Public domain / United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Victims of the Night of Broken Glass (Kristallnacht) flee to Amsterdam
After Kristallnacht in November 1938 the Committee to help Jewish refugees welcomes victims of the Kristallnacht with food, accommodation and medical aid. The Committee is set up in an old school on the ‘s Gravenhekje which is demolished in 1939.

© Stadsarchief Amsterdam / Dienst Publieke Werken; afdeling Stadsontwikkeling
The refugees are treated in the Nederlands-Israelitisch Ziekenhuis (Dutch –Israelite Hospital) on the Nieuwe Prinsengracht.
Silent film. The recording was made for 'The Refugee - Today and Tomorrow', a report for the American current affairs programme 'March of Time', which showed how Jewish refugees were taken in in various European countries.
Refugees and immigrants
After Adolf Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany in 1933, tens of thousands of Jews decide to leave their fatherland and to chance their luck elsewhere. A large number move to neighboring country the Netherlands. In 1941 the number of German Jewish refugees in the Netherlands totals 15,174.
Political and Jewish refugees are accepted, but the Dutch government also sends many back. The Jewish community is responsible for looking after the refugees.
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