© Privécollectie Paula Bakker
Paula Bakker – Steenfatt
Steenfatt with a double ”t” lived in the front room. He lived for us for years on the Singel. He usually played with me on Sundays, mostly gymnastics. And he gave me crackers with butter.
He was German. When war broke out everyone said to him “You should have become Dutch.” But that would have cost him about 500 guilders, I think, and he didn’t have the money. But looking back it didn’t make any difference.
He was called up. He’d fought in the First World War and had been gassed and had problems with his stomach. He didn’t seem to hesitate about going to war again. He must have been in his late forties. He had to go on exercises and he went in his uniform. But then when he had to report for active duty he went into hiding.
Underneath us there was an electrical store and he went into hiding with the shop owners in the Haarlemmerstraat. Something that we didn’t know at the time and didn’t want to know either. In the meantime the Germans came more than once to the house asking where Steenfatt was. My mother was told to say: “He left in his uniform but I don’t know anything else.” Then they looked around, but what more could they do?
Paula Bakker
Paula Bakker is 10 years old when war breaks out. Her unmarried mother runs a boarding house on the Singel with Paula’s stepfather. 10 people live in the house: people who rent rooms and those who are boarding house guests. Most of them are unmarried or divorced and with some of them she has a lot of contact with others none. Paula experiences the occupation in many different ways.
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