Willem Arondeus was a Dutch resistance fighter who gave his life trying to protect his Jewish countrymen from the Nazis.
Born in Amsterdam in 1895, Willem was one
of six children. From a young age, he was a talented artist and his
parents encouraged his creativity, until he came out as homosexual at
age 17.
In a time when
nearly all gay people were in the closet, Willem’s parents could not
accept his choice to live openly. Their rejection led Willem to run away
from home.
On his own, Willem took odd jobs and eventually
became a successful visual artist and writer. He was commissioned to
paint a mural for Rotterdam’s town hall, in a style that combined modern
abstract painting with a traditional Dutch motif. Willem was a
well-respected author who published a popular biography of Dutch painter
and political activist Matthijs Maris.
In 1940, Germany invaded
the Netherlands. Willem immediately joined the resistance movement, and
urged his fellow artists to fight against the Nazi occupation. WIllem
published illegal anti-Nazi pamphlets calling for mass resistance
against the Germans.
Willem was especially committed to saving
Amsterdam’s Jewish community. Bringing in others to the cause, Willem
arranged for Dutch Jews to be hidden in people's homes. He used his
artistic skills to create false identity papers.
In 1943, Willem
hatched a brazen plan. Dressed as a German Army captain, and with 15
men behind him, Willem boldly marched into the Public Record Office,
where lists identifying people as Jews were kept. Willem drugged the
guards and planted a firebomb. The resulting blaze destroyed tens of
thousands of documents, and delayed or prevented many Jews from being
identified by the Nazis.
Unfortunately, Willem was captured by
the Germans and sentenced to death. Willem's last words before being
executed in July, 1943 were, "Let it be known that homosexuals are not
cowards.”
In 1986 Yad Vashem recognized Arondeus as Righteous Among the Nations.
Because of his sexual orientation, Willem’s story was omitted from
Dutch history books. Only in the last 20 years has his courage become
widely known.
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