Henny reaches Brussels October 1939

At last Henny Hartog managed to flee Germany!
On 29 October 1939, eight weeks after war had broken out, she was eventually able to travel from Cologne, cross the closed border into Belgium and arrive in Brussels to join Hermann. Both she and Hermann were exhausted, but ecstatic to be reunited and as soon as she arrived she wrote to their young daughters in England with the news,
'After an adventurous journey, I at last arrived with Vati today and you will feel how great was the joy. But my head is still so dazed after all the exertion that I can't write much. I will write later about everything that I experienced.'
Hermann had located a big room at 127 rue Royale Sainte Marie where they could live together in a house that gave accommodation to refugees, and they were grateful to the kindly Belgian woman who hosted them there. They had been able to bring very little money from Germany and relied on a welfare committee to meet their day-to-day needs. As they wrote to their daughters to explain their lack of correspondence,
'For the price of a stamp to England we can buy a small loaf of bread. You know how much we must economise.'
They found that they could communicate quite well with local people who spoke either French or Flemish. Henny tried to remember the French that she had learnt in her Swiss finishing school over twenty years earlier, and Hermann discovered that Flemish was quite close to the Low German that he had spoken as a boy in Aurich, near the Dutch border.
There were then thousands of new Jewish arrivals in Belgium who had fled German-speaking countries. Many of them had arrived 'illegally' but they were tolerated by the authorities provided that they were looked after by a private organisation. Henny and Hermann sought help from the Comité d'Assistance aux Refugiés Juifs which had its offices in Brussels at rue Roger van der Weyden 25, which was a 45 minute walk away from their lodgings.
As more and more Jewish refugees flooded into Brussels, the committee became increasingly anxious to advise against them giving offence and thus causing a potential rise in anti-Semitism. Painted in large letters in German on to the walls of the organisation's buildings was the exhortation:
'Deserve the hospitality you receive in Belgium!
Always carry yourself in an exemplary manner!
Respect the customs of the country. Don't get noticed.
Avoid speaking loudly in the streets and in public places.
Discipline yourself! This is in your own interest.'
And so – eighty-five years ago - their time as refugees began for Henny and Hermann.
(the photo shows the house at 127 rue Royale Sainte Marie where they rented a room)









