Cornelis van Geelkerken
Template:Short description Template:Dutch name capitalization Template:Family name hatnote Template:Infobox officeholder
Cornelis "Kees" van Geelkerken (Template:IPA;Template:Efn 19 March 1901 – 29 March 1976) was a Dutch fascist political leader and Nazi collaborator.
Van Geelkerken was born in 1901 to a Dutch family in Molenbeek-Saint-Jean, Belgium, and grew up in Utrecht. He gravitated toward fascism in the 1920s while working as a municipal employee in Zeist and Utrecht. Van Geelkerken co-founded the far-right National Socialist Movement in the Netherlands (NSB) with Anton Mussert in 1931. He was made the leader of the Nationale Jeugdstorm, the party's youth corps.
In 1943, during the German occupation of the Netherlands, Van Geelkerken was appointed Inspector-General of the Nederlandse Landwacht, a collaborationist paramilitary created by the Germans to combat the Dutch resistance. He was expelled from the NSB in early 1945 after a falling out with Mussert. After the war, he was tried in the Bijzonder Gerechtshof ("Special Court of Justice") and sentenced to life imprisonment. Geelkerken was released from prison in 1959 and died in 1976 in Ede.
See also
Works
- Voor Volk en Vaderland, Utrecht, 1943
Notes
References
- Nazi Rule and Dutch Collaboration: The Netherlands under German Occupation, 1940-45 by Gerhard Hirschfeld (Template:ISBN)
- Dutch Under German Occupation: 1940-1945 by Werner Warmbrunn (Template:ISBN)
- The Patriotic Traitors: A History of Collaboration in German-Occupied Europe, 1940-45 by David Littlejohn (Template:ISBN)
- Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890 edited by Philip Rees, 1991, (Template:ISBN)