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Visiting Info
Opening Hours:

Sunday to Thursday: ‬09:00-17:00

Fridays and Holiday eves: ‬09:00-14:00

Yad Vashem is closed on Saturdays and all Jewish Holidays.

Entrance to the Holocaust History Museum is not permitted for children under the age of 10. Babies in strollers or carriers will not be permitted to enter.

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Yad Vashem to Honor the late Jan Willem Kamphuis and Klazenia Kamphuis-Vink, Righteous Among the Nations from Holland, on Tuesday

The ceremony will take place in the presence of Righteous Commission Chairman, Supreme Court Justice (ret.) Jacob Turkel

07 July 2016

Anthonie Vink, son and grandson of the Righteous, will accept the medal and certificate on behalf of his family

On Tuesday, 12 July 2016, Yad Vashem will hold a ceremony posthumously honoring Jan Willem Kamphuis and his daughter Klaziena Kamphuis-Vink from Holland as Righteous Among the Nations. Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev will present Anthonie Vink, son of Klaziena Kamphuis-Vink and grandson of Jan Willem Kamphuis, with the medal and certificate of honor on behalf of his mother and grandfather. The event will take place in the presence of Supreme Court Justice (ret.) Jacob Turkel, Chairman of the Committee for the Designation of the Righteous, as well as Dr. James Loewenstein, son of Holocaust survivors Henny and Manfred Kurt Loewenstein; a representative of the Dutch Embassy in Israel; and family members and friends.

A memorial ceremony in the Hall of Remembrance will be held at 10:30 a.m. followed by the awarding of the medal and certificate in the Synagogue at Yad Vashem.

The events will be conducted in English and Hebrew.

The event is open to the press, in coordination with the Media Relations Dept: 02-644-3412.

The Rescue Story

Henny Dünner was born in 1918 in the city of Cologne, Germany. Her father, Rabbi Dr. Eliezer Dünner, was the local rabbi. Henny attended the local Jewish Yavne School until her studies were cut short when her parents decided to send her and her siblings to family living in Amsterdam. This was shortly after the rise to power of the Nazis, and Henny's parents felt that their children would be safer if they left Germany. In 1939, Henny's parents joined their children in Amsterdam. Henny decided to halt her studies in order to learn a trade; she trained to be a seamstress.

In the spring of 1943, Henny was arrested and taken to Hollandsche Schouwburg, the Jewish theater that served as an assembly point for Jews who had been arrested and were awaiting deportation. There, she told the authorities that she had experience caring for children and was transferred to the adjacent children's home, where she helped the children before their deportation. Henny successfully escaped from the children's home together with her future husband, Manfred Kurt Loewenstein. Shortly thereafter, the two found a hiding place in the home of Jan Willem Kamphuis, a widower who lived together with his daughter, Klaziena, in Driebregen near the city of Utrecht. Despite the danger, Jan Willem and Klaziena opened their home to Manfred and Henny. For eight months, the couple hid in a small room in the attic of the house. Although Henny and Manfred never dared venture outside except to hide out in the nearby forest when imminent danger loomed, the neighbors became suspicious of the Kamphuis home, and in February 1944, the situation became more dangerous, particularly because some of the neighbors were Dutch Nazi party members. With the help of the local resistance, Henny and Manfred were taken to another hiding place, where they stayed through the end of the war. Shortly before their liberation, while still in hiding, Henny gave birth to their son, James.

Meanwhile, Rabbi Dr. Eliezer Dünner and his wife had been arrested together with their children and deported to Bergen Belsen. Fortunately, the family was part of a prisoner exchange for German Templars from Mandatory Palestine and thus survived the war. One of Henny's sisters, Ruth Dünner, was sent to Auschwitz and murdered there.

On 19 October 2015, the late Jan Willem Kamphuis and Klaziena Kamphuis-Vink were recognized by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations.