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The Jewish Community of Den Ham |
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Introductory: -This article is as far as could be established the
only remaining written history of the Jewish community of Den Ham.
The author/researcher
had not much to go on, as he himself states in the article, by lack of
written historical source material, enabling him to reconstruct the
history of the Jewish community of Den Ham in the way that is done with
other communities.
The article is based,
therefore, mostly, but not exclusively, on the records of the Civil
Registry, this having a
bearing on its character, that is mostly genealogical and in a lesser
way: -anecdotic and story telling.
Resultantly only the
surnames pertaining to the Jewish families of Den Ham are noted here. (Including
names mentioned in sources).
Most persons bearing
those names that made up or were related to the Den Ham’s Jewish
community are mentioned in the body of the article itself.
Surnames mentioned in
the article (in order of appearance): -Beem-Brandes(Brandis)-
Lievendag-Wolff-
Corwin- Lieveboom(Lievenboom)- de Vienne (Duveen)- de Jong- Schaap-Wertheimer-
Boekbinder- Weiler- Schlosser- Sion- Kaijzer (Keyzer-Keizer)-
Hompersmaar-Gomperts-van Boelen- Gazan- Laamle- Falkenburg-van Coeverden-
Muller- van Leer- Hilberink- Gerrits- Zevenbergen- van Dam- Israels-
Alfing
There are two Jewish
cemeteries in Den Ham, one atop of the Mageler Es and the other one at
the beginning of the road from Den Ham to Vroomshoop, somewhat to the
east of the general cemetery at the corner of the Molenstraat and
the Dorpsstraat. More information hereabout is hard to find, the history
of the Jewish residents of Den
Ham is nowhere written, it is only oral tradition. The oldest
cemetery is the one at Mageler Es. Cadastral is this cemetery in
its triangle form, since the land consolidation, known under section A,
nr.4122, area 110 m2. This property has been registered since 1955 in
the name of
the Dutch Jewish Community (Nederlandse
Israelitische Gemeente-the NIK) in Amsterdam; formerly, since 1854, the
ownership belonged to Jewish community Den Ham.
On the request of the owner, the civil municipality has taken over the
maintenance of this cemetery since 1952, while the NIK has placed a
memorial as a future identification mark. This stone is 65 cm. high and
40 cm. in width and it is the only external distinguishing mark that
ornaments the cemetery. Unfortunately, miscreants were not ashamed to
mishandle this stone destructively.
On the stone below the words”Jewish cemetery” we find an
abbreviation of the five Hebrew words ”May their soul be bound in the
bundle of life”. A Jewish cemetery is as a mitigating expression also
called ”Home of the Living”.
In a disposition of the state council (Director-General of the Reformed
Church) dated 21 December 1821 nr. 4173/2046, pertaining to the
subdivision and description of the synagogue resorts in ecclesiastic
rings and the so called church circles the name Den Ham is not found.
In a regulation- by -law from 27 June 1877 of the Jewish community, the
name Den Ham does not appear either, therefore the official Jewish
sources doubt whether in the 19th century Den Ham was a
separate Jewish community. However, Mr. Beem found by coincidence in
Israel a supplementary document from which it became clear that in the
19th century efforts had been made to organise independent
church services in Den Ham. It refers to a disposition of the Head
Commission for Jewish Affairs, nr.35 sent 26 February 1857 in which on
request of Mr. Brandes permission is given to have Sabbath services in a
house synagogue, but under certain conditions. This permission was given
for one year and each year a new request had to be handed in. It is thus
clear that Den Ham had a “minjan” in 1857.Documents from the National
Archives show that Brandes already tried in 1856 to have a house
synagogue in Den Ham, but he succeeded in getting the permission only in
1857, and not longer than for that single year only.
On January 1, 1860 a census was taken in Den Ham, 36 Jewish people were
mentioned. That means 7 or 8 families who could have been able to form a
minjan in 1857 and that could have been the background for the request
of A. Brandes in 1857 to realize a house synagogue.
According to a regulation from 1906, Den Ham belonged to the Dutch
Jewish Community in Ommen. This municipality was dissolved in 1947 in
order to be added to the Jewish community in Almelo. Is is certain,
however, that Jews resided in Den Ham already in 1750. Six Jews lived in
Den Ham according to the location description of Den Ham dated 1835, 33
Jewish residents were counted in the year 1850 and 36 in 1860. The
annual almanac of 1913/14 published by the Central Organisation for the
Religious and Moral Elevation of the Jews in the Netherlands (Amsterdam
1913) mentions that Den Ham had at that time 5 male and three female
members of the Dutch Jewish community. At the registration for identity
cards during the German occupation 4 men and 3 women came forward as
being fully Jewish, 4 men and 3 women had 2 Jewish grandparents and 6
men and 6 women had 1 Jewish grandparent, this out of a total population
of 7486 persons.
