The names of some 425,000 suspected Dutch collaborators went online 80 years after the Holocaust ended, making them ...
The CABR contains approximately 30 million pages of documents that provide valuable insights into the victims of the ...
The names of Dutch people investigated for working with the Nazis during World War 2 are available online for the first time.
Nearly 80 years after the end of the Holocaust, the names of suspected Nazi collaborators have been digitized and published online in the Netherlands. The digital archive includes the names of roughly ...
The names are part of an archive of files from the Special Jurisdiction, a legal system set up in 1944 to bring Nazi collaborators to justice after the Allies liberated the Netherlands from German ...
Hundreds of thousands of people in the Netherlands have been looking for their relatives in a new database containing the ...
A massive trove of documents about suspected Nazi collaborators in the Netherlands is now open to the public for the first time. For the past seven decades, only researchers and relatives of those ...
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 ...
Hundreds of thousands of people in the Netherlands have been looking for their relatives in a new database containing the ...
During World War II, two teenage sisters, Freddie and Truus Oversteegen, played an important role in resisting the Nazi ...
Nazi collaboration is a controversial topic in the Netherlands and much of Europe ... Even many relatives of known collaborators have backed the publication of the archive.