Abraham Asscher (19 September 1880 – 2 May 1950) was a
Dutch Jewish
The history of the Jews in the Netherlands began largely in the 16th century when they began to settle in Amsterdam and other cities. It has continued to the present. During the occupation of the Netherlands by Nazi Germany in May 1940, the J ...
businessman from Amsterdam, a politician, and a leader of his community who attained notoriety for his role during the
German occupation of the Netherlands
Despite Dutch neutrality, Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands on 10 May 1940 as part of Fall Gelb (Case Yellow). On 15 May 1940, one day after the bombing of Rotterdam, the Dutch forces surrendered. The Dutch government and the royal family re ...
(1940–1945).
Early career
Asscher's grandfather founded the Asscher Diamond Company (now the
Royal Asscher Diamond Company
The Royal Asscher Diamond Company ( nl, Koninklijke Asscher Diamant Maatschappij) was founded in 1854 by the Asscher family of gemcutters. The company is responsible for cutting some of the most famous diamonds in the world including two of the ...
) in 1854, but it was Abraham and his brother Joseph who built its international fame. In 1907 the brothers opened a new factory at 127 Tolstraat in Amsterdam and soon they received a request from King
Edward VII
Edward VII (Albert Edward; 9 November 1841 – 6 May 1910) was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Emperor of India, from 22 January 1901 until his death in 1910.
The second child and eldest son of Queen Victoria and ...
of the United Kingdom to cleave the legendary
Cullinan Diamond
The Cullinan Diamond is the largest gem-quality rough diamond ever found,Scarratt and Shor, p. 120. weighing (1 lb 5.92 oz), discovered at the Premier No.2 mine in Cullinan, South Africa, on 26 January 1905. It was named after Thomas Cull ...
, the largest rough gem-quality diamond ever found.
Public service
Asscher translated his growing success in business into political and community involvement. In 1917, he took up a seat on the Provincial Council of North Holland for the ''
Liberale Staatspartij
The Liberal State Party, "the Freedom League" ( nl, Liberale Staatspartij "de Vrijheidsbond", LSP), was a conservative liberal political party in the Netherlands from 1921 to 1948. It is historically linked to the People's Party for Freedom and ...
'' (Liberal State Party). And in the 1930s, he became a leader and spokesman of the Dutch Jewish community. He served as the President of the nation's central Jewish organization, the ''Nederlandsch-Israëlitsch Kerkgenootschap'' (Dutch Jewish Congregation).
Therefore, when in 1933 Jewish refugees began to flee in numbers to the Netherlands from the Nazi regime in Germany, it was Asscher, along with Professor
David Cohen, who established (with government cooperation) the ' (Committee for Special Jewish Affairs - CBJB). An offshoot of the CBJB, the ''Comité voor Joodsche Vluchtelingen'' (
Committee for Jewish Refugees - CJV), was formed to provide direct service to the refugees. The CJV provided advice and, as needed, financial support to the refugees, and worked to facilitate the emigration of refugees away from continental Europe.
David Cohen was the chair of the CJV for most of its eight years of existence. Both of these committees were dissolved by Germany in 1941, and their responsibilities transferred to a Jewish Council.
The Jewish Council
It was in this context (see
Netherlands in World War II
Despite Dutch neutrality, Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands on 10 May 1940 as part of Fall Gelb (Case Yellow). On 15 May 1940, one day after the bombing of Rotterdam, the Dutch forces surrendered. The Dutch government and the royal family r ...
) that the Nazi occupiers later, on 12 February 1941, ordered Asscher and Cohen to head up a new (, or , of Amsterdam); the only example of a
Jewish Council
A ''Judenrat'' (, "Jewish council") was a World War II administrative agency imposed by Nazi Germany on Jewish communities across occupied Europe, principally within the Nazi ghettos. The Germans required Jews to form a ''Judenrat'' in every com ...
in the German occupations of Western Europe. The first meeting was held at the
Asscher Brothers headquarters in . The Jewish Council had to mediate the occupying government's orders to the Dutch
Jewish community of Amsterdam Amsterdam has historically been the center of the Dutch Jewish community, and has had a continuing Jewish community for the last 370 years. and, beginning in July 1942, to help organize the selection of Jewish deportees from the Netherlands to the work camps.
