© Privécollectie Hélène Egger
Hélène Egger - ‘Saturday was a nice day. It was Sabbath’
‘I went with my oldest brother to temple, another name for the Jewish church. My brother Daniël was really the only one of us who was religious. He got that from my mother. Until she became ill they always went to the synagogue together. After her death Daniël continued to go. I liked to go with him. I always put on my best clothes. I wasn’t that bothered about the religion. For me it was a day out. The full synagogue, the women upstairs, the men below. After the service we nearly always went for lunch with the de Leeuw family at their home in the Banstraat. They were friends of Daniël. Dishes full of fried plaice and of course the plaited Jewish bread, challah. I loved that. They were a lovely family. They always wanted to make everything nice for us because we had just lost our mother. They felt sorry for us.’

The Synagogue Jacob Obrechtstraat, Amsterdam © Stadsarchief Amsterdam (city archives)
Source: Extract from Ik ben er nog. Het verhaal van mijn moeder Hélène Egger. In cooperation with author Debby Petter and Uitgeverij Thomas Rap.
Hélène Egger
Hélène Egger is a 10 year old Jewish girl when the war breaks out in 1940. When her mother has to undergo a serious operation she goes to live with her grandparents. After being arrested, Hélène manages, with the help of her grandfather who has connections in the Jewish Council, to escape from the Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theatre). She goes into hiding and eventually ends up at a farmer's family in Brabant.
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