The (new) Jewish cemetery on the Vroomshoopseweg, which has been
registered since 1900 in the cadastre in the name of the civil
municipality Den Ham under the number B 2395, is 400m2. Five gravestones
are still visible, two with a Hebrew text only, two with a Hebrew and a
Dutch text and one with a Dutch text only. Those with the Hebrew and
Dutch text relate respectively to Sophia Brandes-Lievendag, born on 26
October 1820, deceased on 3 November 1895 (the Jewish year is on the
tomb) and to Abraham Brandes, born 15 March 1820, deceased on 4 November
1907. The gravestone with the Dutch text is on the grave of Heyman
Wolff, born 8 December 1893, deceased on 17 July 1920.
The name Brandes is probably derived from the little town Brandes in the
vicinity of Prague. The name also appears elsewhere in Holland, among
others at the name adoption in Harderwijk in 1811. Another source
concerning the Hammer Jews is the Annual ‘Jaarboek Twente’ of the year
1962 containing an article written by H.M.Corwin named:” About old
Jewish Cemeteries in Twente pp.43-53. (Over oude joodse begraafplaatsen
in Twente).
Corwin writes that Izak Philip Lieveboom (which became later on
Lievenboom), ancestor of a respected Jewish family in Borne, left the
town Liechtenstein (in that time Kingdom Bohemen) to settle in Borne in
the beginning of the 19th century. It is interesting that his
first wife was called Lena Israel Joseph de Vienne (French for Vienna).
According to a descendant who still lived in 1962, Lena de Vienne was
born in Den Ham and her name had been Duveen, but no evidence has been
found to confirm this to be true. Many well known antiquaries descend
from the Duveen family, one was raised to the peerage and thus became
Sir Duveen. There are many reasons-Corwin writes-to assume that their
family coming from Vienna first settled in Twente and from there spread
all over Holland.
Documents from the local government offices show that the Brandes family
tree is as follows:
Isaac Simon Levie Brandis married to Clara Isaak de Jong on 16 October
1820 in Borne. They had a son Abraham, born on 15 March 1820 in
Harderwijk; Abraham married to Sophia (also called Heije) Lievendag,
daughter of Salomon Hartog Lievendag en Rose Schaap on 16
October 1820, in Borne. Abraham was a housepainter and lived in the
Molenstraat.
Abraham and Heije had two children:
Salomon Brandes, born 19th January 1854 in Den Ham, first he
was a vendor, later on
a house painter. He remained unmarried just as his sister Clara Brandes,
born 8 January 1847 in Den Ham, a tradeswoman, later on without a
profession and known to be somewhat strange.
Abraham died on 4 November 1907 in Den Ham, Sophia (Heije) on 3 November
1895 also in Den Ham. The tombstones are to be found at the Jewish
cemetery on the Vroomhoopseweg. Salomon died in Almelo on 5 Januari
1931, Clara in Apeldoorn on 11 February 1927; both were buried at the
Jewish Cemetery on the Vroomhoopseweg.
Not much is known today about the Brandes family, one of the oldest
Jewish families living in
Den Ham. No doubt he must have been a prominent Jewish resident which
can be concluded from the fact that several times he gave death notice
about deceased Jewish fellow believers. In 1864 he signed the death
certificate of the 71 year old butcher Abraham Samuel Wertheimer, born
in Weerts, Beieren (Germany). Abraham lived in Den Ham and was married
to Hanna Boekbinder. De death certificate also mentions that the family
and private names of Wertheimer’s parents are unknown, a phrasing that
appears in several death certificates of the Jews in the nineteenth
century.
In 1865 Abraham Brandis also signed the death certificate of the 50 year
old unmarried Jew Philip Levie Weiler, born in Winterswijk,
without a profession, living in Den Ham, the private and family names of
his parents are unknown as well.
The Wolff family has apparently played an important role in the Jewish
life of Den Ham. The ancestor of the Wolff family in Den Ham was Jacob
Wolff, who was born on 21 June 1861 in Boxem. He lived on the Twistweg.