In September 1943, most of the remaining staff of the Jewish Council, including Asscher were deported. Asscher, like most deported Dutch Jews, initially went to the
Westerbork transit camp
Camp Westerbork ( nl, Kamp Westerbork, german: Durchgangslager Westerbork, Drents: ''Börker Kamp; Kamp Westerbörk'' ), also known as Westerbork transit camp, was a Nazi transit camp in the province of Drenthe in the Northeastern Netherlands, d ...
in the
Drenthe province in the east of the country. From there, the Nazis transported him to the
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp
Bergen-Belsen , or Belsen, was a Nazi concentration camp in what is today Lower Saxony in northern Germany, southwest of the town of Bergen near Celle. Originally established as a prisoner of war camp, in 1943, parts of it became a concentra ...
.
Postwar
Asscher survived his imprisonment at Bergen-Belsen and returned to Amsterdam after the conclusion of the war. Aside from historian
David Cohen, who also survived
Theresienstadt
Theresienstadt Ghetto was established by the SS during World War II in the fortress town of Terezín, in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia ( German-occupied Czechoslovakia). Theresienstadt served as a waystation to the extermination ca ...
concentration camp, and
Arnold van den Bergh
Arnold van den Bergh (20 January 1886 ‒ 28 October 1950) was a Dutch legal notary based in Amsterdam. He was a well-known and high-profile lawyer, one of six Jewish notaries operating in Amsterdam. Van den Bergh contributed to the field of s ...
, all other members of the Jewish Council perished, including the Chief Rabbi of Amsterdam . The Dutch government instituted investigations against Asscher and his colleague David Cohen into charges of collaboration. A ''Joodsche Eereraad'' (Jewish Council of Honor or Community Tribunal) was also established to investigate wartime collaboration charges on behalf of the Jewish community. It was particularly concerned with activity after 15 August 1942, a point from which, according to the accusers' post-war perspective, it was considered obvious that the ''Joodse Raad'' was assisting in a mass-murder of Dutch Jews in German-occupied Poland's Nazi extermination camps. However, what was obvious to either Jews or non-Jews in the Netherlands at the time is a matter of considerable historical controversy. The Nazi occupiers went to great lengths to conceal the fate of deported Jews from the Dutch population, including Dutch Jews and the Joodse Raad.
In 1947 the Council of Honor ruled to exclude Asscher and Cohen from ever holding public office in the Dutch Jewish Community. By then, Asscher—deeply wounded by what he saw as unjust charges leveled against him—had left the Community. When Asscher died in 1950 in accordance with his wishes he was not buried in a Jewish cemetery, but instead at the
Zorgvlied cemetery. However, in the same year, due to constant protests and appeals, the Jewish community tribunal after reconsidering the charges reversed and annulled its decree to exclude both Asscher and Cohen from official posts in the Jewish community, exonerating them completely. The Dutch government, taking its cue from the Jewish community, dropped all charges of its own the year following. Abraham Asscher has been officially exonerated of all charges, even if it came too late for him to know about it.
Legacy
The actions of Asscher and the ''Joodse Raad'' during the German occupation were and are a controversial topic. Hans Knoop, in his history of the ''Joodse Raad'', came to this conclusion:
“They issued deportation notices and urged the Jews in ' to obey these summons to the letter…Cohen declared after the war that ‘thanks to our efforts no Jew suffered from hunger in occupied Holland.’ That is the case. But thanks to Asscher and Cohen the deportation of the Jews in the Netherlands achieved a greater measure of perfection and efficiency than anywhere else in occupied Europe.”
