The colourful life of Jan de Voogd - Dutch Australia Cultural Centre (2024)

Johannes Jan Nicolaas de Voogd, known as Jan, was born in January 1932 in Japan to Dutch parents, Nicolaas Arie Johannes (Niek) de Voogd (1899-1977) and Amarintia Clasina de Vries (1903-1998). Jan’s parents married in 1930 in Kattendijke in Zeeland, the Netherlands. At the time his father Niek was an interpreter at the Dutch embassy in Tokyo, Japan. Later, Niek is reported to have been the Dutch consul in Kobe. Because of his father’s work, Jan grew up in Japan. As a young child he learned Japanese and studied at a Canadian school, where he also learned English.

Jan lived in Japan until 1941, when he was evacuated to Canada with his mother and brother, due to Japan’s involvement in the Pacific theatre of war during the Second World War, which had broken out in Europe two years previously. In Canada the family lived in Toronto, and Jan has memories of the Second World War. In an interview in 2016, Jan told Rae Litting that theirs was “the last ship to carry passengers before the Second World War started in the Pacific. He [Jan] was 9 years old […] The Dutch ship only narrowly escaped being caught by a German raider because the captain made it difficult for the raider to follow accurately by heading straight into the sun. The slower ship managed to escape when it was able to hide in a rain squall.”

Jan also remembered an anecdote about his father Niek during the war. He told Litting that his father “was responsible for saving the lives of 4000 Jews who had escaped from Europe via Russia. Many of these refugees had been helped by a Japanese consul, Chiune Sugihara, who was working in Lithuania. Sugihara produced thousands of hand-written transit visas permitting the holders to travel to Japan. However, before entering Japan, they were meant to have a visa to enter a third country. Jan’s father met the refugees and issued them with visas to travel to Curaçao in the Dutch West Indies.” In a post on the Quaker website The Australian Friend in 2018, Jan remembered his father as “inclusive and generous in Spirit, which was a blessing his brother and sister (my aunt and uncle) shared. He taught me to look at things from the point of view of those on “the other side”. As a diplomat he felt it was his role not only to represent the Netherlands but also the country where he had been placed.”

The colourful life of Jan de Voogd - Dutch Australia Cultural Centre (2)

After the end of the Second World War Jan’s family moved again as his father Niek was posted to different countries, first to the United States of America, then the Netherlands, and later China. Jan spent two years in China between 1949 and 1951. In 1951 he was evacuated to Australia amidst fears that the Korean War (1950-1953), which by then had been going for some time, would escalate. In the early 1960s Jan spent time in New Zealand. Pat Reesby remembered of this time, “Jan taught me how to make coleslaw and I tried once to produce sounds from his oboe but with no success. I think he kept a sailing boat in the boat harbour.” By 1966 he was working in Australia as Assistant Education Officer, Third Division, in the New South Wales Department of Education.

In Australia Jan became involved in music, environmental and political activism, and religious activities. He was an avid musician and learned to play the oboe in his twenties before joining orchestras that toured in Australia and New Zealand. Later, he became a teacher. Throughout his life he kept up an enduring hobby of building his own boats and sailing them. These boats were also involved in his activism: Jan told Rae Litting that he sailed his own hand-built boat Duyfken (not to be confused with the replica ship built by the 1606 Duyfken Replica Foundation) in the Peace Squadron alongside other boats, including a Greenpeace ship. In his later years Jan remained active in his community, lodging a submission to the NSW Portfolio Committee No.6 (Transport and the Arts) on their inquiry into local government in New South Wales in 2015. He lived at McMahons Point, north Sydney, and enjoyed the community there, but was concerned about over-development.

Jan de Voogd passed away in January 2021 at the Royal North Shore Hospital in Sydney, aged 89. In his will he bequeathed a sum of money to fund projects expressing the Quaker values of “Simplicity, Peace, Integrity, Community, Equality and Sustainability”. The Jan de Voogd Peace Fund was administered until 2023 by the NSW Regional Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends.

Sources:

The colourful life of Jan de Voogd - Dutch Australia Cultural Centre (2024)

FAQs

Which day is celebrated in Australia as apology for the children lost from the 1820s to the 1970s? ›

National Sorry Day
Observed byAustralia
TypeCultural
SignificanceCommemoration of the Stolen Generations
Date26 May
5 more rows

What is the history of the Dutch in Australia? ›

The historical ties that bind the Netherlands and Australia date back to the early 17th Century. A small Dutch ship called the Duyfken entered the pages of Australian history when it became the first European vessel to make a recorded visit to the south land's shore in 1606.

What day did Australia say sorry? ›

On 13 February 2008 Prime Minister Kevin Rudd made a formal apology to ​Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, particularly to the Stolen Generations whose lives had been blighted by past government policies of forced child removal and assimilation.

What did Kevin Rudd apologize for? ›

On 13th of February 2008, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd offered a formal Apology on behalf of the nation to Australia's Indigenous Peoples, particularly the Stolen Generations. I move: That today we honour the Indigenous peoples of this land, the oldest continuing cultures in human history.

Why did the Dutch lose Australia? ›

Twenty-nine other Dutch navigators explored the western and southern coasts in the 17th century, and dubbed the continent New Holland. Most of the explorers of this period concluded that the apparent lack of water and fertile soil made the region unsuitable for colonisation.

Why did Dutch people come to Australia? ›

Many Dutch people migrated to Australia in the wake of World War II. Many Dutch people lost their lives during the German occupation and Allied bombing and as Europe was facing economic and social devastation, survivors were encouraged by the Dutch and Australian governments to come to Australia.

What was Australia called before the Dutch? ›

Why did the Dutch call the land mass of Australia 'New Holland' when it was then known as Terra Australis? The continent was known as Terra Australis Incognita, or unknown southern land.

What is National Sorry Day in Australia for kids? ›

On National Sorry Day, we gather together to commemorate the Stolen Generations, their families and communities, celebrating their strength and survival and sharing in the process of healing and reconciliation. The story of the Stolen Generations is a significant and important aspect of Australia's history.

What was the reason for the day of mourning and protest in Australia in 1938? ›

The Day of Mourning was a chance to draw attention to the injustices done to Aboriginal people since European colonisation. After the protest Prime Minister Joseph Lyons and his wife, Enid Lyons, met with the organisers of the protest.

What year was the day of mourning in Australia? ›

When was the Australia Day massacre? ›

26 January 1838.

The Waterloo Creek massacre, also known as the Australia Day massacre.

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