He had a kind of clerical function, which can be deduced from the fact
that he was in control of funerals. Their ancestor Jacob married to Bet
Schlosser on 23 April 1896 in Den Ham, a descendent of another
well-known family in Den Ham. It is mentioned in their marriage
certificate that Jacob was the son of Theodor Wolff (a manufacturer in
the year 1896) and of Johanna Sion (who died already in 1896). Neither
Theodor nor his wife ever lived in Den Ham. Older informants still
remember that he was a butcher, which is also mentioned in his marriage
certificate. His wife, Bet Schlosser was born on 24 April 1875 in Den
Ham; she died on 15 February in Den Ham and was buried in the Jewish
cemetery on the Vroomhoopseweg. Her husband Jacob was deleted from the
local records on 11 January 1932, he left for the Central Jewish
Orphanage in Leiden, and he died during WWII.
The Wolf-Schlosser family had 6 children; the eldest two Heyman and
Levie were legalized at the marriage of their parents. Heyman, born in
den Ham on 8 December 1893, left home when he was 22 years, returned
when he was 26 and died one month later in Den Ham. His tombstone can
still be found. Did he die like his sister Lea Johanna, suffering from
tuberculosis? According to the municipality archives Heyman’s house
functioned as a kind of temporary home for other Jews like Simon de
Vries and Mozes Kaijzer (Keyzer), an uncle of Wolff’s wife.
Levie, (born on 27 March 1896 one month before the marriage date of his
parents) left Den Ham when he was 14 years old in order to try his luck
somewhere else.
The fourth child Johanna Helena Wolff, born on 30 September 1900 died
nine months after birth (16 June 1901) and her sibling Leea (also called
Lea) Johanna Wolff, born in Den Ham on 24 July 1903 died on 28 August
1928, at the age of a mere 25 years. She was buried in the Jewish
Cemetery on the Vroomhoopseweg. Lea left her home to live in Twente when
she was only 15 years old. Lea Johanna’s child, Betje Jacoba Wolff was
born in Den Ham on 13 July 1924. She lived in Ubach and escaped the
persecution mania during the war. A brave non-Jewish citizen of Den Ham
went to the registry office in 1942 just before the mass deportations of
the Jews, and in front of the clerk declared the child to be his. Betje
Jacoba thus officially got his name and escaped the gas chambers.
The sixth child from Jacob Wolff and Betje Schlosser was born in Den Ham
on 26 January 1911 and was called Bertha Theodora Wolff. Contrary to the
Jewish Schlosser family, the Wolff family has left no traces in Den Ham.
The former lived on the Esweg, but a little away from the main road.
Gompert Schlosser the ancestor of the Schlossers in Den Ham originated
from Germany. He was born on 10 July 1819 in Ahausen, son of Levie
Schlosser and Hendrika Hompersmaar, his offspring in Den Ham were called
by the name Gomperts.
Gompert Schlosser married when he was 50 years old on 23 June 1870 in
Den Ham. His wife, Lena (also called Lea) Keijzer was born on 15 May
1836 in Hasselt, she was the daughter of Philip Manus Keijzer and Naatje
Levie Ruben van Boelen. Lena Keijzer was a sister of the already
mentioned Mozes Keijzer.
Gompert is a small retailer at
the day of his marriage and Lea is without a profession. Lea obviously
had lived already for some time in Den Ham because when she marries, her
first three children born in Den Ham (Hendrina, 3 January 1866; Levie, 1
October 1867 and Philip 26 February 1870) are legalized by both
partners. Gompert Schlosser died at the age of nearly 80, on 21 March
1898. It is not known where
he was buried. Abraham Brandis was one of the persons who registered his
death. His wife Lena Keijzer who traded in draperies after her husband’s
death, died when she was 92 on 2 October 1923. Salomo Brandis registered
her death. Lea was buried in the cemetery on the Vroomhoopseweg.
After being married and after legalizing the three children mentioned
before, Gompert Schlosser and Lea Keijzer had 6 more children; Hanne who
was born 18 June 1877; David, born 4 August 1880; Sara, born on 22
February 1883; Simon and Salomon born respectively on 22 December 1885
and on 30 December 1890. All were born in Den Ham.
The Schlosser children Hendrika, Levie, Philip, Hanne, Sara and Simon
are mentioned in the later Jewish life of Den Ham. Hendrina, the eldest
married on 21 April 1887 in Den Ham to Philip Gazan who was thirty years
older than she was. Philip was the son of of Levie Raphael Gazan and
Betje Phillipus Abrahams Laamle who lived in Den Bosch. Philip was born
in Amsterdam on 28 October 1835 and when he married he was legally
separated from Jette Keizer. He died in De Ham on 27 July 1905 where he
was also buried.
When Hendrina married, she had already a daughter, Lea Lena who was born
on 26 April 1888 in Den Ham. Hendrina and Philip Gazan lived on the
eastside of the Daarlseweg, near the crossing with the Vroomhoopseweg.
