© Beeldbank WO2 / NIOD
The Netherlands refuse Jewish refugees
Jewish refugees from Germany pose in front of the Oostelijke Handelskade number 12 in Amsterdam.
Between 1933 and 1935 about 25,000 German Jewish refugees arrive in the Netherlands. Many use the Netherlands as a stop-over and travel on to other destinations. The Netherlands doesn’t want to appear too attractive as a country for refugees. For this reason certain jobs and professions are ‘protected’. From 1937 it’s virtually impossible for foreigners to establish themselves in the Netherlands.
Undesirable foreigners
In January 1938 the Justice and Home Office meet to discuss how to stop the stream of refugees coming into the country. They decide to stop any more refugees entering the country. From now on every refugee is seen as undesirable unless they can prove they are in physical danger. Despite protests from other political parties, the law is passed.
No review after the Kristallnacht
On 12 March 1938 the annexation of Austria takes place, the Anschluss. Now Austrian Jews want to leave the country. On 9 November the pogrom in Germany commonly known as the Kristallnacht takes place. Nearly 200 synagogues are set on fire and 7,500 shops are destroyed and looted. More than 100 Jews are murdered. The Nazis arrest 30,000 Jewish men and send them to concentration camps. These events do not cause the Dutch government to review their policy regarding refugees. The borders remain closed to Jewish refugees.
Housed in camps
After the Kristallnacht more than 40,000 Jews apply for a visa to enter the Netherlands. At first the Dutch government sticks to its policy, but eventually 7,000 are granted a visa. They are put in camps and have no freedom of movement. Another 2,000 refugees enter the Netherlands illegally, but are not sent back for humanitarian reasons. They come under military supervision and are put in separate camps. All these refugees have left Germany for the same reason, they fear persecution.
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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