Het Parool
![1945 issue of Het Parool][float-right]Het Parool is a daily newspaper based in Amsterdam, Netherlands, founded on 10 February 1941 as an underground resistance publication during the German occupation of the country in World War II.[1]
The paper, whose name translates to "The Password" in English, emerged from social democratic circles and quickly became one of the most widely distributed illegal newspapers, challenging Nazi propaganda, reporting on resistance actions, and bolstering public morale amid occupation hardships.[2][3]
After liberation in 1945, Het Parool transitioned to a legal daily, maintaining its commitment to independent journalism under the motto Vrij, Onverveerd ("Free, Unflinching"), with a primary focus on Amsterdam news, cultural commentary, and investigative reporting.[4]
Its WWII origins as a key organ of the Dutch resistance underscore its historical significance, though postwar it has evolved into a regional powerhouse known for innovative design and coverage of local issues, while navigating ownership changes and the challenges of print media decline.[1][5]
Origins and Early History
World War II Resistance Period
Het Parool emerged as a clandestine resistance newspaper amid the German occupation of the Netherlands following the capitulation on May 15, 1940. A precursor newsletter, Nieuwsbrief van Pieter 't Hoen, was launched on July 25, 1940, by journalist Frans Goedhart to counter Nazi propaganda and rally opposition. This evolved into the newspaper proper, with the inaugural issue of Het Parool appearing on February 10, 1941, printed secretly in Amsterdam and distributed underground.[6] Under Goedhart's leadership as founder and publisher, the paper involved key figures including Koos Vorrink, Wim van Norden, and others from social democratic and resistance circles. Production began with duplication methods before shifting to printing in August 1941, enabling broader dissemination via a nationwide network tied to groups like the Workers' Youth Centre. By 1943, circulation reached a minimum of 25,000 copies per issue, making it one of the largest illegal publications alongside Trouw and Vrij Nederland.[6][7] The content emphasized incitement to active resistance, exposure of occupation abuses, uncensored war updates, and critiques of the prewar system, while advocating postwar democratic renewal and social justice. Issues maintained morale by countering German narratives and fostering unity against collaborationist forces. A Hague edition operated under the title Vrijheid.[6][3] Publication persisted despite intense risks, with major arrests in autumn 1941 and from December 1943 to March 1944 disrupting operations. The first Parool trial in December 1942 yielded 17 death sentences, 13 of which were carried out by firing squad on February 5, 1943, targeting printers, distributors, and editors. A second trial in July 1944 prosecuted 23 individuals, yet the paper resumed output, sustaining resistance efforts until Allied liberation in May 1945.[6]Immediate Post-War Transition
Following the Allied liberation of Amsterdam on 5 May 1945, Het Parool rapidly transitioned from a clandestine resistance organ to a legal daily newspaper, capitalizing on its wartime prestige to establish itself as a prominent voice in the Dutch press. Although the first openly printed edition had appeared on 25 September 1944 in Maastricht—the southern Netherlands' initial liberated city—the full resumption in Amsterdam occurred within days of the capital's freedom, with editions documented as early as 7 May 1945 reporting on immediate post-occupation events such as the Dam Square shooting. This swift pivot was facilitated by pre-war preparations dating to 1943, when resistance leaders anticipated a post-liberation role and structured the paper for independent operation unbound by political parties.[8][9][10] Founder Frans Goedhart, who had endured imprisonment and escape during the occupation, reassumed editorial leadership, steering the publication toward advocacy for democratic renewal, anti-fascist vigilance, and opposition to communism—principles rooted in its underground origins. Circulation surged due to public trust earned through wartime risks, with the paper distributing up to 100,000 copies daily by late 1945 amid paper shortages and infrastructural disarray. Editor Wim van Norden, a key resistance figure, had devised sustainability plans emphasizing reader subscriptions and a dedicated foundation for financial autonomy, enabling Het Parool to avoid reliance on government subsidies or partisan affiliations.[11][12] The transition was not without hurdles, including purges of collaborationist elements in media and debates over press licensing under the provisional government, yet Het Parool's resistance credentials granted it preferential access to printing resources and exemptions from stringent rationing. By emphasizing factual war reporting and calls for national reconstruction, it positioned itself as a bulwark against renewed authoritarianism, though early editions reflected the era's raw focus on reprisals and accountability for occupation-era crimes. This phase solidified its identity as a socially progressive yet independently minded outlet, distinct from established pre-war dailies.[9][13]Organizational Evolution
Post-War Independence and Challenges
