The Anne Frank House in Amsterdam, which is nearly 65 years old, is consistently one of the most visited museums in the Netherlands. Yet public-school teachers report an alarming rate of Holocaust denial among Dutch students.
Of 400 surveyed teachers, almost 10% overall and 25% of those with classes that had more than a quarter of immigrant students told the Dutch daily Nederlands Dagblad that they have encountered students who deny that the Holocaust took place.
The 10% of teachers who regularly teach about the subject only reported a rate of student Holocaust denial of 1%.
Many Holocaust memorials have been erected in the Netherlands, particularly in Amsterdam and The Hague.