© Stadsarchief Amsterdam
‘Not even a decent piece of clothing’
Jewish I. Querido returns to Amsterdam in June 1945. He receives clothing coupons and goes to the clothing depot on the Nieuwendijk where repatriates can exchange the coupons for used clothing.
‘I refused to accept any even though I didn’t have any decent clothes on. The man who was in charge asked me what was wrong. After talking to him he advised me to go to ‘New England’ on the Koningsplein and gave me a ticket to hand in there. It appears that he was Mr. Holenkamp, one of the owners of clothes shop ‘New England’. They dressed me from head to toe, including new underwear, in lovely new clothes of a pre-war quality. I was so grateful that I had met someone who realized what those Jews who returned had gone through. From then on whenever possible I bought my clothes in ‘New England’.
Source: Dienke Hondius, Terugkeer. Antisemitisme in Nederland rond de bevrijding, p. 133-134
Return
After the war many start to make their way back from all over Europe. People reappear from their hiding places. Many captured resistance members and forced labourers return too. But there are many missing. Of the 70,000 Jews deported from Amsterdam only about 4,000 return. Sometimes they find other people living in their homes. Many houses have been destroyed.
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