Jantje Timmermans

Geslacht: Vrouw
Vader: Jacob Timmermans
Moeder: Dieuwke Kalma
Geboren: 29 Nov 1906 Ferwerd, Ferwerderadeel
Overleden: 20 Nov 1991 onbekend
Aantekeningen: Last Name: Braak
First Name: Jantje
Maiden Name: Surname unknown
Rescuer's fate: survived
Nationality: THE NETHERLANDS
Gender: Female
Place during the war: Ferwerd, Friesland, The Netherlands
Rescue Place: Ferwerd, Friesland, The Netherlands
Rescue mode: Hiding
File number: File from the Collection of the Righteous Among the Nations Department (M.31.2/1260)
Willy Birnbaum was six years old when he arrived at the home of Ruurd and Jantje Braak in Ferwerd, Friesland, in November 1943. The childless couple took the young boy into their home and cared for him with devotion and warmth until the end of the war. Before the war, Willy had lived in Muiderberg, North Holland, where his father was the caretaker of the local Jewish cemetery. With the help of a contact who was active in the underground, the Jewish family was able to find hiding places for three of their children. In Ferwerd, Ruurd and Jantje told people that Willy was the son of a close friend who had been killed when the Germans bombed the Fokker factory near Amsterdam. Willy lived a relatively normal life. Willy soon learned Frisian and grew to love his foster parents and his life in the small village. Even though the Braaks were devout Christians, they had the sensitivity to read only from the Old Testament in Willy’s presence. The family doctor was their contact with the underground and Ruurd and Jantje were also involved in the Resistance in their village, where 40 Jewish children were sheltered during the war. Willy’s parents, hidden in another village, were betrayed and sent to Auschwitz. Knowing this, the childless Braak couple could conceivably have kept Willy as their son. However, after the war, Ruurd and Jantje went to the Jewish community in the nearby city of Leeuwarden and expressed their willingness to give up their foster child to a Jewish family in order for him to receive a Jewish education. However, Willy’s mother survived and she herself took Willy back. The Braaks never asked for any financial remuneration for sheltering the Jewish boy.
On March 14, 1978, Yad Vashem recognized Ruurd Braak and his wife, Jantje Braak, as Righteous Among the Nations.

Gezin 1

Huwelijkspartner: Ruurd Braak geb. 2 Feb 1910 overl. 30 OKT 1998
Huwelijk: 12 MEI 1938 Ferwerderadeel