UMATILLA COUNTY A12 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2022 Escaping the Holocaust Survivor Anneke Bloomfield has packed house for presentation at Pendleton Library BY JOHN TILLMAN Hermiston Herald Anneke Bloomfield was 5 years old in the Netherlands in May 1940 when Nazi Ger- many invaded her country. The occupation regime ordered Dutch males ages 16-40 to turn themselves in for forced labor. German troops blocked off streets and searched houses. Bloomfield was traumatized when sol- diers pounded on their door, demanded entry and searched every room, including hers. “I was so scared when he came to my bedroom,” Bloom- field said. “I had nightmares for a couple years after that.” Now 82 years later, Bloom- field, an outreach speaker for the Oregon Jewish Museum and Holocaust Education Center, recounted her young life under the Nazi occupation to a packed house Tuesday, May 31, at the Pendleton Public Library. The presentation was in conjunc- tion with the traveling exhibit “Americans and the Holocaust,” on display at the library until July 1. Her partner, Jerry Paster, said Bloomfield dedicates her talks on her experiences in World War II to her father, Thomas Siebel. He worked for oil company Royal Dutch Shell. Her mother was a former school teacher. AVOIDING THE ‘J’ STAMP Bloomfield was born in The Hague, seat of government of the Netherlands, in April 1935. She said her father saw the threat Nazis posed before the war began in 1939. He made every effort to remove Juda- ism from his family’s life. They moved from the Jewish quar- ter of The Hague to a Chris- tian neighborhood, where they bought a three-story house. They stopped going to temple and instead attended church on Sundays. Her father started working in the church library, so community mem- bers would see him and think he was Christian. Bloomfield and her siblings were taken out of Jewish day school and put into Christian schools. “There was a big school open to all just two blocks away,” she said, “but he sent me to a Chris- tian school seven blocks away.” Bloomfield’s maternal grand- parents were rich but stuffy. She adored her father’s poor but loving parents. Even though they lived in Delft, 7 miles dis- tant by road, she visited them on the blue scooter she got from her rich grandparents on her fifth birthday. Under the Nazis, every- one 10 and older had to get ID cards. By acting indignant when asked if he were Jewish, her fa- ther managed not to get a “J” stamped on his. Bloomfield had three broth- ers, Claas, born in 1934, Bert in 1938 and Tom in 1940. Their circumstances grew progressively worse. Her dad kept his job for a while. Shell continued to pay him, even though he couldn’t work later in the war. They suffered wartime food and fuel shortages and German soldiers conducting searches, sweeps and roundups. One neighbor was a Dutch col- laborator with the occupiers. FAMILY SENDS HER AWAY Shortages worsened. Bloom- field’s father made her shoes from wooden planks in the at- tic floor. Bloomfield said her family sent her three times to live with house they approached and waited until it was safe again. When she returned to the bus, only seven children re- mained, but they resumed their journey. By the time Bloom- field arrived at her new refuge, she had lice and was hungry. Food and fuel were scarce. In the mornings she would go to the soup kitchen for food and warmth. There was no way for her to contact anyone she knew, so she continued to live in fear and hunger. “In Eastern Europe, the Nazis killed people who hid children. In the Netherlands, the penalty wasn’t always death, but the consequences were severe.” — Anneke Bloomfield, Holocaust survivor strangers. Her parents feared the situation in The Hague had become too dangerous for her and her siblings to stay there. They might be outed as Jews at any time. Her older brother was sent away first. Her parents didn’t tell their children the real rea- son why they were being sent to the country. They said it was for lack of food. “Imagine how little kids would feel,” Paster said. “What did we do wrong? Don’t you love us?” The first time, Bloomfield went south to near the Belgian border, to stay with a couple without children. When it be- came riskier to hide children, they returned her home. “In Eastern Europe, the Nazis killed people who hid children,” Bloomfield said. “In the Nether- lands, the penalty wasn’t always death, but the consequences were severe.” Her family decided to send her away again, this time to a farm up north. There she stayed with a family that took good care of her. They