Silence beneath the Occupied Streets
eBook - Hiding Jewish Families during Dutch Occupation Horrors
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Zusatztext
In the summer of 1942, a quiet but mortal choice fell upon thousands of ordinary Dutch citizens: look away, or open their doors. Across the flat, exposed geography of the occupied Netherlands ¿ where hiding was harder than anywhere else in Western Europe ¿ an estimated 25,000 to 28,000 Jewish men, women, and children vanished from public life into cellars, attics, and back rooms, becoming onderduikers: the under-divers. Those who sheltered them risked everything. Discovery carried the death sentence. Informers operated openly, motivated by bounties that reached 40 guilders per Jew by the spring of 1944. The Germans deployed Dutch collaborators alongside their own forces, constructing one of the most efficient persecution apparatuses in occupied Western Europe ¿ a system so effective that three quarters of Dutch Jews ultimately perished, the highest proportion in Western Europe. Yet within that darkness, acts of extraordinary human solidarity endured. In the village of Nieuwlande, residents collectively agreed that every household would conceal at least one Jewish family ¿ a silent covenant that saved hundreds, including many children. In Amsterdam, quiet networks of students, doctors, and housewives forged false documents, moved infants across provinces, and maintained an invisible architecture of survival for years.
Autorenportrait
A union organizer turned writer who fought for rights firsthand, combining self-help advocacy tools, business ethics on fair labor, and histories of worker uprisings across centuries.
Weitere Details
Erschienen: 11.04.2026
Umfang: 166 S., 1.33 MB
Sprache: ENG
Lesealter: Lesealter: 1-99 J.
ISBN/EAN: 9783565403837
Umbreit-Nr.: 1251858
