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Jules Schelvis

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Jules Schelvis

Birth
Amsterdam, Amsterdam Municipality, Noord-Holland, Netherlands
Death
3 Apr 2016 (aged 95)
Amstelveen, Amstelveen Municipality, Noord-Holland, Netherlands
Burial
Amsterdam, Amsterdam Municipality, Noord-Holland, Netherlands Add to Map
Plot
No gravestone, ashes scattered there
Memorial ID
View Source
Jules Schelvis was a Dutch historian, writer, Holocaust survivor, and Nazi hunter. Jules Schelvis was rounded up in Amsterdam along with his family on 26 May 1943 during the occupation of the Netherlands by Nazi Germany. He was deported to Westerbork and after 6 days boarded the Holocaust train to Sobibor. The journey lasted for 4 days. At the ramp, Schelvis was separated from his family and selected to join the work unit sent to Lublin Reservation labour camp in Dorohucza to build latifundia of General Plan Ost. The Poles and Dutchmen, covered in lice, received one litre of soup per day, and sometimes dog meat. From there he was sent to the Radom Ghetto, to work in the weapons factory, where he witnessed the ghetto liquidation action on 8 November 1943. He was sent on a death march to Tomaszów Mazowiecki. From there he eventually reached Vaihingen near Stuttgart, where he was liberated by the French army on 8 April 1945. After the war, Schelvis was a plaintiff and expert witness during the trial of John Demjanjuk, and he wrote a lot of books about the Holocaust, like Vernietigingskamp Sobibor (1993), Binnen de poorten (1995) and Sobibor. Transportlijsten (2001). He lost his wife Rachel and most of his family during The Holocaust. Jules Schelvis died on 3 April 2016 in Amstelveen.
Jules Schelvis was a Dutch historian, writer, Holocaust survivor, and Nazi hunter. Jules Schelvis was rounded up in Amsterdam along with his family on 26 May 1943 during the occupation of the Netherlands by Nazi Germany. He was deported to Westerbork and after 6 days boarded the Holocaust train to Sobibor. The journey lasted for 4 days. At the ramp, Schelvis was separated from his family and selected to join the work unit sent to Lublin Reservation labour camp in Dorohucza to build latifundia of General Plan Ost. The Poles and Dutchmen, covered in lice, received one litre of soup per day, and sometimes dog meat. From there he was sent to the Radom Ghetto, to work in the weapons factory, where he witnessed the ghetto liquidation action on 8 November 1943. He was sent on a death march to Tomaszów Mazowiecki. From there he eventually reached Vaihingen near Stuttgart, where he was liberated by the French army on 8 April 1945. After the war, Schelvis was a plaintiff and expert witness during the trial of John Demjanjuk, and he wrote a lot of books about the Holocaust, like Vernietigingskamp Sobibor (1993), Binnen de poorten (1995) and Sobibor. Transportlijsten (2001). He lost his wife Rachel and most of his family during The Holocaust. Jules Schelvis died on 3 April 2016 in Amstelveen.


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  • Created by: Italia
  • Added: Oct 29, 2016
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/171955572/jules-schelvis: accessed ), memorial page for Jules Schelvis (7 Jan 1921–3 Apr 2016), Find a Grave Memorial ID 171955572, citing Amsterdam Westgaarde Herdenkingspark, Amsterdam, Amsterdam Municipality, Noord-Holland, Netherlands; Burial Details Unknown; Maintained by Italia (contributor 48834954).