Jacob Hiegentlich (30 April 1907 – 18 May 1940) was a gay Dutch poet of Jewish descent. He committed suicide in 1940, at age 33,
days after the German invasion of the Netherlands.
Biography
Hiegentlich was born on 30 April 1907 in
Roermond, one of five children of Rosalie Egger (d. 1927) and Sallie Hiegentlich, a trader in textiles. Four of the children and the father did not survive
World War II. Jacob grew up in the Catholic city of Roermond in what he later called "a confusing mix of Roman Catholicism and Jewishness". He attended
gymnasium at the , but did not graduate—he had problems with math.
[ Jews in Limburg did not suffer the same antisemitism as Jews in other parts of Europe. Still, while they were nominally granted the same rights as non-Jews, they were nonetheless marked as different, insulted, and ostracized; Hiegentlich sketches their position in the partly autobiographical novella ''Mirjam''.
He wrote and published his first novel at age 17, under the pseudonym David Jozua de Castro; ''Het zotte vleesch. Roman van 't Limburgse volk'' ("The foolish flesh: novel of the people of Limburg") featured an unflattering portrait of a friend of his father, who bought up the entire printing. At his father's insistence he got a degree in Dutch in Amsterdam, graduating on 17 November 1930. In that city he was a member of the Nederlandse Zionistische Studenten-Organisatie (NZSO), and hung out with artists and bohemians, in a group named the ''Reynderskring'' for a café on the Leidseplein.][
In 1932 he got a job as a teacher at a theosophical lyceum in Naarden, but his strong individualism did not go together well with the classical system of education, and after 1935 he devoted himself exclusively to being a writer. He remained an enthusiastic Zionist, and opted for the militant branch led by Ze'ev Jabotinsky. He wrote for Jewish and Zionist magazines, including ''Baderech'', ''Hatikwah'' (the official publication of the NZSO), and ''Ha'Ischa''. For the ''Joodsche Wachter'', the official publication of the , he wrote political articles that warned against the coming of Nazism. He also wrote book reviews, greatly admiring Jacob Israël de Haan and Carry van Bruggen. He lectured on literature and Judaism, and published novels, novellas, essays, and poetry.][
The outbreak of World War II proved lethal to a generation of Dutch writers—some were killed, some killed themselves, some died as a result of wartime accidents; Hiegentlich was one of many. On the evening of 14 May 1940 he took poison, and was taken, unconscious, to the ]Wilhelmina Gasthuis Wilhelmina may refer to:
* Wilhelmina (given name), a given name and list of people with the name
People
* Wilhelmina of the Netherlands (1880–1962), Queen of the Kingdom of the Netherlands from 1890 to 1948
* Wilhelmine Amalie of Brunswick (167 ...
, where he died on 18 May, at age 33.
Literary works
Hiegentlich's early work covers the period until 1930, when he was 23. It includes a collection of German poems, ''Die rote Nacht'' ("The red night", 1923), the novel ''Het zotte vleesch'' ("The foolish flesh", 1925), a play, ''Gaat u zitten'' ("Please sit down", produced in 1927), and an anthology of Louis Couperus, ''Werk van Louis Couperus'' (1929), an author he greatly admired.
His early (German) poetry is described as "typical puberty poetry of a precocious boy", reminiscent of Willem Kloos and Heinrich Heine
Christian Johann Heinrich Heine (; born Harry Heine; 13 December 1797 – 17 February 1856) was a German poet, writer and literary critic. He is best known outside Germany for his early lyric poetry, which was set to music in the form of '' Lied ...
. His best and best-known poems are "Kerstmis aan de bar" ("Christmas in the bar", published in '' Elsevier'' in 1935), a poem about people who appear to be enjoying life but are tortured by hidden grief, and "Sonnet", published in '' Helikon'' (1932), a poem inspired by '' Death in Venice''s Tadzio.
In 1935 he published a short story collection, ''Het vochtige park'' ("The wet park", Maastricht, A.A.M. Stols, 1935). Stories of his were also published in '' De Nieuwe Gids'', ''Nederland'', and ''De Stem'', but by 1949 they had not been collected and published separately. During the period 1930–1940 he wrote a number of novels touching on the threats posed by the Nazis, by antisemitism, and by Dutch nationalism. ''Onbewoonbare wereld'' ("Uninhabitable world", 1937), is a psychological novel whose main character is the son of the editor of the National Socialist Movement in the Netherlands (NSB) magazine; he plans to kill his father for spreading antisemitic ideas, but ends up killing himself—a suicide which the NSB exploits for its own purposes. The world of the novel has become "uninhabitable" for any person of sensibility. The main character of ''Schipbreuk te Luik'' ("Shipwreck in Liège
Liège ( , , ; wa, Lîdje ; nl, Luik ; german: Lüttich ) is a major city and municipality of Wallonia and the capital of the Belgian province of Liège.
The city is situated in the valley of the Meuse, in the east of Belgium, not far from b ...
", 1938), Alex Moser, resembles Hiegentlich in many ways, having been brought up a Jew in Limburg and becoming estranged from Germany because of Nazism. ''Met de stroom mee'' ("With the current") was published posthumously in 1946, and follows the life of an actor, Lode Wolff, a talented but coldhearted man who ends up as an agent for the Gestapo in Flanders. One more novel, preserved in manuscript, is ''Taboe'' ("Taboo"), whose main character, Emile Moser, is a thinly veiled version of the author.
Legacy
He is remembered with a plaque at his brother's house, on Markt 27 in Roermond.[
An anthology of his work with an extensive biography was edited by Dr. Catharina Ypes, and published as ''1907–1940. Een joods artist tussen twee oorlogen'' by L.J. Veen, Amsterdam, in 1949. He makes an appearance in the novel '' Sunken Red'' by ]Jeroen Brouwers
Jeroen Godfried Marie Brouwers (30 April 1940 – 11 May 2022) was a Dutch writer.
From 1964 to 1976 Brouwers worked as an editor at Manteau publishers in Brussels. In 1964 he made his literary debut with ''Het mes op de keel'' (''The Knife ...
, who also devoted a chapter to him in his ''De laatste deur'' ("The last door"), a study of Dutch writers who committed suicide.
See also
* History of the Jews in the Netherlands
References
Other sources
*Siegfried E. van Praag, "Ter herinnering aan mijn vriend Jacob Hiegentlich", ''Nieuw Israëlietisch Weekblad
The ''Nieuw Israelietisch Weekblad'' (Dutch: New Israelite Weekly), in short NIW, is the only Jewish weekly and the oldest functioning news magazine in the Netherlands. Founded on August 4, 1865, it has since informed the Jewish community on issu ...
'' (NIW), 11 April 1947
*Laura Schot, "Geheid erfgoed", NIW, 4 July 2003
*P.J.A. Nissen en W. Kusters, ''Jacob Hiegentlich 1907–1940. Een Joods dichter in Roermond'', Roermond: Stichting Rura, 1992
*R. Fuks-Mansfeld (red.), ''Joden in Nederland in de twintigste eeuw. Een biografisch woordenboek'', Utrecht, 2007); page 136
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hiegentlich, Jacob
1907 births
1940 suicides
20th-century Dutch poets
20th-century Dutch male writers
Dutch male poets
Dutch gay writers
Dutch LGBT poets
Gay poets
Gay Jews
People from Roermond
Dutch Jews
Jewish Dutch writers
Drug-related suicides in the Netherlands
1940 deaths
Suicides by poison
20th-century Dutch LGBT people
Suicides by Jews during the Holocaust
Dutch Jews who died in the Holocaust
Dutch Zionists