Jaap Meijer (18 November 1912 – 9 July 1993) was a Dutch Jewish historian, and poet. He wrote his poetry under the pseudonym Saul van Messel.
Jaap Meijer | |
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Born | Jakob Meijer (1912-11-18)18 November 1912 Winschoten, Netherlands |
Died | 9 July 1993(1993-07-09) (aged 80) Heemstede, Netherlands |
Nationality | Dutch |
Other names | Saul van Messel |
Occupation | Historian, poet |
Notable work | Isaac da Costa's weg naar het Christendom (1946) |
Relatives | Ischa Meijer (son) |
Meijer was born Jakob Meijer on 18 November 1912 in Winschoten, Netherlands, and was raised in the Orthodox Jewish tradition.[1] At the age of 10, his father died, and it was decided to send him to the Dutch Israeli Seminary [nl] in Amsterdam[2] to become a rabbi.[3] During this period, he was involved in the zionist movement.[1]
Meijer graduated from the seminary in 1938,[4][3] but decided that he did not want to become a rabbi,[3] and continued to study history at the University of Amsterdam.[2] World War II had started and the Netherlands had been invaded, but Meijer had other things on his mind.[5] On 20 June 1940, he married Liesje Voet, which caused controversy with his orthodox family, because her father was active as a trade unionist.[4] Meijer was also working on his thesis about Isaac da Costa's conversion to Christianity. On 2 October 1941, he received his doctorate.[5] From 1941 until 1943, he taught history at the Joods Lyceum [nl].[2] One of his students was Anne Frank.[6] On 14 February 1943, his first child Ischa was born.[7]
In June 1943, Meijer and his family were sent to Westerbork transit camp.[4] On 15 February 1944, they were moved to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. When British troops neared the camp, they were put on the so-called Lost Train, trains heading East with no clear destination. The train was captured by the Red Army in Tröbitz[8] on 23 April 1945.[9] Meijer and family managed to survive the war.[2]
In 1946, his thesis was reprinted as Isaac da Costa's weg naar het Christendom[10] As an author, he started to focus on the pre-war Jewish history in the Netherlands, and was known for his sharp criticisms.[11] In 1951, Meijer taught history at the University of Amsterdam.[2]
The Cold War worried Meijer, and in 1953, he accepted an offer to become rabbi in Paramaribo, Suriname.[12] He did not stay long, and returned to the Netherlands in 1955.[2]
In 1967, Meijer started to publish poetry in Kentering using the pseudonym Saul van Messel. Poetry started to become a means of escape from his Jewish history.[1] During the 1970s, he started to write many poems in both Dutch and Hebrew.[13] In 1969, he wrote Vrouger of loater in the Gronings dialect for which he was awarded the Literaire pries [nl] in 1984.[1]
Meijer died on 9 July 1993 in Heemstede, at the age of 80.[2]
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