Dutch Heroes, Collaborators and Traitors during WWII: A deep analysis using great colorized footage

This is part-2 of my series about the Netherlands during WW2. The main theme of part-2 is to address the question how many Dutch people sympathized with the German occupation and why.
The comments section under part-1 has shown that there was and still is a lot of controversy about this matter. In a number of cases it has lead to quite some nasty debates during which it has become clear, at least to me, that especially a contingent of young viewers have a totally misplaced and misguided concept of what actually happened during WW2 and in particular in the Netherlands. Not only does it show that the quality of history lessons worldwide is not what it used to be, but in the absence of proper understanding of the driving forces behind the WW2 scenes, many make the big mistake of judging history through today's eyes.
I have done my best to give insight into what I believe actually happened in the Netherlands during WW2 and to do so on the basis of verified historic facts in an as neutral as possible manner, without bringing feelings and emotions into the equasion.
The transcript of this documentary can be read here:
www.ricksfilmrestoration.com/N...
Part-1 can be viewed here: • Spectacular colorized ...
ATTENTION ! Please do not ruin the comments section under this video like what happened with part-1 and which eventually forced me to close it. By all means share your facts, thoughts and opinions on this topic, but do this with respect, decency and good understanding of the circumstances during WW-II in the Netherlands. Hateful, respectless, rude and rubbish comments will simply be removed. This channel is intended to provide a better understanding of history and not to become a public sewer filled with waste and debris from today's sad world. Please understand!
Music: Howard Harper Barnes, Haempus Naeselius, Johannes Bornloff, Bonnie Grace a,o.
Source: Beeld En Geluid, Archive.org a.o.

Пікірлер: 880

  • @Rick88888888
    @Rick8888888811 ай бұрын

    *ATTENTION! Please do not ruin the comments section under this video like what happened with part-1 and which eventually forced me to close it. By all means share your facts, thoughts and opinions on this topic, but do this with respect, decency and good understanding of the circumstances during WW-II in the Netherlands. Hateful, respectless, rude and rubbish comments will simply be removed. This channel is intended to provide a better understanding of history and not to become a public sewer filled with waste and debris from today's sad world. Please understand* ! The transcript of this documentary can be read here: www.ricksfilmrestoration.com/NLduringWWII-2.htm *My most important films can now also be watched (in higher quality!) on* archive.org *via my website* : www.ricksfilmrestoration.com/indexEN1.htm Part-1 can be viewed here: kzread.info/dash/bejne/oY58u9dsmMrepMo.html PS: There are now CC captions in English under this video, including a translation of the Dutch/German speeches.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    Already 1 comment has been removed even before the première has started! Not a good sign.

  • @jerryswallow

    @jerryswallow

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Rick88888888 sorry to hear, possible all those comments from those younger & do not know a thing about WW2, Good Vids my friend, keep it up

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    @@deadline8416 Thanks! So far the comments section under this video is fine.

  • @Wayoutthere

    @Wayoutthere

    11 ай бұрын

    Zover zo goed, maar weet wel dat domheid verstoppen/deleten weinig zin heeft, het moet juist aan de oppervlakte komen. Strafbare uitingen zijn uiteraard een ander verhaal.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    @Wayoutthere Ja en Nee. Als je de comments onder Deel-1 zou hebben gelezen zou je begrijpen waarom comments daar blokkeren de enige resterende optie was. Immers was het een chaos en een riool geworden. Er zijn grenzen en stupiditeit etaleren dient niemand (behalve de conclusie trekken dat onze wereld naar de verdommenis gaat)!

  • @hankgs
    @hankgs10 ай бұрын

    My Uncle was in the Dutch Underground in Velsen. A Dutch Dentist (NSBer) turned him in to the German's who interrogated him in an Amsterdam prison. He was held for three days. On the 3rd night he escaped and made it to Ijmuiden (hometown) and he and another Underground member took a small boat from the Hoogovens across the English Channel. They were picked up by a British patrol boat. They were interrogated and he was given a new ID and was sent BACK to Holland to organize resistance operations. He was then picked up by a British patrol boat off the coast, went back to England and was debriefed. He was then trained as a Spitfire Pilot for the RAF 322nd Dutch Squadron. He flew many sorties until April 30th, 1945 when he was shot down over Southern Holland and killed- Three weeks before the end of the War....

  • @annhenry6893

    @annhenry6893

    10 ай бұрын

    Holy cow! What a man to be proud of! Trying to imagine the courage he had and what all he must have went through.

  • @cyirvine6300

    @cyirvine6300

    10 ай бұрын

    What a family legacy!

  • @IbrahimSean

    @IbrahimSean

    10 ай бұрын

    Was he called nicolaas, my grandmothers brother dit the same as your uncle, het was from Gouda and also fought in the royal air force and fought at the grebbeberg and got wounded there and escaped

  • @nanabutner

    @nanabutner

    10 ай бұрын

    I am sorry, but your uncle was definitely a hero! My dad was born on Madeira Island, Portugal, immigrated ti the USA and became a legal naturalized citizen, but because he was “foreign born” he could not fly bombers or fighters-- that was why he flew gliders. He was one of the glider pilots that flew into Holland during WWII. He always felt bad that the Americans were not able to reach the bridges they were sent to capture.

  • @chantalsscaleisafibber

    @chantalsscaleisafibber

    10 ай бұрын

    What an incredibly brave man and to lose his life after so much so close to the end of the war is just awful Your entire family must be so incredibly proud of him.

