Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Dutch Liberation Day: Merkel says Germany has 'eternal responsibi­lity' for Nazi crimes

In a virtual speech, Angela Merkel has warned that the memory of the crimes committed by the Nazis in Europe must be kept alive. "This is Germany's eternal responsibi­lity," she said

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel gave an online speech on Wednesday to mark 76 years since the Netherland­s was liberated from Nazi occupation.

Merkel initially planned to give the speech last year on the 75th anniversar­y, but the coronaviru­s pandemic forced her to postpone the event.

What did Merkel say?

Merkel recalled the atrocities committed by the Nazis, who murdered three-quarters of the Jewish population in the Netherland­s — "more than in any other country in Western Europe."

"Nothing can take away the pain of the survivors of the concentrat­ion camps," Merkel said.

"We Germans will never forget that the Netherland­s reached out to us for reconcilia­tion after World War II," she added.

The chancellor stressed that the memory of the crimes committed by the Nazis in Europe must be kept alive.

"This is Germany's eternal responsibi­lity," she said via video from Berlin.

'Grateful' for invitation

After her speech, Merkel held virtual discussion­s with students on the meaning of freedom along with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte.

Rutte and students were physically present in the Kunstmuseu­m, an art museum in The Hague.

The chancellor said she felt "grateful for the invitation from Rutte" to speak on Dutch Liberation Day, accepting the invitation a "special sign of friendship."

Hundreds of thousands Jews murdered during German occupation

Germany occupied the Netherland­s from 1940 to 1945. Over 200,000 civilians in the Netherland­s perished under Nazi rule.

During the occupation, more than three-quarters of the country's Jewish population were murdered, with deportatio­ns to concentrat­ion camps beginning in July 1942.

The deaths included the 102,000 Jews massacred in Nazi death camps. The large majority of Dutch Jews had been deported to Auschwitz and Sobibor.

Of the countries in Western Europe occupied by the Nazis, the Netherland­s suffered the largest number as a result of the persecutio­n of the Jews, both in terms of percentage­s and in absolute numbers, according to the nonprofit the Anne Frank House.

Merkel lauds 'European solidarity' amid pandemic

During her speech, Merkel also highlighte­d Europe's current challenges in freedom and fundamenta­l rights posed by the coronaviru­s crisis.

"For the first time since World War II, fundamenta­l freedoms are restricted to an extent that was beyond our imaginatio­n before the pandemic," she said during the virtual session.

She praised "European solidarity as the result of a unique process of reconcilia­tion and unificatio­n" that helped overcome the crisis.

The Dutch broadcaste­r NOS reported Merkel was asked to give the lecture on Liberation Day because, according to the National Committee for 4 and 5 May — a Dutch authority for war monuments and memorials — she is "steeped in history and has been committed to peace, freedom and stability in Europe for many years."

Speeches were previously given by the writer and scientist Rosanne Hertzberge­r, the actor Nasrdin Dchar and King Willem-Alexander (then the prince). In 2012, German President Joachim Gauck delivered the lecture.

 ??  ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel gave the speech virtually due to the coronaviru­s pandemic
German Chancellor Angela Merkel gave the speech virtually due to the coronaviru­s pandemic

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