Following the liberation of the Netherlands in May 1945, Het Parool rapidly transitioned from an underground resistance publication to a legal daily newspaper, resuming open operations under the editorial leadership of figures like acting chief editor Frans Goedhart.[12] The paper's first post-war issues emphasized continuity with its wartime mission of combating totalitarianism and promoting societal renewal, aligning with the statutes of the Stichting Het Parool, established in late 1944 by resistance leaders to own and publish the newspaper independently after the war.[14] This foundation structure was designed to shield Het Parool from domination by political parties or commercial entities, positioning it as the only major Dutch daily without pre-war antecedents and rooted instead in the resistance movement.[15] The stichting's ownership ensured editorial autonomy, with the paper initially reflecting social-democratic ideals through close but non-binding ties to the nascent Partij van de Arbeid (PvdA), formed in 1946 amid the "doorbraak" movement for broad democratic renewal.[12] By the early 1950s, Het Parool had restructured into a naamloze vennootschap (limited company), yet the stichting retained sole shareholding to preserve control and prevent external influence.[14] This model allowed bold stances, such as Goedhart's 1952 critique of the Drees cabinet over Queen Juliana's involvement in the Greet Hofmans affair, demonstrating the paper's willingness to challenge government positions despite its progressive leanings.[15] Post-war challenges were multifaceted, including severe material shortages—such as rationed newsprint and printing supplies amid economic reconstruction—that hampered production and distribution in the immediate aftermath.[2] Rebuilding a depleted staff posed another hurdle, as many resistance-era contributors had been arrested, executed, or imprisoned by the Nazis, requiring recruitment from surviving networks while maintaining the paper's anti-authoritarian ethos.[16] Financial strains from low initial circulation and competition with entrenched conservative dailies further tested viability, though the stichting's oversight mitigated risks of partisan capture. Politically, affiliations with the PvdA occasionally constrained full independence, as seen in restrained coverage of sensitive intra-party issues like the 1956 Hofmans scandal, highlighting tensions between journalistic freedom and ideological alignment.[15] Despite these obstacles, Het Parool solidified its role as a progressive, resistance-forged voice, advocating postwar reforms without succumbing to immediate collapse.[14]Mergers, Acquisitions, and Ownership Shifts
In 1968, Het Parool, under the ownership of Stichting Het Parool, merged operations with the competing newspaper De Volkskrant to form Perscombinatie NV, a joint publishing company aimed at sharing investments in new printing facilities amid rising costs in the Dutch newspaper industry.[17] This arrangement allowed both titles to maintain editorial independence while pooling resources, with Perscombinatie handling printing, distribution, and administrative functions.[18] By the 1990s, Perscombinatie had expanded through acquisitions, including a majority stake in publisher Meulenhoff & Co. in 1994, leading to the creation of Perscombinatie Meulenhoff (later rebranded as PCM Uitgevers), which oversaw Het Parool alongside De Volkskrant, Trouw, and other titles.[19] Stichting Het Parool retained significant influence as a major shareholder in Perscombinatie, holding up to 90% after the 1970s acquisition of Trouw, but operational control shifted toward the broader PCM structure amid financial pressures from declining circulation and advertising revenue.[17] Facing ongoing struggles, PCM sold its stake in Het Parool in January 2003 to Belgian media group De Persgroep (now DPG Media), marking the newspaper's independence from PCM and De Persgroep's entry into the Dutch market.[5] This acquisition, valued as a strategic foothold for the Belgian firm, involved De Persgroep partnering with a newly established foundation to ensure Het Parool's editorial continuity, while Stichting Democratie en Media (successor to Stichting Het Parool) retained a minority stake to safeguard its resistance-era legacy.[19] Subsequent consolidations within DPG Media, including the 2009 acquisition of PCM, did not directly alter Het Parool's ownership, which stabilized under the Belgian parent's majority control.[17]Current Structure under DPG Media
Het Parool operates as a distinct brand within DPG Media's Dutch news division, following De Persgroep's acquisition of the newspaper in 2003, which marked the Belgian group's entry into the Netherlands market.[19][20] DPG Media Nederland, the entity overseeing Het Parool and other titles, is owned 68.9% by DPG Media Group and 29.3% by Stichting Democratie en Media, a foundation dedicated to preserving journalistic pluralism; the latter holds a priority share in Het Parool to protect against undue commercial influence on editorial decisions.[21][22] This structure balances corporate oversight with safeguards for independence, as evidenced by the foundation's charter prioritizing diverse, opinion-forming media.[23] Editorial leadership transitioned in early 2025, with Kamilla Leupen departing as editor-in-chief on March 1 to assume the role of director for DPG's quality news brands (including Het Parool, de Volkskrant, Trouw, and NU.nl) starting in May.[24][25] On April 3, 2025, DPG appointed Jildou van der Bijl and Michiel Couzy as co-editor-in-chiefs, with van der Bijl transitioning from an external editorial consultancy and Couzy promoted from within the existing leadership team.