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Dutch writer, philosopher and criminologist, who openly wrote about homosexuality and feminism. Catharina Irma Dessaur was born in the Bethlehem clinic in Den Haag. She was the eldest daughter of the Jewish perfume merchant Salomon Dessaur (10 September 1903, Den Haag - 16 September 1989, Scheveningen) and Rosa Louise "Shoshanna" Jacobs (20 July 1906, Laag Keppel - 10 March 2000, Scheveningen). Her father was earlier married to Sophia Groen (27 Augustus 1902, Den Haag - 30 September 1942, Auschwitz). She had younger brother named Joost Reinier Dessaer (June 1946), who was named after Reinier Koster, who helped the the family hide during WW2, Reinier married Simone Trientje Moses. Using false passports supplied by the Dutch Resistance, her Jewish family changed identity and hided in separate places during World War II. From early July 1942 to 1945, during her early years of puberty, Burnier was separated from her parents, staying in sixteen different locations in the North of the Netherlands under the false name Ronnie van Dijk. Without support of her parents, she became painfully aware of the lack of rights that women experienced in a male-dominated society. She felt like a boy trapped in a girl's body. After the war, Burnier was reunited with her parents and grandparents in Scheveningen. But coming back together was experienced as a "house of sorrow", as so many loved ones never came back and the family had not been able to sustain their members during the second world war. It felt like a "we lost our souls innocence" in a kind of diaspora. How do we find our torn apart origins back? At age 14, still loaded with a painful past, Dessauer went to a Liberal Christian Lyceum in Den Haag. As she was a bright child, she skipped two classes and graduated with high notes at the Lyceum . She went on to study medicine and philosophy in Amsterdam, but she could not finish it. In 1953 she became pregnant of a son and as a female one had to marry and care for the children according to the mores of those days. On 4 September 1953, Burnier married the antroposophic publisher and father of her son Johannes Emanuel Zeijlmans van Emmichoven (5 Augustus 1926-2008). In 1951 Zeijlmans had established the Dutch journal "Castrum Peregrini" (burcht der onverzettelijken). The name refers to the hiding place of the German poet Wolfgang Frommel (8 July 1902, Karlsruhe - 13 December 1986, Amsterdam) and other artists at the safe-place at Herengracht 401, being protected by the Amsterdam paintress Gisèle d'Ailly-van Waterschoot van der Gracht (11 September 1912, Den Haag – 27 May 2013, Amsterdam). Zeijlmans worked for many years as a bookdealer, editor and publisher. They got two children: Carlo Dominique (1954), a "Sprachgestalter "living in Hamburg and Ingeborg Anne Zeijlmans van Emmichoven (28 December 1960, Zeist), who became a PhD psychologist in 2000 at the UVA. Johns father was the antropospohic Ph.D. "color" psychiatrist and Rudolf Steiner biographer Frederik Willem Zeylmans van Emmichoven (23 November 1893, Helmond – 18 November 1961, Capetown). From him Burnier learned a lot about antroposophy, which is reflected in her work. After the birth of her daughter Ingeborg Anna, Burnier left her husband and fled to her Jewish parents in Scheveningen. She went on studying again, this time philosophy in Leiden, which she finished quickly and cum laude. On 16 January 1964, Burnier and Zeijlmans officially divorced in Amsterdam. Zeijlmans was in 1966 ordained as a priest. He was instrumental in founding the Dutch metaphysical journal Jonas. He went to Reutlingen, Germany in 1977. Emanuel Zeylmans became the author of a number of works, including a biography of the antroposophist physician Ita Wegman and his father. But Burnier had discovered and accepted her lesbian nature and debuted in 1965 in the literary magazine Tirade as Andreas Burnier with fragments from "De verschrikkingen van het noorden" (The horrors of the North, 1967) and published her first novel "Een tevreden lach" (A satisfied smile) that same year. Both works deal with homosexuality. In "A satisfied smile", she wrote in a natural way about her homosexual orientation. This caused a literary sensation in The Netherlands, as no female writer had done this before. But for her coming out was a relieve. She had met her first female lover, with whom she stayed for seventeen years. Her children were brought into the care of a foster home. She had a short career as a civil servant in The Hague, but then became a research assistant at the Institute of Criminology at Leiden. In January 1971 she gained her Ph.D. in criminology under professor W. Nagel on the thesis "Foundations of theory formation in criminology". From 1973 to 1988 Burnier was professor criminology at the Radboud University of Nijmegen. In the "De wereld is van glas" (The world is made of glass, 1997) she reconciled with her Jewish ancestry. She was involved in the erection of the Joods Educatief Centrum Crescas (1999) that was named after the medieval Spanish-Jewish philosopher and Spinoza teacher Hasdai ben Judah Crescas (c. 1340). She considered Crescas as her spiritual teacher. On 1991 she was knighted as a member of the Order of the Netherlands Lion. She died 18 September 2002 in Amsterdam of brain haemorrhage. She was buried at the Liberal Jewish cemetery Gan Hasjalom in Hoofddorp. Link to Wikipedia
