The day concluded with a wonderful meeting with my friends Ranier and his lovely wife AnnaLesie. I had met them by chance on a plane several years ago and they live here in Amsterdam. They took Vicki and I to a little fishing town and then to the town of Edam ( same as the cheese) it was lovely, and serene. They too had Holocaust connection through their grandparents and parents. Ranier's grandfather worked for the resistance and was arrested by the Nazis' He however rarely talked about it. His wife's grandmother was attacked by Nazis and her father was at a labor camp so her mother had little food for the family. It is amazing to learn these things about people and to realize how many people even today have stories related to the atrocities of the war. We returned by ourselves on a ferry and we had our last group dinner. We listened to Maude tell some stories and to thank us and much as we thanked her, the photo is of David Koker and the diary is called "At The Edge of The Abyss"
An interesting story alike to Schindler is the story of the Phillips Enterprise. Some feel that Phillips (yes the light bulb people) took advantage of free Jewish labor- others see him as a savior. Here is sosme information about it.
Frits Philips, 100; Head of Electronics Company Helped
Save Jews From Nazis
Frits Philips, the former president
of the Dutch electronics giant that bears his family name, who helped save
hundreds of Jewish workers after Nazi occupiers forced him to open a workshop
in a concentration camp in the Netherlands during World War II, has died. He
was 100.
Philips, the last family member to
lead the electronics group, died Monday of pneumonia and complications
resulting from a fall at his estate in Eindhoven in the southeast Netherlands,
the company announced.
His strategy in becoming an employer
at the prison camp near Vught, about 20 miles north of company headquarters in
Eindhoven, was deceptively simple.
Philips put as many Jews to work as
possible and argued that they were indispensable, delaying their deportation to
the Auschwitz death camp in Poland.
Of the 469 Jewish prisoners who
helped make radio receivers and electric shavers for Germany, 382 survived the
war, according to a company history.
In 1996, when he was awarded a Yad
Vashem medal, given to Holocaust rescuers, Philips said that he was no hero and
that many others had helped save lives.
Philips "showed extraordinary
courage in the face of terrible circumstances," the Yad Vashem memorial
group told Reuters this week.
His personal drama escalated when
thousands of workers at his factories went on strike in 1943. The Nazis
imprisoned Philips and threatened to execute him unless his employees went back
to work. They did, but Philips was detained for five months.
On entering the prison, Philips
"felt as if the colossal weight of my responsibility was suddenly being
lifted from me," he wrote in his 1976 autobiography, "45 Years With
Philips."
Much later he realized that his
"life had been that day hanging by a silken thread."
The same May day that Philips was
arrested, seven men -- including four in his employ -- were executed by the
Germans at a company plant. For the rest of his life, Philips visited the yard
to lay flowers where the men were murdered.
At 25, he had joined the family
business and later played a key role in transforming it into a multinational
electronics corporation. Philips spent more than 40 years at the company,
including a decade at the helm beginning in 1961.
Under the leadership of "Mr. Frits,"
as employees affectionately called him, revenue tripled, partly because of the
sale of color television sets.
He also emphasized scientific
research. The electronics group produced the first compact audiocassette player
in the early 1960s. Work was also started on what would become the compact
disc.
Today the enterprise, now called
Royal Philips Electronics, is Europe's leading electronics manufacturer, with
annual sales of more than $35 billion and nearly 160,000 employees. It sells
consumer electronics, lighting, semiconductors and medical technology.
Frederik Jacques Philips was born in
Eindhoven on April 16, 1905, the only son of Anton Philips, who co-founded a
lightbulb business in the early 1890s with his brother Gerard.
Frits Philips was raised to take his
place at what the family called "the factory," graduating with a
degree in mechanical engineering in 1929 from the Technical University in
Delft.
By the time Philips joined the
business in 1930, it was also making medical X-ray tubes and radio valves and
experimenting with television technology. Later in the decade, it introduced
one of the first electric razors.
When Philips got word on May 9,
1940, that the Germans were going to invade the Netherlands the next day, he
stayed behind while other family members fled to North America. A deeply
religious 35-year-old, Philips wanted to protect his employees and prevent the
family enterprise from aiding German occupiers.
During the war, the company
deliberately manufactured faulty radio valves, hid its capacity to make weapons
and tried to be as unproductive as possible.
Still, the firm was forced to make
electrical equipment for the German army. It became one of the few Dutch
targets for Allied bombers, and Philips factories were extensively damaged.
In July 1944, fearing that he was
going to be deported to Germany, Philips escaped through a window just as
German guards arrived at his office. He hid in friends' attics until Eindhoven
was liberated two months later.
In an attempt to flush Philips out
of hiding, the Germans imprisoned his wife, Sylvia, in the Vught camp for
several weeks.
From 1945 on, Philips oversaw
reconstruction of the operation in the Netherlands and the expansion of the
company in South America and Asia.
When he turned 100, the festivities
received national television coverage in his country. Eindhoven renamed itself
"Frits Philips City" for the day, and his beloved professional soccer
team, founded in 1913 as a sports club for Philips employees, called itself
"Frits."
Sylvia Philips died in 1992. He is
survived by three sons and three daughters; another daughter predeceased him.
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