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| Prime Minister Marke Rutte (l) laid a wreath at the Auschwitw Never Again monument during the ceremony in Amsterdam (AFP Photo) |
The Hague (AFP) - Prime Minister Mark Rutte on Sunday made the Netherlands' first government apology for the war-time persecution of Jews.
"Now
the last survivors are still with us, I apologise today in the name of the
government for what the authorities did at that time," Rutte said.
He was
giving an address in Amsterdam in memory of victims of the Holocaust on the eve
of the 75th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz.
Only 38,000
of the 140,000 Jews who lived in the Netherlands survived World War II, but no
government apology had been offered for the role the authorities played.
The
question of an apology was raised in 2012 when Rutte was also prime minister.
He said then that not enough information was available about government action
during the war and there was "not broad enough support" for an
official apology.
In 1995,
Queen Beatrix said in a speech to the Israeli parliament that the Dutch had
done enough to help their Jewish compatriots during the war.
In 2000,
then prime minister Wim Kok apologised for the "icy welcome" Nazi
camp survivors received on their return to the Netherlands, which the Nazis
occupied from 1940-1945.
'A pity
we had to wait'
On Sunday,
Rutte went further saying: "Our government institutions did not act as
guardians of justice and security. Too many civil servants carried out the
orders of the occupiers.
"The bitter consequences of the drawing up of registers (of Jews) and of the expulsions have not been adequately recognised, nor recognised in time," Rutte added.
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Sunday's
ceremony included a silent march to the monument (AFP Photo)
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"The bitter consequences of the drawing up of registers (of Jews) and of the expulsions have not been adequately recognised, nor recognised in time," Rutte added.
"On
the whole, it was too little too late. Too little protection. Too little help.
Too little recognition."
"Seventy-five
years after Auschwitz, anti-Semitism is still amongst us. That's exactly why we
fully recognise what happened and say it out loud," Rutte said.
A number of
Holocaust survivors were present at the ceremony to hear Rutte's apology.
"I
lost everything during the war," said Zoni Weisz, in comments to Dutch
broadcaster NOS.
Weisz, who
was a child during the war, lost his parents, brother and sisters, all of whom
perished in the Nazi death camps.
"They
cannot have died in vain," said the 82-year-old. "In this respect, it
is important that apologies be made. And for myself, I accepted them.
"A
pity we had to wait 75 years," he added.
Holocaust
survivors will gather in Auschwitz on Monday to mark 75 years since Soviet troops
liberated the camp, while world leaders held a sombre remembrance ceremony in
Jerusalem last Thursday.
More than
1.1 million people, mainly Jews, were killed at Auschwitz-Birkenau.
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| Mark Rutte and rabbi Meno ten Brink. Photo: Sabine Joosten/ Hollandse Hoogte |
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