• Global
    • Africa
      • Burundi
      • Ghana
      • Gambia
      • Senegal
    • Asia
      • Indonesia
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • South Korea
    • Caribbean
      • Central America
    • Climate & energy
      • Climate
      • Carbon
      • Coal
      • Disruptive
      • Gas
      • Nuclear
      • Oil
      • Solar
      • Water
      • Waves
      • Wind
      • Renewable
      • South America
    • Lifestyle
      • Best chefs
      • Cocktail of the week
      • History
      • Influential women
      • Newshub long-read
    • US politics
      • Epstein
    • War
  • Finance
    • Africa finance
    • Australia
    • Asia finance
    • Banking
    • Business of the week
    • Central Banks
    • China
    • Commodities
    • Corporate
    • Europe
    • Investment
    • Japan
    • MSTRpay
    • Neobanking
    • South East Asia
    • UK
    • US
  • Fintech
    • Tech
    • AI
    • Blockchain
  • Press releases
  • NF GPT
Thursday, May 7, 2026
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
Newshub Finance
  • Global
    • Africa
      • Burundi
      • Ghana
      • Gambia
      • Senegal
    • Asia
      • Indonesia
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • South Korea
    • Caribbean
      • Central America
    • Climate & energy
      • Climate
      • Carbon
      • Coal
      • Disruptive
      • Gas
      • Nuclear
      • Oil
      • Solar
      • Water
      • Waves
      • Wind
      • Renewable
      • South America
    • Lifestyle
      • Best chefs
      • Cocktail of the week
      • History
      • Influential women
      • Newshub long-read
    • US politics
      • Epstein
    • War
  • Finance
    • Africa finance
    • Australia
    • Asia finance
    • Banking
    • Business of the week
    • Central Banks
    • China
    • Commodities
    • Corporate
    • Europe
    • Investment
    • Japan
    • MSTRpay
    • Neobanking
    • South East Asia
    • UK
    • US
  • Fintech
    • Tech
    • AI
    • Blockchain
  • Press releases
  • NF GPT
  • Global
    • Africa
      • Burundi
      • Ghana
      • Gambia
      • Senegal
    • Asia
      • Indonesia
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • South Korea
    • Caribbean
      • Central America
    • Climate & energy
      • Climate
      • Carbon
      • Coal
      • Disruptive
      • Gas
      • Nuclear
      • Oil
      • Solar
      • Water
      • Waves
      • Wind
      • Renewable
      • South America
    • Lifestyle
      • Best chefs
      • Cocktail of the week
      • History
      • Influential women
      • Newshub long-read
    • US politics
      • Epstein
    • War
  • Finance
    • Africa finance
    • Australia
    • Asia finance
    • Banking
    • Business of the week
    • Central Banks
    • China
    • Commodities
    • Corporate
    • Europe
    • Investment
    • Japan
    • MSTRpay
    • Neobanking
    • South East Asia
    • UK
    • US
  • Fintech
    • Tech
    • AI
    • Blockchain
  • Press releases
  • NF GPT
No Result
View All Result
Newshub Finance
No Result
View All Result
Download MSTRpay app Download MSTRpay app Download MSTRpay app
ADVERTISEMENT

Netherlands to open archive on people accused of wartime Nazi collaboration

Netherlands to open archive on people accused of wartime Nazi collaboration

Three sisters whose family history is in the archive: (left to right) Jolanda, Connie and Mieke. Photograph: Mark Rammers

Some descendants are apprehensive but a historian says making 30m pages of records public is ‘important step’

For 80 years, details of their ancestors’ collaboration with the Nazis have been buried in spotless rows of filing cabinets in The Hague. But thousands of Dutch families face having their relatives’ history laid bare later this week when an archive opens on 425,000 people accused of siding with the occupier during the second world war.

On Thursday, the central archives of the special jurisdiction courts (CABR), established after the allies liberated the Netherlands to bring collaborators to justice, will open under national archive rules.

Download the MSTRpay app Download the MSTRpay app Download the MSTRpay app

Until now, the most visited war archive in the Netherlands has been accessible only to researchers, those involved and direct descendants. But from Thursday the physical archive will open to general visitors.

For the first three months of 2025, researchers and descendants of victims and alleged perpetrators will also have digital access to a quarter of this extraordinary database – on site at the national archive in The Hague – for the first time.

Relatives have mixed feelings about the move. “It’s a bit uncomfortable,” said Connie, 74, one of three sisters whose family history is contained in the archive. “I don’t know what could come out of it eventually, if people Google our surname.”

