© Het Parool
Three hundred Jews across the city arrested
On 11 June 300 Jews across the city are arrested. The most are picked up from their own homes by the Amsterdam police who are given the addresses by the Sicherheitsdienst.
The arrests are reprisals for a bomb attack on German army buildings on the Bernhard Zweerskade and the Schubertstraat, and also on the Luftwaffe (German air force) telephone exchange at Schiphol in which one soldier was badly wounded.
Those arrested are mostly young men. They are all deported to Mauthausen and none survive. When the notifications of their deaths arrive in Amsterdam the name Mauthausen becomes notorious. The Germans use the name Mauthausen as threat to anyone disobeying the law. Het Parool, the illegal newspaper, writes about this on 23 June.
Reprisals
In retaliation for attacks by the resistance the Germans often conduct harsh reprisals against the civilian population. Towards the end of the war these become even harsher. They set houses on fire, execute prisoners and even randomly selected civilians out on the streets.
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