S.No. | Event Type | Event Date | Event Description |
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1 |
Published/Released |
Jan. 1, 1971 |
Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1 January 1971 in Rotterdam (Foundations of theory formation in criminology) . |
2 |
Published/Released |
Oct. 19, 1973 |
Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 19 October 1973 in Nijmegen (Wetenschap tussen cultuur en tegencultuur: disrede.) . |
3 |
Published/Released |
Sept. 1, 1975 |
Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released September 1975 (Interview by Willem M. Roggeman) . |
4 |
Published/Released |
Jan. 1, 1987 |
Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1987 (De rondgang der gevangenen: een essay over goed en kwaad, in de vorm van zeven brieven aan de Platoclub.) |
5 |
Published/Released |
Oct. 10, 1999 |
Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 10 October 1999 in Amstelveen (Crescas opened) . |
S.No. | Event Type | Event Date | Event Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 |
Marriage |
Sept. 1, 1953 |
Relationship : Marriage 4 September 1953 (Johannes Emanuel Zeijlmans van Emmichoven) . |
2 |
Divorce |
Jan. 16, 1964 |
Relationship : Divorce dates 16 January 1964 in Amsterdam (left her spouse in 1961) . |
S.No. | Event Type | Event Date | Event Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 |
Child Adopted |
Dec. 28, 1960 |
Family : Adopted a child 28 December 1960 in Zeist (Ingeborg Anne Zeijlmans van Emmichoven) . |
S.No. | Event Type | Event Date | Event Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 |
Father Death |
Jan. 18, 1934 |
Death of Father 18 January 1934 in Den Haag (Grandfather Benjamin Wolff Groen, born 13 Sep 1874 's-Gravenhage) . |
2 |
Mother Death |
Feb. 26, 1943 |
Death of Mother 26 February 1943 in Auschwitz concentration camp (Grandmother Theodora de Beer, born 2 Oct 1878 's-Gravenhage) . |
3 |
Mother Death |
March 17, 1951 |
Death of Mother 17 March 1951 in Den Haag (Grandmother: Catharina de Liema, birth 14 Mar 1873 's-Gravenhage) . |
4 |
Father Death |
Oct. 1, 1963 |
Death of Father 8 October 1963 in Den Haag (Grandfather Maurits Dessaur, birth 10 Jul 1878 's-Gravenhage) . |
5 |
Father Death |
Sept. 16, 1989 |
Death of Father 16 September 1989 in Scheveningen (16 September 1989, Scheveningen) . |
6 |
Mother Death |
March 10, 2000 |
Death of Mother 10 March 2000 in Scheveningen . |
7 |
Disease |
Sept. 18, 2002 |
Death by Disease 18 September 2002 in Amsterdam (brain haemorrhage) . |
S.No. | Event Type | Event Date | Event Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 |
Other Social |
June 10, 1942 |
Other Social 10 June 1942 in Amsterdam (First Dutch Jews deported to Westerbork) . |
2 |
Other Social |
Aug. 18, 1942 |
Other Social 18 August 1942 in Den Haag (First transport of Jews From Den Haag (where she resided)) . |
3 |
Other Social |
Aug. 22, 1942 |
Other Social 22 August 1942 in Scheveningen (First raid for Jews in Scheveningen, as only 1200 of the 4000 summoned Jews had appeared in June.) . |
4 |
Other Social |
Dec. 21, 1942 |
Other Social 21 December 1942 at 11:45 AM in Scheveningen (Gestapo tried to arrest Peter Cornelius, the man who hided her in her first shelter place. She had to move.) . |
5 |
Other Family |
June 1, 1946 |
Other Family June 1946 (Brother born: Joost Reinier Dessaer) . |
6 |
Other Family |
June 14, 2000 |
Other Family 14 June 2000 in Amsterdam (Thesis of daugther Anne: Attachment-related information processing : exploring the effect of attachment organization on cognitive regulation in adults.) . |
Gender | Female |
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Weekday | Friday |
Date | July 3, 1931 |
Time | 9:30 a.m. |
Daylight Saving | Yes |
City | The Hague, South Holland, Netherlands |
Geo-location | 52ºN4'36.01", |
Timezone | Europe/Amsterdam |
City | The Hague, South Holland, Netherlands |
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Timezone | Europe/Amsterdam |
Time (Europe/Amsterdam) | Jul. 03, 1931, 09:10:27 AM |
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Time (UTC) | Jul. 03, 1931, 08:10:27 AM |
Time (LMT) | Jul. 03, 1931, 08:27:39 AM |
Time (Julian) | 2426525.84059028 |
LMT Correction | 0.2867 Hrs |
Ayanmsha | True Chitra - 22º53'12.02" |
Joined Organization
May 1, 1942
Social : Joined group 3 May 1942 (Dutch Jews had to wear the yellow Star of David in public) .
Institutionalized
July 1, 1942
Social : Institutionalized - prison, hospital July 1942 (Hided early July 1942) .
Great Publicity
April 29, 1991
Social : Great Publicity 29 April 1991 (Knigthed as a member of the Order of the Netherlands Lion.) .