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After the Shoah: Continuity and change in the postwar Jewish community of the Netherlands

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Abstract

The Dutch Jewish community is part of Western European Jewry and as such is part of what Bernard Wasserstein describes as the vanishing Diaspora. The community is one of Europe's smallest and it was also the Western European Jewish community most heavily damaged by the Shoah; it lost 75% of its population. It is surprising that the community still exists. It has gone through many changes, most notably in the 1960s. Progressive Judaism and the Lubavitcher Habad movement have made considerable inroads in the religious community, but the population has become largely secular, and new secular Jewish networks have been established. Dutch Jews have redefined their identity, shifting from “Dutchmen of the Israelite religion” to “Jews” or “people with a Jewish background,” belonging to a social and cultural minority. A small population exchange has taken place between Israel and the Netherlands. The brief baby boom after the Shoah and the newly formed networks outside the religious framework have revitalized the community. But most Jews in the Netherlands are married to non-Jews, and in spite of unique efforts to integrate the Israelis into the community, the future seems uncertain.

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Volume/Issue

15(2)

Page Number

149-168

Link

Link to article (paywalled), After the Shoah: Continuity and change in the postwar Jewish community of the Netherlands
PDF (via academia.edu), After the Shoah: Continuity and change in the postwar Jewish community of the Netherlands

Bibliographic Information

Brasz, Chaya After the Shoah: Continuity and change in the postwar Jewish community of the Netherlands. Jewish History. 2001: 149-168.  https://archive.jpr.org.uk/object-neth18