Everything about Dutch Resistance totally explained
Dutch Resistance to the
Nazi occupation during
World War II developed relatively slowly, but its counterintelligence, domestic sabotage, and communications networks provided key support to
Allied forces beginning in 1944 and continuing until the country was fully liberated.
Prelude
Prior to the German invasion,
the Netherlands had adhered to a policy of strict neutrality. The Dutch hadn't engaged in war with any European nation since 1830. In 1914, when the
Great War started the Dutch were not invaded by Germany, and anti-German sentiment wasn't as strong as in other European countries. The German invasion therefore came as a shock to the
Dutch people.
German invasion
On
May 10,
1940, German troops invaded the Netherlands without a
declaration of war. The day before, small groups of German troops in Dutch uniforms had entered the country. Many of them were wearing
Dutch helmets, some made of cardboard as there were not enough originals. Although the Dutch army was inferior in nearly every way, four days later it looked as if the Dutch had stopped the German advance.
Hitler, who had expected the occupation to be completed in two days, ordered
Rotterdam to be annihilated, followed by every other Dutch city if the Dutch refused to surrender. The Dutch, who had quickly lost their air force, realised they couldn't stop the German bombers and surrendered.
Nevertheless, while the Dutch envoy who had just signed the ceasefire agreement with the Germans was on his way back, German bombers roared overhead, and
Rotterdam was indeed bombed. The Dutch soldiers who died defending their country, together with at least 800 civilians who perished in the flames of Rotterdam, were the first victims of Nazi occupation which was to last five years.
Initial German policy
The Nazis, who considered the Dutch to be fellow
Aryans, were less repressive in the Netherlands than in other occupied countries, at least at first. The open terrain and dense population made it difficult to conceal illegal activities. Furthermore, the country was surrounded by German-controlled territory on all sides, offering no escape routes. If the Germans discovered people were involved in the resistance, they were often immediately sentenced to death.
At first, most of the Dutch accepted the occupation. Indeed, some of them were avid collaborators. As in Germany, it was the Social Democrats, Catholics and Communists who started the resistance movement.
The Nazis deported the
Jews to
concentration camps, rationed food, and withheld food stamps as a punishment. They also forced adult males between 18 and 45 to work in German factories or on public works projects. Over the next five years, as conditions became increasingly harsh and difficult, resistance became better organized and more forceful.
In the Netherlands, the Germans managed to exterminate a relatively large proportion of the Jews. The main reason was that before the war, the Dutch authorities had required citizens to register their religion so that
church taxes could be distributed among the various religious organisations. In addition, the country was occupied by the oppressive
SS rather than the
Wehrmacht as in the other Western European countries. Then there was the fact that the occupying forces were generally under the command of
Austrians who were keen to show that they were good
Germans by implementing antisemitic policy.
Activities
Less than a year later, on
February 25,
1941, the
Communist Party of the Netherlands called for a general strike, the
February strike, in response to the first Nazi
razzia on
Amsterdam's Jewish population. Apart from the
general strike in occupied Luxembourg in 1942, the strike was unique in the history of Nazi-occupied Europe, although it was quickly suppressed.
It was also unusual for the Dutch resistance, which was more covert. Resistance in the Netherlands took the form of small-scale, decentralized cells engaged in independent activities. Some small groups had absolutely no links with others. They produced forged ration cards and counterfeit money, collected intelligence, published underground papers such as
De Waarheid,
Trouw,
Vrij Nederland and
Het Parool, sabotaged phone lines and railways, produced maps, and distributed food and goods.
One of the riskiest activities was hiding and sheltering refugees and enemies of the Nazi regime, Jewish families like the family of
Anne Frank, underground operatives, draft-age Dutch, and others. Collectively these people were known as
onderduikers ("people in hiding" or literally: "under-divers"). Later in the war this system of hiding people was used to protect downed Allied airmen.
Corrie ten Boom and her family are among those who successfully hid several Jews and resistance workers from the Nazis.
In February 1943, two operatives of a Dutch resistance cell called
CS-6 (for their address, 6 Corelli Street, in Amsterdam) rang the doorbell of a 70-year-old Dutch collaborator, retired Lieutenant-General
Hendrik A. Seyffardt, in
The Hague. After he answered and identified himself, they shot him twice in the abdomen. He died a day later. This assassination of a lower-level official triggered a cruel reprisal from
SS General
Hanns Albin Rauter, the killing of 50 Dutch hostages and a series of raids on Dutch universities. By accident the Dutch resistance attacked Rauter's car on
March 6,
1945, which in turn led to the killings at
De Woeste Hoeve, where 116 men were rounded up and executed at the site of the ambush and another 147
Gestapo prisoners executed elsewhere. A similar war crime happened on October 1 and 2, 1944, in the village of
Putten, where over 600 men were deported to camps to be killed in retaliation for resistance activity.
