Dutch Holocaust memorial opens in Amsterdam after years of legal dispute
- It is the first memorial to name all 102,000 Dutch Jews, Sinti and Roma who were murdered by the Nazis during World War II
- Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema said that during the German occupation, the city did not sufficiently protect the Jewish population from persecution

A Dutch National Holocaust Memorial was officially opened in Amsterdam on Sunday, after years of legal dispute.
King Willem-Alexander unveiled the monument that was created by the Dutch Auschwitz Committee and designed by architect Daniel Liebeskind.
It is the first memorial to name all 102,000 Dutch Jews, Sinti and Roma who were murdered by the Nazis during World War II.
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said it is a memorial against oblivion. “This monument says: No, we will not forget you. No, we will not allow your names to be erased. No, evil does not have the last word.”
The prime minister also stressed that the memorial forced the Netherlands to account for the “cold reception” given to the few Jews who had survived the death camps and returned. Rutte spoke of “a black chapter in our history.”
