Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
German soldiers gather Jewish men on Jonas Daniël Meijerplein in Amsterdam, 22 February 1941
German soldiers gather Jewish men on Jonas Daniël Meijerplein in Amsterdam, 22 February 1941 - Credit: Anonymous / Wikimedia Commons - License: CC-0
Politics
Amsterdam
Femke Halsema
Second World War
WWII
apology
formal apology
Holocaust
persecution of Jews
jewish
Friday, 11 April 2025 - 08:40

Share this article:

Mayor Halsema will apologize to Jewish community for Amsterdam's role in WWII

Mayor Femke Halsema will formally apologize to the Jewish community for the municipality of Amsterdam’s role in the persecution of Jews during the Second World War. The city is also making 25 million euros available to strengthen Jewish life in the Dutch capital, several sources in and around city hall confirmed to Parool.

Halsema will make the apology on behalf of the municipality at the Hollandsche Schouwburg on April 24, where the victims of the Shoah are commemorated every year. The apology follows an investigation by NIOD into the municipal services’ role in the persecution of Jewish Amsterdammers, the report on which should be published soon.

Previous studies have already shown that Amsterdam actively cooperated in this persecution. The police assisted in raids, the population registry provided Jewish residents’ address details to the Nazi occupiers, and GVB trams transported thousands of Jews to collection points for deportation.

Parool’s sources said that the apology is not reparations, but recognition of the municipality’s share in this chapter of history.

The city is also working on a fund of 25 million euros to strengthen Jewish life in the city. According to the newspaper’s sources, this amount is not for commemoration projects or to fight anti-Semitism, but for cultural and social activities from the community itself. The goal is to make Amsterdam’s thriving Jewish community more visible in daily life, and to contribute to a greater understanding and anchoring of Jewish life in the city.

Halsema already hinted that an apology was coming in an interview with AT5 last year. At the time, the municipality had announced that it would be waiving the money earned during the war by transporting Jewish people for deportation. “Money that the municipality should never have had,” Halsema told the Amsterdam broadcaster. Converted to today’s currency values, it involves an amount of 61,000 euros. The municipality rounded it up to 100,000 euros and paid it into a fund that the Central Jewish Consultation (CJO) is allowed to spend.

Halsema will be the first mayor to apologize for a municipality’s role in the Second World War. Then-Prime Minister Mark Rutte already apologized on behalf of the national government during the National Holocaust Remembrance in 2020.

More like this

Image
Queen Maxima and King Willem-Alexander on a packed Dam Square during the National Commemmoration of World War II victims, 4 May 2025
Some 16,000 attended national WWII commemoration; 6 arrested
Image
Interior of the Portuguese Synagogue in Amsterdam
Open letter against anti-Semitism signed by 329 of 342 mayors of Dutch cities
Image
Remembrance Day flowers on Dam Square in Amsterdam
Extra security around WWII Commemoration: Fewer people, no flags, and everyone searched
Image
Aldermen Sofyan Mbarki, Hester van Buren, Zita Pels, Rutger Groot Wassink, and Touria Meliani lay flowers during the commemoration of the February Strike of 1941 at the Dokwerker in Amsterdam. The event is organized jointly by the Committee for the Commemoration of the February Strike 1941 and the City of Amsterdam.
Amsterdam honors February strike 85 years after historic protest against Nazi occupation
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Landlords ignore rent tribunal rulings in at least 10 percent of cases
  • Hottest June 24 on record in the Netherlands; Feels like 50°C on the roads
  • Heatwave: Defqon.1, TT Assen ready for 38°C days; More events cancelled
  • Hundreds of thousands of Dutch use Ozempic to lose weight; Third without prescription
  • Controversial FVD-affiliated school reopens with state funding confirmed

Top stories

  • Six arrested in electoral fraud investigation; Allegations of forgery, voter coercion
  • Hottest night on Dutch records expected tomorrow; Code Orange takes effect at noon
  • 270 children abducted to or from the Netherlands last year; Increase of over 25%
  • Public transport strike from 4 a.m. to 8 a.m.: No trains, buses, trams, metros running
  • Life sentence sought for Dutch-Rwandan man over massacre of 3,000 Tutsi in 1994 genocide

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content