Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte (second right) laying a wreath at the Wertheim park in Amsterdam during the national Holocaust Memorial Day ceremony on Sunday, January 26. (AT5 photo)
AMSTERDAM--Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte used his speech during the national Holocaust Memorial Day ceremony in Amsterdam on Sunday to apologise for the actions of the Dutch government during World War II.
“Now that the last survivors are still among us, I apologise today on behalf of the government for what the government did back then,” Rutte said.
It is because so few survivors are still alive that “we must fully acknowledge what happened at the time,” Rutte said, speaking at the memorial in Amsterdam’s Wertheim park.
“When a group of countrymen were set aside, excluded and dehumanised under a murderous regime, we failed,” the Dutch prime minister said.
And while there was some resistance within government, “too many Dutch officials carried out what the [Nazi – Ed.] occupiers demanded of them,” he said.
Rutte said he was apologising in the knowledge that “no word can express something as big and horrific as the Holocaust. It is up to us, the post-war generations, to continue to commemorate, to honour the dead by name,” he said.
The Netherlands is still struggling to come to terms with the way it treated Jews who returned home in 1945 and whose property and possessions had been stolen or lost.
Only 35,000 of the country’s Jewish population of 140,000 survived the war and 102,000 of the 107,000 who were deported to death camps were killed.
Those who returned found their houses and possessions had been taken, and many were presented with bills for unpaid taxes and ground rent for their homes, scandals which are only now finally being dealt with.
Dutch state-owned railway company NS said in 2018 that it would pay compensation to survivors and family members of people it transported to death camps. NS earned large amounts of money from the German occupiers by transporting Jews to Westerbork, the holding camp where people were kept before being moved out to Germany and Poland.
Rutte’s apology has been welcomed by Jewish groups and survivors. Holocaust survivor Zoni Weisz told Dutch public broadcaster NOS that it was an emotional moment. “It was beautiful,” he said. “It’s a shame it had to take 75 years before we were offered an apology.”
In 2012, Rutte had said the cabinet saw no reason to apologise for the Dutch government’s attitude to Jews during World War II.