(September 18, 2008 - Jerusalem)
Henk Drogt, Righteous Among the Nations from the Netherlands,
will be posthumously honored at Yad Vashem on Monday September
22, 2008 for rescuing Jews during the Holocaust. A memorial
ceremony will take place in the Hall of Remembrance at 11:00,
followed by the unveiling of the name of the Righteous in the
Garden of the Righteous Among the Nations at 11:15. The
ceremony will take place in English, in the presence of Henk
Brink, son of the Righteous, H.E Michiel den Hond, Dutch
Ambassador to Israel, Honorable Supreme Court Justice Yaacov
Turkel, Chairman of the Commission for the Designation of the
Righteous Among the Nations, and Avner Shalev, Chairman of Yad
Vashem.
The events are open to the press in coordination with the
Media Relations Department: 02 644 3410.
The Rescue Story
On March 9, 1943 the military police, Marechaussee, in
Grootegast, Holland and its neighboring villages, received the
order to arrest the remaining Jews of the area. At first, the
policemen tried to argue with their superiors, but their
commanders insisted and put pressure on their subordinates to
comply with the order. The policemen stood firm and were
subsequently arrested and taken to the Vught concentration
camp. In 1988, all of them except one were recognized by Yad
Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations.
Henk Drogt’s name was missing from the list submitted to the
Commission for the Designation of the Righteous, because he
had managed to escape arrest. It took another twenty years and
the unexpected help of an EL AL pilot, Mark Bergman, in order
to be able to complete the picture. The stories he heard from
Drogt’s son, Henk Brink (Drogt), whom he met on one of his
flights to South Africa, prompted Bergman to turn to Yad
Vashem. Bergman along with El Al President and Chief Executive
Haim Romano will attend the ceremony.
Following his escape, Henk Drogt joined one of the Dutch
resistance groups. He was caught in the beginning of August
1943 and executed on 14 April 1944. Henk Drogt was a young man
of 23 years old at the time of his arrest, planning to get
married to his girlfriend who was expecting a child - a son
that he did not live to see.
Over 22,000 individuals have been recognized as Righteous
Among the Nations, including more than 4,800 people from
Holland. For more information about the Righteous Among the
Nations program
click here.
Contact:
Estee Yaari / Foreign Media
Liaison / Yad Vashem