Netherlands
NETHERLANDS - THE JEWISH COMMUNITY
Nederlandse Kring voor Joodse Genealogie (Netherlands Society for Jewish Genealogy)
Maurice Mol, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., P.O. Box 94703, 1090 GS Amsterdam, Netherland. E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.Website: http://www.nljewgen.org. Newsletter Misjpog.Contacts:
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.: Albert Bremer
Victor Brilleman, Scretary of the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
The Virtual Jewish History Tour- Netherlands by David Shyovitz.Dutch government allocates over $2.5 million for Jewish cemetery restorations [December 2002]
Dutch Genealogy Links: [December 2002]
See Netherlands link at http://www.worldjewishcongress.org/comm_west.html [October 2005]
Dutch Jewish History: [December 2002]
Jewish Historical Museum, Jonas Daniel Meijerplein 2-4, Tel. (020) 269-945
Jewish Community Information [October 2000]https://www.i24news.tv/en/news/international/europe/1573912186-dutch-government-allocates-over-2-5-million-for-jewish-cemetery-restoration
AKEVOTH (Traces)-Research of the family origins and heritage of Dutch Jewry (A.R.). Dutch Jewish genealogical information worldwide database. Amoetat Akevoth is an Israeli-based non-profit organization, run entirely by volunteers, maintaining an active branch in the Netherlands. Cenetery information in cooperation with the NIK-Organisation of Jewish communities in the Netherlands.[August 2009]
Beth Chaim Foundation: Netherlands Beth Chaim Foundation is in urgent need of funds to be able to work on the restoration of unique tombstones. The more than 223 Jewish cemeteries now are owned by a private organization that wishes to remain anonymous. All burial information on the cemeteries is available in the Joods Cultureel Centrum in Amsterdam and in Hilversum. According to a member of Beth Chaim, over the years, the municipalities in the Netherlands did nothing to maintain the cemeteries. Many of them are in a terrible condition. A small group of volunteers named themselves "Beth Chaim" [House of the Living]: The Workgroup Meppel" in Meppel gave guidance to more than 300 pupils and individuals in the summer of 1998 when they started the restoration of the Jewish cemetery in Meppel. In February 1999, the Beth Chaim Workgroup Meppel became Beth Chaim Foundation, working closely with a cemetery consultant responsible for all the Jewish cemeteries in the Netherlands. The Foundation cannot do anything without permission of the anonymous organization that owns the cemeteries. In March 2000, the Beth Chaim Foundation has restored two cemeteries and is working on more projects for the future. The Beth Chaim Foundation is an organization of Jewish people and people with a Jewish background with seven in the organization's management. Their goal is the restoration of Jewish cemeteries throughout The Netherlands by all kinds of people: students, Christians, and Jews. BCF emphasizes education of the youth of the Netherlands. Beth Chaim Foundation is a non-profit organization funded by donations and possibly by the council. Contact: Ron van Diejen, Secretary of the Beth Chaim Foundation in Meppel, The Netherlands for more information, e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. In 2002, J. Bader published "Verborgen in Brabantse bodem. Joodse begraafplaatsen in Noord-Brabant" (Hidden Under the Brabant Floor. Jewish Cemeteries in north-Brabant) (Tilburg, 2002; 240 p). With many photo's and illustrations and a CD-ROM on the hebrew texts on the graves for seventeen [sic] Jewish cemeteries in Brabant Province, Netherlands. Source: A. Vos, Netherlands, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . [January 2004]
[UPDATE] Dutch government allocates over $2.5 million for Jewish cemetery restorations [November 2019]