|
The
last flamenco was danced by Catherina van den Berg behind the
walls of the Theresienstadt Ghetto (northwestern
Czechoslovakia) in the spring of 1943. The statuesque, lithe,
and very pretty Dutch-Jewish woman caught the attention
of the Czech artist Charlotte Buresova when Catherina took her
infant son, Clairence, for
a walk on the main street of Theresienstadt. She had recently
arrived to the ghetto from Westerbork (northeastern
Netherlands), a transit camp for some 97,000 Dutch Jews who
were being deported to Eastern Europe in 1942-44.
Catherina passed through the gates of Westerbork as a newlywed
in a nurse's uniform, accompanied by her husband, Jacques
Frank, and pregnant with her son. In her last days in her
hometown of Rotterdam, she had served as a nurse in the Jewish
hospital, and in Westerbork, too, she was assigned to work at
an 1,800-bed infirmary.She gave birth to Clairence on 3 May
1943. Her husband managed to see his son once before they were
separated.
He was
evacuated in one of nineteen transports that delivered 35,000
Dutch Jews to Sobibor, Poland - the infamous
extermination camp where prisoners were sent to the gas
chambers within a few hours of arrival. At the end of the war,
only nineteen of the Dutch Jews who had reached this camp had
survived. Jacques Frank was not one of them.The inmates at
Westerbork lived a quasi-normal life in between the dreaded
transports to the East and certain extermination. In months
when such transports did not occur, the camp commander
encouraged the prisoners to entertain themselves. Concerts,
opera, and cabaret performances were arranged with the
participation of the artists among the camp
prisoners.Catherina, a newlywed and new mother whose husband
had been deported to an unknown destination, was asked to join
the camp's entertainment team.The team members from Rotterdam,
recalling that their childhood friend had studied dance from
age six to age twenty, recommended her to Willy Rosen and
Erich Ziegler - two famous musicians from Germany - who
composed and wrote lyrics for a revue called"Humor and
Song" at the Westerbork cabaret. Although the
performances were meant for the prisoners' amusement, the camp
staff and high-ranking SS officers filled the first row of
seats every evening.On one of those occasions, the notorious
Adolf Eichmann sat in the front row and watched the revue. (A
descriptive album with color drawings, a manuscript, and
photographs is in the Yad Vashem Archives.) After the program,
he asked to be introduced to the lovely dancer, Catherina
Frank. When he heard her personal story, he promised to have
her sent to the Theresienstadt camp and interned there until
the end of the war. He kept his word. In the spring of 1943,
clutching her infant son and a fur coat sent to her by her
father - with gold coins concealed in the lining - she was
transported to Theresienstadt.The young mother and her son
were given housing in one of the large barracks, with neither
privacy nor any of the special accoutrements that an infant
needs. The spectacle of a baby in the ghetto was unusual, and
whenever Catherina took him for a walk people would approach
and stare at the sweet, handsome little boy. When the artist
Charlotte Buresova stopped her, however, she had an
exceptional request; she was working on a series of drawings
of dancers and dances from around the world and wanted
Catherina to model for her. When Catherina came to the studio,
Buresova asked her whether she knew the steps of the flamenco.
Thus, it was in the Theresienstadt ghetto, far from home, her
future and fate unknown, that Catherina Frank danced her last
flamenco. However, it was not the last time that Buresova
asked Catherina to model for her. One day, she told Catherina
that the camp commander had asked her to produce an oil
painting of Madame Butterfly. Observing Catherina's lovely
face, Buresova decided that she was the ideal model. So she
became Madame Butterfly in the painting that enhanced the camp
commander's office. (Charlotte Buresova escaped from the
ghetto in the vehicle of the Swedish ambassador three days
before the camp was liberated by the Russians. She returned to
Prague where she continued to paint portraits of children and
her memories of Theresienstadt.)In one of his many visits to
Theresienstadt, Adolf Eichmann, who had been responsible for
establishing the ghetto, and for assembling and deporting Jews
from Europe to the concentration and death camps, noticed the
painting and told the commander that he had made the
acquaintance of the beautiful Jewish woman. Catherina was
summoned to the commander's office for her second encounter
with Eichmann. She reminded him where they had first met and
was surprised he could remember her. When Eichmann asked if he
could help her in any way, Catherina described her hardship in
raising her son in the cavernous barracks, and immediately he
promised to arrange for a private room. Catherina was moved to
a small room on the fourth floor of one of the barracks and
became the housemother for a group of young Hehalutz (Jewish
youth group) members who had reached Theresienstadt with
another 500 Danish Jews captured in Copenhagen in October
1943. The prisoners from Denmark received special treatment
from their government, including support parcels from the
Danish Foreign Ministry. They shared these parcels with
Catherina and her young son, and with this food she and the
boy managed to survive in the ghetto despite the harsh
conditions. By the end of the war when most of Dutch Jewry had
perished at Auschwitz and Sobibor, Catherina and Clairence
were among the only five percent of Dutch Jewry who had
survived.Catherina remembers her first steps on Dutch soil,
with the sole responsibility of caring for her 2-year-old son,
as the most difficult moments of all. She had just recovered
from the typhoid fever she had contracted during her last
weeks of internment in the camp, and had been flown back to
her homeland with the assistance of American soldiers for whom
she had served as an interpreter.The authorities were
unsympathetic in their treatment of the returning refugees.
She was given a job at a department store by the former
manager of the laundry facility in Theresienstadt, who had
promised to help her if they survived the inferno. She
remarried in 1952, and as Mrs. Van den Berg raised her son
Clairence, who eventually became the father and grandfather of
daughters and granddaughters. Catherina speaks proudly of all
of them and pampers them with everything she could not give
Clairence in his own boyhood. She never danced again; the
flamenco in Theresienstadt was indeed the last flamenco of the
dancer whose shapely legs, as she confided to this author, had
saved her from a brutal fate. She contributed the painting of
her likeness as a flamenco dancer and a portrait of Clairence
at the age of nine months to the Yad Vashem Art Museum, during
her recent first visit to Israel. "This is the right
place to preserve them." she said.The paintings were
added to the Art Museum collection and joined several works by
Charlotte Buresova, including women dancers in various ethnic
costumes. We had not known the full story of these paintings
until Catherina explained it to us, during her visit. Then,
for the first time in her life, Mrs. Van den Berg gave a full
account of her ordeal. Now, past the age of eighty, she feels
that a chapter is closing. The story of the last flamenco, now
in the public domain, has a personal dimension. This firsthand
account of Catherina's story has added to our awareness that
dancing and art existed behind walls and barbed wire during
the Holocaust.
|
 |
 |
 |
|
Portrait
of Clairence Edward Maxim van den Berg (the son
of Catherina van den Berg and the
late Jacques Frank). Donated by Mrs. van den Berg. |
Ghetto
Quarters. Watercolor,ink,and pencil on paper. Donated
by Mrs.
Aliza Chir. |
Catherina
van den Berg modeling as a flamenco dancer. Watercolor
on paper, 1943. Donated by Mrs. van den Berg. |
The
author is Senior Curator of the Yad Vashem Art Museum.
|