Dubai Telegraph - Dutch get first Holocaust museum, as anti-Semitism spikes

EUR -
AED 4.238266
AFN 72.705309
ALL 95.668561
AMD 435.658397
ANG 2.065855
AOA 1058.268309
ARS 1609.771702
AUD 1.639387
AWG 2.080184
AZN 1.97751
BAM 1.950038
BBD 2.323724
BDT 141.568013
BGN 1.972637
BHD 0.435974
BIF 3415.123752
BMD 1.154055
BND 1.475559
BOB 7.972546
BRL 6.110604
BSD 1.153786
BTN 107.862753
BWP 15.732717
BYN 3.500472
BYR 22619.477726
BZD 2.320434
CAD 1.585014
CDF 2625.474851
CHF 0.91074
CLF 0.026905
CLP 1062.377083
CNY 7.963499
CNH 7.967717
COP 4274.065722
CRC 538.905302
CUC 1.154055
CUP 30.582457
CVE 109.940623
CZK 24.503702
DJF 205.455588
DKK 7.471427
DOP 68.486744
DZD 152.485097
EGP 60.289738
ERN 17.310825
ETB 181.835175
FJD 2.558422
FKP 0.864455
GBP 0.866701
GEL 3.133279
GGP 0.864455
GHS 12.577001
GIP 0.864455
GMD 85.40008
GNF 10112.85554
GTQ 8.837848
GYD 241.389876
HKD 9.04104
HNL 30.538368
HRK 7.532406
HTG 151.36079
HUF 393.26443
IDR 19567.002288
ILS 3.597022
IMP 0.864455
INR 108.141357
IQD 1511.414412
IRR 1517726.563899
ISK 143.791167
JEP 0.864455
JMD 181.263615
JOD 0.818185
JPY 183.607265
KES 149.473342
KGS 100.919682
KHR 4610.436957
KMF 493.935903
KPW 1038.59276
KRW 1735.923728
KWD 0.35366
KYD 0.961472
KZT 554.688597
LAK 24776.113307
LBP 103329.822982
LKR 359.91496
LRD 211.135221
LSL 19.463106
LTL 3.407624
LVL 0.698076
LYD 7.386175
MAD 10.781197
MDL 20.09289
MGA 4810.847387
MKD 61.669046
MMK 2423.253558
MNT 4119.601018
MOP 9.312942
MRU 46.184533
MUR 53.675008
MVR 17.830323
MWK 2000.714273
MXN 20.680943
MYR 4.545786
MZN 73.744287
NAD 19.462938
NGN 1564.587431
NIO 42.454371
NOK 11.041017
NPR 172.580059
NZD 1.976919
OMR 0.443748
PAB 1.153806
PEN 3.988896
PGK 4.980263
PHP 69.186784
PKR 322.126581
PLN 4.278601
PYG 7535.700782
QAR 4.219015
RON 5.096766
RSD 117.418159
RUB 96.218081
RWF 1678.761398
SAR 4.333505
SBD 9.288507
SCR 15.852941
SDG 693.586815
SEK 10.807898
SGD 1.479539
SHP 0.86584
SLE 28.44801
SLL 24199.968523
SOS 659.360285
SRD 43.26264
STD 23886.608183
STN 24.427715
SVC 10.095171
SYP 127.82927
SZL 19.469387
THB 37.907216
TJS 11.081899
TMT 4.039192
TND 3.407531
TOP 2.778687
TRY 51.146676
TTD 7.827836
TWD 36.931833
TZS 2985.152508
UAH 50.543634
UGX 4361.094896
USD 1.154055
UYU 46.492623
UZS 14066.436344
VES 524.732218
VND 30365.494792
VUV 137.374477
WST 3.166918
XAF 654.032957
XAG 0.016596
XAU 0.000253
XCD 3.118891
XCG 2.079347
XDR 0.814597
XOF 654.021656
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.299978
ZAR 19.628086
ZMK 10387.883774
ZMW 22.527728
ZWL 371.605235
  • CMSC

