Registry Office set on fire
A forged identity card offered little protection if the information did not coincide with that in the registry office. On the evening of March 27th, 1943, a resistance group set fire to the Amsterdam Registry Office (opposite the present Museum of Dutch Resistance). The action caused quite a stir.
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| Almost all those involved in the attack on the Amsterdam registry office were betrayed, arrested and sentenced to death. |
National Organisation of Armed Squads
In August 1943, the National Organisation for Aid to Those in Hiding (LO) began setting up a network of Landelijke Knokploegen [LKP, National Organisation of Armed Squads]. The armed squads set registry offices on fire and carried out armed raids in which they seize ration coupons and blank identity cards.
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| Map for a raid on the Weesp ration office. |
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| 'Envelope with contents' for the staff at a ration office who had cooperated in a raid. It was common for Dutch ration office officials to turn a blind eye to the activities of raiders. |
Pram used for illegal transports. 
The compartment in the base was intended for diapers. A woman with a pram was not particularly suspect and fit in with the National Socialist ideal of the woman as an innocent mother. Couriers cleverly played on those sentiments.
Infiltrators
With the help of Dutch infiltrators, the Germans tried to round up the resistance organisations. Sometimes arrested resistance fighters were forced to act as infiltrators. Exposed traitors were shot by the resistance. Despite moral objections, most resistance fighters regarded the liquidation of traitors as a bitter necessity.
Killing traitors is ethically permissible
Het Parool (illegal press) stated on October 15th ****, that ‘the bitter battle for life and death that we are fighting (…) is at times troubling the conscience of many. How far can we, should we go? The illegal publication concluded that ‘killing traitors is ethically permissible.’ ‘Total war requires total resistance.’
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Couple in love
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The German police started looking for a 'red haired girl', so Hannie dyed her hair black. To no avail. In 1945 - shortly before the liberation - she was arrested and taken to the dunes to be executed.