Hans Mossel was considered to be among the most notable clarinetists and saxophonists performing in
Europe. In 1935 Mossel was employed by the Dutch broadcasting company the
AVRO as a bandleader for the AVRO Dance Orchestra. In 1939 Mossel married Ada Elizabeth van Ollefen. They had two children. Shortly after the beginning of World War II life became very difficult for Hans Mossel. Although married to a non-Jewish woman, he was forced by the Nazis to fill bomb craters at
Schiphol airport, which was used as a German military airfield called Fliegerhorst 561 and as a result regularly attacked by the
Allied Forces. On 13 December 1943, 199 American planes dropped about 1600 bombs (about 400.000 kilos) on Fliegerhorst 561, after which it could no longer be used by the Germans. On the basis of a trumped-up case of sabotage Hans Mossel was sent on 9 March 1944 to the
Westerbork transit camp. On 23 March 1944 Mossel was deported to the
Monowitz concentration camp, also called Auschwitz III, which was part of the
Auschwitz concentration camp in Nazi German-occupied
Poland. Monowitz was set up at the request of the chemical factory
IG Farben to provide slave labour. The German manufacturer
Krupp also used slave labour provided by Monowitz. Hans Mossel was forced to work for IG Farben. The life expectancy for these slave labourers at IG Farben was three to four months. As a result of exhaustion and
dysentery Mossel died on 4 August 1944. There is a short biography of Mossel written by Herman Openneer (1935-2017), one of the founders of the Dutch Jazz Archive. == References ==