SALLY NOACH

Disbelief

Letters

Even before the end of the war, my father started receiving thank you letters from Dutch people that he helped in the Lyon area from September 1940 - September 1942. These letters demonstrate a great amount of gratitude for my father’s actions; people thanking him for his prison visits – often followed by an unexpected camp or prison release – but also for the housing support, food (sausages are often mentioned), cigarettes, chocolates, and money that he provided. I have included many of these letters, each accompanied by a short quote. I hope that they will encourage further reading. Also included are four 'official' documents from the Lyon period, and three post-war testimonies. In 1967 an attempt was made to belatedly award my father a Royal Honor; I describe the outcome of this attempt in my book. I've also included six letters which my father received after the publication of his book "It had to be done"

Click on the title to read the letter

"Was u er niet geweest dan zat ik nu nog ongetwijfeld in Frankrijk"

Oscar de Brey roept herinneringen op aan Oudejaarsavond 1941 in Lyon met o.a. Bergmann, de Bruijn Kops en Kragt.

'Aan u, meneer Noach, ben ik op de eerste plaats het behoud van mijn leven en vervolgens ook mijn vrijheid verschuldigd'.

Jacques en Erich Grootkerk en Ab van Crefeld hebben na een lange tocht Engeland bereikt. "De overige consuls waren maar knudde"

Hélène Heijmans schrijft dat sinds mijn vader naar Londen is vertrokken het heel erg ongezellig is in Lissabon.

"Sally, je ne peux répéter assez de temps ce que tu faisait pour moi et pour beaucoup d'autres."

Hélène Heijmans hoopt op korte termijn een visum voor Amerika te krijgen. Zij maakt zich, als alleenstaande moeder, zorgen over haar zoon Deef in Londen

Rachel Woudhuijsen heeft inmiddels vernomen dat haar ouders weer in Westerbork zitten, zij vreest het ergste.

Henry Woudhuijsen schrijft over de verveling die over Praia das Maçás is neergedaald.

Ben Sternefeld kijkt nog steeds met veel plezier terug op de gezellige avonden in Praia das Maçás, een badplaats bij Lissabon, waar Nederlandse vluchtelingen ondergebracht waren.

Jeanne Grishaver heeft in Jamaica gehoord van het bezoek van mijn vader aan koningin Wilhelmina.

Ben Blitz is niet echt gelukkig met de tropische omstandigheden in Paramaribo. Dan maar in de kou en mist van Londen.

The Dutch government felt that the ‘uncivilised’ diplomat needed to comply more with the (German and Vichy-French) rules. The high class and often anti-semitic members of the Dutch diplomatic service didn’t naturally gel with Sally Noach, an uneducated seller of carpets.

Sally’s son Jacques Noach (London, 1946) carried out extensive research into the ‘Sally Noach File’ and discovered some shocking revelations about the ‘support’ the London-based Dutch government provided to Dutch refugees. If it had been down to the Dutch civil servants, all Dutch refugees would have immediately been sent back from France to occupied Holland. There were also clear signs of a ‘politically correct’ form of antisemitism. Sally was discredited by the Dutch government and referred to as ‘uncivilised’. The Dutch Consul-General in France, Ate Sevenster articulated it clearly: “Jewish refugees are the lowest class.”

In 1969, Sally Noach was awarded the Royal Dutch Honorary Cross by Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard. From the Dutch government however, Sally received only contempt. He published his war memoirs, titled “It had to be done” in 1971. Those memoirs have been included within this book.