Sonja DuBois (F / Netherlands, 1940), Holocaust survivor
Sonja DuBois (F / Netherlands, 1940), Holocaust survivor.
- KEYWORDS : <Hidden Children> <Adopted Children>
- MEMOIRS : Finding Schifrah (2019)
Biography
Born in Rotterdam on October 19, 1940, Sonja DuBois became a Holocaust child survivor when her parents were deported to Auschwitz in July 1942. She was raised by a Dutch Christian foster family, first in Rotterdam, then in the United States, without fully being told about her biological family and true identity. Her lifelong search for understanding has led her to be a witness for the impact of the Holocaust. She has spoken to hundreds of students and general audiences in Tennessee and Kentucky. She has been featured in the Tennessee Holocaust Commission s Living On exhibit. She donated artifacts to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC, which has a recorded interview of her life. She participated in the 70th anniversary commemorations of the end of World War II in Rotterdam. She lives in Knoxville, Tennessee, with her husband Ron, her best friend, whom she married in 1962. They have two daughters, five grand-children, and two great-grand-children.
Book : Finding Schifrah (2019)
- Finding Schifrah: The Journey of a Dutch Child Holocaust Survivor"
Born in 1940 in Rotterdam, Clara van Thijn was separated from her parents on July 29, 1942 when they reported for the first Jewish transport headed for Auschwitz, where they were murdered shortly after their arrival. Entrusted into the arms of family friend Dolf Henkes, rescued by a Dutch Christian couple, she spent the postwar years in Schiedam as Sonja, the foster child of Willem and Elisabeth van der Kaden. Although she was also surrounded by her surviving Jewish aunts and uncles, she was not told of their relationship to her, nor was she told of her birth parents death. In 1952 the van der Kaden family emigrated to the United States, where Sonja continued to be surrounded by her Jewish relatives who had settled there. After she graduated from college, she married and raised two children. A newspaper inquiry by the now famous painter Dolf Henkes led to their reunion in 1987, although she only learned pieces of her past. It was not until age 60 that she was able to overcome her reluctance to probe into her past. She discovered her Jewish roots with the help of new friends whom she met at a hidden children's conference. Her journey continues to overcome the denial, pain, and anger she felt during most of her life, and to deepen her knowledge of her Jewish heritage. The commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II in 2015 in Rotterdam, brought her story to full circle. Her amazing story of resilience and love raises ageless and universal questions about overcoming childhood trauma and finding one s true identity.