Volksverwering
Volksverwering was a Flemish, mainly Antwerp-based, far-right and openly antisemitic organisation active in Belgium from 1937 until 1944. Founded and led by Antwerp lawyer René Lambrichts, it espoused Nazi-style biological racism and focused on the removal of Jews from Belgian society through agitation and propaganda.
History
Origins and ideology
Volksverwering emerged in Antwerp in early 1937 under the initiative of lawyer René Lambrichts, who had previously been active in nationalist circles. It promoted radical antisemitism grounded in “blood and soil” racism and aligned itself with National Socialism.From January 1937 the group issued a homonymous newspaper, Volksverwering: propagandablad ter beveiliging van ras en bodem, modeled in tone on Der Stürmer. In 1941 it continued as Volksche Aanval; a francophone counterpart appeared as L’Ami du Peuple.
Activities under German occupation
After the German invasion in May 1940, Volksverwering intensified anti-Jewish agitation and cooperated with occupation structures. Around March 1941, in conjunction with the Sipo–SD, the movement helped set up the “Landelijke Anti-Joodsche Centrale voor Vlaanderen en Wallonië”, led by SD agent Pierre Beeckmans.The organisation played a visible role in Antwerp. On 14 April 1941 it organised a screening of the Nazi propaganda film Der Ewige Jude at Cinema Rex on the De Keyserlei. After the screening, several hundred people—many linked to Volksverwering, VNV and SS-Vlaanderen—attacked Jewish homes, shops and synagogues in what contemporary historians describe as a “mini-pogrom” or the “Antwerp Kristallnacht”.
Volksverwering’s propaganda also included posters, labels and stamps caricaturing Jews; surviving examples are preserved in museum and archive collections. Membership figures are uncertain; educational material from Kazerne Dossin estimates “about 700 members”.