Hollandsche Schouwburg – National Holocaust Memorial

The Hollandse Schouwburg (Dutch theater) was opened on the 5th of May 1892 in the Amsterdam Plantage District, it was designed by the Dutch architect Cornelis Antonius Bombach. Initially it was named the Artis Schouwburg, but two years later it was renamed the Hollandsche Schouwburg. In the beginning of the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, little changed in the daily life of the theater, but in 1941 the Nazis changed the name of the theater to the Joodse Schouwburg (Jewish Theatre). This happened in tandem with the Nazi law 138/41, which excluded Jews from many public spaces in an attempt to further segregate them from the rest of the population. From that point on only Jewish actors and artists were allowed to perform – for a strictly Jewish audience. Inadvertently, this however did lead to the theater becoming a breeding ground of high level Jewish culture, with many Jewish orchestras, cultural orginisations, and theatre companies being formed and performing. The theater furthermore started to function as a location where Jewish wedding ceremonies were held.

On the 20th of July 1942 the Nazis started using the Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theater), then named the Joodse Schouwburg (Jewish Theater), as a deportation location. From then on the Nazis also started to call the theater the Umschlagplatz Plantage Middenlaan (Storage place Plantage Middenlaan). All shows stopped and Jews from Amsterdam and the surrounding areas were summoned to report at the Theater. The theater started to function as a prison for those Jews captured in the razzias and those that arrived ‘voluntarily’. From 1943 onwards the Nazis also employed Dutch collaborators, also known as the Colonne Henneicke (Henneicke Column), to expose Jews that had gone into hiding.  At arrival in the theater registration took place, and the waiting period started. People were locked up in the theater for hours, days, and even weeks, before being deported to the Dutch transit camps of Westerbork and Vught. The theatre, which was not built for housing so many people for such a long time became a cramped, unhealthy, and fearful place. The Nazis also took control of the nursery at the opposite side of the street, where children up to 12, separated from their parents, awaited deportation. This nursery however also became a place of resistance, with resistance groups smuggling out Jewish babies in for example bags, handing them over to other resistance groups on Amsterdam Central Station, who then proceeded to bring them to hiding places. Around 600 kids were saved from deportation in this fashion. The last transport from the Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theater) took place on the 19th of November 1943. Tens of thousands of people had been placed on transport from the Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theater).

The Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theater) holds remembrances annually on the 4th of May (Remembrance Day in the Netherlands), on Yom HaShoah (the Jewish Remembrance Day for the Jews murdered in World War II) and a Children’s Remembrance Day. During the International Holocaust Memorial Day on the 27th of January the Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theater)/the National Holocaust Memorial furthermore organizes educational gatherings. Since 2012, the Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theater) also functions as the starting point of the Westerborkpad (Westerbork path), a walking route that leads to Westerbork and meant to symbolize the Jewish persucation. Both the Hollandsche Schouwberg and the Holocaust museum on the other side of the street are moreover connected to The Jewish Monument, an online monument dedicated to the more than 104.000 people persecuted as Jews in the Netherlands who did not survive the Holocaust.

The monument is a continuously growing and never complete monument where visitors can register as user and are invited to add information. It includes at least the basic details of every Holocaust victim in the Netherlands, along with any other available information. Every victim is represented by a pixel and aims to ensure that the men, women, and children murdered in the period 1940-45 will not be forgotten. In the Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theatre), visitors can use computers to browse and engage with the website, and in the recent National Holocaust Museum a semi-permanent exhibition based on the monument is shown. The larger Jewish Cultural Quarter, of which the Hollandsche Schouwburg (Dutch Theater) is a part, furthermore, in combination with primary and high schools, organizes different trips to their various locations, provides educational materials, and encourages classes to add poems, letters, and projects created by the children to the online monument.

Area(s) of Focus

Entry type

Address

Plantage Middenlaan 24
Amsterdam
Netherlands

Geolocation