But some in the Netherlands believe that openness about the country’s wartime past, including its economic and bureaucratic collaboration, is crucial. Three-quarters of the Dutch Jewish population – more than 102,000 people – were murdered by the Nazis, with antisemitic collaboration from the state, police and some of the Dutch population.

It is a past that the country is only now coming to terms with, opening a national Holocaust museum, making a public apology and funding research into the role of institutions and transport firms.

“This is part of the repression by the Dutch of their memories of collaboration, after we had punished our military and political collaborators,” said Johannes Houwink ten Cate, an emeritus professor of Holocaust studies at Amsterdam University. “I can understand the children and grandchildren of collaborators now fear possible consequences, but my personal experience is that their feelings come to rest once they have seen the files. Making this open is an important step.”

Police cordons separate groups of protesters, one group waving Israel flags and the other Palestine flags.

Initially, the intention had been to put the archive online at the website Oorlog voor de Rechter (“war before the judges”) on Thursday. But the prospect sparked public disquiet and the Dutch Data Protection Authority (AP) issued a warning that putting the archive of suspected collaborators online would breach privacy laws.

“In the spring of 2024, the AP had a signal from a surviving relative that the planned publication of the CABR was possibly not being organised in a lawful way,” it announced. “The national archives must now start working on an alternative method.”

Online publication is delayed and the culture minister, Eppo Bruins, says the archive should not be indexable by search engines such as Google. But eventually it is hoped that 30m pages of witness reports, diaries, membership cards for the Dutch fascist party, medical records, court judgments, pardon pleas and pictures will all be searchable.

At a recent event at the NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies in Amsterdam, the director, Martijn Eickhoff, said the special court archive from 1944 and 1952 was a valuable historical resource. But it was also a period of wild accusation, he said: fewer than 15% of suspects were punished by tribunals and extraordinary courts, and two-thirds not at all.

“It is important to look at this archive carefully,” he told the Guardian. “If a text is misleading, people become critical about the source, and this is what you learn to do as a historian … But because it contains so many personal documents, this affects people enormously.”

He compared the Dutch archive with modern-day Syria, where global experts are working to preserve evidence of crimes under the toppled dictator Bashar al-Assad. “We hope to lead this experiment [opening the archive] on the right tracks. Not to open the door again to collective hatred,” he told a room of descendants, including Connie and her sisters Jolanda and Mieke.

The sisters, who asked for their surname not to be published, have different feelings about the opening of the archive. While Connie is concerned, Jolanda, 70, said she did not mind and Mieke, 68, said she was keen to see her grandfather’s dossier. He had a building company that carried out work for the Nazis, and in the reckoning after the war he was punished for it. The sisters’ father worked there too.

“But he was 18,” said Jolanda. “I don’t know what other things my grandfather believed, but Dad believed in a better world, not in Nazi ideology … But you can make choices, like my father’s family. Sometimes it’s a bad choice.”

Source: The Guradian

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Kiran Mazumdar names niece Claire as future successor at Biocon
  • Moscow tightens security ahead of Victory Day parade amid drone fears
  • Vietnamese banks face new competition era shaped by ESG and AI
  • Anthropic expands into Wall Street with new AI agents for financial firms
  • Trump pauses ‘Project Freedom’ as Washington seeks Iran agreement

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • May 2026
    • April 2026
    • March 2026
    • February 2026
    • January 2026
    • December 2025
    • November 2025
    • October 2025
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • July 2025
    • June 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • October 2024
    • September 2024
    • August 2024
    • July 2024
    • June 2024
    • May 2024
    • April 2024
    • March 2024
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • October 2023
    • September 2023
    • August 2023
    • July 2023
    • June 2023
    • May 2023
    • April 2023
    • March 2023
    • February 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2022
    • September 2022
    • August 2022

    Categories

    • Africa
    • Africa finance
    • AI
    • An diesem Tag
    • Asia
    • Asia finance
    • Australia
    • Banking
    • Best chefs
    • Biden
    • Blockchain
    • Burundi
    • Business of the week
    • Carbon
    • Caribbean
    • Central America
    • Central Banks
    • China
    • Climate
    • Climate & Energy
    • Coal
    • Cocktail of the week
    • Commodities
    • Corporate
    • Deutsch
    • Deutsch PR
    • Digital Banking
    • DRC
    • English PR
    • Epstein
    • Europe
    • Financial insights
    • Focus on neobanking
    • Gambia
    • Gas
    • Ghana
    • Global news
    • Harris
    • History
    • India
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Influential women
    • Invest and Rest
    • Italiano PR
    • Jamaica
    • Japan
    • Kenya
    • Kenya
    • Laos
    • Laos
    • LATAM
    • Lifestyle
    • Malaysia
    • Metaverse
    • MSTRpay
    • Neobanking
    • News
    • Newshub long-read
    • newshub special
    • newshub-special
    • NFT
    • Nobel Prizes 2024
    • Nuclear
    • Oil
    • Philippines
    • Press
    • Press releases
    • Pressroom
    • Renewable
    • Russia
    • Senegal
    • Senegal
    • Solar
    • South America
    • South East Asia
    • South Korea
    • South Korea
    • Stocks
    • Svensk PR
    • Tech
    • Trump
    • Trump trials
    • UFO
    • Uganda
    • UK
    • UK News
    • Ukraine
    • US
    • US politics
    • Vietnam
    • Vietnam
    • War
    • Waves
    • WEX
    • Wind
    • World safety