    -0.1400

    22.71

    -0.62%

  • RYCEF

    -0.6100

    15.99

    -3.81%

  • CMSD

    -0.2600

    22.64

    -1.15%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • GSK

    -0.3300

    52.04

    -0.63%

  • RIO

    -2.3200

    83.33

    -2.78%

  • RELX

    -0.3800

    33.44

    -1.14%

  • NGG

    -2.7200

    82.81

    -3.28%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.36

    -0.42%

  • BTI

    -1.1500

    57.57

    -2%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    25.81

    +0.31%

  • JRI

    -0.1510

    12.009

    -1.26%

  • BCC

    -1.0900

    68.77

    -1.58%

  • AZN

    -4.0200

    184.91

    -2.17%

  • BP

    -0.9150

    44.945

    -2.04%

Dutch get first Holocaust museum, as anti-Semitism spikes
Dutch get first Holocaust museum, as anti-Semitism spikes / Photo: Bart Maat - ANP/AFP

Dutch get first Holocaust museum, as anti-Semitism spikes

Eighty years after World War II, the Netherlands is poised to open its first Holocaust museum, hoping to raise awareness at a time when the Gaza war has driven up anti-Semitism.

Text size:

Striped Auschwitz uniforms, buttons taken from clothes stripped on arrival at the Sobibor death camp, poignant letters and photos: the museum displays 2,500 objects, many never seen before in public.

Before the war and the Nazi occupation, the Netherlands was home to a vibrant Jewish community of around 140,000 people, mainly concentrated in Amsterdam.

By the time the Holocaust was over, an estimated 75 percent -- 102,000 people -- had been murdered.

The building housing the museum, a former kindergarten in the historic Jewish quarter of central Amsterdam, itself played a critical role in Dutch Holocaust history.

Across the road stands a theatre where Jewish families were taken to await deportation to death camps. Children were separated and taken to the kindergarten for deportation.

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

Visitors can walk through the "escape corridor" where children were spirited away, most never to see their family or friends again.

Photos of children not so lucky adorn the walls, most of them toddlers, babies or very young children -- all murdered in extermination camps.

"Within just a few hundred square metres in the city centre of Amsterdam, you have the history of deportation, of collaboration, the dark part of history," curator Annemiek Gringold told AFP.

"And on the other side, you have a building which represents humanity, solidarity and tremendous courage of Gentile rescuers sticking out their neck to save Jewish lives."

On the museum walls are plastered texts of anti-Jewish laws the Nazis forced on the community, including the 1942 requirement to wear a yellow Star of David.

Jews are banned from visiting parks, rewards are offered for "denouncing" Jews to authorities, the first deportations: The laws trace a brutal history of persecution.

To put a face to some of the tens of thousands of murdered Jews, the museum features so-called "forget-me-nots", a picture of a victim with a short text about the person's life.

"We tell this history of extreme humiliation and we redignify the victims by presenting their objects in a very special way," Gringold told AFP.

- 'Exclusion and dehumanisation' -

King Willem-Alexander will officially inaugurate the museum Sunday and its opening comes at a time of rising anti-Semitism in the Netherlands.

The number of anti-Semitic incidents doubled in 2023, the government's national coordinator for combating anti-Semitism reported last month.

In an attack that made headlines across the country, unknown vandals recently daubed swastikas on a synagogue in the southern town of Middelburg.

Amsterdam has allocated 900,000 euros ($976,000) for security for the museum, which has large boulders outside it to prevent a car ramming attack.

The Dutch Jewish Cultural Quarter association, which runs the museum, said it had until now refrained from commenting on the October 7 Hamas attacks, which sparked the current war in Gaza.

"Now, on the eve of the opening of the National Holocaust Museum, a museum about the consequences of exclusion and dehumanisation, but also about the courage to resist it, we are doing just that," it said in a statement.

They said they were "seriously concerned" about the impact of the war in the Netherlands, where it said that "black-and-white thinking" is driving anti-Semitism, polarisation and Islamophobia.

"It is unfortunate that the opening of the National Holocaust Museum coincides with this ongoing war. It only makes our mission more urgent," the association said.

Gringold said the museum carried many warning signs applicable to the current day, including propaganda, nationalism and a diminishing rule of law.

"I think every people needs to know its history, be aware of what human beings are capable of doing to others and with others," she said.

Holocaust survivor Roosje Steenhart-Drukker, 82, contributed the shoes she was wearing as a two-year-old when her Jewish parents left her, hoping she would be found.

"I am extremely happy that our history is not lost after all the tragedy, all the sadness," she told AFP.

"But we're still here."

B.Krishnan--DT