission to bury the dead
'in the Jewish manner' within the township perimeter.
Hertogh Jacobs hailed from Veenendaal, where his father
Adolphus Jacobs was holder of the local bank. Hertogh's
multiple dissensions with the
local magistrate during the 1684- 1764 period apparently
point to his failure to set up a flourishing banking
business. Thus for instance it appears that after only a
year after establishing his business, Hertogh Jacobs did
not have sufficient security bonds. The municipal
council admonished Jacobs more than once to acquire
confiscation, securities to the required value, and
referred him time and again to the stipulations of his
contract. In March 1676 the banker still had not
complied with the council’s demands, and the threat of
confiscation is raised again. A week later the court's
beadle is charged to take up residence within the bank.
The requisite securities must by now have reached a
value of at least one thousand guilders. Hertogh Jacobs
could not meet this sum, and on the 31st of March 1676
he proposes his father and his nephew Abraham Jacobs to
vouch for him financially.
But
then Hertogh Jacobs obtains the support of Baron Johan
van Reede van Renswoude, who intercedes for him with the
municipal management. The minutes concerning this issue
are somewhat vague, but Hertogh Jacobs is allowed to
continue his banking activities. Soon afterward his
position in the town is significantly reinforced. By
1678 he has become one of the three concessionaires of
mill taxation, and in 1680 of the butchery tax and
brewery tax. In 1677 he engages his brother-in-law
Abraham Marcus, town citizen since 1675, to become his
assistant in banking affairs.
Between 1675 and 1684 Hertogh Jacobs changes his address 4 times. He resides in the Leuterstraetse Buert, the Merckt quarter, at the upper end of the Peperstraat, arriving finally at the Vorderstraet.
The
oldest Jewish cemeteries
Beside their own ecclesiastic organization, the Jews of
Wijk bij Duurstede had since the thirties of the 18th
century disposal of their own cemetery. Possibly they
had burial privileges from an earlier time, since the
earliest contracts with the bankers mention burial
according to Jewish custom on ground assigned for this
purpose by the magistrate. The earliest solid reference
dates from 18 june 1731. On that date the magistrate
decided to burden several town councilors with the task
of finding a fitting burial terrain for those Jews "who
came to live here strengthened with families". It
transpires a number of years later that a garden plot,
leased by the widow Van Roelof van Bladel from the
municipality, was destined to become a Jewish cemetery.
The plot was situated jut outside the city wall near the
Womens' Gate [Vrouwenpoort], at the foot of Ruisdael's
Mill. Apparently the dimensions of this property were
rather small, because already in 1737 space has become
cramped and permission for expansion is requested. Again
the councilors reach agreement to grant the Jews a piece
of ground adjoining the existing cemetery. Two months
later the Municipal Council agrees to allow the Jews
sole use of "the large gate belonging to their
cemetery". Apparently the cemetery remained in use till
the end of the 18th century, since mention is made in
1789 of "the Jews' cemetery outside the Women’s' Gate,
between the city wall and the Leckendijk".
Notwithstanding this expansion, the increasing stream of
Jewish immigrants who came to settle rendered the burial
area again inadequate. It has to be assumed that further
local expansion was not feasible, because the parnas
Jacob Levi approaches the magistrate in June 1776 with a
request to allow the Jews the use of a tract of land
near the Wijkersloot for the interment of their dead.
Within a short while, however, it transpires that a
certain burgher of Wijk by name of Jan van Agthoven has
property rights on that terrain, and he is disinclined
to relinquish them.