[26][27] The duo reports to DPG's news media directorate while retaining autonomy over Amsterdam-centric content. Organizationally, Het Parool maintains a dedicated editorial staff focused on local investigative reporting, city culture, and urban issues, supplemented by shared DPG resources for national and international news to optimize costs without compromising its distinctive Amsterdam lens.[28][29] The newspaper produces a daily print edition, a robust digital platform at parool.nl, and a weekly Saturday magazine supplement, PS van de Week, emphasizing lifestyle, entertainment, and themed annual issues on topics like fashion and urban living.[29] This setup integrates Het Parool into DPG's multi-platform ecosystem—encompassing print, online, and events—while prioritizing editorial firewalls, as reinforced by the 2025 establishment of independent foundations for affiliated digital brands like NU.nl to further insulate journalism from business pressures.[30]Editorial Orientation and Content Style
Evolution from Resistance to Mainstream Left-Leaning Voice
Following the end of World War II and the liberation of the Netherlands on May 5, 1945, Het Parool transitioned from an underground resistance publication to a legal daily newspaper, resuming regular printing on May 21, 1945, under the auspices of a newly formed foundation to ensure independence. This shift capitalized on its wartime reputation for defiance against Nazi occupation, attracting a broad readership seeking accountability, democratic renewal, and social reforms in the reconstruction era. Initially, the paper emphasized anti-totalitarian principles—rooted in founder Frans Goedhart's opposition to both fascism and communism—and advocated for progressive policies like expanded welfare and labor rights, loosely aligning with social-democratic ideals without formal ties to the Labour Party (PvdA) or the pillarized Dutch media system.[9][12] In the immediate post-war decades, Het Parool solidified its role as a national yet Amsterdam-centric voice, prioritizing investigative reporting on corruption and policy failures while expressing sympathies for PvdA positions on economic redistribution and decolonization, though it positioned itself as neutral and non-partisan overall. Circulation peaked in the 1950s, reflecting public trust in its resistance credentials amid societal debates on rebuilding. However, by the mid-1960s, under editor-in-chief Herman Sandberg, the paper veered toward conservatism, notably endorsing U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War—a stance that clashed with growing anti-war sentiment in the Netherlands—resulting in subscriber losses exceeding 20% and internal editorial rifts, as younger journalists pushed for alignment with emerging progressive movements. This period marked a low point, prompting leadership changes and a recalibration to retain relevance amid declining print sales and the rise of television news.[31][32][18] The 1970s and beyond saw Het Parool adapt to cultural liberalization, incorporating more coverage of social issues like gender equality, environmentalism, and urban development, which steered its editorial line toward left-liberal priorities characteristic of Amsterdam's cosmopolitan ethos. Ownership transitions, including mergers in the 1990s and acquisition by DPG Media in 2017, integrated it into a consolidated media ecosystem but preserved its focus on in-depth local journalism over sensationalism. Today, it is widely perceived as a mainstream left-leaning outlet, critiquing neoliberal policies and emphasizing identity and migration topics, though critics from across the spectrum question its occasional deference to establishment narratives amid broader Dutch media tendencies toward progressive consensus. This evolution reflects pragmatic survival in a depillarized, commercialized press landscape, where wartime heroism yielded to audience-driven content emphasizing social critique over ideological purity.[32][14]Key Features, Layout, and Design Innovations
![Front page of Het Parool from October 27, 2018][float-right]Het Parool adopted a tabloid format in 2003, marking it as the first Dutch newspaper to transition from broadsheet, which allowed for more compact layout and enhanced portability while maintaining comprehensive coverage. This shift facilitated innovations in visual storytelling, with increased emphasis on images, portraits, and illustrative elements to capture reader attention amid declining print readership. [1] A major redesign occurred on February 10, 2016, led by Polish designer Jacek Utko, who drew inspiration from the elegant aesthetics of 1950s and 1960s newspapers, incorporating a black logo, restrained color palette, and clean typography to evoke a sense of timeless authority. [33] [34] This overhaul extended to both print and digital platforms, prioritizing readability and Amsterdam-centric content. [35] The redesign earned Het Parool the European Newspaper Design Award in 2016 and the title of World's Best Designed Newspaper in both 2017 and 2018 from the Society for News Design. [34] [36] [37] Key features include a core news section paired with the daily themed magazine PS, which covers lifestyle, culture, and opinion, alongside weekend glossies like PS van de Week. [29] Distinctive Amsterdam-focused elements, such as the extensive entertainment and culture calendar, in-depth weekly interviews, and the reader-submitted "My Amsterdam" section, underscore its regional identity and community engagement. [29] The layout balances dense reporting with visual "guts," using bold photography and modular designs to differentiate from national competitors. [29]