Of course, such accusations benefit from a hindsight that the leaders of the Jewish Council in The Netherlands did not have.
Jacob Presser’s groundbreaking history of the Holocaust in the Netherlands, (lit. ''Destruction''; published in English as ''The Destruction of Dutch Jews'', or ''Ashes in the Wind: The Destruction of Dutch Jews''), also criticized Asscher and Cohen, while balancing this with a defense of their good intentions and courageous attempts within the realities of their own perceived situation, to lessen Nazi measures. Presser stated firmly that: "No one has accused the two Presidents and the " of being collaborators in the strict sense of being "corrupt and immoral willing tools" of the Nazis, much less as partisans for them, as were the Dutch Nazis, Quislings, Petains and Francos, but the accusations after the war rather were about the degree to which they as victims had naively or mistakenly, despite their best efforts to preserve as much as they could, conceded too much to Nazi pressures to collect together and help to transport the Jewish community to unknown destinations in "the East." Presser, acknowledging that they sought to preserve as many as possible of the Jewish community by haggling numbers deported down as far as possible, even adds,"The played for time. Was that wrong? ... Even the most unselfish people would surely have hesitated to shelter and hide Jews if they had known that their self-sacrifice would drag out over so many long years. And it has been said that had the war in fact ended in 1942 the Jewish community would have built a monument to Asscher and Cohen, as the brave and resourceful leaders by whose hands Dutch Jewry was saved."
Leni Yahil
Leni Yahil (1912–2007), née Leni Westphal, was a German-born Israeli historian, specializing in the Holocaust and Danish Jewry.
Early life
Leni was born in Düsseldorf, Germany, in 1912, and was raised in Potsdam, Germany. She was a sixth-ge ...
, in her ''The Holocaust: The Fate of European Jewry'', writes sympathetically of them: "While Visser's opposition to cooperation
f any kind whatsoeverwith the Germans bespoke a political orientation," (he had led a rival Jewish "Coordination Committee" that the Nazis had disbanded, which had urged that the Jewish community resist any cooperation with the Nazis and only address itself to the Dutch government, which, according to Yahil "ignored the fact that the heads of the Dutch administration were now carrying out orders issued by the Germans"), "Asscher and especially
Cohen invoked the humanitarian principle and believed it was necessary to negotiate with the Germans in order to mitigate the suffering of the Jews through intercession on their behalf. Thus, they essentially held to the approach that had been employed prior to the war to obtain aid for the refugees, except that now they were tending to the Jewish community as a whole."
In 1980, the company that Asscher and his brother had brought to international fame and prominence was awarded the Royal title by Queen Juliana of the Netherlands; it is now known as the
Royal Asscher Diamond Company
The Royal Asscher Diamond Company ( nl, Koninklijke Asscher Diamant Maatschappij) was founded in 1854 by the Asscher family of gemcutters. The company is responsible for cutting some of the most famous diamonds in the world including two of the ...
(. Abraham's grandson, , is the current President of the company.
His great-grandson
Lodewijk Asscher
Lodewijk Frans Asscher (; born 27 September 1974) is a Dutch politician and jurist who served as Leader of the Labour Party (PvdA) from 2016 to 2021 and parliamentary leader in the House of Representatives from 2017 to 2021.
Asscher worked as ...
was the
Dutch Minister of Social Affairs and Employment until 2017.
References
Further reading
*
* Presser, J., & Adler, H. G. (1965)
Ondergang: De vervolging en verdelging van het Nederlandse Jodendom, 1940-1945 (English title: ''Ashes in the Wind: The Destruction of Dutch Jewry''. ). 's-Gravenhage: Staatsuitgeverij.
External links
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Asscher, Abraham
1880 births
1950 deaths
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp survivors
Dutch Jews
Dutch corporate directors
Jewish Dutch politicians
Liberal State Party politicians
Members of the Provincial Council of North Holland
Businesspeople from Amsterdam
20th-century Dutch businesspeople
Jewish Council of Amsterdam