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Jan Brasser, an armed squad leader from Krommenie says: 
'It was a time of enormous tension and emotion. You never got any rest — real rest, I mean. Always on the go, always on your guard... The emotions that you had to deal with if your comrades were arrested [...]. You couldn't reflect on that very long. There just wasn't the time.' 'I didn't join in the liberation festivities. I was done in... completely worn out, mentally exhausted. I didn't want to go out in the street with all those singing and dancing people. I just couldn't bear it.'
Dina Davidson, a Jewish woman who returned from hiding:
'There was no one to meet us when we returned. We couldn't move back into our house until six months after the liberation. People shrugged their shoulders in response to our story. Then they would tell us of their own hardships: everything had been rationed, their bicycles stolen...'
Dik Nannes, returned from forced labour in Germany:
'I had wanted to go into hiding, but that cost money which I just didn't have. When I came back I was in rags. There was no kind of shelter. I had expected something from the Reformed church, of which I was a member, but they didn't do anything. You felt like a second-class citizen, also because of things they said to you on the street like "why didn't you go into hiding?" and “haven't they arrested you yet?"'
Interest in the war dwindled as the forties drew to a close and the ravaged Netherlands concentrated on reconstruction of the devastated country.
Several hundred thousand homes had been destroyed by wartime hostilities. Materials for reconstruction were in short supply. Destroyed bridges and the lack of transportation made it difficult to bring materials in. Severe shortages remained during those post-war years.
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