  • @astridmaclean
    @astridmaclean10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this brilliant documentary, one of the best I have seen!! I was born in the Netherlands, the daughter of one of the lucky 5000 Jewish survivors who spent the last years of the war as an "onderduiker", thanks to some amazing Dutch people who shared their meagre rations with him. I will be forever grateful to them and the many others like them. It was really good though to see and hear what motivated Dutch and German citizens to act as they did. Once again, thanks so much for this objective evaluation!!

  • @MichaelN-ji3gr
    @MichaelN-ji3gr6 ай бұрын

    My Grandmother was a businesswoman from Aruba. She was in Rotterdam in business when the Germans invaded. Being unable to return to Aruba, she joined the Dutch underground. For 4 years she fought and killed many Nazis. The stories are too numerous. But In March of 45 her and her crew ambushed a platoon of Nazis that were making their way back to Germany. When going through their possessions, they found a cache of 1910 Dutch 10 guilder gold coins. I still have 40 of th coins. She got back to Aruba in late 1945, after 4 years evading the Nazis. I was born in 1962 from her daughter in Florida. Always looked forward to visiting her once a year growing up and listening to the stories. When she gave you that look, though……. Rest in Peace, Oma. I miss you still.

  • @leobrancovich1743

    @leobrancovich1743

    6 ай бұрын

    What an extraordinary story. And she survived! Was she interviewed, post-war?

  • @colmangreen6029
    @colmangreen602910 ай бұрын

    My German farmhand grandfather with 8 children was enamoured with the SDAP in the early years and became a member. He cancelled his membership once he saw what they really stood for. Neighbours who didn't were still entitled to extra butter and other privileges while his children now faced starvation. I still have black and white photographs of my potbellied mother and her sore covered brothers cuddling their rabbit one last time before it was slaughtered. Meanwhile, my Dutch baker grandfather supplied 'onderduikers' with bread. Railway strikers, labour camp refusers and Jews in hiding. Thus he jeopardised the safety of his own family. Was my German opa evil for having been a 'Nazi'? Was my Dutch opa a saint? I loved them both, and both did what they could with the knowledge and understanding they had.

  • @smgdfcmfah
    @smgdfcmfah11 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this. My parents both lived through the war in the Netherlands as did my mother's second husband (she remarried 10 years after my father passed and I was in my thirties, so I never really thought of him as my "step father"). He was born in 1930 (still alive) and likes to tell stories of being a boy during the war. He openly brags that he was good with a horse, so the Germans would pay him to drag telephone poles out into the water (the horses would swim and he, a small young boy would ride while they dragged the poles). The Germans in small boats would then take over the poles and he would take the horses back to shore. He still has no idea that he was helping them build the Atlantic wall defenses by bringing the engineers material for beach obstacles. To him it was a way to gain extra money or food for the family. In the next breath he will tell you about the neighbour they liked to harass and throw rotten food at his house... because HE was a collaborator! I dare anyone to judge him using today's "moral compass".

  • @chrismccartney8668
    @chrismccartney866810 ай бұрын

    I visited Netherlands in the late sixties and early seventies as a young travel member of staff and found thank you and gratitude to Britain and The Allies for their relief from the Nazis was overwhelming !!

  • @censured-again

    @censured-again

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes, of course, they had to hide from the truth of how they betrayed their own family, friends, and neighbors.

  • @spaceenemiesnovel
    @spaceenemiesnovel10 ай бұрын

    My grandfather was shot in '44 when he left a cafe in our hometown. One of my grandmother's brothers was with the resistance. One of his brothers was sent to the camps and survived.

  • @etiennenobel5028
    @etiennenobel502810 ай бұрын

    If it wasn't filmed one can hardly believe this is Europe less than eighty years ago. Shows you how fragile our modern world and democracy is.

  • @smoothbrain4384
    @smoothbrain438411 ай бұрын

    Thank you for all of your incredible work, it's absolutely breathtaking!

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you too!

  • @dario957
    @dario9579 ай бұрын

    Excelent story. Even you say “I am not a historian” this is an very good job. Facts Are from public sources and this facts Are wide known, but some people dont want to refresh history data… So we need to have somebody WHO can make the story of history in understandable way. You did exsatly that. With numbers, an I like your stile. Please keep going!

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    9 ай бұрын

    Great, thanks!

  • @vangestelwijnen
    @vangestelwijnen11 ай бұрын

    I fear you have to close the comments section soon, but let me first thank you for your wonderful uploads. Ze vertellen een verhaal dat zonder oordeel anno nu verteld mag worden.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    Dank je wel. Dat was ook mijn opzet: het verhaal too-the-point maar toch neutraal vertellen.

  • @georgecooksey8216
    @georgecooksey821610 ай бұрын

    Fine piece. We indeed need to be very careful judging past societies through a lens of modern values and sensibilities. We must place ourselves in the shoes of those we seek to analyze and judge - we must contextualize. As the great historian Margaret MacMillan cautions "It is all too easy to rummage through the past and find nothing but a list of grievances".

  • @thomasm1964
    @thomasm196411 ай бұрын

    Very thoughtful and informative video - thank you. Also, it was interesting to see a Dutch perspective. I'm more used to seeing British and Ameican views of the war.

