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Memorial De Woeste Hoeve

In March 1945 117 men were shot near an Inn called "De Woeste Hoeve" close to Hoenderloo as a reprisal action after an erroneously attack on the highest Police- and SS-chef in the Netherlands, Hans Albin Rauter. The men were "Todeskandidaten", originating from several prisons in the country.

The 117 victims were initially buried on a nearby cemetery in Ugchelen, where nowadays still four victims are buried on the "Woeste Hoevelaantje".

At the place of the attack a simple monument appeared shortly after the liberation, a wooden cross with a wooden plate with the text `On 8-3-'45 117 countrymen were assassinated by the German oppressor, in a cruel manner.'

Only in 1992, the current Memorial was revealed, a wooden cross with a memorialplate made off glass with the names of 116 victims in alphabetical order, framed by metal (one of the victims remained unknown, the Polish pilot Czeslaw Oberdak is recently identified as victim). The cross and the plate are surrounded by a metal construction. In the path to the monument lies a memorialstone with a poem of the German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer.

Do you have more information about this location? Inform us!

Source

  • Text: Kees Jan Koster & René ten Dam
  • Photos: Arjan Vrieze

Related books

Perpetrating the Holocaust
The Field Men
Woeste Hoeve: 8 maart 1945
Rauter