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Daniël Goulooze was born on 28 April, 1901 in Amsterdam, Netherlands, is a fighter. Discover Daniël Goulooze's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 64 years old?
Popular As |
N/A |
Occupation |
construction worker, Comintern agent |
Age |
64 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Taurus |
Born |
28 April, 1901 |
Birthday |
28 April |
Birthplace |
Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Date of death |
(1965-09-10) Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Died Place |
Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Nationality |
The Netherlands |
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He is a member of famous fighter with the age 64 years old group.
Daniël Goulooze Height, Weight & Measurements
At 64 years old, Daniël Goulooze height not available right now. We will update Daniël Goulooze's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Wife |
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Daniël Goulooze Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Daniël Goulooze worth at the age of 64 years old? Daniël Goulooze’s income source is mostly from being a successful fighter. He is from The Netherlands. We have estimated
Daniël Goulooze's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
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Source of Income |
fighter |
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Timeline
Such was the level of communication that Goulooze conducted with Soviet intelligence, that he maintained four separate and active wireless telegraphy sets and one in reserve. His signals were eventually detected by the German Funkabwehr and he was arrested along with many members of the DIS. Goulooze was sent to Sachsenhausen concentration camp but managed to survive the war. In 1948 he was expelled from the CPN after a smear campaign about his role in the war that last more than a decade. He then worked for the "De Republiek der Letteren" (The Republic of Arts), a left-wing publishing house. In 1951 he had a heart attack and died in 1965. Goulooze used the Daan alias disguise his identity.
When Goulooze reached the concentration camp, it was the first in months that he was able to see fellow human beings. In Sachsenhausen, he discovered that some of his prior contacts held important positions. Among them were Ben Telders and Joop Zwart [nl], who were able to obtain fake identity cards that changed Goulooze identity, effectively killing off his name. This enabled him to transfer to the Heinkel aircraft works in Oranienburg where his many contacts amongst the imprisoned communists, enabled Goulooze to create an organisation to help incoming Dutch KPD and communist prisoners. However, in the night of 20 April 1945, he was transferred out the camp onto a Death march in the Belower Forest [de]. After four days, units of the Red Army intersected the march and Goulooze was liberated.
Postma was subject to enhanced interrogation but never exposed any of his collaborators. Goulooze was also subject to enhanced interrogation and also refused to expose anybody nor any of the safehouses or radio locations. In February 1944, he was released from detention and then taken to seminary in Haren where further interrogation began on 21 March 1944, concerning his Belgian contacts. Twice he was taken to Brussels for identification, but due to his stamina, self-confidence and cool-headnesses he was saved from complete collapse. At the time, the trial of the other 11 arrestees was held up due to the length of Goulooze's interrogation. There was agreement reached on 11 August 1944 between the Judge and the Sicherheitsdienst that the trial should go ahead without Goulooze. However, by 5 September 1944, the liberation of the Netherlands was only hours away, so Goulooze was never tried, instead he was sent to Sachsenhausen concentration camp along with 3000 other prisoners from Haren.
On 12 January 1943, Alfons Kaps was arrested by the Sonderkommando in Düsseldorf, following a denunciation. Under enhanced torture, he agreed to work for the Sonderkommando as a double agent or V-Mann, first betraying Willi Seng, who was arrested on 20 January 1943 and who was also subject to enhanced torture. After the indictment, Kaps took his own life in March 1943. Through Seng, Knöchel was betrayed and was arrested on 30 January 1943. After he was tortured, Knöchel agreed to become a V-Mann and held a number of meetings with van Proosdy in the normal course of operation, making him effectively under the control of the Gestapo. Van Proosdy eventually realised that Knöchel was a V-Mann, due to his general demeanor and errant behaviour. He decided to make arrangements to return to Amsterdam but was arrested on 22 May 1943 before he could leave. Upon learning from a contact that van Proosdy was arrested and that the Sonderkommando was searching for him, Goulooze went into hiding.
