Pieter Jacob Arts

Geslacht: Man
Vader: Gerard Arts
Moeder: Maria Gertrudis van Enckevort
Geboren: 21 Apr 1892 Sevenum
Overleden: 15 Juni 1985
Beroep: landbouwer
Aantekeningen: Personal Information
Last Name: Arts
First Name: Piet
Date of Birth: 21/04/1892
Date of death: 15/06/1985
Rescuer's fate: survived
underground movement member
Nationality: THE NETHERLANDS
Gender: Male
Profession: FARMER
Organization/ Religious order: Westerweel Groep
Rescue
Place during the war: Sevenum, Limburg, The Netherlands
Rescue Place: Sevenum, Limburg, The Netherlands
Grubbenvorst, Limburg, The Netherlands
Westerbork, Camp, The Netherlands
Rescue mode: Hiding
Arranging shelter
Other
File number: File from the Collection of the Righteous Among the Nations Department (M.31.2/1173)
Commemoration
Date of Recognition: 22/03/1977
Righteous Commemorated with Tree/Wall of Honor: Tree
Ceremony held in Yad Vashem: Yes
Rescued Persons
Prague, Chaya
Paz, Dov
Nussbaum, Yaari, Sophie, Schulamit
Ticho, Kettner, Lilly
Cohen, Rivka
Rescue Story
Arts, Piet J.
From 1940, the first year of the war, Piet Arts, a farmer from Sevenum, Limburg, was the organizer of the underground group that operated in the areas of Sevenum and Grubbenvorst. Due to the efforts of Miss Eugenie Boutet*, Piet later affiliated with the Westerweel* group and became their resident member in Sevenum. Over and above this commitment, Piet also ran a covert operation, hiding prisoners previously smuggled out of the Westerbork camp with families in Sevenum. In those days, Sevenum was a remote village with a population of only 3,000 inhabitants and the villagers were especially active in underground operations. It has been estimated that about 300 individuals found a safe haven there during the war. Piet coordinated the anti-German Resistance activities of the entire village. He collaborated with the underground in matters of registration, with the police who conspired not to give out information, and with officials of the postal service, who also agreed not to betray the activists and their plans. In 1938, Viennese-born Lilly Kettner (later Ticho), born in 1923, arrived in Holland on a Kindertransport. Initially, she worked in the crèche opposite the Hollandsche Schouwburg, from where hundreds of children were smuggled out to safe hideouts. Lilly, however, was deported to Westerbork, but escaped and, with Piet’s assistance, managed to hide in Sevenum. She was hidden for a while in the chicken coops on Piet’s farm. From this haven she was able to listen to BBC radio broadcasts in Dutch. Owing to Piet’s tireless and selfless efforts to save lives, Dov Paz, Rivka Cohen, Ruth Meyer, Rachel Lavie, Chaya Prague, Max Bischburg, Sophie Nussbaum (later Shulamith Ya’ari), the Winter family, and many more were spared the atrocities of the Nazi occupation. Sometime between late 1943 and early 1944, Piet himself was forced to go into hiding after it became apparent that the German police were pursuing him. After the war, Piet was honored by the underground movement in Holland as well as by General Eisenhower, Deputy Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force.
On March 22, 1977, Yad Vashem recognized Piet Arts as Righteous Among the Nations.