  • @OHFORPEATSAKES
    @OHFORPEATSAKES11 ай бұрын

    Well done. My grandfather thought a new 'world order' was just what the country needed. He even went to work in Germany voluntarily. After 6 months he came back horrified. Joined the resistance and actively fought the nazi's. Got caught in early 1943 and after many interrogations was sent to Vught, then on to several concentration camps. Ultimately died in Bergen Belsen, about one week before it was liberated.

  • @jasonplanas9020
    @jasonplanas90205 ай бұрын

    I appreciate you taking the time to put this content public

  • @Raven-nx8su
    @Raven-nx8su11 ай бұрын

    My family was very divided during the war. My grandfather was imprisoned in the orange hotel for 6 months and was beaten and humiliated daily because he refused to give a pig to the Germans. His brother was executed on November 19, 1942 in Soesterberg as one of the 33 of Soesterberg for committing acts of sabotage and arson. My great-grandparents (my grandmother's parents) had had 3 Jews in their attic for 3 years while their son had volunteered for the Waffen SS and served on the Eastern Front. After the war, my grandfather's sister went bald through the village on a flat cart because she was not so picky towards the men. So you can see how thin the line is between right and wrong.

  • @Raven-nx8su

    @Raven-nx8su

    11 ай бұрын

    @Rick88888888 Great video

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    Indeed. Thank you for sharing these memories.

  • @edwinhof2090

    @edwinhof2090

    10 ай бұрын

    Just like in my family. My grandfather was also imprisoned at the Orange Hotel in Scheveningen and his brother was a member of the NSB.

  • @marin313
    @marin31310 ай бұрын

    Fascinating footage that I have never seen before. The story of how civilian populations reacted to occupation in Europe and Asia is history that needs to be more widely told. We must never forget.

  • @metgirl5429
    @metgirl54295 ай бұрын

    My parents were teenagers in the Netherlands in WW2 I will hold their stories close to my heart forever and share with my children May we learn from history least we will sorely repeat it …. What the nazis did did not just happen over night …. Slowly slowly ….. the last 3 years …. are we awake now🕊

  • @gnolan4281
    @gnolan428110 ай бұрын

    Context is essential to understanding a given situation. It enables one to draw distinctions and gain insights into the heart of things. Wisdom, balance and empathy cannot be attained without it. Historical research sheds light on the subject and steers discussions and writings away from the reliance on rhetoric, slogans and facile distillations. Thank you Rick for this and the upscaling of the images. All in all it is a tutorial worthy of respect and admiration.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much

  • @fleuger99
    @fleuger997 ай бұрын

    Excellent content, thank you for sharing. I'm Canadian and one of my neighbors, now passed away, was a tank commander and took party in the liberation of the Netherlands. He informed me that he helped get food for several families and up until the early 2000's he was still in touch with those families and would go visit them until he was too old to travel.

  • @elrjames7799
    @elrjames77992 ай бұрын

    Couldn't agree more with the opening remarks: history is not only about hindsight, but what actually happened in the past.

  • @old_seadog
    @old_seadog11 ай бұрын

    After 80-90 years later, it sometimes seems like we haven't learned anything from a tragic history. We must never forget this awful period in human history & records like this are vital.

  • @youria2559

    @youria2559

    11 ай бұрын

    But we have learned, we've learned that we can kill any form of discussion by calling someone a Nazi. Apart from that not much less. :(

  • @UserNotFound-mw4hp

    @UserNotFound-mw4hp

    11 ай бұрын

    Because shit today is going so well, right ✅️

  • @analgas

    @analgas

    10 ай бұрын

    You’ve only got to look at people like Trump and the republicans to show nothing has been learnt

  • @christopherlane4945
    @christopherlane49459 ай бұрын

    Thank you for providing a very thought provoking and objective approach to such a delicate subject. We are always quick to lump a group of people into one category or another or to not try and understand their motives or circumstances for doing whatever they may have done.

  • @terrybirch239
    @terrybirch2397 ай бұрын

    Rick, that is an amazing piece of work. I visited Amsterdam with my wife and friends a few years ago (I live in Nottingham UK). We went on a walking tour of the city and our guide pretty much told that dark part of the country’s history as you have. Dank je well.

  • @DHS11999
    @DHS1199910 ай бұрын

    There exists a temptation to judge the past using the criteria of the present. Nothing could be more dangerous than that. We must never deny nor forget the past but we must move forward creating a society that will not repeat the sins and errors of the past.

  • @censured-again

    @censured-again

    10 ай бұрын

    But we are, and will continue to do so because there is money to be made.