The Sonderkommando first attempted to use van Proosdy's wife in a trick to expose him, but this was unsuccessful. Even when the Gestapo managed to find a photograph of Goulooze, they were unable to locate him. By 10 June 1943, Goulooze had informed all his radio and cipher people that it was likely van Proosdy was arrested and that they should go into hiding. At the time, all the work and residual addresses were abandoned. On the night of 1–2 July 1943, the Gestapo raided all the addresses they had been monitoring and suspected, but it yielded nothing of importance. However, on 2 July, the Gestapo arrested one of Goulooze's radio operators. The man was tortured and revealed that he was to meet Goulooze's deputy, Jacobus Dankaart, the next afternoon. However the Gestapo bungled the meeting and the Dankaart was shot twice in the back when he tried to flee. By the end of July several more of the radio people had been arrested and two of the radio sets had been captured by the Sonderkommando. Goulooze informed the Comintern in Moscow through the last transmitter of the situation, that the OMS group would be disbanded. On the 24 August 1943, Dankaart was taken to the Zuidwal hospital in The Hague. This enabled Goulooze to contact Dankaart to arrange an escape plan, which was successful on 18 September 1943. During the following days, the Gestapo operation continued. Comintern agent Eugen Fried (Clément), Goulooze's collaborator and liaison with the French Communist Party was shot dead in Brussels on 17 August 1943. On the 5 November 1943, Kowalke was executed. During his many months of interrogation, he never exposed any names, which saved the lifes of many people in Goulooze's organisation. Another close collaborator of Goulooze was Erich Gentsch [de] who was the director of the KPD in Amsterdam since 1936. He was arrested in April 1943 and never exposed any names during his interrogation over many months. He was hanged in August 1944.
On the 15 May 1943, Goulooze was listening to the radio broadcasts from Moscow, when he heard that the Comintern had been dissolved on the order of Stalin. For Goulooze, who was a revolutionary, the vision that the Comintern presented was one of a need for world revolution. Harmsen posits that Goulooze must have been disappointed and even expressed some doubt about the value of the work that he had done for the organisation up to that point but ultimately his revolutionary zeal wouldn't have been extinguished. Goulooze wouldn't have known about the Stalinist purges that started in August 1936. He came to know about the trials of the group associated with Leon Trotsky after several Comintern officials whom he had met when he visited the Soviet Union and spoke to on the radio were replaced and this swayed his ideology to such an extent that he had a real fear of Trotskyism. He came to know about it through a copy of the memior by the American diplomat Joseph E. Davies "Mission to Moscow", that was passed hand to hand in the Netherlands that viewed the Soviet show trials under rose tinted glasses. He never came to realise the true nature of Stalinist Russia, i.e it was merely fascism by another name. After the war, in 1946, Goulooze published "The great conspiracy; the secret war against soviet Russia" by Michael Sayers and Albert Kahn. The book falsly claims that Trotsky committed treason. Even then Goulooze had no ideological doubts and continued to fight against "fascism".
On 23 October 1943, Goulooze, Postma, Kees Schalker [nl] and Ko Beuzemaker [nl] meet in an insurance building at Catharijnesingel in Utrecht, with the expectation that the war was coming to an end, with a plan to formulate their positions after the war. At a second meeting arranged in Utrecht for the 11 October led to the arrest of Ko Beuzemaker and his wife. This eventually led to the arrest of Goulooze, Postma, Cornelis Schalke on the 15 November 1943 who were all arrested by the Sicherheitsdienst in Utrecht and taken to Herzogenbusch concentration camp. Dankaart had been waiting for a rendezvous with Goulooze, he organised a rescue party where 6 men put on the uniform of the Ordnungspolizei, some would act as guards and some prisoners and drive to the prison but a patrolling German guard as them for daily password and they were discovered and arrested. Dankaart later managed to escape. Beuzemaker and Schalker, who were barely involved in clandestine activities were executed on 13 January 1944 on the Waalsdorpervlakte.
The first KPD member to travel to Germany with Goulooze's identity documents was Alfons Kaps [de] who went as an instructor, in January 1941. The next person to travel was Willi Seng. Albert Kamradt was the third person. The fourth person was Alfred Kowalke [de]. On the 9 January 1942, Knöchel met Goulooze for a final meeting before travelling to Germany, taking along blank identity papers, a selection of official stamps and communist literature, travelling as an itinerant silver polisher. At the time, Goulooze arranged for everything that was published by the Comintern executive in Moscow, to be couriered to Knöchel in Berlin. When he arrived in Berlin, Knöchel started to produced the hectographed "Der Friedenskämpfer" (“The Fighter for Peace,”) that offered detailed accounts of German atrocities across the eastern front. The May 1942 special edition of "Der Friedenskämpfer" included detailed knowledge of the execution of French, Czechs, Germans, and Norwegians across Europe and as well as specific military companies that carried out executions of Soviet POWs in Leningrad, and civilians in Lviv. Knöchel exchanged documents in the form of micro-photocopies with Elisabeth Schumacher. and Wilhelm Guddorf who were the intermediaries of John Sieg. It is not known if Sieg ever met Knöchel.
