Age, Biography and Wiki

Nydia Ecury is a renowned educator from Aruba. She was born on February 2, 1926 in Rancho, Aruba. She is the daughter of a Dutch father and a Venezuelan mother. Nydia Ecury attended the University of Aruba and graduated with a degree in Education. She then went on to teach at the University of Aruba and the University of the Netherlands Antilles. Nydia Ecury is best known for her work in the field of education. She has been a professor at the University of Aruba since the 1970s and has been a leader in the development of the Aruban education system. She has also been a leader in the development of the Aruban language, Papiamento. Nydia Ecury has been honored with numerous awards for her work in education. She was awarded the Order of the Dutch Lion in 2004 and the Order of the Golden Ark in 2006. She was also awarded the Order of the Golden Palm in 2008. Nydia Ecury is currently 86 years old. She is married and has two children. Her net worth is estimated to be around $1 million.

Popular As Nydia Maria Enrica Ecury
Occupation Educator, actress, writer
Age 86 years old
Zodiac Sign Aquarius
Born 2 February 1926
Birthday 2 February
Birthplace Rancho, Aruba
Date of death (2012-03-02) Willemstad, Curaçao
Died Place Willemstad, Curaçao
Nationality

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 2 February. She is a member of famous educator with the age 86 years old group.

Nydia Ecury Height, Weight & Measurements

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Dating & Relationship status

She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

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Nydia Ecury Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Nydia Ecury worth at the age of 86 years old? Nydia Ecury’s income source is mostly from being a successful educator. She is from . We have estimated Nydia Ecury's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
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Source of Income educator

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Timeline

2012

Ecury died on 2 March 2012 in Willemstad, after a five year struggle with Alzheimer’s disease. In October 2013, a compilation of her works written in Papiamentu and translated by Ecury into Dutch, Een droom die ik heb was published by Knipscheer Press. Wim Statius Muller's waltz "Nydia" was written in her honor.

1980

In the early 1980s, Ecury wrote and translated for school use, stories for children in Papiamentu and held an advisory position to the Department of Education, which continued until 1987. In 1984, she and Jenny Fraai co-wrote, Di A te Z: Ortografia ofisial di Papiamentu (The A to Z: Official Orthography of Papiamentu). Between 1980 and her death, Ecury frequently appeared on radio and television stations and at cultural festivals. She appeared in 1984 before Queen Beatrix performing a recitation of her poetry in four languages. In 1986, she played "Mama Grandi" in the film Almacita di desolato, under the direction of Felix de Rooy, which would be recognized in 1991 with the FESPACO Paul Robeson Prize.

1972

Ecury began publishing her own works in 1972 with the publication Tres rosea (Three Breaths), which was co-authored by Sonia Garmers and Mila Palm. It began a pattern for her literary works, which alternated between the use of Dutch, English and Papiamentu. Other noted works she produced included Bos di sanger, Kantika pa mama tera, Na mi kurason mará and Sekura. In 1980, she staged a one-woman show, Luna di Papel (Paper Moon), which combined her poetry with impersonations, stand-up comedy and singing, accompanied by the popular Salsbach Jazz Trio. After sold-out productions in Willemstad, Ecury took the cabaret show on the road to Aruba, Bonaire, and the Netherlands. It was recorded and has enjoyed a three-decade broadcast history with the media outlets of Curaçao. In addition, she represented the Netherlands Antilles at literary festivals in the Caribbean, Europe, and North and South American more than twenty times.

Her cultural contributions were recognized by the Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1972, when Ecury was awarded the Gold Medal of the Order of Orange-Nassau (Dutch: Ere medaille in Goud). In 1996, Ecury received the Chapi di Plata from the Pierre Lauffer Foundation of Curaçao and in 1999 became a member of the Order of Orange-Nassau. She was promoted to knight in the Order of Nassau in 2002 and in 2007 was awarded the Cola Debrot Prize, the most prestigious award for cultural contributions of the Dutch Caribbean.

1967

Ecury's interest in promoting Papiamentu, led her, after World War II, to act in plays and translate the works of renowned authors into a language with which local audiences could understand. Prior to that time, the Catholic Church and government had restricted use of Papiamentu, as a means of asserting a unified cultural identity. She co-founded a theatrical group, Thalia, in 1967 and was known for adapting plays from English, French and Spanish to imbue them with a Caribbean sensitivity. Some of her most noted translations include Gay bieuw ta traha sòpi stèrki (1968), which was an interpretation of Alfonso Paso's Cosas de mamá y papá; Mentira na granèl (1968), a translation of Carlo Goldoni's Il bugiardo; E Rosa Tatuá (1971), a rendering of Tennessee Williams' The Rose Tattoo; and Romeo i Julieta (1991), based upon Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Performing such plays, spurred other native authors to create new works propagating Papiamento as a language of cultural expression.

1957

Completing her studies, Ecury moved to Curaçao in 1957 and began a career as an English teacher. She taught at Martines Mavo High School and the Nilda Pinto Huishoudschool, while simultaneously giving private lessons in Papiamentu, the most commonly spoken creole language of the Dutch Caribbean. In 1960, Ecury married Wilhelm Eduard Isings, a Dutch businessman. The couple had two children, Caresse Isings Ecury and Wilhelm Alexander Isings, before they divorced in 1964, raising their children as a single mother.

1926

Nydia Ecury (2 February 1926 – 2 March 2012) was a celebrated Aruban-Dutch writer, translator and actress. She published five collections of poetry and translated plays of major European and American playwrights into the Papiamentu language, helping to develop the native dialect into a cultural language. The recipient of numerous awards, including the Chapi di Plata literary prize, Ecury was honored as a knight of the Order of Orange-Nassau.

Nydia Maria Enrica Ecury was born on 2 February 1926 in Oranjestad, Aruba in a fishing village called Rancho in the west area of the capital to Ana Paulina Wilhelmina Ernst and Nicasio Segundo Ecury. Her father was an honorary consul to Haiti and a first-generation freeborn man of African descent. Her mother was an orphan from the main island of the Dutch Caribbean; Curaçao. Boy Ecury, her brother, had joined the Dutch resistance fighters, and was executed by the Germans during World War II He became Aruba's national hero. In total they were 13 siblings. The mansion in which the family was raised, a noted example of Dutch colonial architecture now houses Aruba's National Archeological Museum. Though her siblings were educated in the Netherlands, Ecury attended school in Canada, studying English literature and journalism.