  • @jetv1471
    @jetv14713 ай бұрын

    My grandfather brought my grandmother my father and two uncles over to USA from Beirvleit between ww1 and WW2. My grandfather was in the Dutch military during WW1. My dad told me about the trip over and the entire family credited an aunt of his who sponsored them all over in a smart way . So that my dad said he got to come first class on the ship into Halifax and he said he was very sea sick and even at the age of 9 was happy to not be in deck and not in the hulls below deck where he saw the other passengers. My grandfather took dad out of school in 9th grade and he and my uncles all worked a tenant farmers on dairy farms in NY . This was apparently a common occurrence for Dutch immigrants . Early on my brothers say that my dad was a terrible racist . He was a milkman and delivered milk in the Newark race riots . His lower legs were covered with scars from dog bites . He was a tough disciplinarian. He changed a lot as he aged , became wiser , more understanding. He later said his parents were ignorant and stubborn … they bankrupted a farm they had and my dad had to have them live with us . I was attending a meeting at NATO and my dad used that as an opportunity to visit Europe and his old village . We looked in a phone book in a phone booth ( yes ! They both existed !😂) and found his aunt and uncle in the village . He and they sat and spoke in Dutch ( apparently he learned it was a very Flemish dialect when he could not understand the Dutch representative to NATO from The Hague ) … He asked them what they did during the occupation. He said his uncle said they flooded all the fields … broke the dikes . ( he and I noticed that the fields were all beets 😂)… After only three days in Zeeland .. dad said , let’s get out of here . He often talked about the part of the trip when we were at the October fest in Munich … but he NEVER brought up his home country again . ( I personally did not like Munich but I am an American through and through and although I have traveled the world I keep liking my home state and country the best 🤷‍♀️.. i wont argue why , no reason to, I think its just an individual preference thing ) I often think about cultural diversity… and how if a culture grips tightly to its norms in a new location and doesn’t try to assimilate to some extent the friction it causes . I am uncomfortable if I am in a place that does NOT have diversity. It makes me nervous. I think diversity is a glorious thing … but there also needs to be a coming together as well to be in society. We need to practice the golden rule. I’m being reminded with the Way politics is going in USA now , that there is always that bell shaped curve … there will always be a percentage that favors a different view than I . I take a deep long breath , try to remain aware of what is gaining TRACTION , and continue without fail to practice the golden rule.

  • @Leanfear69
    @Leanfear6910 ай бұрын

    Goed in elkaar gezet en afgewogen gepresenteerd. Ik kan de percentages die je noemt niet beoordelen maar ik ben blij dat er een balans komt in de berichtgeving over “goed” en “fout”.

  • @williamogilvie6909
    @williamogilvie690910 ай бұрын

    Amazing videos of life in Holland before and during the war. As a child, growing up in Canada, I had several friends who were Dutch. Their parents had survived the war. A close friend, who lived across from us, was Jewish. His parents survived life in a concentration camp. Another neighbor's family was from the Dutch East Indies. Those people had it very bad during WW2.

  • @theomaksor851
    @theomaksor85110 ай бұрын

    Thanks for this well presented insight. It sheds a very clear light onto my own family before and during WWII: My father was born in 1926 as the youngest of 7 older siblings. They grew up in a medium large city. My father told us very little about his family - a bit more about his safe refuge on a farm and almost nothing about the war itself. My mother grew up in a large provincial city - one of the key cities during the end of the war. She had 2 sisters and they were raised by their mother. She sometimes talked about the public kitchens and how they begged and scavenged for food. A few years before my father died he told me his WWII story : His Oldest brother was married and they were housing Jews for almost the duration of the war. One brother escaped to England as he was a specialist in the upcoming radar technology - one brother joined the Dutch / German SS army and was stationed in a French port city - one brother we know very little about he always expressed a strong hatred to the Communists and we know he fought in Berlin , but he never revealed on which side. One brother had joined the Dutch NAZI / NSB party and was an active member. One sister became a very active member of the Dutch Resistance - we know she participated in armed actions against the Germans. My father himself became partly involved in the resistance as courier , he was to young to be an armed fighter and he was on paper adopted as a son of a dairy farm family - farmers were exempt from slave labor in factories in Germany. This division within one family is perhaps a good example of the division in the Dutch society as a whole. After the war the brothers and sister reconciled and all acknowledged that the war was the most evil period in Dutch' history - never ever to be repeated again.

  • @ellebelle8515

    @ellebelle8515

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this important part of the history of a Dutch family during WWII. Truly an example of Europe and the West as a whole. A very tragic history for many. All my Germanic ancestors were born in Communist Russia. Because of their extreme suffering under the Communists, especially Stalin, some among them tended to see the early German armies as liberators. Our experiences form us, both in good and bad. So important to see those who have learnt from the failures and guide future generations.

  • @ianevans2917
    @ianevans29178 ай бұрын

    A very fair and accurate assessment of what was for the people and the country of the Netherlands, a very difficult and thought-provoking period of its history.

  • @AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc
    @AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc10 ай бұрын

    Sleepwalked into tyranny. Again 2023?

  • @prae7068

    @prae7068

    10 ай бұрын

    Very valid question. Similar wave of lunacy active again. Fight back!

  • @catherinecarr3506

    @catherinecarr3506

    9 ай бұрын

    The propaganda machine is well refined in 2023. Goebbels would be proud

  • @Franklin-pc3xd
    @Franklin-pc3xd5 ай бұрын

    Thank you for presenting these videos and providing your narration. We often overlook the Netherlands in the history of the 20th century.

  • @Absolomx
    @Absolomx7 ай бұрын

    Rick, ik heb je kanaal net gevonden. Maar je legt het super goed en interessant uit. In combinatie met deze beelden is het echt heel fijn om naar te kijken. Ga zo door!

  • @Ozgipsy
    @Ozgipsy5 ай бұрын

    Don’t get bent up by comments. This is an outstanding video. 👍👍

  • @petshopboyspartnership
    @petshopboyspartnership10 ай бұрын

    These restorations are fantastic... and this one is no different. Thank you for taking the time to introduce us to real history

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    Glad you like them!

  • @spib65
    @spib6511 ай бұрын

    Hi Rick, another superb effort on a tricky subject matter. all the very best.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    Thanks, you too!