They had nine children, all born in Den Ham but still at young age, they
all left for elsewhere.
Those 9 children were:
Levie Raphael (3-11-1887);
Betje (20-3-1889); Hendrika (9-1-1891); Doortje (21-1-1894); Gompert
(11-8-1895); Mietje (16-5 1897); Anna (13-1-1899); Bernard (31-12-1900);
and Isaak Geerts (11-1-1903).
After the death of her husband, Hendrina remarried on 19 May 1911 in
Den Ham to Joel Falkenburg, eleven years her junior. He was born on 16
June 1877 in Sneek, being the son of Isaak Falkenburg and Jantje van
Coevorden. He was a hawker who had come to Den Ham from Winterswijk.
Their marriage did not last very long, to be precise from 1911 till
Hendrina’s death (during the Spanish flu) on 24 October 1918. After
Hendrina’s death he left Den Ham again and remarried a much younger
woman. Hendrina’s daughter Lena Lea Schlosser, born before Hendrina’s
marriage to Philip Gazan, married Joel Falkenburg’s brother in 1913; as
a consequence her mother became also her sister in law, her uncle became
her husband and Mozes was in addition to being Joel’s brother also his
son in law! The married couple Mozes Falkenburg- Lea Lena Schlosser
lived near the crossing Vroomhoopseweg-Daarlseweg where their 8 children
were born:
Philip (4 May 1914-6 June 1914) was buried in Den Ham; Philip (18 April
1915); Izak (1 March 1917); Hendrina (20 January 1920); Jansje (2
September 1921-14 March 1931); Bertha (12 November 1922); Louis (25
January 1924-4 March 1924) buried in den Ham and David (8 June 1925).
Mozes and Lea Lena moved to Apeldoorn with their children Philip, Izak,
Bertha and David on 30 October 1939. Their daughter Hendrina married
Izak Muller on 12 April 1939 in Den Ham. Izak Muller was born on 15 June
1915 in Hagen in Westfalen, Germany. After WWII Izak was chairman of the
Jewish community in Leeuwarden.
Hanne Schlosser had two children before she married Philippus van Leer
on 4 October 1901 in Den Ham: Theresia (6 October 1896) and Gompert (12
July 1899) who were at the legitalized at their marriage. Philippus was
born on 7 July 1879 in Drachten, son of a merchant from Smallingerland,
Leman van Leer and his wife Frouke Levi. Later on Hanna and Philippus
had two more children: Vrouke (born in Leiden in 1902 and deceased in
the same year in Harderwijk) and Leman, born in 1903 in Groningen.
The Van Leer-Schlosser family with Theresia, Gompert en Leman left on 7
May for Zutphen where they were divorced on 22 August 1908.Theresia
returned later on to Den Ham and married on 27 August 1920 a gentile who
was 19 year old, Willem Hilberink. Not long afterwards on 21 August 1923
she died from tuberculosis. She was buried in the municipal cemetery.
Sara Schlosser had lived some time in Amsterdam, when she married on 25
March 1904 in Den Ham to Jan Gerrits (born in den Ham on 24 April 1882).
She and her husband are registered at the local authority office as
Dutch Protestant. Both lived a long time in Vroomshoop, Sara died on 10
March 1968.
Philip Schlosser who married the Dutch Protestant Neeltje Zevenbergen (8
November 1879) in all probability in Rotterdam, has also lived in
Vroomshoop on the Vierzonenweg. He left for Rotterdam on 10 January 1921
with his eight children, registered as Jews.
Simon Schlosser married on 25 April 1914 in Leek to Judic van Dam who
was born in Leek on 29 September 1886 as the daughter of Miechel van Dam
and Rebekka Freerks Israels. They lived at the Daarlseweg and had three
children; Lena (12 August 1914) who married on 8 October 1937 the Dutch
Protestant W.Alfing; Miechel (8 July 1918) who was a brush maker and
stayed unmarried and Gompert (30 July1931), a cattle dealer.
Simon, Judic and their children Miechel and Gompert as well as Levie
Schlosser were transported to Westerbork
in March 1943; they were murdered on 20 March 1943 in Sobibor
(Poland).
Based on:-
H.Konijnenberg-The Jews and their cemeteries in Den Ham-published in 8
parts and 5
commentaries in the Periodical of the Society for Antiquities Den Ham
Vroomshoop-
January/February 1973.
(Photocopied material in the genealogical library of the Center for
Research of Dutch Jewry-
Hebrew
University-Jerusalem)
A shortened and reconstructed excerpt from the original: -editing and
translation:-
Trudi Asscher & Ben Noach
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