The Japan Times - Nazi past shakes Dutch royals as popularity wanes

EUR -
AED 4.351869
AFN 77.023985
ALL 96.63237
AMD 452.823666
ANG 2.121224
AOA 1086.634242
ARS 1714.678669
AUD 1.704125
AWG 2.135942
AZN 2.016552
BAM 1.955039
BBD 2.405763
BDT 145.96316
BGN 1.990034
BHD 0.448925
BIF 3538.721986
BMD 1.184989
BND 1.512711
BOB 8.253786
BRL 6.228891
BSD 1.194435
BTN 109.687287
BWP 15.628914
BYN 3.402075
BYR 23225.775647
BZD 2.402265
CAD 1.612331
CDF 2683.999101
CHF 0.915765
CLF 0.026002
CLP 1026.709185
CNY 8.237744
CNH 8.246608
COP 4348.606608
CRC 591.469676
CUC 1.184989
CUP 31.402197
CVE 110.222078
CZK 24.343237
DJF 212.697174
DKK 7.467211
DOP 75.200716
DZD 154.410871
EGP 55.902865
ERN 17.774828
ETB 185.552144
FJD 2.612485
FKP 0.865555
GBP 0.865271
GEL 3.193574
GGP 0.865555
GHS 13.084905
GIP 0.865555
GMD 86.504497
GNF 10480.918624
GTQ 9.161432
GYD 249.892689
HKD 9.256278
HNL 31.526723
HRK 7.534037
HTG 156.319128
HUF 380.877851
IDR 19876.405501
ILS 3.662095
IMP 0.865555
INR 108.656932
IQD 1564.790655
IRR 49917.642999
ISK 144.93564
JEP 0.865555
JMD 187.177111
JOD 0.840116
JPY 183.471566
KES 154.209949
KGS 103.627087
KHR 4803.129613
KMF 491.769793
KPW 1066.4897
KRW 1719.182195
KWD 0.363696
KYD 0.995412
KZT 600.736067
LAK 25704.990216
LBP 106962.747619
LKR 369.386157
LRD 215.296161
LSL 18.965415
LTL 3.498963
LVL 0.716788
LYD 7.495081
MAD 10.834781
MDL 20.090177
MGA 5337.921359
MKD 61.616006
MMK 2488.865218
MNT 4226.121106
MOP 9.60526
MRU 47.658441
MUR 53.834423
MVR 18.319442
MWK 2071.193456
MXN 20.620577
MYR 4.671242
MZN 75.555046
NAD 18.965415
NGN 1642.962557
NIO 43.952884
NOK 11.418882
NPR 175.499659
NZD 1.97076
OMR 0.457862
PAB 1.194435
PEN 3.993545
PGK 5.113009
PHP 69.813597
PKR 334.176468
PLN 4.213363
PYG 8000.884374
QAR 4.354904
RON 5.095326
RSD 117.354301
RUB 90.534923
RWF 1742.721367
SAR 4.44571
SBD 9.54107
SCR 17.197303
SDG 712.773565
SEK 10.560067
SGD 1.50588
SHP 0.889048
SLE 28.824866
SLL 24848.616602
SOS 682.634175
SRD 45.089405
STD 24526.870573
STN 24.490463
SVC 10.45093
SYP 13105.469656
SZL 18.959617
THB 37.213986
TJS 11.150158
TMT 4.14746
TND 3.431864
TOP 2.853168
TRY 51.538109
TTD 8.109842
TWD 37.443255
TZS 3075.70229
UAH 51.194065
UGX 4270.337087
USD 1.184989
UYU 46.35195
UZS 14602.313711
VES 409.936611
VND 30738.603075
VUV 140.766514
WST 3.212244
XAF 655.701663
XAG 0.013999
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.202491
XCG 2.152662
XDR 0.815482
XOF 655.701663
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.412399
ZAR 19.100534
ZMK 10666.318069
ZMW 23.440872
ZWL 381.565831
  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    0.1800