  • @willemkoeslag9269
    @willemkoeslag92695 ай бұрын

    Makes me even more proud of my Father and Mother who sheltered several Jewish families during the war. I recall very little but remember vaguely one couple who I was lead to believe were my Aunt and Uncle. I was born in 1940, Almelo, Overijsel.

  • @trstquint7114
    @trstquint71149 ай бұрын

    Part 2, compiled with great care, provides an insight without any reservations or personal opinion. Thanks for this!

  • @ballgms308
    @ballgms30810 ай бұрын

    Did you really make this video?? This is incredible and thought for sure it was just colorized which I couldn’t imagine the amount of time that alone would take. The detail and perspective given is trul remarkable and I never imagined I could take a step back in time like this. What a hidden gem this channel is and your voice was made to do this. I went to sleep last night and now I’m hooked on the Netherlands

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    Great! Yes I wrote the script and restored, enhanced, edited and colorized the film footage.

  • @dezbell6109
    @dezbell610910 ай бұрын

    i have only just listened to your opening remarks. I would like you to know I really enjoy and appreciate watching these videos and support the extensive work you do.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    Glad you enjoy it!

  • @ajb.9094
    @ajb.909411 ай бұрын

    Thank you for helping shed some light on the past. It is a great help for younger people like me to see some of the other side of things that I may not have heard of.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    Thanks, good to hear that! Glad that you are open to understand and learn from the past.

  • @IbrahimSean
    @IbrahimSean10 ай бұрын

    Rick you are doing a great job, don’t listen to fools who only talk the talk and then run away, ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @alvashoemaker8536
    @alvashoemaker85366 ай бұрын

    The Dutch were trying to survive; how in the world can anyone who’s never experienced hardship know what THEY would do in horrific circumstances…? We can try to re-write history…but will justifiably fail!! 😲🤨

  • @ARBAN30
    @ARBAN3010 ай бұрын

    Learnt a lot from your videos and narration. Thank you for the upload.

  • @ontheroad_again
    @ontheroad_again10 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately due to human nature, hate is easier to teach and learn than love & compassion.

  • @Eitner100
    @Eitner10010 ай бұрын

    As Drs. De Jong wrote, there were far more collaborators in The Netherlands plus pro Nazi regime Dutch, than 'heroes'. After the war many collaborators claimed having been part of the very small resistance. That is the big Dutch lie, with the knowledge that after Croatia and Norway, the Dutch were the most pro Hitler and most passive people in WWII. Examples are ample and shortly after the war the best sold car in The Netherlands was the German VW, the favourite vacation destinations were Germany and Austria and the favourite restaurant chain the Wienerwald from Austria.

  • @NSResponder
    @NSResponder6 ай бұрын

    A good friend of my family was a Dutchman who was enslaved by the Nazis. When he was liberated by American troops, he immediately joined them and was enlisted as a sargeant because he was fluent in Dutch, English, German and French and was made an interpreter.. He fought almost continuously from the day he joined the US Army until the Nazis surrendered, and enlisted in the British Army immediately after the US Army demobilized him to serve in the occupation forces. He hated the German Nazis almost half as much as he hated Dutch Nazis.

  • @jetv1471

    @jetv1471

    3 ай бұрын

    Good info thank you .

  • @Zeus2024-pn2ht
    @Zeus2024-pn2ht5 ай бұрын

    I love these videos. Thank you for your work on them.

  • @voraciousreader3341
    @voraciousreader334110 ай бұрын

    This is a very important synopsis of the general situation in Holland prior to and during WWII. I also agree that there are far too many people who are extremely ignorant yet they propound polarizing and completely inaccurate information, without understanding that many different lenses must be used to understand history. I don’t blame all of this ignorance on education, but on the seductive nature of WWII documentaries which run for roughly 50 minutes and cover a wide swath of time, meaning that a real understanding of the varying situations simply cannot be adequately explained; however, there are too many people who believe they’ve learned all they need to know on the subjects. I sarcastically call them “KZread geniuses,” because they truly feel they have as much knowledge as someone like me, who has been reading history books covering 1920-1946 for 35 years. As you said, these people “don’t know what they don’t know,” and spew hatred and ignorance with a confidence which is truly horrifying. *PLEASE READ BOOKS, PEOPLE!!!*

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    My sentiments too! Thanks

  • @seanohare5488

    @seanohare5488

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes read always

  • @harryvisser5843
    @harryvisser584311 ай бұрын

    Excellent analysis and commentary. Many thanks for this work.

  • @jasonkilbourn4723
    @jasonkilbourn472310 ай бұрын

    Very well put together,great footage, thanks

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it

  • @seanohare5488

    @seanohare5488

    10 ай бұрын

    I agree

  • @2bignorant
    @2bignorant2 ай бұрын

    Rick Your hard work and extensive research and restoration is greatly appreciated

  • @jaymorris3468
    @jaymorris34682 ай бұрын

    Brllliant stuff, kudos to you for taking the time to put this together.

  • @FlyingKarl01
    @FlyingKarl019 ай бұрын

    My father was born in Nijmegen in 1931,I am now living in The Netherlands learning about the time period of 1931 to 1954 when he moved to Canada . Your films fill in the gaps in what was told to me about that time period . Thanks You for your work

  • @henktittel3588
    @henktittel358810 ай бұрын

    In mijn ogen (met mijn beperkte kennis) een goed onderbouwd document, dank voor tijd en moeite die er in gestoken is.

