The Diary Keepers : World War II in the Netherlands, as Written by the People Who Lived Through It

A riveting look at the story of World War II and the Holocaust through the diaries of Dutch citizens, firsthand accounts of ordinary people living through extraordinary times

Based on select writings from a collection of more than two thousand Dutch diaries written during World War II in order to record this unparalleled time, and maintained by devoted archivists, The Diary Keepers illuminates a part of history we haven’t seen in quite this way before, from the stories of a Nazi sympathizing police officer to a Jewish journalist who documented daily activities at a transport camp.

Journalist Nina Siegal, who grew up in a family that had survived the Holocaust in Europe, had always wondered about the experience of regular people during World War II. She had heard stories of the war as a child and Anne Frank’s diary, but the tales were either crafted as moral lessons — to never waste food, to be grateful for all you receive, to hide your silver — or told with a punch line. The details of the past went untold in an effort to make it easier assimilate into American life.

When Siegal moved to Amsterdam as an adult, those questions came up again, as did another horrifying one: Why did seventy five percent of the Dutch Jewish community perish in the war, while in other Western European countries the proportions were significantly lower? How did this square with the narratives of Dutch resistance she had heard so much about and in what way did it relate to the famed tolerance people in the Netherlands were always talking about? Perhaps more importantly, how could she raise a Jewish child in this country without knowing these answers?

Searching and singular, The Diary Keepers mines the diaries of ordinary citizens to understand the nature of resistance, the workings of memory, and the ways we reflect on, commemorate, and re-envision the past.

Supplemental enhancement PDF accompanies the audiobook.

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4.0

2 recensioner

Grace

2025-10-10

A different experience of the Shoah, the author’s choice to use the war diaries that were gathered immediately after the victory in 1945 in Holland, gives a broad and robust recollection of WW2 written by people of all walks of lives, The perspective given of various inhabitants while World War II was going on comes from both the persecuted, i.e. all Jewry, Roma, Sinti, the undesireble, as well as anyone opposing the Nazi regime, as well as from those in Holland who before the war hadn’t expressed any opinion on whether they stood for anti-Semitism or not, but who clearly claimed their antisemitic stance shortly after the Nazi Germany’s takeover of Holland. This book gives a lot and even though I found a few parts a bit over explained on the whole I feel I got a very valuable insight into the everyday life + how “we cannot understand history in hindsight/understand it from the future and back, that’s not realistic all people who lived through great historical events could not predict the future vis-à-vis what they “should have known” or “could have known” whilst they’re living through an extraordinary period in our history.” Respectfully, Grace

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