Subsequently, the parnassim cast their eye on
another parcel outside the town perimeter, situated on
municipal property known as 'the Stroobandse Capel'. In
this case we have a description of the area: '17 by 3
rod' which means about 721 square meters. The magistrate
deferred his decision even though asking advice from the
"gentlemen of finances", and we have to conclude that
the 'Stroobandse Capel' never became a Jewish burial
place. For the time it is not known how the Jews of Wijk
bridged the time interval between 1776 and the use of
the burial area "Along the Wall. Neither is it known
when the oldest Jewish cemetery, the one outside the
Womens' Gate, was cleared. Today two tombstones are
visible at this cemetery: the one on the grave of Isaac
Hijmans (1791- 1817), and the marker on the grave of
Cristje de Vries (1796- 1814). With the dissolution of
the Jewish congregation of Wijk bij Duurstede in 1923,
the ownership of the old cemetery was transferred to the
name of N.I.G. Utrecht. The remaining 17 tombstones at
the mixed cemetery at the Steenstraat and Along the Wall
are today the petrified witnesses of the vanished Jewish
community of Wijk bij Duurstede.
Circumcisions at Wijk bij Duurstede.
Jewish congregations in Holland's larger cities usually
had a resident mohel (ritual circumciser). For
the circumcision of Jewish male babies in the smaller
towns, such as Wijk bij Duurstede, the ritual was
carried out, pro deo, by a mohel from
outside, who was reimbursed for his travel expenses. The
mohalim who served the congregation of Wijk over
the years 1773- 1850 included:
Isaac
Auerbach (1773 -1782) from Amersfoort
Wolf
Cohen (1792- 1808), from Amersfoort
Abraham Mozes Levits (1812), from Amersfoort
Rabbi
David Hes (1823- 1850), from Tiel.
More
details hereabout can be found in the circumcision
registers in the Mediene section:-http://dutchjewry.org
A mohel
of whom we do not have the name and who was active
during the years of the French occupation told the mayor
of Zaltbommel that he destroyed his records of performed
circumcisions, presumably to prevent the recruitment of
Jewish youngsters to the Jewish Corps, established in
1809 by the Napoleonic army, and which aroused
considerable opposition among the Jewish community.
The
mohalim kept their own records, in Hebrew, and
these belonged to them personally, not to the Jewish
congregation. As a result many of these circumcision
records became lost with time. As far as is known, 48
such registers are still extant in public and private
archives throughout the Netherlands. They are the only
relics of what must have been the many hundreds that
were kept by the faithful ministers of the oldest Jewish
rite.
parochie
Wartime hiding of Jews in Wijk bij Duurstede
During the Nazi occupation of 1940-1945 the Roman
Catholic Parish Church offered in 1943 a hideout for
Jews at its headquarters on the market. One of these was
Louis Worms and his wife and child. At a later date -
probably after 'Mad Tuesday' *[Dolle Dinsdag] – these
hiders moved out to a precinct on the Dijkstraat, next
to the Sailors' House, and thus survived the war.
Possibly more Jewish fugitives found safety at the
parochial headquarters.
Jews
found safety also at a number of private addresses. in a
hiding place beneath the floor at the residence of a
school principal in the Vogelenbuurt suburb for example
and at the Golden Lion [Gouden Leeuw] restaurant. The
names and fates of these Jewish hiders are unknown.
Town
Councillor A. J. J. van Bemmel played a major role in
the Dutch underground. His farm 'De Vogelpoel' [The Bird
Pool], no. 3 along the Wijkersloot, was headquarters of
the local resistance movement, and housed among other
things an ammunition depot. From here, attacks were
launched against the German occupation force, which
included a raid on the post office and the seizing of a
consignment of food vouchers.
A number of fugitives found a hiding place at the
Vogelpoel farm, but it is not known if these included
Jews. For his heroic activities during the Occupation,
Van Bemmel was awarded the Cross of Resistance.
·
Mad Tuesday is a Dutch name for Tuesday September
5, 1944.
On this day many rumors were spreading in the occupied
Netherlands that the liberation by Allied forces was at
hand.
[Source and credits:- "Ordentelijke
lieden van de Joodsche Natie" bijdragen tot de Joodse
Geschiedenis van Wijk bij Duurstede,1671-1923 van F.E.
van Hekelen, J.Becker & R.V. Brilleman-ISBN
90-75207-17-7-Historische Reeks Kromme-Rijngebied 2-1994