  • @realpirate
    @realpirate7 ай бұрын

    ' De mens is een product van zijn tijd . ' bij Berthold Brecht . We should always try to see people in their context . Thank you very much for this video , de groeten uit Limburg .

  • @margyeoman3564

    @margyeoman3564

    6 ай бұрын

    That statement is the truest of them all. The good also are generally a product of their time.

  • @AbsoluteRangatira
    @AbsoluteRangatiraАй бұрын

    Very informative! Love your narration as well. Thank you

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @fiatian
    @fiatian6 ай бұрын

    Your efforts are priceless

  • @joostprins3381
    @joostprins338110 ай бұрын

    My grandfather was deported to Germany to work in the factories, he had a choice, go under or go to Germany. He chose the last to keep his family (at that moment wife and 2 daughters) safe. It was an easy choice for him, I hope I will never have to be in that position. In that regard I am sure we can’t say about the normal citizens if they were right or not. The same counts now for the Russian people, you don’t know how the situation is so you can’t judge them as such.

  • @HenkvandenHeuvel
    @HenkvandenHeuvel7 ай бұрын

    Bedankt, ik heb er met grote interesse naar gekeken. Wat mij betreft heb je het keurig uitgelegd en van commentaar voorzien, hulde!

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    7 ай бұрын

    Dank je wel

  • @nickel2325
    @nickel23254 ай бұрын

    Its criminal how history was taught to me in public schools

  • @jeromebreeding3302
    @jeromebreeding330210 ай бұрын

    This documentary came completely out of left field,as I was ignorant of the scope of Dutch role during WWII. Plenty of accusations on Poland's knowledge of attrocities against the Jews, with concentration camps within their borders. I wonder if the film clips we're colorized.To my knowledge color photography was rare in the thirties-forties. As a student of history, I found this video very enlightening.

  • @Hongaars1969
    @Hongaars196910 ай бұрын

    Thank YOU for another great masterpiece. You keep both the history and the memories alive. Facts remain facts and the truth shall always remain true. Thank you

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    My pleasure

  • @stephenholmes1036
    @stephenholmes10368 ай бұрын

    Well done, Well researched a good piece. I was pleased you showed the hongar winter

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    8 ай бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it! Have you seen my film about the Hongerwinter? kzread.info/dash/bejne/aqaI0c9rnduyeqw.html

  • @tw-ym8zr
    @tw-ym8zr10 ай бұрын

    Thankyou so much for this video. It was very informative

  • @loladavinci1243
    @loladavinci12439 ай бұрын

    I completely concur with your opening statement. Thank you!

  • @samuelarduino
    @samuelarduino10 ай бұрын

    TOPPNOTCH! documentary, you say you are not an historian.., but you are!,raising the right sort of questions in this well balanced presentation. hope your work will get the recognition it deserves in popular and scientific forums. (Astonising how people then and now are getting their opinions very often based on limited and incorrect information... to be free and to think means using energy that is :to observe ,to examine and to conclude for yourself and then often to correct your own opinions . there is really a problem here in education and growing up, and the social media need to become much stronger on these issues. the world is fascinating and very very complex and simple solutions? well they are there for dictators and demagogues

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much! Just to tell you: Today I got a comment from a snooty historian who stated that amateurs like me shouldn't meddle with historic topics because nearly evering I stated was supposedly wrong. He even proclaimed Nazisme was not extreme-right but leftist... Apparently he, like so many people, got mislead by the word "Socialist" in the NSDAP's name. In fact it wasn't socialist at all but totally the opposite. I simply deleted his comment. KZread can do without such "quasi-experts"...

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    PS: I don't think most social media (apart from KZread) are the right place for serious topics. Such a pile of childish rubbish mixed with serious issues can never work, just like KZread "Shorts" are unsuitable for historic or other serious topics (although KZread has been trying to persuade me to do so). "Shorts" are simply KZread's attempt to regain terrain from TikTok, because "oh dear" they are losing money...

  • @grewdpastor

    @grewdpastor

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Rick88888888 There are many "KZread Historians", especially from conservative American and English circles, who want to make their dislike for socialism and communism more understandable by stating that they are the same thing and that National Socialism is also exactly the same. All the social legislation on employment, health care and education that have been achieved in Western Europe through the interference of, among others, the Social Democrats, are therefore not good according to these "historians". They are often supported by people from the former Eastern bloc, who have not been able to cope with the traumas caused by communist rule.

  • @TheSpritz0
    @TheSpritz010 ай бұрын

    Possibly in 2 years more will be known on how many joined the REGULAR Wehrmacht as well?? I just subscribed!!

  • @susiefairfield7218
    @susiefairfield721810 ай бұрын

    As someone who is 100% Dutch on both my Mother & Father's sides (from Goes) but in America since the 1800s. I thank you for this documentary, it taught me a lot

  • @johnnyappleseed2058
    @johnnyappleseed205810 ай бұрын

    Very insightful video! Sadly people continue to view the past through today's lense!

  • @tyrgoossens
    @tyrgoossens11 ай бұрын

    Amazing visuals and overall very nuanced look at what remains a difficult topic. Great video.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much!

