Jan Campert

Jan Campert, born in 1902, was a journalist, theater critic and writer, living in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. During the second World War Campert was arrested for aiding the Jews. He was held in the Neuengamme concentration camp, where he died on the 12th of January 1943. Campert is best know for his poem "De achttien doden" (The eighteen dead), describing the sacrifices made by the resistance against the German occupation. Written in 1941, the poem was illegally published in 1943.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
carmunnock
cadillac v16 engine
torch lake
leonardo nascimento de araujo
omega christian television
william reid
ezhava
christian gnther
schweizer reneke
geoff capes
bebeto
natalie du toit
cattewater
kumaran asan
one dimensional man
radasm
wrestling at the 2004 summer olympics men's greco roman 55 kg
caerdroia
the flying lizards
ohio senate membership, 125th general assembly
flutter tonguing
jagathy sreekumar
masm32
mediterranean cypress
vssc
convention relating to the regulation of aerial navigation
how far can you go?
orders of magnitude (speed)
drake's island
honda cb500t
under these rocks and stones
hardgate
duntocher
archibald douglas, 5th earl of angus
dead of night
colour moving and still
list of elements by melting point
archibald douglas, 6th earl of angus
wild licorice
carradale
exxos
archibald douglas, 8th earl of angus
stanislaw poniatowski
romeo class submarine