Some looked out of curiosity, others out of concern.
The names of some 425,000 suspected Dutch collaborators went online 80 years after the Holocaust ended, making them accessible to historians and descendants as the country grapples with its past.
After Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler was appointed chancellor in 1933, he promptly packed the government full of loyalists and used Weimar Germany's constitution to turn himself into an absolute dictator.
efforts to hide Jewish residents and the names of over 400,000 individuals suspected of collaborating with Nazi Germany, which occupied the country from May 1940 to May 1945. For nearly a century, ...
Eight decades after the defeat of the Nazis, a debate in the Netherlands asks how much of the largest Dutch war archive should be made available online.View on euronews
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP ... One of those names was Ludolf Baas, a resistance fighter who taped microfilm of Nazi atrocities to his body and smuggled it over enemy lines.
efforts to hide Jewish residents and the names of over 400,000 individuals suspected of collaborating with Nazi Germany, which occupied the country from May 1940 to May 1945. For nearly a century, ...
In the past, the names could only be viewed in person. But due to expiring access restrictions, they're now available to anyone with an internet connection