Het Stenen Archief - Afgerond en lopend onderzoek

[14392]

(205)133
4
Meijer
Babeth
Andriesse
Mozes Maurits Andriesse
Barend Abraham Meijer & Rosa de Groot
18-05-1907
5 Sivan 5667
Oirschot
03-10-1984
7 Tishri 5745
Veghel
Oss
08-10-1984//12 Tishri 5745

HIER RUST
BABETH MEIJER
GEB. OIRSCHOT 18 MEI 1907
OVERL. VEGHEL 3 OKTOBER 1984
WED. VAN
MAU ANDRIESSE
Z. R. I. V.


 

פ"נ
Hier rust
[Bron:-wiewaswie.nl-BHIC]
Geboorte:-
Akte #43 Oirschot 20-05-1907
Uur van geboorte 3 uur namiddag

[Bron:-Delpher-De Telegraaf 05-10-1984-rouwadvertentie]
Overlijden en begraven

Uur van overlijden kon niet worden vastgesteld.
Haar echtgenoot is begraven in Oss (205)132.

Huwelijksakte nr.5, gemeente Oirschot, d.d.5-3-1929.

Haar vader Barend Meijer is begraven in Schijndel (27)46. Haar moeder Rosa de Groot geboren 25-4-1868 in Oirschot is 14-5-1943 in Sobibor vermoord. Zij staat vermeld op de steen van haar echtgenoot.

Aanvullende details:-

[Bron:-De geschiedenis van het Humanitarisme in Nederland-Christiaan Heerkens-http://www.humanitarisme.nl/personen/index.php?m=family&id=I450930]

When the war broke out, Babeth Andriesse-Meijer was living with her husband Mozes Maurits, and daughter, Rosa, aged 11, in Veghel, North Brabant. They went into hiding in Jos and Marietje Heerkens attic on April 7, 1943. The Heerkens lived together with Jos?s parents in a house adjoining a pub on Dolvert Street in the village of Dinther, only a few kilometers from Veghel. Although the Andriesses warned Jos and Marietje that helping Jews in 1943 could lead to their being sent to a concentration camp, they chose to risk their lives and those of their two-year-old daughter and one-month-old son in order to hide the family. Marietje had worked for the Andriesses as a housekeeper from 1932 until 1939. When she heard about the deportation of Jews in 1943, she offered them shelter. Babeth's four-year-old son, Barend Jozef, was sent to the Bienfait-van Osselen* family in Eindhoven because it was considered too dangerous to hide him in the village. Babeth, Mozes Maurits, and their daughter had only a small window in the attic through which to see the world. They were never discovered, despite the comings and goings of people to the nearby pub. When the food that the Andriesses had brought with them ran out, they paid the Heerkenses for food with the food stamps given to them by the Dutch underground. Jos and Marietje never accepted any compensation for their courageous deeds. They saved the lives of the Andriesse family because of their friendship and out of humanitarian motives. The Andriesse family left the Heerkenses? home on September 29, 1944, when Dinther was liberated. A year after the liberation, Jos, who was a diabetic, passed away at the age of 32.
On November 13, 1984, Yad Vashem recognized Jos Heerkens and his wife, Marietje Heerkens-Wijgergangs, as Righteous Among the Nations.
2022/01/26
bnnch