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Netherlands: amid the rise of anti-Semitism, a first Holocaust museum will open its doors

2024-03-05T21:45:17.544Z

Highlights: Netherlands to open its first Holocaust museum in Amsterdam on Sunday. The museum will exhibit 2,500 objects related to the Holocaust. The Netherlands was home to some 140,000 Jews, mainly in Amsterdam. 102,000 of them were killed in the Holocaust, or about 75% of the population. The number of anti-Semitic incidents doubled in 2023, according to official figures. In a recent attack that made headlines, swastikas were painted on a synagogue in the Netherlands.


The museum will exhibit 2,500 objects related to the Holocaust in Amsterdam, not far from Anne Frank's house.


Eighty years after World War II, the Netherlands is set to open its first Holocaust museum, hoping to raise public awareness at a time when the war in Gaza has raised concerns anti-Semitism.

Striped uniforms from Auschwitz, clothing buttons torn off upon arrival at the Sobibor extermination camp, letters and photos: the museum exhibits 2,500 objects, most of which have never been shown to the public.

Before the war and the Nazi occupation, the Netherlands was home to some 140,000 Jews, mainly in Amsterdam.

102,000 of them were killed in the Holocaust, or about 75%.

A neighborhood marked by history

The building housing the museum, a former daycare center located in the historic Jewish quarter of central Amsterdam, itself played a vital role in the history of the Holocaust in the Netherlands.

Across the road is a theater where Jewish families were taken while waiting to be deported to the death camps.

Children were separated from their families and taken to kindergarten before being deported.

Around 600 children were smuggled out, most in boxes or baskets, under the noses of Nazi guards, and brought to safety by the Dutch resistance.

Visitors to the museum have the opportunity to walk in the footsteps of these children, down the corridor through which they fled.

Photos of babies and children who did not survive adorn the walls.

“Restore dignity to victims”

The museum also shows texts of the anti-Jewish laws that the Nazis imposed on the community, including the 1942 requirement to wear a yellow Star of David, and photos of victims along with information about their lives.

“We are telling this story of extreme humiliation and we have restored dignity to the victims by presenting their objects in a very special way,” said museum curator Annemiek Gringold.

“On a few hundred square meters in the city center of Amsterdam, we find the story of the deportation, of the collaboration, the dark part of the story,” she added.

“And on the other side, you have a building that represents humanity, solidarity and the tremendous courage of the Righteous who saved Jews at the risk of their lives,” she continued.

Anne Frank's house not far away

Not far from there is the house of Anne Frank, a Jewish teenager who took refuge with her family in a secret annex for two years to escape the Nazis before dying in Bergen-Belsen at the age of 16 in 1945. Her diary became one of the most powerful stories of the Holocaust.

King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands will officially open the museum on Sunday, amid rising anti-Semitism in the country.

The number of anti-Semitic incidents doubled in 2023, according to official figures.

In a recent attack that made headlines, swastikas were painted on a synagogue.

Amsterdam allocated 900,000 euros to secure the museum, in front of which concrete blocks were placed to prevent a car-ramming attack.

The Dutch Jewish Quarter Association which runs the museum has so far refrained from commenting on the October 7 Hamas attack, which sparked the current war in Gaza.

“Now, just days before the opening of the National Holocaust Museum, a museum about the consequences of exclusion and dehumanization, but also the courage to resist it, that is exactly what we are doing “, she said in a press release.

An “urgent” mission against anti-Semitism

The association said it was “seriously concerned” by anti-Semitism, polarization and Islamophobia in the Netherlands since the start of the conflict in Gaza.

“It is unfortunate that the opening of the National Holocaust Museum coincides with this ongoing war.

This only makes our mission more urgent,” the association said.

The museum highlights themes with current resonance such as propaganda, nationalism and the weakening of the rule of law, raised Annemiek Gringold.

We all need to “be aware of what human beings are capable of doing to others,” she said.

The museum displays the shoes worn by 82-year-old Holocaust survivor Roosje Steenhart-Drukker when her Jewish parents left her at the age of two in the hope that someone would find her.

“I am extremely happy that our history is not lost after all this tragedy, all this sadness,” she said.

Source: leparis

All news articles on 2024-03-05

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