When Knöchel left for Germany, at least 10 communist instructors still had to be recruited and sent to Germany. Arranging the travelling for the instructors became increasingly difficult, due to heavy bombing and increased German security, leaving only a river connection. The difficulty was the lines of radio communication between from the KPD in Germany, to Goulooze DIS and onwards to the Comintern in Moscow. At the time, Knöchel was using two couriers, his common-law wife Cilly Hansmann [de], and Charlotte Garske to move intelligence between Berlin and Amsterdam for transmission to the Comintern. In the late summer 1942, the Comintern and the KPD leadership through Wilhelm Pieck began to urge Goulooze to establish a radio communication link in Berlin. Considered an extremely perilous and difficult task, Goulooze selected van Proosdy for this.
Van Proosdy had to establish a legal existence in Germany by registering with the Arbeitseinsatz. Once that was completed, it was arranged for a letter to be sent by Willem Visser, an employee of a small Berlin based electricity company that was part of AEG, to offer a position of employment to Van Proosdy, as an electrician. Van Proosdy left on 2 December 1942, using documentation arranged by Goulooze. In Berlin, he made contact with Knöchel, who introduced him to Kowalke who was to be trained as a radio operator. Goulooze arranged for a radio transmitter to be sent by ship but it never arrived. He then forwarded a small reserve transmitter by ship as a replacement.
In 1942, Goulooze arranged with Soviet intelligence to recruit new radio operators. These were agents that were part of Operation Pickaxe and dropped by aircraft sent from RAF Tempsford. In early 1942, Goulooze arranged to receive Soviet parachutists by delegating an area close to a body of water in Veluwe, where they could be safely accommodated. On 22 June 1942, Jan Wilhelm Kruyt Jr, was parachuted into the Netherlands with a wireless telegraphy set for Goulooze and false papers. On 24 June 1942, Jan Wilhelm Kruyt Sr, an ardent communist and ex-clergyman was dropped by parachute from a British plane in Belgium. Kruyt Sr broke his leg when he landed and was arrested shortly after by the Gestapo and sent to Fort Breendonk. On 30 November, a Soviet agent Peter Kousnetzov using the alias Bruno Kühn was parachuted into the Netherlands. Kousnetzov was found by Goulooze's men after wandering about the woods for a night. Kousnetzov was originally sent to provide support the Knöchel network in Germany. However, Goulooze was unable to contact Knöchel at the time, so decided to contact the Comintern executive to request that Kousnetzov work with CPN radio operator Jan De Laar instead, which was agreed. Kousnetzov joined De Laar in March 1943 and worked to train agents in the Netherlands to work inside Germany.
On 18 or 19 August 1942 (sources vary), Winterink was arrested by the Sonderkommando Rote Kapelle at a cafe in Amsterdam, after being betrayed by Konstantin Jeffremov. Nine members of the group with two remaining radios were not discovered and continued to work. A total of 17 people from Winterink's group were arrested. This arrests led to an unpleasant aftermath for Goulooze as rumours were spread by the CPN that it was Goulooze's fault. Winterink's friends even went as far in stating that Goulooze was a member of the Sicherheitsdienst . Due to the rumours, distrust in Goulooze grew to an extent that it was decided by two members of the CPN, Ab Arendse and Piet Groeneveld to kill Goulooze. When their preparations were complete, they contacted Jan Postma, who decided to intervene to prevent the execution.
In the summer of 1941, Eugen Fried contacted Goulooze to request his help to expand his radio network in Brussels. Goulooze sent van Proosdy to Brussels in August 1941. van Proosdy was shown a self-built transmitter by the young person who was hosting it, but it refused to work. A new transmitter was delivered by courier to van Proosdy, three weeks later and he managed to make a connection to Moscow.
