-
Greenlanders doubtful over Trump resolution
-
Real Madrid top football rich list as Liverpool surge
-
'One Battle After Another,' 'Sinners' tipped to top Oscar noms
-
Higher heating costs add to US affordability crunch
-
Eight stadiums to host 2027 Rugby World Cup matches in Australia
-
Plastics everywhere, and the myth that made it possible
-
Interim Venezuela leader to visit US
-
Australia holds day of mourning for Bondi Beach shooting victims
-
Liverpool cruise as Bayern reach Champions League last 16
-
Fermin Lopez brace leads Barca to win at Slavia Prague
-
Newcastle pounce on PSV errors to boost Champions League last-16 bid
-
Fermin Lopez brace hands Barca win at Slavia Prague
-
Kane double fires Bayern into Champions League last 16
-
Newcastle pounce on PSV errors to close in on Champions League last 16
-
In Davos speech, Trump repeatedly refers to Greenland as 'Iceland'
-
Liverpool see off Marseille to close on Champions League last 16
-
Caicedo strikes late as Chelsea end Pafos resistance
-
US Republicans begin push to hold Clintons in contempt over Epstein
-
Trump says agreed 'framework' for US deal over Greenland
-
Algeria's Zidane and Belghali banned over Nigeria AFCON scuffle
-
Iran says 3,117 killed during protests, activists fear 'far higher' toll
-
Atletico frustrated in Champions League draw at Galatasaray
-
Israel says struck Syria-Lebanon border crossings used by Hezbollah
-
Snapchat settles to avoid social media addiction trial
-
'Extreme cold': Winter storm forecast to slam huge expanse of US
-
Jonathan Anderson reimagines aristocrats in second Dior Homme collection
-
Former England rugby captain George to retire in 2027
-
Israel launches wave of fresh strikes on Lebanon
-
Ubisoft unveils details of big restructuring bet
-
Abhishek fireworks help India beat New Zealand in T20 opener
-
Huge lines, laughs and gasps as Trump lectures Davos elite
-
Trump rules out 'force' against Greenland but demands talks
-
Stocks steadier as Trump rules out force to take Greenland
-
World's oldest cave art discovered in Indonesia
-
US hip-hop label Def Jam launches China division in Chengdu
-
Dispersed Winter Olympics sites 'have added complexity': Coventry
-
Man City players to refund fans after Bodo/Glimt debacle
-
France's Lactalis recalls baby formula over toxin
-
Pakistan rescuers scour blaze site for dozens missing
-
Keenan return to Irish squad boosts Farrell ahead of 6 Nations
-
US Treasury chief accuses Fed chair of 'politicising' central bank
-
Trump rules out force against Greenland but demands 'immediate' talks
-
Israeli strike kills three Gaza journalists including AFP freelancer
-
US Congress targets Clintons in Epstein contempt fight
-
Huge lines, laughs and gasps as Trump addresses Davos elites
-
Trump at Davos demands 'immediate' Greenland talks but rules out force
-
Australia pauses for victims of Bondi Beach shooting
-
Prince Harry says tabloid coverage felt like 'full blown stalking'
-
Galthie drops experienced trio for France's Six Nations opener
-
Over 1,400 Indonesians leave Cambodian scam groups in five days: embassy
Dutch get first Holocaust museum, as anti-Semitism spikes
Eighty years after World War II, the Netherlands is poised to open its first Holocaust museum, hoping to raise awareness at a time when the Gaza war has driven up anti-Semitism.
Striped Auschwitz uniforms, buttons taken from clothes stripped on arrival at the Sobibor death camp, poignant letters and photos: the museum displays 2,500 objects, many never seen before in public.
Before the war and the Nazi occupation, the Netherlands was home to a vibrant Jewish community of around 140,000 people, mainly concentrated in Amsterdam.
By the time the Holocaust was over, an estimated 75 percent -- 102,000 people -- had been murdered.
The building housing the museum, a former kindergarten in the historic Jewish quarter of central Amsterdam, itself played a critical role in Dutch Holocaust history.
Across the road stands a theatre where Jewish families were taken to await deportation to death camps. Children were separated and taken to the kindergarten for deportation.
Around 600 children were smuggled out, often in boxes or baskets right under the noses of Nazi guards, and taken to safety by the Dutch resistance.
Visitors can walk through the "escape corridor" where children were spirited away, most never to see their family or friends again.
Photos of children not so lucky adorn the walls, most of them toddlers, babies or very young children -- all murdered in extermination camps.
"Within just a few hundred square metres in the city centre of Amsterdam, you have the history of deportation, of collaboration, the dark part of history," curator Annemiek Gringold told AFP.
"And on the other side, you have a building which represents humanity, solidarity and tremendous courage of Gentile rescuers sticking out their neck to save Jewish lives."
On the museum walls are plastered texts of anti-Jewish laws the Nazis forced on the community, including the 1942 requirement to wear a yellow Star of David.
Jews are banned from visiting parks, rewards are offered for "denouncing" Jews to authorities, the first deportations: The laws trace a brutal history of persecution.
To put a face to some of the tens of thousands of murdered Jews, the museum features so-called "forget-me-nots", a picture of a victim with a short text about the person's life.
"We tell this history of extreme humiliation and we redignify the victims by presenting their objects in a very special way," Gringold told AFP.
- 'Exclusion and dehumanisation' -
King Willem-Alexander will officially inaugurate the museum Sunday and its opening comes at a time of rising anti-Semitism in the Netherlands.
The number of anti-Semitic incidents doubled in 2023, the government's national coordinator for combating anti-Semitism reported last month.
In an attack that made headlines across the country, unknown vandals recently daubed swastikas on a synagogue in the southern town of Middelburg.
Amsterdam has allocated 900,000 euros ($976,000) for security for the museum, which has large boulders outside it to prevent a car ramming attack.
The Dutch Jewish Cultural Quarter association, which runs the museum, said it had until now refrained from commenting on the October 7 Hamas attacks, which sparked the current war in Gaza.
"Now, on the eve of the opening of the National Holocaust Museum, a museum about the consequences of exclusion and dehumanisation, but also about the courage to resist it, we are doing just that," it said in a statement.
They said they were "seriously concerned" about the impact of the war in the Netherlands, where it said that "black-and-white thinking" is driving anti-Semitism, polarisation and Islamophobia.
"It is unfortunate that the opening of the National Holocaust Museum coincides with this ongoing war. It only makes our mission more urgent," the association said.
Gringold said the museum carried many warning signs applicable to the current day, including propaganda, nationalism and a diminishing rule of law.
"I think every people needs to know its history, be aware of what human beings are capable of doing to others and with others," she said.
Holocaust survivor Roosje Steenhart-Drukker, 82, contributed the shoes she was wearing as a two-year-old when her Jewish parents left her, hoping she would be found.
"I am extremely happy that our history is not lost after all the tragedy, all the sadness," she told AFP.
"But we're still here."
S.Leonhard--VB