The Stijkel Group (Dutch: Stijkelgroep) was a Dutch resistance group that fought the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands during the Second World War.
[1][2] In April 1941, forty-three men and four women of the Stijkel Group were betrayed and captured.
Thirty-two were executed in Berlin following a secret trial before a German military court.
Following the war, those who had been executed were re-interred in Westduin Cemetery in The Hague, and the present monument was erected.
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