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UNDER NAZI NOSES by John Tepper Marlin Kirkus Star

UNDER NAZI NOSES

edited and translated by John Tepper Marlin ; by Erik Schaap

Pub Date: Feb. 12th, 2024
ISBN: 9781963632026
Publisher: Boissevain Books

A biography of Walraven Van Hall, a central figure in the Dutch Resistance to German occupation during World War II.

Born in 1906, Walraven Van Hall enjoyed a “sunny childhood”—the sixth of 10 siblings, he was raised by a family as wealthy as it was loving. His life and the lives of his Dutch countrymen, however, were threatened by the sudden Nazi invasion in 1940. A banker and a broker, Van Hall became an active member of the Dutch Union, a political party that welcomed moderates who were neither revolutionary communists nor conservatives slow to commit to any plan of action against the German occupation. The party’s official stance against underground resistance gave it cover to fight the Nazis. As author Schaap puts it in this marvelous blend of scholarly rigor and gripping drama: “The Dutch Union was a precursor of, and catalyst for, a fortified Resistance.” Van Hall’s war efforts began modestly, raising funds for the families of seamen who lost their income when they refused to sail for the Nazis. Within a year, though, he was managing large amounts of money to support the Resistance and to help find safe lodging for Jews. Appropriating all this money required extraordinary secrecy and ingenuity. At one point, desperate for cash, Van Hall orchestrated a sophisticated heist of the Dutch State Bank. The author powerfully portrays Van Hall’s indefatigable efforts, which exacted a terrible toll on his physical and mental health and eventually led to his arrest and execution. The Dutch Resistance was the best funded of its kind in Europe, and Schaap lucidly explains its complex inner machinations. Also, this is an emotionally wrenching tale conveyed in moving prose. Just before his execution, Van Hall hid a note to his family in his underwear, assuming it would be sent back to them: “Oh dearest, what a good time we had together these 13 years. I know, thank God, you are surrounded by loving family and friends. It has cost me a lot of struggle, but I am willing to accept the worst.” The translation by Marlin is graceful, and his introduction to the volume edifying. This is an important contribution to the scholarship on the underground Dutch Resistance to the Nazis.

An extraordinary tale, cinematic and historically painstaking.