
I can’t deny the facts that the Dutch could have done more during World War II, especially concerning helping their fellow Jewish citizens. On the other hand, it is easy for me to judge because I was never in a situation where I had to choose between aiding a neighbour with a good chance of being harshly punished for it or “turning a blind eye.”
There were, however, times when the Dutch openly spoke out against their occupiers, and as an unintended consequence, at least I believe it was, it brought several Christian communities together.
Below is an English translation of a letter signed by the majority of all the Dutch churches, published as a collective protest against the treatment of the country’s Jews:
The undersigned Dutch Churches are already deeply shocked by the measures against the Jews in the Netherlands, which exclude them from participation in daily public life, and are horrified to learn of the new measures under which men, women, children, and entire families shall be deported to Reich territory and territories under Reich control. The suffering that this will inflict on tens of thousands, the knowledge that these measures are repugnant to the deepest moral consciousness of the Dutch people, and, above all, the violation inherent in these measures of the law and justice laid down by God, compel the Churches to address to you the most urgent plea not to implement these measures.
Our urgent petition to you is also motivated by the consideration that, for the Christian Jews, these measures would make it impossible for them to participate in the life of the Church.
The Dutch Reformed Church;
The Archbishop and Bishops of the Roman Catholic Church in the Netherlands;
The Calvinist Churches in the Netherlands;
The General Mennonite Sect;
The Remonstrant Brotherhood;
The Old Reformed Church in the Netherlands;
The Reformed Sect in the Netherlands;
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in the Netherlands;
The New Evangelist Lutheran Church in the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
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I am not sure when the letter was published, but it must have been late 1940 or early 1941. It is good to note that any form of protest could lead to the death penalty.

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Sources
Protest of the Dutch Churches, during World War II, quoted in The Yellow Star: The Persecution of the Jews in Europe, 1933-1945, by Gerhard Schoenberner, at page 132. Online, courtesy Google Books.
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