When she was in her early 20s, Jeanne Daman became the unlikely headmistress of a Jewish kindergarten in German-occupied Belgium
When she was in her early 20s, Jeanne Daman became the unlikely headmistress of a Jewish kindergarten in German-occupied Belgium. Jeanne, a Roman Catholic, taught children who were banned from public education.
When the Gestapo came to her school and asked for three children by name, Jeanne felt she had no choice but to comply. She dressed the children, the youngest of whom was three years old. "I put them in the truck myself, delaying the moment when the Nazis would touch them," she wrote. The children were used to lure their parents out of hiding.
That day changed Jeanne. "I was anti-Nazi by conviction before. Now I wanted to strike back myself, to damage them,” she wrote.
Jeanne was eventually forced to close the school because it posed too much danger for the young students who were facing deportation. After the school closed, Jeanne joined a clandestine rescue network to find hiding places for innocent children across Belgium. Later, she helped the Belgian resistance—transporting weapons by bicycle and gathering intelligence.
After the Holocaust, Jeanne continued to care for orphans and reunite families. Yad Vashem recognized her as Righteous Among the Nations in 1971.
Click the link in our bio to learn more.
Photos: USHMM, gift of Aldo Scaglione
#WorldTeachersDay #Teacher #Holocaust less
Comments
Post a Comment