Difference between revisions of "Volendam"

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Volendam, a steamer of the (Dutch) Holland-America Line of 15,434 tons gross, built in 1922, scrapped in 1952, named after the small Dutch town of Volendam in [[North Holland (Netherlands)|North Holland]], was used for the transport of Mennonite [[Refugees|refugees]], and is particularly known for its transport of Mennonites from [[Europe|Europe]] to [[Buenos Aires (Argentina)|Buenos Aires]] in 1947 (known as the [[Berlin Escape, 30-31 January 1947|Berlin Escape]]). [[Klassen, Cornelius Franz "C. F." (1894-1954)|C. F. Klassen]], then the [[Mennonite Central Committee (International)|Mennonite Central Committee]] representative in Europe, who organized the journey, chartered the ship. Some 650 Men­nonite refugees embarked at Rotterdam, Nether­lands, on 28 January 1947; in Bremerhaven some 450 others from a refugee camp at Gronau, Germany, joined them. Then they waited for a large group from Berlin. Because Klassen gave a financial guar­antee to the Holland-America Line for a possible delay in sailing and this warrant was accepted without the usual bail, the ship waited for the Berlin group. This was a group of some 1,100 Mennonite refugees from Russia who after much trouble and danger of life had reached Berlin and even in Berlin had a narrow escape, for only at the last moment did the Russian authorities give the neces­sary permission to travel through the Eastern Zone of Germany, occupied by the Russians. Packed into railway freight cars they were transported to Bremerhaven, from where the <em>Volendam</em> sailed on 1 February 1947, with the 2,306 Mennonites. The emi­grants were led by [[Dyck, Peter J. (1914-2010)|Peter]] and [[Dyck, Elfrieda Klassen (1917-2004)|Elfrieda Dyck]], who had come with the Berlin group. During the train journey a woman died, and a baby during embarkation. Two aged persons and a baby died at sea, and four children were born on the boat: one was named Peter Volendam (after Peter Dyck and the ship), and one Elfrieda (after Mrs. Dyck). Upon arrival at Buenos Aires further transportation was difficult, and for a large number of these immigrants impossible until October 1948, because a revolution had broken out in [[Paraguay|Paraguay]]. About 1,200 of the passengers of the <em>Volendam s</em>ettled in Eastern Para­guay, giving to their new colony the name of [[Volendam Colony (San Pedro Department, Paraguay)|Vo­lendam]] after the ship which had brought them to the new world and to liberty. Of the remaining 1,100, 870 founded the [[Neuland Colony (Boquerón Department, Paraguay)|Neuland Colony]] in the Paraguayan Chaco, 162 remained in Buenos Aires, and the rest joined their relatives in the [[Fernheim Colony (Boquerón Department, Paraguay)|Fernheim]] or [[Friesland Colony (San Pedro Department, Paraguay) |Friesland]] colonies or settled in Asuncion, the capital of Paraguay.
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The SS Volendam, a steamer of the (Dutch) Holland-America Line of 15,434 tons gross, built in 1922, scrapped in 1952, named after the small Dutch town of Volendam in [[North Holland (Netherlands)|North Holland]], was used for the transport of Mennonite [[Refugees|refugees]], and is particularly known for its transport of Mennonites from [[Europe|Europe]] to [[Buenos Aires (Argentina)|Buenos Aires]] in 1947 (known as the [[Berlin Escape, 30-31 January 1947|Berlin Escape]]). [[Klassen, Cornelius Franz "C. F." (1894-1954)|C. F. Klassen]], then the [[Mennonite Central Committee (International)|Mennonite Central Committee]] representative in Europe, who organized the journey, chartered the ship. Some 650 Men­nonite refugees embarked at Rotterdam, Nether­lands, on 28 January 1947; in Bremerhaven some 450 others from a refugee camp at Gronau, Germany, joined them. Then they waited for a large group from Berlin. Because Klassen gave a financial guar­antee to the Holland-America Line for a possible delay in sailing and this warrant was accepted without the usual bail, the ship waited for the Berlin group. This was a group of some 1,100 Mennonite refugees from Russia who after much trouble and danger of life had reached Berlin and even in Berlin had a narrow escape, for only at the last moment did the Russian authorities give the neces­sary permission to travel through the Eastern Zone of Germany, occupied by the Russians. Packed into railway freight cars they were transported to Bremerhaven, from where the <em>Volendam</em> sailed on 1 February 1947, with the 2,306 Mennonites.  
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The emi­grants were led by [[Dyck, Peter J. (1914-2010)|Peter]] and [[Dyck, Elfrieda Klassen (1917-2004)|Elfrieda Dyck]], who had come with the Berlin group. During the train journey a woman died, and a baby during embarkation. Two aged persons and a baby died at sea, and four children were born on the boat: one was named Peter Volendam (after Peter Dyck and the ship), and one Elfrieda (after Mrs. Dyck). Upon arrival at Buenos Aires further transportation was difficult, and for a large number of these immigrants impossible until October 1948, because a revolution had broken out in [[Paraguay|Paraguay]]. About 1,200 of the passengers of the <em>Volendam s</em>ettled in Eastern Para­guay, giving to their new colony the name of [[Volendam Colony (San Pedro Department, Paraguay)|Vo­lendam]] after the ship which had brought them to the new world and to liberty. Of the remaining 1,100, 870 founded the [[Neuland Colony (Boquerón Department, Paraguay)|Neuland Colony]] in the Paraguayan Chaco, 162 remained in Buenos Aires, and the rest joined their relatives in the [[Fernheim Colony (Boquerón Department, Paraguay)|Fernheim]] or [[Friesland Colony (San Pedro Department, Paraguay) |Friesland]] colonies or settled in Asuncion, the capital of Paraguay.
  