Goulooze was the son of Daniël Goulooze, a blacksmith, and Baukje Goulooze (née Visser), a housemaid, and was the oldest of six children, who grew up in Amsterdam in a working-class family. His grandparents on his father's side came from Zeeland in the south, and on his mother's side from Friesland, in the northern part of the Netherlands. His father was a member of the National Federation of Metal Workers union that was affiliated with the National Labor Secretariat (NAS, Nationaal Arbeids-Secretariaat) trade union federation. He was an admirer of the Dutch politician and later social anarchist Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis. After the German invasion of the Netherlands in May 1940, his father was interred at the Herzogenbusch concentration camp and died, aged 70, in 1943.
After the occupation of the Netherlands by the Wehrmacht that began on 10 May 1940, a meeting was held by the CPN on 15 May 1940, where it was realised that many of the members would not survive the war and the party itself would have to operate illegally. The secretariat was reformed with many members put in reserve with Paul De Groot, Jan Dieters [nl] and Lou Jansen [nl] forming the triumvirate that gradually brought the illegal CPN into action. During that month, De Groot planned to run the illegal CPN from Moscow and was in contact with Goulooze to arrange passage by ship, but the plan was abandoned when De Groot and Goulooze visited the Soviet trade representative in Netherlands who rejected the idea.
De Groot then expounded the idea of editing and printing an illegal newspaper from Vichy France. Goulooze explored the idea with French and Belgian communists but the plan was found to be impractical and was abandoned. De Groot instructed Goulooze to contact the Comintern executive in Moscow, to make a request for the secretariat to move to Moscow but on 21 June 1940, Dimitrov rejected the idea, informing De Groot that the group had stay in the Netherlands. Dimitrov forwarded detailed instructions to the secretariat on how to resist the occupation.
During this period, Goulooze was reporting to the Comintern. The reports were created by the CPN party leadership. Due to the limited radio contact, he would first send the reports in an abbreviated form, as well as forwarding each completed report to Moscow by courier. In October 1940, the secretariat complained to Goulooze about a summary letter that Goulooze had written, that was critical of the secretariat, of its wait-and-see approach. In a meeting of the CPN leadership, they decided to replace him after holding a vote that resulted in "no confidence". The secretariat had withdrawn from Amsterdam, leaving the OMS in the city.
On 24 June 1940, the Dutch government withdrew the CPN publication ban and on 26 June an issue of the "Volksdagblad" was written. In an article, Paul de Groot opined that German aggression was caused by English imperialism and the Dutch bourgeoisie, stating that the Dutch people had no "enmity" towards the German people and that the Dutch people had "only an interest in friendship and peace with the German people". The article went on by stating:
Goulooze read the "Volksdagblad" article and was vehemently opposed to its printing. He managed to make contact with a Comintern representative, who contacted the Comintern executive in Moscow. They forbade its printing. However, the article was released. At the time, there was some panic in the CPN at the release of the article and how it would be viewed. It did not prevent the CPN and its organs from being banned by the Arthur Seyss-Inquart in July 1940.
In April 1940, van Proosdy built a radio transmitter for use by a woman in south Amsterdam and by February 1941, she had been trained to use it. In total, five radio operators were eventually recruited by Goulooze by the end of 1941. To ensure a high level of security, Goulooze separated the encryption/decryption of messages by the cypher clerks from the radio transmission process and used couriers to move messages around, with messages hidden in matchboxes, flashlight batteries or rolled in cigarette cases. It resulted in the radio operator's never knowing what the contents of their message were and the cypher clerks not knowing who transmitted the telegrams. At the same time, the people in his network were employed in legitimate roles designed to disguise their illegal activity, for example as municipal workers.
As the CPN recovered after being banned, a second meeting of the triumvirate was arranged in July 1940, where they updated and prepared new manifestos. They decided to force a general strike in the large metal companies in November and protest against the persecution of Jews. At the end of November, the CPN published an edition of the De Waarheid.
At a meeting in Moscow in 1940, it was decided that the various KPD Abschnittsleitung in different capitals in Germany should be dissolved, to enable the formation of a new operational leadership in Germany. The intention was for German KPD organiser, Wilhelm Knöchel to take change of the KPD in Germany. Knöchel who was considered an exceptionally effective communist resistance organiser, whose alias was "Alfred". He had been living in Amsterdam since 1936 and was the leader of an emigre group of German communists. By 1939, he was living in Moscow and was a full member of the Central Committee of the KPD.