had a daughter about her age. Bloomfield had never tasted pork, but loved it. The rich food made the starved little girl sick, so she was once again sent home. Her father was in the Dutch Resistance. People could enter a library without suspicion, so he became a conduit of infor- mation for the Underground. At 8, Bloomfield said she car- ried two “newspapers” — filing cards with intelligence, to con- tacts after dark, but before the 8 p.m. curfew. If out after then, she’d be shot. She saw two men try to evade detention by German soldiers beneath an underpass. “It didn’t work,” she said. “They got pushed up on the wall, and they got shot.” Bloomfield made it home without being caught, but she was too scared to work as a cou- rier anymore. Her father de- cided she was no longer safe in The Hague. LEAVING A THIRD TIME Her mother gave her a coat and a flannel sheet to make warm clothing. Her father ac- quired used shoes with the toes cut out. The third time Bloomfield was sent away, she said she went north again to Heerenveen on a bus full of other children, and a man she knew. The bus was bombed. The man was bleed- ing from his ear. Her new coat was torn in many places, but she didn’t get a scratch. She and another girl ran from the bus. They were let into the third CONCEALED CARRY PERMIT CLASS JUNE 16 TH • 6PM Kennewick Ranch-&-Home JUNE 18 TH • 9AM Hermiston Ranch-&-Home Multi-State $ 80 Oregon Included No Fee Oregon Only $ 45 MULTI-STATE Valid 35-States, including Washington Shaun Shaun Curtain Curtain 360-921-2071 360-921-2071 or or email: email: ShaunCurtain@gmail.com ShaunCurtain@gmail.com | www.ShaunCurtain.com.com | www.ShaunCurtain.com.com “For a year, from 9 to 10, I didn’t grow an inch,” Bloom- field said. Hitler was punishing the Netherlands for its support of the Allies after their liberation of part of the Netherlands in September 1944. She witnessed the Germans evacuating the Netherlands in 1945. The British Army liberated Heerenveen, but it didn’t have enough food to share. Neither did the Canadians, who fol- lowed. Bloomfield foraged for food. If she found a turnip or potato, she dusted it off and ate it raw. Finally, the Americans ar- rived and took pity on a lousy, scrawny girl with frightful hair, a coat shot full of holes and her toes sticking out. They dusted her hair with insecticide DDT and told her not to wash it for three days. “The bread with butter was the best cake I ever had,” she said. One day, she was told to re- port to a truck. There she met her youngest brother, now 5, who, unbeknownst to her, had also been sent north. They re- turned home together. NOTHING THE SAME AFTER LIBERATION Back with her family, Bloom- field asked where her toys had gone, including her scooter. Her parents explained she now had a baby sister, Henny, but her starved mother couldn’t make milk, so they farmed out the infant. The family that agreed to take her demanded all Bloomfield’s toys. “It took Anneke three years to reestablish a relationship with her father,” Paster said. “They took long walks to- gether, but she was never able to bond with her mother.” Bloomfield said that she wasn’t able to eat normally until she was 31. Her older brother was the most damaged, she said. He kept running away to the farm family that had fostered him. Then, at 18, he left for Alberta, finding work as a truck driver in Calgary. When she turned 20, Bloom- field also went to Canada. She was able to track Claas down. Against her father’s wishes, she stayed in Canada, married a Swede, adopted a son and moved to Phoenix, Arizona, with her family. She relocated 19 years later to North Hollywood, California. Her husband died. She eventu- ally retired to the Portland area. “Some people claim you can’t be a Holocaust survivor without having been in the concentra- tion camps,” Paster said. “But those who escaped capture suf- fered as well.” Kathy Aney/Hermiston Herald Holocaust survivor Anneke Bloomfield shares her childhood memo- ries to a large audience May 31, 2022, at the Pendleton Public Library. Anneke Bloomfield/Contributed Photo This photo on display May 31 2022, at the Pendleton Public Library shows Holocaust survivor Anneke Bloomfield as a young girl. Bloom- field was a child from the Netherlands who hid in safe houses to escape Nazis in World War II. HIV isn’t just a big city issue. More than half of Oregonians with HIV live outside of Portland, often in suburbs and small towns like this one. Good neighbors chip in to get the job done. And we’ve got work to do on HIV prevention. 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