  • @robyn3168
    @robyn31687 ай бұрын

    My father was confiscated as a dutch youth (non jewish) for their 'so called work camps' By todays standards conditions were so appalling they would be called slave labour plus some. The Gemans destroyed all the papers about these camps, so only stories remain. It is about time more was known about these prime youth being taken and killed by poor food, overwork or illnesses. Some of the camps were in Poland and Germany. My fathers stories of the cries coming from the gas chambers. My fathers buriel in a pit while alive for days, as punishment (dug hole in the ground), haunt me to this day. They haunted him all his life as well.

  • @jetv1471

    @jetv1471

    3 ай бұрын

    😢😢😢

  • @brunoterlingen2203
    @brunoterlingen220311 ай бұрын

    A brave topic for you to address Rick, here you were very measured in your comments, nuances indeed.

  • @ledrevonellyledrevo606
    @ledrevonellyledrevo60611 ай бұрын

    Merci beaucoup Rick pour ces informations sur cette page d'histoire et pour votre travail toujours aussi bon et très intéressant sur ce visionnage, merci pour ces explications, j'ai apprécié ces traductions en français pour le premier et deuxième visionnage. 🙏.👍

  • @ragandoil
    @ragandoil8 ай бұрын

    many thanks for this , it brings to life the things my mother who had great admiration of all the people in Holland she often spoke of the brave dutch people when i was a child in england in the 1950s

  • @hamlet7959
    @hamlet795911 ай бұрын

    Thank you Rick for an interesting film and for your excellent and thought-provoking interpretation of the situation in the Netherlands between the wars and during WW11. Here In France where I've lived for a number of years the question of civilian involvement and collaboration with the Nazis is still a a subject of heated debate!

  • @JohnFox-X333XXX
    @JohnFox-X333XXX7 ай бұрын

    I have learned and understood far more about nazism and WW2 in 33 minutes than one might believe impossible, thank you Rick.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    7 ай бұрын

    Great to hear that!

  • @twanhouben5572
    @twanhouben557210 ай бұрын

    Aangrijpend verhaal met zeer mooi bijpassende beelden. Dank!

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    Graag gedaan!

  • @cashew1
    @cashew110 ай бұрын

    We have a tendency to forget the past, why? Because relevance is only given to the new/current generation. The old when they die, their story is over and forgotten. So history can and will repeat itself.

  • @prae7068

    @prae7068

    10 ай бұрын

    Yeah. Plus: human psychology doesn't change, even if technology does...

  • @robertbielawski5299
    @robertbielawski52994 ай бұрын

    Dank U wel for your fine video. I hope you finally got your bicycle back! It was a story I heard of treatment of German tourists after the war, "where is my bicycle"? along with dierections given in the opposite direction.

  • @jwhiskey242
    @jwhiskey24210 ай бұрын

    Fascinating and well done. One thing that was overlooked was that during WWI the British enforced a blockade of the Netherlands - limiting imports to a fraction of what was needed -partially strangling the Dutch economy.

  • @jwhiskey242

    @jwhiskey242

    10 ай бұрын

    @@beverly9 I never said that.

  • @jcfmsantos1
    @jcfmsantos16 ай бұрын

    Many thanks for the video, a great example of how to approach a sensitive and complex topic with the, much needed and ever more scarce resource, nuance. Long live freedom, reason and compassion!

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    6 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much.

  • @Mythodea79
    @Mythodea798 ай бұрын

    thank you for creating and uploading! looking forward to your other video's

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks. There are already 300 videos on my channel!

  • @Chriskros1984
    @Chriskros198410 ай бұрын

    Wow part one has some crazy views ! Well deserved hope to see some colored part of Gerardus Mooyman and/or Henk Feldmeijer .

  • @marcusweekes7641
    @marcusweekes76414 күн бұрын

    Above and beyond, yet another fantastic restoration Rick, all the very best.

  • @marcusvalerius7663
    @marcusvalerius766310 ай бұрын

    My grandpa needed to work for the germans in a weapon factory where he sabotage numeros k89's rifle's with the risk for his own life.. And he would never talk about most he witnessed during the war. While my other grandpa helped the resistance and helped downed pilots find safe houses ect.

  • @user-qm7nw7vd5s
    @user-qm7nw7vd5s6 ай бұрын

    Well done video, at least on par with many self-proclaimed historians. That you used all color (or colorized) archival film clips give the documentary a contemporary feel. 👍👍

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    6 ай бұрын

    Well said! That's the whole idea. I do not pretend to be an historian, just someone who likes history...

  • @spambedam
    @spambedam10 ай бұрын

    Both my Grandfathers and at least two cousins died during the occupation. Two cousins I know of were forced workers in Germany. One cousin told me of German soldiers quartered in her home. It was a hellish time and heroism probably was a matter of happenstance, opportunity, and necessity, as much as a matter of intention. As the narrator said, people tried to survive. Simple as that. God zegen Nederland.

  • @1955porsche
    @1955porsche10 ай бұрын

    you hav really created a masterpiece of a documentary..my father lived thru the occupation n liberation .. he would hav applauded how well you have made this informative documentary that everyone avoids to discuss..anti semitism has been a part of europe since the charlemagne n the middle ages ,,, its nothing new ..very impressed w your documentary

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much!

  • @johnnyblogg2113
    @johnnyblogg211310 ай бұрын

    May i compliment you on this well balanced item. However it is well documented that as a whole our population and especially the civil service has been more compliant than other nations under occupation. To our great shame this is also illustrated by the exssesive large number of jewish compatriots in our country that were murdered . As now a 76 year old son and grandson of jewish and Christian grandparents who either were deported or have recived the yad vashem medal i do realise that generalisaties of how our nation " behaved" during WW2is dangerous but my impression is not as well balanced unfortunately.

