Het Joods lyceum

A plaque hangs on the wall of the school building on Fischerstraat. The text on the plaque reads:

From 1941 to 1943, 276 children attended the Jewish Lyceum here.

They were not safe

Not in the house

Not on the street

Not at school

179 of them were arrested and deported from the Netherlands

They never returned

During the Second World War, from October 16, 1941 to April 15, 1943, the Jewish Lyceum stood here. The Netherlands was occupied by the German Nazis at that time. The Nazi policy was to first isolate the Jews from the rest of the population, then deport them to concentration camps and ultimately exterminate them. In 1941, the occupying forces announced that Jewish children were only allowed to attend special Jewish schools with only Jewish teachers. Jewish students who attended other schools were not allowed to return to that school after the summer holidays of 1941

The municipal council of The Hague then decided to reserve some schools specifically for Jewish children. All Jewish children who had previously attended other secondary schools were housed there. The students came not only from The Hague, but also from the surrounding area. All children walked to school, because they were no longer allowed to use public transport and in June 1942 all Jews had to hand in their bicycles. The teachers were the Jewish teachers who had been fired from other schools at the end of 1941. There were primary schools on Bezemstraat and Duinstraat. A secondary school was established on Fischerstraat in a former public school with fifteen classrooms. The school was also called Joodsch Lyceum Fisherstraat.

Soon the number of students at the school decreased due to hiding and deportations. In May 1942 the deportations of the Jews started. First to Amsterdam, later to the Westerbork transit camp. On November 26, 1942, the municipality closed its doors because there were too few children left. The following month, the school moved to the Bezemstraat building, where a Jewish primary school was already located. The Jewish primary school at the Duinstraat address was also closed. The number of students at the lyceum, which was now renamed the Jewish School for Secondary Education, had now decreased so much that four classrooms were sufficient for the school.

On April 13, 1943, the Germans demanded that all Jews from Zuid-Holland province had to be gone by April 23. On April 15, 1943, the municipality closed the school on Bezemstraat. A week later, the last large train transport with Jews left The Hague and The Hague was declared ‘judenrein’ (clear of Jews). 267 students attended the Jewish Lyceum

Fisherstraat. At least 179 of them were murdered during the Second World War. Of the 43 teachers, 15 did not survive the war and five of the eight support staff were murdered.

After the Second World War, a primary school was opened in the building again, which has now been replaced by a new building. There are currently two primary schools.

On April 2, 2014, the memorial plaque in memory of the Jewish Lyceum and its students was unveiled on the wall of the building. Rolf Nihom, a former student of the school, gave a speech. He characterized the school as ‘a sinking ship, fewer students every week and more empty school desks’.

Source:

https://www.joodserfgoeddenhaag.nl/voormalig-joodsch-lyceum-fisherstraat-fischerstraat-135/ 

https://www.shie.nl/budve/Transvaal/218/218.htm 

https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joods_Lyceum_(Den_Haag)

Het Joods lyceum
Het Joods lyceum
Het Joods lyceum
Badhuis
Boerenstraat
De Ooievaars
Gurudwara Singh Sabha
Hertzogstraat
Het joods lyceum
Hobbemaplein
Julianakerk
Kaapseplein
Mandelaplein
Noeroel Islam Moskee
Paul Krugerplein
Springfonteinstraat
Veluweplein
Viljoenplein
Wijkpark