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'Refugees' by Martin Monnickendam, 1936
Collection Jewish Historical Museum, Amsterdam

Historical context

  • Foreign Office
  • Diplomacy and Persecution

Background

  • The persecution of Jews
  • The life of German Jews
  • The migration of German Jews
  • Dutch refugee policy
  • The reception of German Jews

Dossiers

  • The AA and the Final Solution
  • The Évian Conference
  • Debate on the refugee issue
  • German intellectuals in exile
  • The ‘Feldscher Action’
  • Refugees as returnees
  • The Kristallnacht
  • Webs of informants
  • Protests in the Netherlands
  • Austrian jews after the Anschluss
  • Sweden as Schutzmacht
Carel M.J.F. Goseling

Hebreeuwse vertaling

C.M.J.F. Goseling (1891-1941) was a barrister and Justice Minster in Colijn Cabinet IV (1937-1939). He pursued an extremely restrained immigration policy even after the Anschluss and the Kristallnacht. During his time in office, refugee camps were set up and the border was ‘closed’ to refugees. In May 1938 Goseling wrote in a circular that the refugees were undesirable elements. He belonged to the Roman-Catholic State Party.

 

See:

 

www.inghist.nl/Onderzoek/Projecten/BWN/lemmata/bwn1/goseling

www.parlement.com/9291000/biof/00476

 

German Organisations

  • Abteilung D
  • NSDAP Foreign Branch
  • The German Legation
  • Gestapo
  • Territory II
  • Reich Security Main Office
  • Reich Commission
  • Schutzstaffel (SS)
  • Security service
  • Security police

Key figures

  • Johan W. Albarda
  • Otto Bene
  • Count von Zech-Burkersroda
  • Hendrikus Colijn
  • Adolf Eichmann
  • Carel M.J.F. Goseling
  • Franz Rademacher
  • Josef R.H. van Schaik
  • Eberhard von Thadden
  • Horst Wagner