In Memoriam (Le Zecher)
Netherlands is the country whose Jewish population was most severely
decimated in the Shoah (1940-1945). While France lost 25% of its Jews, and
Belgium and Norway each lost 40%, no less than 75% of the Jewish population
of the Netherlands was murdered by the Nazis. This percentage was the
third-highest in Europe as a whole, after the Jewish communities of Poland
and Greece.
Before World War II, about 140,000 Jews were living in the Netherlands, plus
some 20,000 descendants of marriages between Jews and non-Jews. Most of the
members of the latter group survived the Nazi occupation. It was the former
group, defined by the Nazis as Volljuden, that was the target of systematic
persecution. Over 105,000 were deported, mainly to Auschwitz and Sobibor,
and only several thousand survived and returned to the Netherlands. These
returnees, together with those who had been successfully hidden by non-Jews
within the country, formed a group of about 35,000 survivors in 1945.
The "Netherlands War Graves Foundation" in The Hague, allowed us to include
their data base, listing all Jews from the Netherlands who were deported and
perished without graves. The names and dates of birth and death were
previously published in the memorial books of the Netherlands War Graves
Foundation. as a means of honoring the memory of those who did not have a
proper burial.
Not all memorial books were of relevance for this goal:-the In Memoriam is
based on volumes 4 till 33 (included), containing the names of the more than
100,000 Jewish Dutch citizens, who were murdered.
The data were gathered by the Red Cross, the Dutch Institute for War
Documentation, and the Dutch Ministry of Defense and Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, and checked against the population registries. Nonetheless, errors
and incomplete data remained, both in the original books and in the new
consolidated volume published in 1995. The Netherlands War Graves Foundation
and a group of volunteers from Akevoth try
their utmost to correct errors and obtain missing information. A revised
version of the list will be published in the near future.
In the volumes 4 till 33 the names of Jewish persons whose fate was/is
unknown were also included.
Through remarks from relatives, internal research in past years, but also on
the strength of publications like the Belgian "Memorial", it became clear,
that many tried to escape through Belgium and France. Regrettably many were
nevertheless caught there and subsequently deported.
These Dutch Jews were mostly killed in Auschwitz.
So as to honor the memory of this group of victims their personal data were
added to In Memoriam.
Also when a grave is found, for instance through discovery of a mass grave,
the personal details are not removed from IM. Neither are they deleted from
the memorial books.
The Jewish victims with a known (in most cases individual) grave, are not
included in IM.
This is a result of the original purpose the memorial books were meant to
serve.
Consequently, the In Memoriam database is a dynamic one, not only because of
the corrections, but also as a result of the additions and deletions.
It is also our intention to add the names of victims with a known burial
place, so that this will be a complete list of the Dutch Jews who died in
the Holocaust.
We apologize in advance for any errors or omissions that may arise.