Anton Schaars
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anton Schaars | |
|---|---|
Anton Schaars is welcomed back in Velp in 1945, wearing his camp clothing. | |
| Born | June 5, 1887 Deventer, Netherlands |
| Died | February 4, 1963 (aged 75) Deventer, Netherlands |
| Occupation | Roman Catholic priest |
| Known for | Resistance work during World War II |
Antonius (Anton) Johannes Schaars (5 June 1887, in Deventer – 4 February 1963, in Deventer) was a Dutch Roman Catholic priest who helped rescue members of the Allied forces during World War II.
Schaars was born in Deventer in 1887. He followed his secondary education at the Canisius College in Nijmegen before studying at the minor seminary in Culemborg and the major seminary in Rijsenburg. In August 1910 he was ordained priest by archbishop Henricus van de Wetering of Utrecht.[1]
He worked as curate in Ameland, Hengelo, Heino, Arnhem and Zeist. After which he worked for 10 years as parson in Doornik, where he helped found a catholic primary school. In 1937 Schaars was appointed parson in Velp.[1]
World War II
Schaars saw the danger of Nazism and preached against it. In 1940, after the Netherlands became occupied by Nazi Germany, he created an escape route for escaped French prisoners of war, together with the married couple Timmermans. He also helped crashed allied pilots and Jewish people in hiding. Together with communist Dirk van der Voort he published a 1942 manifest calling the farmers to destroy their harvest as a form of resistance.[1]
The Germans became aware of the escape route and both Schaars and the couple Timmermans were arrested on 5 May 1942. He was held for two months at the Oranjehotel prison in Scheveningen, before being transported to first Kamp Amersfoort, followed by Herzogenbusch concentration camp, and finally Dachau concentration camp. He was transferred to Natzweiler in October 1943, and returned to Dachau in September 1944. He stayed in Dachau until it was liberated on 29 April 1945. On his return to Velp on 26 May 1945 Schaars, dressed in camp clothing, was driven through town in an open chariot.[1][2]
