Addition

The family Soester

Adele Anna Baars-Soester married Evert Baars, a (non-Jewish) man, during the war. She survived the war and emigrated to Canada after the war. She remarried in Canada. Her wife Evert Baars did not survive the war.
See: http://www.baars-rhenen.nl/languages/nl/persons/Person_84769893.html. For further information, see joodsmonument.nl/nl/page/735119 the eventful life of Evert Baars.

Her sister Roza Soester and husband Jan Dikkescheij survived the war. The family moved to Haarlem during the war. So are the three children. The story goes that a Jewish person in hiding also temporarily stayed at the address of this family in Haarlem (Doverstraat).
Roza's youngest daughter mentions this in an ego document from 2007: "One day my parents went out and a neighbor from Amsterdam came to babysit for us. An NSB member lived across the street. If the person in hiding were to leave the back room - and go to the front room - he would be seen. We were not allowed to say anything to anyone, even the neighbor was not allowed to know anything - but the man had gone to the front room anyway. I had to go to the neighbor's room to get a needle and thread because there was something broken in her dress. Then she saw that man and I was terribly shocked - and then became terribly ill. The doctor came and I had to go to the hospital (Elizabeth Gasthuis in Haarlem). All my food came out. I was dried up. I was five years old then."

Her other sister Hendrika Soester also survived the war. She was most likely in hiding, as can be concluded from the family's Jokos file. Hendrika's husband, Godschalk Zwaap, had to do forced labor and did not survive the war.
See: https://www.oorlogsbronnen.nl/tijdlijn/Godschalk-Zwaap/01/84108 Godschalk Zwaap is also mentioned on page 112 in the book described by Herman van Rens and Annelies Wilms under the heading 'Interim station Cosel'.

Source: Rob Arnoldus