‘Anything that damages the welfare of a healthy society should be purged’
After the German occupation many cafés for homosexuals close their doors, but not all of them. Café Populair (later called Café Monico – although most people call it ‘Blonde Saar’ after its owner) on the Lange Niezel opens in 1941 and attracts Germans too.
On 10 December 1943 the article ‘Anything that damages the welfare of a healthy society should be purged’ is published in the Nazi newspaper ‘Storm’. It states: ‘In the small pubs in Amsterdam’s narrow alleys and elsewhere our people’s health is being ruined. It is of importance that an end is put to this.’ The author calls Café Populair a ‘queer bar’. ‘Out the back where darkness reigns, these abhorrent deviants dance in a form of public lewdness.’ The article results in a raid, but Café Populair is not closed down.