Adrian Hoekstra
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Adrianus Johannes Antonius Hoekstra (28 August 1917 - 7 February 1998) was a member of the
Dutch Resistance The Dutch resistance () to the History of the Netherlands (1939–1945), German occupation of the Netherlands during World War II can be mainly characterized as non-violent. The primary organizers were the Communist Party of the Netherlands, C ...
during
World War II World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
. Hoekstra was born in Oosterhout (NB, The Netherlands) on 28 August 1917. Hoekstra’s involvement in the Dutch Resistance began with the OD ('' Ordedienst'' or Order of Service), a local group preparing for the return of the exiled Dutch government. He later extended to assisting Jews and downed Allied pilots who were in hiding. Additionally, he contributed to the provision of information for the Allies in Britain about airfields, railway lines, mine production and German troop movement. In March 1944, he was arrested and sent to a forced labour camp in Germany. He escaped in March 1945 and returned to Oosterhout as the Allied army fought eastwards towards Berlin. In 1950, he was awarded the Mobilisation War Cross (Mobilisatie-Oorlogskruis) for his war-time activities. In 1980, the Dutch Government instituted the Resistance Memorial Cross (''Verzetsherdenkingskruis'') to recognise resistance workers from World War II, and Hoekstra was awarded the medal in 1982. The resistance group he was involved in for the greatest time was honoured with a monument in the town of Schipperskerk, Limburg in September 2024.


Early years

Hoekstra was born in
Oosterhout Oosterhout (; from ''ooster'', "eastern", and ''hout'', "woods") is a Municipalities of the Netherlands, municipality and a city in southern Netherlands. The municipality had a population of in . Population centers The municipality of Ooste ...
to Johannes Theodorus Hoekstra and Bernardina Hoekstra (nee Looymans). His father had four children from a previous marriage. Hoekstra was his sixth child. Hoekstra’s father owned a cigar making factory called Lombok Cigars. Hoekstra attended primary school in Oosterhout. His secondary schooling included first boarding at a Capuchin seminary in Velp and later attending an Augustinian grammar school in Eindhoven. In part because of his dislike of boarding as well as his father’s precarious financial position, he left school at the age of 15 to work in the factory. In 1938, his father declared bankruptcy. Due to the legal circumstances of the time, the factory continued to operate, and Hoekstra remained involved in the running of the factory with one of his older half-brothers, Joop (Johannes Henricus).