  • @RogerCooley
    @RogerCooley11 ай бұрын

    As always, What a wonderful Job. Thank you

  • @desydukuk291
    @desydukuk29110 ай бұрын

    Rick, did you remove my perfectly decent, respectful and thoughtful comments? Can't see them here, happy to re-post.

  • @cambridge1960
    @cambridge196011 ай бұрын

    Ik ben onder de indruk van hoe evenwichtig en met zicht op het perspectief van die tijd u het verhaal vertelt. Mensen kunnen achteraf zo makkelijk oordelen nu ze weten wat er allemaal ging gebeuren ipv begrijpen dat vele mensen verlangen naar orde, zekerheid en werk.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    11 ай бұрын

    Dank je wel!

  • @moladiver6817

    @moladiver6817

    10 ай бұрын

    In dat licht vond ik de serie Broeders in Berlijn van de NPO soms ook erg verhelderend. Als West Europeanen zagen we de val van de muur als een enorme verlossing voor de mensen erachter. En waar die val natuurlijk onvermijdelijk was beginnen we nu pas te erkennen dat veel mensen in de DDR eigenaardig genoeg best gelukkig waren. Het was een eenvoudige en best wel ordelijke maatschappij die weinig verrassingen bood en voor veel mensen was dat een prettig bestaan. Na de Duitse Wende domineerde de West Duitse cultuur en Oost Duitsers hadden lange tijd het gevoel dat ze geen stem hadden. DDR elementen werden zo snel mogelijk gewist in het nieuwe Duitsland om het eenwordingsproces maar zo snel mogelijk te laten verlopen. Daarbij voelden veel 'Osies' een heel nieuw soort onderdrukking. De aflevering in Bremen is een interessante. Dat is eigenlijk een best wel welvarende stad geworden maar doordat veel mensen van inmiddels middelbare leeftijd het gevoel hebben dat ze door de DDR en na de Wende de boot gemist hebben zijn er veel nieuwe antisemitische en andere overeenkomstige gevoelens die zich onder andere uiten in vrij grote pegida bijeenkomsten. Daarnaast sluimert met name in Duitsland het neo-nazisme door en je hebt ook nog de nationalisten die graag terug willen naar de tijd van de Pruisen en het moderne Duitsland niet erkennen. Al met al denk ik dat populistische stromingen in Duitsland nog net zo'n gevaar vormen als 100 jaar geleden en we weten inmiddels waar dat toe kan leiden.

  • @Grumszy
    @Grumszy10 ай бұрын

    Great video. We must not have hate to any particular race of people. We must also learn to forgive for the human race to survive.

  • @AlexanderLittlebears

    @AlexanderLittlebears

    10 ай бұрын

    What if there is a small, smart, ethnocentric minority who wants to destroy your nation so that nobody would attack them for their refusal to assimilate, who wants rights for everybody only as a second choice where they can't momentarily reach their end goal to have more rights than the others? You shouldn't hate them?

  • @BGivka
    @BGivkaАй бұрын

    Can you recommend any other documentaries on the Netherlands during ww2? Thanks! I'm interested in learning more.

  • @Rick88888888

    @Rick88888888

    Ай бұрын

    You could try looking further on my channel. You should find at least a dozen. This is one of them: kzread.info/dash/bejne/oY58u9dsmMrepMo.html

  • @steveparkes8461
    @steveparkes846110 ай бұрын

    A well balanced documentary. It is easy for people to judge that sit in comfort today and perceive 'then' through 'now' eyes. A complex and turbulent world that was going through extreme changes, everywhere. As in France, it always makes me wonder how the ones that metered out 'justice' to collaborators after the war were not themselves hiding some guilt. How brave to shave a woman's head because she dared to fall in love with 'the enemy'.

  • @raymondsommerfeldt2817
    @raymondsommerfeldt281710 ай бұрын

    Certainly a well researched and balanced documentary. Europe in general had no place for the Jews. Russia, Poland, Hungary, Romania for instance. Even th e United States and Britain .were unsympathetic bye and large. Unfortunately, intolerance still raises its' ugly head today. As was mentioned, there are always some who show their ignorance and "mouth off" without understanding the events behind the times, Unfortunately, Hitler was firmly entrenched in power with a very effective police state by the time everything was being exposed. Something I think the vast majority of German people never would have voted for, if they had have known what was ti transpire. The worst part is the Pope, sanctioned Hitler, never spoke out and never ex-communnicated him! Thanks again. Thoroughly worth while watching.

  • @ellebelle8515

    @ellebelle8515

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes, all of Europe and beyond had been harboring this antisemitism for centuries. Also significant, the sanctioning of so many Nazis by the Catholic Church. All helped Hitler until it was too late.

  • @maryholter2971

    @maryholter2971

    10 ай бұрын

    How could The Pope excommunicated a non practice Catholic in name only like Hitler?

  • @mirola73
    @mirola7311 ай бұрын

    Zeer interessante beelden uit een rottige tijd. Bedankt !

  • @pascalguerandel8181
    @pascalguerandel818110 ай бұрын

    Here in Sacramento CA.. l have been studying Dutch language on my own...Waardeer je film echt.

  • @prae7068

    @prae7068

    10 ай бұрын

    Good luck with that. Dutch is close to impossible to learn for foreigners. Met respect...