    92.77

    +0.19%

  • RIO

    -4.1000

    91.03

    -4.5%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    60.68

    +0.76%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16

    -2.69%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.76

    +0.21%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    35.8

    -1.03%

  • BP

    -0.1600

    37.88

    -0.42%

  • GSK

    0.9400

    51.6

    +1.82%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.05

    -0.17%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    25.86

    +1.43%

  • BCC

    0.5100

    80.81

    +0.63%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    85.27

    +0.23%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.65

    -0.41%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.08

    +1.07%

Nazi past shakes Dutch royals as popularity wanes
Nazi past shakes Dutch royals as popularity wanes / Photo: Koen van Weel - ANP/AFP

Nazi past shakes Dutch royals as popularity wanes

Revelations that the Dutch king's grandfather was a card-carrying member of Adolf Hitler's Nazi party have stunned the Netherlands and its royal family, whose popularity was already in free-fall.

Text size:

Prince Bernhard, husband of the former queen Juliana, had insisted until his death in 2004 that he had never signed up to the Nazi party.

"I can swear with my hand on the Bible: I have never been a Nazi," Bernhard told daily De Volkskrant in an interview just before his death aged 93.

He added he had "never paid a subscription fee and never had a membership card".

But the card, dated 1933 and confirmed to AFP to be genuine by the royal household, shattered these claims.

Historian Flip Maarschalkerweerd, former head of the royal archives, unearthed the membership card in the prince's personal files stored at his sumptuous Soestdijk Palace residence.

Born in 1911 in Jena, Bernhard von Biesterfeld was living in Berlin at the time he signed up to the Nazi party.

He married crown princess Juliana in 1937 after meeting her at the Berlin Olympic Games a year earlier and introduced her to the good life with fast cars, luxury holidays and designer clothes.

During the war, he headed the Dutch resistance from London, where the government and his mother-in-law, Queen Wilhelmina, resided in exile.

After Juliana became queen in 1948, he was made inspector general of the armed forces and conducted official and unofficial economic missions for the government.

Internationally, he was best known as founder of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in 1961. He was its president until 1977.

Two weeks after his death came revelations that he had fathered two illegitimate daughters and had a string of affairs, in the bombshell interview in De Volkskrant, where his part in a 1970s corruption scandal also came to light.

"I was surprised that Prince Bernhard kept the document and that it is still in the archives of the royal family," Rick Evers, a Dutch royal specialist, told AFP.

He said that the emergence of the card would not have happened without the consent of the current King Willem-Alexander.

"These are private archives, not national ones. He decides what to do with them."

The country's main Jewish group, CIDI, and a parliamentary party have demanded an enquiry into Bernhard's Nazi past but Prime Minister Mark Rutte has so far rejected the appeals.

The CIDI said the revelations "add another black page to a painful part of the recent history of the Netherlands".

For his part, Willem-Alexander told reporters: "I imagine that the news has a major impact and that it prompts a lot of emotion, especially in the Jewish community."

- 'Too little openness' -

For Jolijn Oliemans, a 41-year-old personal trainer passing by the splendid Noordeinde Palace, where Willem-Alexander has his office, the news came as a sort of betrayal.

"It is also that he has always denied it, which is difficult for many people and that there has been too little openness about it," she told AFP.

There were some calls on Dutch social media to abolish the royal family in the wake of the revelations and polls show their popularity is waning.

According to a September Ipsos survey, only 38 percent of the Dutch said they still had "real confidence" in the king.

This was down from nearly 80 percent in 2020.

More than a quarter of those surveyed called for the Netherlands to become a republic.

Several dozen protesters booed the royal family during the traditional Prince's Day celebrations in The Hague last month.

The family is still recovering from gaffes during Covid.

In October 2020, the king and queen flew to Greece for a holiday, as the country declared a partial Covid lockdown.

The couple returned a day later, following an outcry in the Netherlands after news of the trip became public.

Two months earlier, the king faced accusations that he was out of touch with the Covid struggles of the ordinary Dutch, when he was pictured on a Greek island without a facemask and not keeping social distancing.

T.Ikeda--JT