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Nol Escher - ‘Three stars and four ordinary children’
“Why don’t you go across the street and play Monopoly?” says my mother. The Jewish children who live there like to see other children. They’re not allowed out much, they have to stay indoors. So seven of us play Monopoly. Three stars and four ordinary children.
I sit opposite the girl with a star, the other two are boys. She has lovely dark skin, dark hair and a sad smile. She looks as if she’s enjoying herself. I keep looking at the star, it’s golden yellow and the word JEW is written on it in strange letters. JEW? Isn’t that some dirty, old, bent over man with a big nose, a shabby long coat, mean eyes and a stringy beard? And on this sweet, nice girl is the word JEW.’
Source: Extract from Nol Escher, Trompetten in de verte: een novelle, written by Emilie Escher, daughter of the author Nol Escher.
Nol Escher
Nol Escher is eight years old when war breaks out. Because the coastal region is evacuated he moves from Bentveld, a village in the dunes near Zandvoort to Amsterdam. Christmas 1942 the Escher family move into a house where Jews had previously lived on the Noorder Amstellaan number 190. In June 1945 they move back to Bentveld.
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