To bring this plan into operation, the Comintern decided the planning stage would be done in Amsterdam, which resulted in Knöchel returning to Amsterdam. Together with Willi Gall, Knöchel began publishing communist literature that included various leaflets and bulletins, for example "The Enemy Stands in Your Own Country", for distribution in Berlin. From mid-1940, Knöchel with the assistance of Goulooze began to train the emigre group of communists in the Netherlands to work in Germany as political activists and informers. Goulooze was able to obtain blank identity cards, along with official stamps from a colleague that enabled the KPD members who were hiding, to interact with CPN members in Amsterdam and to travel safely to Germany in some cases under diplomatic protection. At the time, Goulooze received instructions from the Comintern and Swedish Communist Party in Stockholm where the KPD leadership emigrated after they were banned. As the Swedish communists were against setting up a radio transmitter link with Amsterdam, Goulooze organised a courier link by sea and when the sailors visited the sea port of Delfzijl, he would pick up a suitcase full of communist brochures, magazines and other literature. In that manner, the Dutch CPN and KPD members managed to read the latest Russian communist literature. The connection by sea, broke down in late 1941 or early 1942 when many Swiss communists were arrested.
As a publisher Goulooze, was able to travel widely without restrictions, that enabled him to meet a wide variety of people, and select particular people for particular jobs. In the same year, he received intelligence training at the Marx–Engels–Lenin Institute in Moscow. By April 1939, van Proosdy had built a radio transmitter that was based on the Hartley oscillator. Goulooze knew nothing of how wireless telegraphy worked, so delegated the ciphering and radio transmission to his employees.
In June 1939, Goulooze recruited Adam Nagel, a photographer and communist member of the CPN to work with Wenzel in Belgium. In the same period Goulooze recruited CPN member Jacobus "Co" Dankaart as his deputy in the information service and became the groups treasurer. Dankaart also worked as a cutout between the radio group and Goulooze.
The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact signed in August 1939, defined neutrality between the ideological rivals of Germany and the Soviet Union. However, it created considerable ideological difficulties for the CPN and the Comintern. The Comintern pursued no policy other than what the Soviet government planned. It labeled the global conflagration as an imperialist conflict and rejected the pact.
In October 1939, Anatoly Gurevich, a Ukrainian GRU agent who was part of a Soviet espionage group that operated in Germany, and Belgium, visited Goulooze to request help to build his espionage network in Belgium. Gurevich asked that a temporary wireless telegraphy link be established for his use, while he established his own wireless telegraphy link in Belgian and this was provided by Goulooze and used, until January 1940. In July 1940, Gurevich again visited Goulooze, his second visit, to request the reserve cypher code, that Goulooze had received from his visit to the Soviet Union, the year before.
Much more important for the Soviet Union than the CPN and the triumvirate, was the work undertaken by Goulooze for the KPD. From the outset of the war, Goulooze maintained radio links between the area control centre ("Abschnittsleitung") of the KPD in Amsterdam and the area control centre of the KPD in Paris, the Western European Bureau of the Comintern in Paris and Comintern Executive in Moscow. He also managed the links between the Abschnittsleitung in Amsterdam and illegal groups in Germany. In 1939, the French KPD groups fell into disarray as the French government banned the French communist party and interned many of its members. As a result, radio and courier services were cut. The Comintern used Goulooze to bring these various groups back into contact with each other.
At the beginning of the occupation, Goulooze had recruited one radio engineer, van Proosdy, whose codename was "Frans". The transmitter was hidden in van Proosdy's house in Orteliusstraat in Amsterdam. In 1938, CPN member Jan de Laar was recruited by Goulooze and sent to the Soviet Union for technical training in wireless telegraphy and intelligence techniques. When de Laar returned he became an assistant to van Proosdy.
Goulooze used the DIS organisation from early 1937 to help establish Soviet Red Orchestra agents in the Netherlands, France and the Low Countries. After the start of the war and the occupation of the Netherlands, Goulooze helped to reestablish the KPD in Germany in 1940. As the war progressed, the Comintern, the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) and the French Communist Party were progressively destroyed in Europe, the DIS designed to send intelligence to Moscow, became increasingly important to Soviet intelligence as the only organisation in Western Europe, where they could maintain contact with Soviet agents on the ground.
