Tazelaar – the original 007

Nearly eighty years ago, on 23rd November 1941, a joint British-Dutch intelligence operation successfully managed to send a Dutch agent to the occupied Netherlands. The operation was called “Contact Holland.”

Pieter Tazelaar swam from a boat to the beach at Scheveningen. He was wearing black tie evening dress. He poured some Hennessy XO cognac over himself and walked up the beach, pretending to be a drunk reveller, and he was thus able to get past the German guards.

On 20th November, on the windswept boulevard in Scheveningen, a small group of people took a moment to remember the Special Forces agents in the Second World War. The head of the Dutch SAS was there, along with descendants of Tazelaar, and representatives from the Museum Engelandvaarders. A letter was read from Dutch Prince Peter-Christiaan, who works closely with Dutch security forces.

After Emma’s song, a man dressed in a black tie ran up to the boulevard from the beach carrying a torch to symbolise the hope that the intelligence team brought to the Netherlands. The group then raised a toast, of course with Hennessy XO.

The ceremony was organised by Dutch author Victor Laurentius who published a biography of Tazelaar in 2009. Needless to say, Tazelaar and Operation Contact Holland were the inspiration for Ian Flemming’s James Bond.

2021-12-02T16:55:37+02:00November 21st, 2021|

Ulster Tower Centenary – Northern Ireland’s National War Memorial

Friday, 19th November, 2021 marked the centenary of the Ulster Tower, Northern Ireland’s national war memorial. It is located in the Somme, France, along the former German front line, where thousands of young men were killed in the Battle of the Somme in 1916. To this day bodies are still being recovered in the surrounding fields.

For the first time in history, the band of the Defence Forces Ireland and the Royal Irish Regiment joined together. They accompanied a remembrance service at the tower and gave a concert in the basilica in Albert. Emma was honoured to be working with them, and with their conductors Tom Kelly and Richard Douglas, and performing in the presence of various heads of state and diplomats.

2021-12-02T16:55:58+02:00November 20th, 2021|

Lecture Recital with Lieselotte van Tol

Together with pianist Lieselotte van Tol, Emma will present a lecture recital about the history of opera and musical theatre. It includes songs from well-known operas, operettas, and musicals, and invites you to question the genre. Tickets are available at the door.

21st November, 14:00, Pier-K Theatre, Nieuw Vennep, the Netherlands

2021-12-02T16:57:16+02:00November 19th, 2021|

German Remembrance Day 2021 – a very special Volkstrauertag

Chief Rabbi Jacobs in the German War Cemetery. Photo: Ronald Hartsuiker

Every few years, British Remembrance Sunday falls on the same Sunday as the German Volkstrauertag. This is because Volkstrauertag is on the third Sunday of November, and Remembrance Sunday is on the Sunday closest to 11th November.

I first sang at Volkstrauertag on the invitation of British veteran John Sleep. He fought in the Netherlands and was injured by a German tank shell. He was grateful for his injury because he believed it saved his life; he believed he was deliberately injured and not killed.

John died last January aged 100. Had he been alive and able to travel, he would have attended the Volkstrauertag ceremony in Ysselsteyn, the Netherlands, and the ceremony at the Monument of Tolerance, as he did every year.

This year’s ceremony was very confronting. For the first time, the Chief Rabbi of the Netherlands was present. He gave a speech and led the prayers in Hebrew and Dutch.

Surrounded by the graves of 32,000 German soldiers and civilians, and of Dutch collaborators, we prayed for the millions of victims of the Third Reich’s terrible campaign of hatred and discrimination: Jews, Sinti, Roma – victims of some of the very people whose graves surrounded us, victims who have no graves.

Chief Rabbi Jacobs said he felt almost as if he were a traitor by being present at the ceremony, and yet he was grateful to be together with people who are not trying to polish away the past, but working to make it visible and to confront people with and warn them about the consequences of prejudice and hatred.

After the ceremony we had tea in the new visitors centre. I was moved by the warmth of the Rabbi and his wife. And very, very sad to learn about the anti-Semitism that people still face today, in 2021, right here in the Netherlands. There is still much work to be done.

Chief Rabbi Jacob’s speech, in Dutch, is available on his Twitter feed.

2021-12-02T16:52:27+02:00November 17th, 2021|

British Remembrance Day 2021

Thiepval Monument to the Missing

On 11th November, Emma sang for the Royal British Legion’s ceremony of remembrance at the CWGC Memorial to the Missing of the Battle of the Somme in Thiepval, France. This huge edifice has the names of more than 72,000 soldiers who were reported missing during the Battle of the Somme. It has become a place of pilgrimage. Emma led the hymns and anthems, and sang the poignant song “Danny Boy” in which a mother laments that her son has gone away to war and may never return.

2021-12-02T16:49:04+02:00November 12th, 2021|

Commemorating the soldiers in the Wellington Tunnels

On 10th November, Emma will sing during a remembrance ceremony in Arras, France, to commemorate the troops who fought in the Battle of Arras in 1917.

Underneath the beautiful city of Arras there is a network of tunnels over 12 km long, sometimes 20 m deep. Some are natural, others were mined by, amongst others, the New Zealand soldiers during the First World War. Over 20,000 soldiers stayed there in preparation for the Battle of Arras.

Emma will also give a short concert on 11th November for Remembrance Day.

For more information, please click here.

2021-11-07T17:09:40+02:00November 7th, 2021|
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