Organization
Already on May 15, 1940, the day after the Dutch capitulation, the communist party
CPN held a meeting in order to organize their underground existence and resistance against the German occupier. It was the first resistance organisation in the Netherlands. As a result, some 2000 communists would lose their lives in torture rooms, concentration camps or by a firing squad. On the same day
Bernardus IJzerdraat distributed leaflets protesting the German occupation and called on the public to resist the Germans. This was the first public act of resistance. IJzerdraat started to build an illegal resistance organistion called
De Geuzen (named after a group who rebelled against the Spanish occupation in the 16th century).
A few months after the invasion, a number of
Revolutionary Socialist Worker's Party (RSAP) members including
Henk Sneevliet formed the
Marx-Lenin-Luxemburg Front, a major force behind the February strike. Its entire leadership was caught and executed in April 1942. The CPN and the RSAP were the only pre-war organisations that went underground and protested against the antisemitic action taken by the German occupier.
According to
CIA historian
Stewart Bentley, by the middle of 1944 there were four major resistance organizations in the country, completely independent of each other:
- the LO ("Landelijke Organisatie voor hulp aan onderduikers", or National Organization for Help to People in Hiding);
- the KP ("Knokploeg", or Assault Group), with 550 members conducting sabotage operations and occasional assassinations;
- the RVV ("Raad van Verzet" or Council of Resistance), engaged in both sabotage and protection of people in hiding;
- and the OD ("Orde Dienst" or Order of Service), a group preparing for the return of the exiled Dutch government, and its subgroup the GDN (Dutch Secret Service), the intelligence arm of the OD.
In addition to these groups, the National Steun Fonds (NSF) financial organization received money from the exiled government to fund operations of the LO and KP. The principal figure of the NSF was the banker
Walraven van Hall, whose activities were discovered by the Nazis, and who was shot at age 39.
The oldest and most important resistance group, the communists, isn't mentioned. For many decades, official historians avoided mentioning the importanrt role played by the communist party and the enormous number of victims, probably more than in all the other resistance groups together.
After Normandy
With the
Normandy invasion in June 1944, the Dutch civilian population was put under increasing pressure by Allied infiltration and the need for intelligence regarding the German military defensive buildup, the instability of German positions, and active fighting.
Portions of the country were liberated as part of the Allied
Drive to the Siegfried Line; the port of
Antwerp was liberated on
September 4,
1944. The Allied paratrooper disaster of
Operation Market Garden, an attempt to secure eight bridges and transport lines around
Arnhem in mid-September, failed partly because British forces refused to accept intelligence offered by the Dutch resistance regarding German strength of forces. Unfortunately they were right in believing that the sources had been compromised.
While the south was liberated, Amsterdam and the rest of the north remained under Nazi control until their official surrender on
May 6,
1945. For these eight months Allied forces held off, fearing huge civilian losses, and hoping for a rapid collapse of the German government. When the
Dutch government-in-exile asked for a national railway strike as a resistance measure, the Nazis stopped food transports to the western Netherlands, and this set the stage for the "Hunger winter", the
Dutch famine of 1944.
Some 374 Dutch resistance fighters are buried in the Field of Honor in the Dunes around
Bloemendaal.
Figures in the Dutch resistance
Willem Arondeus
Frieda Belinfante
Captain Boers
Corrie ten Boom
Sally Dormits
Daan Goulooze
Paul de Groot
Erik Hazelhoff Roelfzema
Jan van Hoof
Bernardus IJzerdraat
Gerrit Kastein
Allard Oosterhuis
Jaap Penraat
Henri Pieck
Johannes Post, one of the leaders of the resistance, and his brother Marinus Post
Hannie Schaft, "the girl with the red hair", student courier, shot at age 24 one month before the war ended
Pierre Schunck of the Valkenburg resistance
Henk Sneevliet
Gaston Vandermeersche
Gerrit van der Veen
Gerben Wagenaar
Geertruida Middendorp, known to be working with the LO Resistance movement in Amsterdam, surviving the war with her husband Hendrick Middendorp. Their activities centered around the coupons used by the Germans and the Dutch Nazi government to ration food and keep tabs on the population & hiding the Jews.Further Information
Get more info on 'Dutch Resistance'.
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