Himmler, Heinrich, 33, 157, 322
Hitler, Adolf: annexation of Austria, 39; attempted assassination of, 5; bankrolled by German industrialists, 19; on bombing of Rotterdam, 41; election of, 30–31, 36; G?ring, waning influence of, 263; head on van Hoeve’s Victoria! poster, 208; Hoffmann and, 261; Mein Kampf, 30; Seyss-Inquart appointed Reich Commissioner by, 33; SS and, 322; US Office of Strategic Services report on strategy of, 13
Hitler Youth, 264
Hitler’s Bounty Hunters (van Liempt), 88, 108
Hoffmann, Heinrich, 261
Holl?nder, Julius, 40, 46
Holl?nder, Rosa, 40, 46, 53
Holl?nder, Walter, 40, 46
Holocaust. See betrayal of Anne Frank; hiders in Prinsengracht 263; specific camps Holocaust deniers, 94, 190–91, 200
homosexuality, 155, 157–58, 162
Hoogensteijn, Cornelia Wilhelmina Theresia “Thea,” 252–54
Hoste, Christine, 21, 138, 146–47, 184–85
Household Inventory Agency (Abteilung Hausraterfassung), 88, 315
Houthuijs, Wim, 157, 160, 272
Huf, Jules, 68, 196–97, 206
Hulsman, Bertus, 173, 176–77, 344n26
Hunger Winter, 86
illegal goods/documents, discovery of hiders by chance while looking for, 99, 183–85
Indonesia, 21
International Criminal Court, 21–22, 133
International Tracing Service (ITS; now Arolsen Archives), 216–17, 225
interviews with potential witnesses, 101. See also specific persons by name Iron Guard (De IJzeren Garde), 124, 318
IV B4. See Referat IV B4
J. & E. Henggeler, Zurich, Switzerland, 233–34
Jansen, Josephus (son of Job), 117
Jansen, Josephus Marinue “Job”: accusing wife and Otto Frank of affair, 114; as amoral opportunist, 128; as collaborator and NSB member, 113–15, 118, 119; Otto Frank’s postwar letter denouncing, 116, 118, 279, 338n2; letter denouncing Otto Frank, 115–16, 119, 121; sons, association with betrayal of, 116–17; as suspect, 113–20
Jansen, Martinus (son of Job), 113
Jansen-Bremer, Jetje (wife of Job), 113–14, 116, 117, 118
Japin, Arend, 252
Jehovah’s Witnesses, 201
“Jew-hunting unit.” See Referat IV B4
Jewish Coordination Commission (Joodse Co?rdinatie Commissie; JCC), 219, 222–23, 270, 318
Jewish Council (Joodse Raad/Judenraete; JR), 219–23; anonymous note and, 225–27, 245, 246; Contact Committee, Westerbork, 266–67, 277, 355n3; defined and described, 318–19; disbanding of, 267; emigration section, Otto applying to, 47; German use of, to control Jewish community, 44; Goudstikker art collection and, 263; granddaughter of van den Bergh on, 256, 257, 259; Het Joodsche Weekblad published by, 318; lists of addresses of people in hiding held by, 266–70, 276, 277; postwar condemnations of, 259, 267–68, 271, 280; postwar trials of board members, 267–68, 270; SD and, 225, 226, 230; Sperres system and, 45, 220–23; Spier and, 266–67; van den Bergh on, 219, 224, 227, 229–30; van den Bergh resigning from, 232
Jewish Honor Council and Courts (Joodse Ereraad), 270, 280, 318
Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center, Moscow, 109
Jewish property, theft of, 19, 30, 49, 75, 77, 88, 89, 149, 151–52, 232, 260–65, 267, 319, 325
Jewish Quarter, Amsterdam, xii, 43–45, 293
Jewish Social Work organization (Joods Maatschappelijk Werk), 246
Jews: Christianity, converted to, 201, 220; exchange Jews, 83, 220–21; German definition and ranking of, 221, 232, 233 (table); in hiding during WWII (See hiding; hiding in Prinsengracht 263); in mixed marriages (with Christians), 157, 220, 232; Palestine Jews, 39, 83, 221, 226. See also Dutch Jews Het Joodsche Weekblad, 44, 318
Jordaan district, Amsterdam, 129, 132, 137, 138, 272, 319
judenfrei, 149
Juliana (queen of the Netherlands), 287, 289
“Just go to your Jews!” remark, 176–77
Kaper, Abraham, 3–4, 68, 119, 152, 153, 165, 171, 186–89, 213, 235, 259, 276
Kaper, Abraham, Jr. (grandson), 187–89
Kardonne, Rick, 355n6
Keg (tea and coffee business), 132
Kempin, Otto, 150, 160–61
Kennedy, John F., assassination of, 196
Kindertransports, 34, 294, 324
“Kitty,” in Anne Frank diaries, 10, 11
Kizio, Esther (granddaughter of Arnold van den Bergh; pseudonym), 255–59, 261
Kleiman, Corrie (daughter), 60, 170
Kleiman, Johanna (wife), 54–55, 60, 71, 170
Kleiman, Johannes: at Amersfoort labor camp, 72; anonymous note and, 247–48, 250, 279, 281; Austrian origins of, 8, 38, 72; Cauvern and, 249; death of, 202, 288; first investigation of raid (1947–1948) and, 164–67, 279; food, gathering, 60, 146; on Anne Frank, 59–60; on Lammert Hartog, 206; helping Franks and others hide in Prinsengracht 263, 37, 51, 52, 55, 59–60; next-door neighbor of, 170; Opekta, postwar operation of, 286; postwar life, 288; raid on Prinsengracht 263 and, 67–69, 71–72, 206; Silberbauer and, 195; survival of war by, 81; suspicions about hiding of Jews, knowledge of, 66; Willem van Maaren, hiring of, 64