Chattanooga Times Free Press

New Holocaust Museum tells of Dutch Jews deported, killed

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AMSTERDAM — The Dutch resistance spirited newborn Flip Delmonte away after his parents were detained by Nazi occupiers of the Netherland­s in World War II.

They were among 102,000 Jews deported from the Netherland­s and murdered in Nazi death camps. Delmonte’s mother was killed as soon as she arrived at Auschwitz while his father, “a strong man,” was worked to death.

On Tuesday, the 80-year-old Delmonte attended the official preview of the Netherland­s’ National Holocaust Museum, pointing proudly at a picture he donated of himself after the war.

“The Jewish people were murdered. There are people, children who survived and we cannot forget them. They must be remembered also in the future,” Delmonte said.

The museum will be officially opened Sunday by Dutch King Willem-Alexander. It tells the story, in video footage, photos, scale models and mementos, of Dutch victims of the Holocaust.

Three-quarters of the prewar Dutch Jews were among the six million Jews murdered by the Nazis, the largest proportion of any country in Europe.

Head curator Annemiek Gringold pulled together exhibition rooms that do not shy away from the atrocities. There is a prominent photo of a boy walking past bodies in BergenBels­en shortly after the liberation of the concentrat­ion camp.

But the museum also features small mementos of the lives lost: a doll, an orange dress made from parachute material and a collection of 10 buttons excavated from the grounds of the Sobibor camp.

“Perhaps this is the closest I can come to the thousands and thousands of anonymous people that were rushed into the gas chamber,” Gringold said. “This is something that they chose to wear, and it is one of the last items that they touched.”

Gringold said the museum opens at a time “that the generation that survived the Shoah is slowly leaving us.”

Now she wants to tell their story “to be aware of where antisemiti­sm might lead to in certain circumstan­ces.”

The walls of one room are filled, floor to ceiling, with the texts of hundreds of laws discrimina­ting against Jews that were enacted by the German occupiers of the Netherland­s, to show how the Nazi regime, assisted by Dutch civil servants, dehumanize­d Jews ahead of operations to round them up.

The museum is in the Dutch capital’s historic Jewish Quarter and close to a memorial officially opened in 2021 that honors Dutch victims of the Holocaust.

It opens against a backdrop of Israel’s devastatin­g attacks on Gaza that followed the deadly incursions by Hamas in southern Israel on Oct. 7.

“The actual events as they are happening in Israel, with the war going on, they are … on my mind. But I focus on the history of this particular site,” Gringold said.

Delmonte was happy to contribute a photograph to the museum, but he kept his most treasured keepsake for himself.

 ?? AP PHOTOS/PETER DEJONG ?? Anita Leeser-Gassan, a survivor of the Bergen-Belsen Nazi concentrat­ion camp in World War II, is interviewe­d Tuesday at the new National Holocaust Museum in Amsterdam, Netherland­s.
AP PHOTOS/PETER DEJONG Anita Leeser-Gassan, a survivor of the Bergen-Belsen Nazi concentrat­ion camp in World War II, is interviewe­d Tuesday at the new National Holocaust Museum in Amsterdam, Netherland­s.
 ?? ?? A Star of David badge with the Dutch word "Jood," or "Jew," worn during World War II, is displayed Tuesday at the new National Holocaust Museum in Amsterdam, Netherland­s.
A Star of David badge with the Dutch word "Jood," or "Jew," worn during World War II, is displayed Tuesday at the new National Holocaust Museum in Amsterdam, Netherland­s.

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