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org

    Recent Posts

    • Kiran Mazumdar names niece Claire as future successor at Biocon
    • Moscow tightens security ahead of Victory Day parade amid drone fears
    • Vietnamese banks face new competition era shaped by ESG and AI
    • Anthropic expands into Wall Street with new AI agents for financial firms
    • Trump pauses ‘Project Freedom’ as Washington seeks Iran agreement

    Categories

    • Africa
    • Africa finance
    • AI
    • An diesem Tag
    • Asia
    • Asia finance
    • Australia
    • Banking
    • Best chefs
    • Biden
    • Blockchain
    • Burundi
    • Business of the week
    • Carbon
    • Caribbean
    • Central America
    • Central Banks
    • China
    • Climate
    • Climate & Energy
    • Coal
    • Cocktail of the week
    • Commodities
    • Corporate
    • Deutsch
    • Deutsch PR
    • Digital Banking
    • DRC
    • English PR
    • Epstein
    • Europe
    • Financial insights
    • Focus on neobanking
    • Gambia
    • Gas
    • Ghana
    • Global news
    • Harris
    • History
    • India
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Influential women
    • Invest and Rest
    • Italiano PR
    • Jamaica
    • Japan
    • Kenya
    • Kenya
    • Laos
    • Laos
    • LATAM
    • Lifestyle
    • Malaysia
    • Metaverse
    • MSTRpay
    • Neobanking
    • News
    • Newshub long-read
    • newshub special
    • newshub-special
    • NFT
    • Nobel Prizes 2024
    • Nuclear
    • Oil
    • Philippines
    • Press
    • Press releases
    • Pressroom
    • Renewable
    • Russia
    • Senegal
    • Senegal
    • Solar
    • South America
    • South East Asia
    • South Korea
    • South Korea
    • Stocks
    • Svensk PR
    • Tech
    • Trump
    • Trump trials
    • UFO
    • Uganda
    • UK
    • UK News
    • Ukraine
    • US
    • US politics
    • Vietnam
    • Vietnam
    • War
    • Waves
    • WEX
    • Wind
    • World safety

    Archives

    • May 2026
    • April 2026
    • March 2026
    • February 2026
    • January 2026
    • December 2025
    • November 2025
    • October 2025
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • July 2025
    • June 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • October 2024
    • September 2024
    • August 2024
    • July 2024
    • June 2024
    • May 2024
    • April 2024
    • March 2024
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • October 2023
    • September 2023
    • August 2023
    • July 2023
    • June 2023
    • May 2023
    • April 2023
    • March 2023
    • February 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2022
    • September 2022
    • August 2022
    • Global
    • Finance
    • Fintech
    • Press releases
    • NF GPT
    Legal - Disclosure - Cookies

    © 2022-2026
    MSTRpay/Newshub Finance

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password?

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In

    Add New Playlist

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Global
      • Africa
        • Burundi
        • Ghana
        • Gambia
        • Senegal
      • Asia
        • Indonesia
        • Laos
        • Malaysia
        • South Korea
      • Caribbean
        • Central America
      • Climate & energy
        • Climate
        • Carbon
        • Coal
        • Disruptive
        • Gas
        • Nuclear
        • Oil
        • Solar
        • Water
        • Waves
        • Wind
        • Renewable
        • South America
      • Lifestyle
        • Best chefs
        • Cocktail of the week
        • History
        • Influential women
        • Newshub long-read
      • US politics
        • Epstein
      • War
    • Finance
      • Africa finance
      • Australia
      • Asia finance
      • Banking
      • Business of the week
      • Central Banks
      • China
      • Commodities
      • Corporate
      • Europe
      • Investment
      • Japan
      • MSTRpay
      • Neobanking
      • South East Asia
      • UK
      • US
    • Fintech
      • Tech
      • AI
      • Blockchain
    • Press releases
    • NF GPT

    © 2022-2026
    MSTRpay/Newshub Finance