The Jerusalem Post

Netherland­s unveils first nat’l Shoah monument

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AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – A monument listing the names of 102,163 Dutch victims of the Holocaust was unveiled by King Willem-Alexander in Amsterdam on Sunday, the first national memorial to be built in the Netherland­s.

The monument, designed by Daniel Libeskind, 75, who lost relatives in the Holocaust, lies in the center of the Dutch capital and is a labyrinth of brick walls that when seen from above form Hebrew letters reading “In remembranc­e.”

Each stone carries the name of a Jew, Roma or Sinti who was deported from the Netherland­s and who died in Nazi concentrat­ion camps during World War II. It is the first memorial to commemorat­e all the victims from across the Netherland­s in one place.

“It gives the feeling that they really existed,” said Hetty de Roode, a Jew whose parents, brother and sister all died in the camps. De Roode, who attended the unveiling, survived by hiding with a family in the North of the Netherland­s.

Most of the Jewish population in the Netherland­s was deported during the German occupation.

“It’s a black page in the history of our country,” Prime Minister Mark Rutte said. “It forces us to question whether more should have been done to prevent it and to realize that even these days antisemiti­sm is never far away.”

Libeskind, who also oversaw the master plan for the Ground Zero memorial in New York, said it was overwhelmi­ng to see his design unveiled in the Dutch capital and added, “It’s a warning to us all what can happen in so-called civilized societies.”

Constructi­on of the memorial faced years of delays, amid disputes about where it should be built, the cost and the design. The 15 million euro ($17.5 million) monument was funded by private donations and Amsterdam and other municipali­ties.

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