© NIOD / Anne Frank Stichting
The first raids
On this photo from 22 February 1941 German soldiers are rounding up a group of Jewish men.

On 22 and 23 February the Nazis hold one of the first major raids in the Netherlands The arrests are a reprisal for fighting between Jews and Dutch and German antisemites. A total of 427 Jewish men are rounded up in the streets round the Waterlooplein and the Jonas Daniël Meijerplein. They are then deported to concentration camps Buchenwald and Mauthausen via prison camp Schoorl. Only one of them survived the war.
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Persecution of the Jews
Shortly after Hitler comes to power in Germany, the persecution of the Jews starts. The aim is to get rid of all Jews in Germany. The Nazis isolate Jews from non-Jews. Molestation and vandalism become the order of the day. The Nazis continue these practices in the occupied countries. Sometimes Jews become forced labourers but most are systematically murdered. The majority of the Jews in the Netherlands are deported to concentration camps where they are killed in gas chambers. The murder of European Jews – in total circa 6 million – is known as the Holocaust or the Shoah.
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