Naatje Fuld, a daughter of Louis Fuld and Jeannetta de Winter, was born in Rotterdam on 14 February 1918. She was a seamstress by trade and lived at home with her parents ans sibs. The last known address of the Fuld family in Rotterdam was per 26 April 1934 the Helmersstraat 18c. This street however had been completely devastated during the bombardment of Rotterdam on 14 May 1940.
Presumably still before the war, the Fuld family have moved from Rotterdam to Den Haag. At that time, most likely in 1940, Naatje got married to Levie David de Wolf, who was also born in Rotterdam on 11 August 1918. He was a son of Salomon de Wolf and Eva van der Sluijs.
Data from the archive of Rotterdam show that Levie David de Wolf has left Rotterdam on 29 June 1940, probably for Den Haag, to his wife Naatje Fuld, who lived with her parents and two sisters lived there already earlier at the address Naaldwijkschestraat 54. On 11 April 1942, Naatje Fuld and her husband Levie David de Wolf had there a son together, who was named after his grandfather Salomon.
In the summer of 1942, the occupier decided that all the Jews had to leave Den Haag and the first raid in Den Haag took place on 22 August 1942. Naatje, together with her husband Levie David de Wolf and their little baby-son Salomon were taken during the large-scale raids of early October 1942 and carried off to Westerbork, where they have arrived somewhere between 3 and 5 October 1942.
Partly because the Germans liquidated the Jewish labor camps in the north of the Netherlands at the same time and removed all Jewish forced laborers to Westerbork, the family of Levie David de Wolf ended up in Westerbork, but on 9 October 1942 they were deported to Auschwitz.
The transport of 9 October contained more than 1700 deportees and arrived in Auschwitz on 12 October 1942. Upon arrival there, Naatje de Wolf-Fuld and her 6-months old baby-son Salomon were immediately murdered in the gas chambers of Auschwitz-Birkenau. Levie David de Wolf however was selected for forced labour somewhere in the camp.
However it is not known where Levie David has been put to work, nor what kind of work he had to perform, nor his real date of death was known after the war. The Dutch Authorities therefore have established after the war, also based on testimonials of survivors and research, that Levie David de Wolf no longer could be alive after 31 January 1943.
The Municipality of Den Haag then was commissioned to draw up a certificate of death for Levie David de Wolf, in which was established that he has died in Auschwitz on 31 January 1943.
Sources include the City Archive of Rotterdam, family registration cards of Louis Fuld and Salomon de Wolf; the file cabinet of the Jewish Council, registration cards of Naatje de Wolf-Fuld, Levie David de Wolf and Salomon de Wolf (1942), website Stichting Erfgoed Den Haag/raids; wikipedia website jodentransporten vanuit Nederland.nl and the website Museum & Memorial Auschwitz-Birkenau/Auschwitz Prisoners/Levie David de Wolf.