By 1937, he was completely devolved from the CPN executive. In the same year, Goulooze was ordered by Dimitrov to disband the current OMS in Amsterdam and create a new OMS, with the infrastructure to support communications with Moscow, including new radio operators, electricians and couriers that were to be recruited from the CPN. It was completely separate from the former German Comintern. Goulooze was provided help by Wenzel, who moved to the Netherlands, in early 1937. Wenzel was an expert radio engineer and they discussed plans for the construction of a radio network in the Netherlands.
In 1935, with permission from the CPN, he started working primarily for the Comintern, but remained director of the Pegasus publishing house, that he used for cover. In the same period, between 1935 and 1937, Dutch CPN member, August Johannes van Proosdy was recruited by Goulooze and sent for technical training in wireless telegraphy techniques in the Soviet Union.
In 1934, the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) established an underground bureau, known as a Abschnittsleitungen in Amsterdam. Goulooze arranged for communists who were working on KPD assignments to travel between the Netherlands and Germany. In the summer of 1939, the relationship between the CPN and KPD deteriorated due to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. By May 1940 and the German invasion of the Netherlands, the relationship between the two organisation had completely broken down. Goulooze was the only person to maintain contact with the illegal KPD leadership in Amsterdam.
In 1933, he established the Amstel Agency, a publishing house that was run by Lydia Wolters, his wife. The publishing work was done in his own house. During the early 1930s, he made numerous trips abroad to arrange contracts with writers. In 1932, he published a book by N. Bogdanov, Het eerste meisje; een romantische geschiedenis (The first girl; a romantic history), about life for members in the Komsomol. In March 1934, as the work of publishing at his house was becoming too stressful due to the success of the business, Goulooze established the formal Pegasus publishing house, located at 29 Nieuwe Prinsengracht in Amsterdam. During the course of his work as director, he formed relationships with many leading left-wing intellectuals and new writers and academics in the country. During the period he worked there, Goulooze published The ABC of Communism written by Nikolai Bukharin and Yevgeni Preobrazhensky and the Marxist Library in 24 volumes. These were classic works by writers like Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin. These books were generally not available in the Dutch language beforehand, so they sold in large quantities. Among the most important people who ran his publishing house was Hein Kohn, the main driving force in the publishing house as well as Nel Schuitemaker, Martien Beversluis, and Menno Poldervaart.
In 1933, after the uprising in the Dutch De Zeven Provinciën-class cruiser De Zeven Provinciën, the government banned a whole series of left-wing organisations including the CPN. This brought huge scrutiny to the CPN and Goulooze as secretary was made responsible for the security of the organisation. Over the next few months, he built a network of trusted people that were committed to identifying and stopping infiltration by the police, the CIA and other intelligence agencies. Through that work, he became familiar with many members of the Belgian and French Communist parties and the Comintern.
On 30 January 1933, Hitler became Chancellor of Germany and following the Reichstag fire on 27 February 1933, strengthened his power. The communists and the CPN believed Hitler would fail, in the expectation that they would come to power. Instead, Hitler used the fire as a pretext to launch an attack on Communist and Bolshevist groups in Germany in an attempt to destroy them. At the time, Goulooze was in Berlin and met Georgi Dimitrov, who had been arrested, after being seen talking to Marinus van der Lubbe, who was accused of starting the fire. Goulooze provided information to Dimitrov that ensured his release. Goulooze used the opportunity to print The Brown Book of the Reichstag Fire and Hitler Terror, in the Netherlands that placed the blame for the fire with the Nazis.
In the summer of 1933, Goulooze provided assistance to Johann Wenzel, a GRU agent and radio operator who was part of a Soviet espionage group that operated in Western Europe. Wenzel travelled to the Netherlands with Theodor Bottländer [de], a German official of the AM Apparat [de] department of the Central Committee of the KPD, to obtain information on Marinus van der Lubbe.
At the end of 1933, it was given a higher workload when it moved to larger rooms at the Bloemgracht in Amsterdam. It was manned by Piet de Smit who did the secretarial work, Anton Winterink, who was part of the editorial work, and Friedl Baruch, who became the KPD liaison.