 
A second Mennonite transport of the <em>Volendam</em> was that in 1947 of 1,640 (including 635 infants) [[Old Colony Mennonites|Old Colonists]] from Quebec to Buenos Aires, who were also to settle in Paraguay, and a third transport by the <em>Volendam</em> was in October 1948, that of a group of 751 West Prussian and Galician Mennonites (the [[Danzig Refugees|Danzig Refugees]]) for Montevideo, [[Uruguay|Uruguay]], and a num­ber of Mennonites from Russia, who intended to go to Paraguay, and who disembarked in Buenos Aires. The [[International Refugee Organization (IRO)|International Refugee Organization]] paid about $160,000 for the cost of the first chartering of the <em>Volendam </em>and assumed the full cost of the third transport as far as Asuncion.
 
A second Mennonite transport of the <em>Volendam</em> was that in 1947 of 1,640 (including 635 infants) [[Old Colony Mennonites|Old Colonists]] from Quebec to Buenos Aires, who were also to settle in Paraguay, and a third transport by the <em>Volendam</em> was in October 1948, that of a group of 751 West Prussian and Galician Mennonites (the [[Danzig Refugees|Danzig Refugees]]) for Montevideo, [[Uruguay|Uruguay]], and a num­ber of Mennonites from Russia, who intended to go to Paraguay, and who disembarked in Buenos Aires. The [[International Refugee Organization (IRO)|International Refugee Organization]] paid about $160,000 for the cost of the first chartering of the <em>Volendam </em>and assumed the full cost of the third transport as far as Asuncion.

Revision as of 00:40, 29 November 2014

The SS Volendam, a steamer of the (Dutch) Holland-America Line of 15,434 tons gross, built in 1922, scrapped in 1952, named after the small Dutch town of Volendam in North Holland, was used for the transport of Mennonite refugees, and is particularly known for its transport of Mennonites from Europe to Buenos Aires in 1947 (known as the Berlin Escape). C. F. Klassen, then the Mennonite Central Committee representative in Europe, who organized the journey, chartered the ship. Some 650 Men­nonite refugees embarked at Rotterdam, Nether­lands, on 28 January 1947; in Bremerhaven some 450 others from a refugee camp at Gronau, Germany, joined them. Then they waited for a large group from Berlin. Because Klassen gave a financial guar­antee to the Holland-America Line for a possible delay in sailing and this warrant was accepted without the usual bail, the ship waited for the Berlin group. This was a group of some 1,100 Mennonite refugees from Russia who after much trouble and danger of life had reached Berlin and even in Berlin had a narrow escape, for only at the last moment did the Russian authorities give the neces­sary permission to travel through the Eastern Zone of Germany, occupied by the Russians. Packed into railway freight cars they were transported to Bremerhaven, from where the Volendam sailed on 1 February 1947, with the 2,306 Mennonites.

The emi­grants were led by Peter and Elfrieda Dyck, who had come with the Berlin group. During the train journey a woman died, and a baby during embarkation. Two aged persons and a baby died at sea, and four children were born on the boat: one was named Peter Volendam (after Peter Dyck and the ship), and one Elfrieda (after Mrs. Dyck). Upon arrival at Buenos Aires further transportation was difficult, and for a large number of these immigrants impossible until October 1948, because a revolution had broken out in Paraguay. About 1,200 of the passengers of the Volendam settled in Eastern Para­guay, giving to their new colony the name of Vo­lendam after the ship which had brought them to the new world and to liberty. Of the remaining 1,100, 870 founded the Neuland Colony in the Paraguayan Chaco, 162 remained in Buenos Aires, and the rest joined their relatives in the Fernheim or Friesland colonies or settled in Asuncion, the capital of Paraguay.

A second Mennonite transport of the Volendam was that in 1947 of 1,640 (including 635 infants) Old Colonists from Quebec to Buenos Aires, who were also to settle in Paraguay, and a third transport by the Volendam was in October 1948, that of a group of 751 West Prussian and Galician Mennonites (the Danzig Refugees) for Montevideo, Uruguay, and a num­ber of Mennonites from Russia, who intended to go to Paraguay, and who disembarked in Buenos Aires. The International Refugee Organization paid about $160,000 for the cost of the first chartering of the Volendam and assumed the full cost of the third transport as far as Asuncion.

Thus the name of the Volendam is well known in Mennonite history.

Bibliography

Fretz,  J. W. Pilgrims in Paraguay: The Story of the Mennonite Colonization in Paraguay. Scottdale: Herald Press, 1953: 39-41.

Logbooks of the Volendam.

"Peter Dyck's Story." Mennonite Life III (1948): No. 1, 8-11.

Reimer, Gustav E.  "Von Danzig nach Uruguay." Mennonite Life IV (1949): No. 3, 12-14.


Author(s) C. A. W Bos
Date Published 1959

Cite This Article

MLA style

Bos, C. A. W. "Volendam." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1959. Web. 18 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Volendam&oldid=127769.

APA style

Bos, C. A. W. (1959). Volendam. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 18 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Volendam&oldid=127769.




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Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 4, pp. 842-843. All rights reserved.


©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.