Half a million suspected Nazi collaborators are named in the Netherlands
Summary
The Netherlands has released a digital archive of 425,000 suspected Nazi collaborators from World War II, following the expiration of a law prohibiting its publication.
The list, compiled by the Huygens Institute’s “War in Court” project, documents the investigations of mostly Dutch individuals, with only 20% ever tried.
This revelation sheds light on the scale of Dutch complicity during Nazi occupation.
While historians and educators hail it as a significant resource, some descendants of those named have expressed concern about potential backlash.
Access to more detailed records remains restricted to researchers.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/suspected-nazi-collaborators-named-netherlands-world-war-two-archives-rcna186096Open linkView original on lemmy.world329
Comments23
Guess these morons are everywhere.
Yes there are morons but not in these proportions. The research has been under scrutiny, if you want to read more about it here is a Dutch article about it. https://www.rtl.nl/rtl-nieuws/artikel/5361474/holocaust-waarheid-nederlanders-geschiedenis-niod-tweede-wereldoorlog
Ok so according to this article the 23% number is very dubious. Selection bias and sample size are at play which means the results are pointless
That didn't make sense.
that made more sense, but I still don't understand how you meant
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israel says the state was established in May 1948 and the Israeli citizenship law was commenced in July 1952. Not sure what you are on about there.
That generalization sounds not so smart. Most people have no problem with people of jewish faith (or origins), hence statistics about antisemitism being worrying when they reach > 10% in the civilized world. Furthermore, there are no "our colonial interests", only governments and big corporations have ever had such, and they were competing, they did not have mutual "colonial interests".
Furthermore, the contemporary Israel administration is very much capable to be the villains themselves.
You really just sound like an under-informed over-agitated naive person who compensates little understanding with more opinions.
Must...not... Aaargh can't not!
I wouldn't have thought that In The Netherlands was such a common name!
Look, you tried...
...and were found guilty.
They also made some mistakes by accidentally including some victims! I read there was at least a few people on there who actually died in a camp.
It’s also worth pointing out that ‘suspected’ is quite a vague term. If a neighbour didn’t like you and tipped you as a collaborator, you might very well be on that list despite being perfectly clean.
Still, it’s a good thing they’re at least acknowledging this uncomfortable part of Dutch history. Some families will finally have some closure/answers as to what their (grand)parents did or didn’t do during the war.
This is a good example of why witch hunts inevitably include innocent people. Maybe you started rooting out fascists, but somebody will take advantage of a ravenous mob given the opportunity.
Which is why Nazis actively carrying signs, showing tattoos, or shouting Nazi shit are fair game. At that point it's just proactive self defense.
I'm glad my own name didn't make it to the list.Those terrible people!No one will ever know.You'd have to be dead for your name to show up on this list
I'd also have to be Dutch. And also not Jewish.
One of the many bizarre details about my life and the people around me: my dad's best friend was a Jewish kid in Amsterdam when the Nazis invaded. He was actually in school with Anne Frank's older sister. He spent the war hiding in an empty water tower. I never asked him about it though, I didn't want to know how bad it was to be honest.
He wasn't alive for the Holocaust, dummy. Or he'd have been tried at Nürnberg (Nuremberg).
Unfortunately - as someone who lived there for a few years - half the Netherlands at least partially agrees with his racist gobbledigook.
It's only one third digitized as we speak, they intent to fully digitize by 2027. The information that is actually online is very limited. The actual files you still can only access in person in the National Archives.
"Suspected" as in not confirmed? I'm all for publishing the names of known collaborators, but just suspected collaborators sounds dangerous. I was alive during a regime where "suspected" was enough for an arrest and enhanced interrogation.
Well, "confirmed" probably involves a trial. And I'm assuming the majority of these people are dead by now.
I'm just imagining people being judged for having family on that list. Does the list include potentially innocent people? Or is it all guilty but they have to say "suspected" because the lack of trial?
People in countries around Germany aren't really judging people for this. That stuff is of the past.
And no:
https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2025/01/03/dutch-war-in-court-database-lists-around-425000-suspected-nazi-collaborators
A lot more were suspected than actually confirmed, yeah. Having your name on the list might seem like confirmation for some which is, geez.