The Daily Show: Ears Edition - Selma van de Perre on "My Name Is Selma"
Episode Date: May 31, 2021From May 2021, Selma van de Perre, a Nazi concentration camp survivor and Jewish resistance fighter, discusses "My Name Is Selma," the need to highlight atrocities and her pursuit of joy. Learn more ...about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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When 60 Minutes premiered in September 1968, there was nothing like it.
This is 60 Minutes. It's a kind of a magazine for television.
Very few have been given access to the treasures in our archives.
You're rolling. But that's all about to change.
Like none of this stuff gets looked at. That's what's incredible.
I'm Seth Done of CBS News.
Listen to 60 Minutes, a second look
on Apple podcasts starting September 17.
Salma of Funderpair.
Welcome to the Daily Social Distancing Show.
You're welcome.
You have lived a life that is remarkable. It has been a life filled with triumphs, trials, tribulations,
and you are now telling your story. You have lived as a Jewish resistance fighter,
you survived a concentration camp, and now on May 5th the Netherlands are
celebrating 76 years of liberation from the Nazi occupation. Why do you think May 5th is so important to many people and especially to yourself?
May the 5th?
Oh well, because it is rather good thing to remember because we were freed from German occupation.
I know people are celebrating today, but many people lost lives and families and are not
ready to celebrate every time freedom.
I think the day before yesterday was very much more important because that was the day of
the debt, although of course today is very important liberation day. And in your new book my name is Selma you talk about
your life, you talk about how you grew up in the Netherlands, you talk about how
your family weren't even practicing Jews. You were just living a normal life
and all of a sudden that got turned upside down when the Nazis started
invading Europe. I would love to know what that felt like to you to you to you to you to you to you to you to you to you to you to you to you to you to you to to to to the the the the the the the the the the the the the the th. th. th. thi thi. My thi the the name the name thi. My name thi. My name thi. tho. tho. tho. My name the. My name the. My name their their their their their their their name their name the name the name the name the name the name the name the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the. the. the. thea. toda. today. today.e. today. today.e.e. today.e.e. today. today.a. My name. the. that got turned upside down when the Nazis started invading
Europe.
I would love to know what that felt like to you as a person where one day you felt like
you were part of a community and a society and the next thing you know you were in danger
just because of your family's history.
Although my great grandparents were very religious, but my father was a very great liberal, and
so I got it on from him.
And we lived in a life amongst all Christian people, and just were one of them, well, I mean,
civilians. And so it was not felt you were Jewish.
My girlfriend knew I was Jewish,
and I knew who was Catholic,
and I knew who was Protestant.
But it didn't make any difference.
We would have had all friends.
And that changed when the Germans came in.
You talk about in the book how your life changed over the course of a few months where in one moment
you were a young girl who were 17 years old and then because of what was happening in the
Netherlands, the Jewish community you had to come together to try to fight the scourge of the
Nazis. As a young girl who is dyeing her hair to change how she looks, as a young girl who is
trying to help fellow members of the Jewish community with passports and papers and food
and transport, what was going through your mind when this was happening?
We were thinking that the end would come soon.
In fact, it came later than we thought, but it was said all the time.
It will only be six months or something. Don't forget the Netherlands were neutral in the
First World War, and the whole population thought that this time we would be neutral as well,
and no occupation was considered. So when it did come, it was a great surprise. After a year or so, the declarations
came in, that Jews were not allowed on the trams and not allowed in the cinemas and not allowed to
visit Christian friends anymore, etc. And so that then one is made to feel an outsider, a Jew.
When you were captured by the Germans, they forced you to work on an assembly line,
manufacturing gas masks for the Germans, and you talk about how what you would do is leave
some of the screws loose so that the gas masks wouldn't
work properly. I have two questions about that. Firstly, weren't you afraid that you would be
caught? And secondly, where did you get that idea from? Well, I was on the assembly line and one of
the first days I was sitting on this side of the assembly line. The the other girl, Hattie Fowter, was her name,
became very important in the resistance. She said, don't tie the screws too tight. She told me to.
So I was very good. I thought it was wonderful because some
tells me we tried to doto do you, not realizing how dangerous it was really.
We thought, well, we were Dutch and we could do anything.
And later on, when I had my thumb broken and couldn't work on the assembly line for a week,
and afterwards, I had to put the gas mask in the box and check them.
And of course I knew that the screws were loose, but I still put them in, because they were sent straight to.... to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to the the the to the Dutch the Dutch to the Dutch the Dutch, the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we were the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch, we the Dutch the the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the box the their their their their their thea, their their their thea, their their their their the box and check them. And of course I knew that the screws were loose, but I still put them in because
they were sent straight to Germany and Poland for the soldiers. When you look at the world today,
you are one of the few remaining survivors of that time. Many people worry that society will forget
that story, as fewer survivors are able to recount what happened to them. Those stories will be the box. Those stories will forget that story,
as fewer survivors are able to recount what happened to them,
those stories will be lost to history,
and part of the fear is that history will then repeat itself.
Why do you think it's so important for us
to keep on talking about what happened during that time
when Nazi Germany was invading the world?
Because that's why I think commemorations are so important.
Because when you commemorate, you tell the story and people tell the stories which has happened.
And I personally go every year back to Raffensbruck with a group of women and men who have just
finished their teaching training, teachers training.
And they tell the children, when they become a teacher, what has happened and what I've heard.
And I've had, and so that's why it's good. I do this every year.
And I've done it for the last 20 years by now.
And I have often get letters from, or emails,
from these students, some of these students
who have become teachers and who are telling the children.
I often wondered how many of them really did something with this workshop information.
But of course they did.
And that's very good to hear.
I didn't think the book was going to be important.
I didn't think the book was going to be top of the booksellers list.
I was very pleased when it was going to be published, but never in.
My life thought that it was going to be so red, much red, you know.
I think the reason everybody should read the book, and I think the reason so many people
have read the book is because not only have you lived an unbelievable life through
one of the most unbelievable and horrific times, but what you're teaching people about life beyond that is so important.
And before I before I leave you, you are now 98 years old and you still live life, you enjoy yourself, you play bridge.
I was told that you play golf, I don't know if that's true so you play golf until until last November.
Why so playing golf playing bridge living life I would love to know what
inspires you to find your joy and what keeps you going in the world every single
day. I do enjoy every day I try to enjoy every day.
So I try to enjoy every day. So I try to eat sensibly, behave sensibly.
And I try to have friends, which I have, and are very good to me, especially I'm old.
Every morning when I wake up, I'm glad that I'm alive.
I'm very much realized the fact that I am alive,
and many, many, many thousands of people are not.
Written in the book also in commemoration of all those people who were resistance fighters
and lost their life, helping other people to stay alive really.
Well I will say this from my small little world.
Thank you for inspiring us. Thank you for writing the book.
Thank you for sharing your story and thank you so much for joining me on the show.
I hope you get back to your bridge and your friends and continue enjoying every single day. Salmo van de Peer, bye, thank you.
You're welcome. Thank you.
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When 60 Minutes premiered in September 1968, there was nothing like it.
This is 60 Minutes.
It's a kind of a magazine for television.
Very few have been given access to the treasures in our archives.
But that's all about to change.
Like none of this stuff gets looked at.
That's what's incredible.
I'm Seth Done of CBS News.
Listen to 60 Minutes, a second look, starting September 17th, wherever
you get your podcasts.
This has been a Comedy Central Podcast.