War years

Germany invaded the Netherlands on 10 May 1940. Hoekstra’s other half-brother, Fredericus J Hoekstra, was killed in action within the first hour of the invasion. After the Dutch capitulation, Hoekstra was recruited to the resistance movement by Mr. Abeelen, an associate o
Colonel Jan Somer
and soon became the leader of the OD in Oosterhout. He also worked with the resistance cell centered around Pater Jacques Kerssemakers OSB. In that group, Hoekstra coordinated the passing of information regarding troop movements, local airfields, railway lines and so on, through channels to the Allies in Britain. After the arrest of Kerssemakers in October 1942, Hoekstra went into hiding in Limburg using the alias Wim Koenraad. Initially, he stayed on the bunker-ship ''De Zwaan,'' which was permanently anchored at Grevenbicht and serving as a supply vessel for other boats. When Hoekstra arrived on ''De Zwaan'' there were already Jewish families on board. The boat’s skipper, Kees Zwaans, in conjunction with two other local residents, Twaan Maintz and Frans Kooimans, had set up a group they named MaZwaKo, initialisms of their surnames, to coordinate the resistance activities in the area. Around the time Hoekstra arrived on board and became involved Kooimans left the group, though he continued hiding Jewish families and pilots. The group’s name, however, did not need to be changed because of Hoekstra’s alias. Hoekstra remained on ''De Zwaan'' for about a year, sometimes acting as a deckhand on other boats, despite his lack of experience. A number of Jewish families, Allied pilots, and men escaping from forced labour camps passed through the group. MaZwaKo also worked with the Pietab-OXO resistance cell which operated around Utrecht in the north of the Netherlands, as well as with the remnants of Hoekstra’s original group from the Oosterhout area. Hoekstra was the point of contact for each of these. In October 1943 Hoekstra left ''De Zwaan,'' but stayed in Limburg to continue his resistance activities. Increasingly he travelled around the Netherlands accompanying fugitives from the Nazis to be dropped off at other safe houses, picking up microfilm, documents and other information, and liaising with the various cells, especially Pietab-OXO. While on a mission in February 1944, Hoekstra was arrested and taken to a prison in Scheveningen nicknamed
Oranjehotel The Hague Penitentiary Institution ( Dutch: ''Penitentiaire Inrichting Haaglanden'') is a Dutch prison that is part of the Judicial Institutions Department (''Dienst Justitiële Inrichtingen'', DJI) of the Ministry of Justice. It can accommoda ...
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Suspecting that he had been betrayed as Wim Koenraad, he reverted to his own name. His interrogators did not make any connection to the activities of his alias, and on 2 May, he was transferred to a holding camp in Kamp Amersfoort, Amersfoort. On 19 May, he was sent to the Rheinhausen prison camp, which provided
forced labour Forced labour, or unfree labour, is any work relation, especially in modern or early modern history, in which people are employed against their will with the threat of destitution, detention, or violence, including death or other forms of ...
to the
Krupp Friedrich Krupp AG Hoesch-Krupp (formerly Fried. Krupp AG and Friedrich Krupp GmbH), trade name, trading as Krupp, was the largest company in Europe at the beginning of the 20th century as well as Germany's premier weapons manufacturer dur ...
Hüttenwerke steelworks. On 31 March 1945, whilst being transported further into Germany, Hoekstra escaped when the train he was on was stopped in Duisburg during an Allied bombing raid. He sought refuge in St Peter Canisius Church, Duisburg, and was able to stay until the advancing Allied army took control of the area and he could return to the Netherlands.


Post War years

Hoekstra married Clara Isabella Oomen in Oosterhout on 10 October 1945. They subsequently had five children. He returned to work in the tobacco industry but could see increased concentration of the industry, which would spell the end for small family run cigar factories in the Netherlands. The loss of the Dutch colonies in Indonesia hastened this situation. In August 1959, the family migrated to Australia and settled in Sydney, where Hoekstra retrained as an industrial chemist. In anticipation of the 50th anniversary of the end of the war, he wrote
memoir
of his experiences. These were accepted by the Dutch War Archives when he returned to the Netherlands for the celebrations in May 1995 Hoekstra died of cancer at Camden (NSW, Australia) on 7 February 1998.


Aftermath

In September 2024, descendants of the members of the MaZwaKo resistance group and their helpers throughout the war gathered in Born and Schipperskerk in Limburg to commemorate their heroism. A monument was unveiled in a ceremony attended by representatives of the King, the Army, the Yad Vashem Jewish Holocaust museum, and two of Hoekstra's children. Also in attendance was Lyda Silbernberg, who had been in hiding on ''De Zwaan'' when Hoekstra first took refuge there, as well as descendants of other Jewish families who had been saved by the group. ''De Zwaan'' is now a tourist vessel, ''Freya'' :de:Freya (Schiff, 1905), operating on day trips out of Kiel in Germany.


References

Information not directly referenced is based on Hoekstra's memoir ''My War Years : Working in the Dutch Resistance, (1939-1945)'' available at thi
link
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Bol, Stan & Kops, Cees, (2012) ''Oosterhout in de Tweede Wereldoorlog,'' Bol, Oosterhout Cammaer, A.P.M., (1994) ''Het verborgen front: Geschiedenis van the georganiseerde illegaliteit in the provincie Limburg tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog,'' Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (Doctoral Thesis) OTHER REFERENCES AND LINKS https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/85122 {{DEFAULTSORT:Hoekstra, Adrian 1917 births Year of death missing