Massive deportations from the Jewish neighbourhood
On 21 May 1943, Ferdinand aus der Fünten head of the 'Zentralstelle für jüdische Auswanderung' (Central Office for Jewish emigration), orders the Jewish Council to call up 7,000 Jews to report to the Polderweg on Tuesday evening, 26 May. This order is carried out, but only 500 people turn up. So from 12 o’clock at night the Nazis start rounding up Jews in the Waterlooplein area. Eventually 3,000 Jews are rounded up on the parade ground on the Polderweg.
The deportations
When the gas chambers in Auschwitz are ready for use in 1942, Jews from all over Europe are sent to this concentration and extermination camp. The Nazis organize this under the guise of ‘emigration’ and ‘employment’ in Eastern Europe. In July they start to assemble Jews in Amsterdam. First they are taken by train to Westerbork in Drenthe then they are sent in crowded cattle and goods cars to concentration camps. More than 100,000 Jews from Amsterdam meet their deaths in this way.
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