Netherlands' national archive says data will reveal to some Dutch Jews the names of those who arrested their relatives, other facts about their final days
Associated Press
| Published: | 04.16.11, 10:07 / Israel Jewish Scene |
The information, from a sealed archive on wartime collaborators, will reveal to some Dutch Jews the names of those who arrested their relatives and other precious facts about their final days as they were deported to Nazi concentration camps during the German occupation of the Netherlands from 1940 to 1945.
The project was carried out by journalist Ad van Liempt and a team of researchers who received special permission in Sept. 2010 to review dossiers of 250 collaborators who are no longer alive.
It primarily centers on the work of the "Henneicke Column" – a group of Dutch Nazi collaborators working in the investigative division of the government's Central Bureau for Jewish Emigration, which employed police and bounty hunters to find Jews who had escaped the net of the Nazis and their informers.
While researching a book on the bounty hunters in 2002 – "A Price on Their Heads" – Van Liempt found personal information in the archive he thought would be useful to victims, but knew they would be unable to obtain.
Read the rest of the story on: Ynet
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