In the period immediately after the Nazis seized power on 30 January 1933, Goulooze made several trips to the Soviet Union, Prague and Paris in the context of reorganising the Comintern. In the same year, the International Liaison Department (OMS) of the Comintern was transferred from Berlin to Amsterdam under the command of Osip Piatnitsky in Amsterdam. The OMS was a part legal, part illegal organisation whose purpose was to carry out administrative policy including arranging travel for officials, to develop and maintain a communication system between the Comintern and the Soviet Union using radio communications and couriers, as well as managing funding for the Comintern organisation and to care for wealthy communists. Goulooze provided the addresses where the Comintern radio transmitters could be housed in Amsterdam. In 1934, Bulgarian Communist leader Georgi Dimitrov was elected secretary of the Comintern and Goulooze became further involved in the daily running of the organisation.
However, it became expedient in the early 1930s for Goulooze to rebuild his legal existence and he was finally arrested. However, when he was undergoing his medical examination for conscription, he was rejected due to a minor foot disorder, making the whole exercise moot.
In 1930, the International Workers Aid (IAH, Internationale Arbeiders hulp) that existed to provide aid to strikers and strengthen cultural ties with the Soviet Union, became embroiled in a disagreement amongst its members, that degenerated into a fight. Goulooze was ordered to take over the reconstruction of the IAH and oversee the election of a new board.
The Great Depression exacerbated the political problems faced by the CPN. The Comintern believed it would result in revolution in the Netherlands. Members of the CPN were in favour of the Comintern attitude, that saw Social Democrats, the main political fulcrum of the ruling class, as the main obstacle to the establishment of a proletarian revolution. The Comintern classed them as "social fascists" who had to be fought at all costs; they were the enemy. Goulooze, who was centrist, rejected this view. At a meeting at his house on 1 February 1930, Richard Gyptner of the Young Communist International, castigated him for this. After a long discussion, the Young Communist League board decided to support the Comintern position. At that point, Goulooze ended his association with the Young Communist League and he was tasked along with four others to organise a conference of CPN members.
In February 1930, a new board was elected at the conference and the membership achieved unity on the basis of political guidelines received from the Comintern. At the age of 24, Goulooze became a member of the CPN and was elected as a CPN board member. He became the secretary of the youth organisation, a position he held for four years.
In March 1929, Goulooze entered into a common-law marriage with Lydia Wolters. In October 1938, Goulooze and Wolters split. Goulooze entered into his common-law marriage, this time to Petronella Alida van de Plaats (1911-1949), who suffered from poor health. The couple had a son, Zane, born in 1939, to whom the couple were devoted. To protect them, Goulooze moved them to Gooi at the start of the war.
The first real decision he made was whether to accept military service during conscription or refuse it. As an anarchist, Goulooze was anti-militaristic and while it was accepted for members of his peer group to refuse the service and wait to be arrested by the Military police, he decided to ignore the conscription order and evade arrest. Goulooze became a nomad, living on his wits, constantly on his guard. During this period, he worked in Antwerp, among other places. For several years he managed to avoid being arrested. In 1929, when he moved into his own apartment with his wife, he refused to be added to the Electoral roll.
On June 1928 in Amsterdam at the CPH party congress, the congress erupted in open warfare. Goulooze was immediately elected as secretary of the board, where he represented the CJB. On 17 August 1928, Goulooze attended the World Youth Peace Congress as a representative of the CJB, that was hosted in Eerde.
In 1927, he wrote De grondslagen van het communisme, de taak van de (the foundations of communism, the task of the communist youth), followed by the 104 page essay on the 1928 KJI Congress. Goulooze considered reading and studying a revolutionary act. Over the next several years, he built up publishing arm of the CPN and imported communist literature from abroad. He also opened a number of communist bookshops.
Under orders from Moscow, it was rearranged into business divisions and the magazine De Jonge Communist (The Young Communist) was renamed to De Jonge Arbeider (The Young Worker). As the CJB was a small organisation, Goulooze tried to create a leadership role that resulted in him negotiating with several companies during spontaneous youth strikes. At the same time, a plan grew to send a delegation to the Soviet Union. Seven young people were delegated from suitable companies and the delegation left at the end of August 1926. When the group returned, a detailed brochure, What did 7 young workers in Soviet Russia see?, was published that described their impressions.This was the first of many trips to the Soviet Union he would take.
In June 1924, the Federation of Social Anarchists group came to an end. At the time, Goulooze rejected anarchism, along with the Postma group. He became fully Communist, as it was the only political alternative that suited his worldview. Goulooze believed that the anarchists were incapable of an effective struggle against capitalism. Unwilling to join the CPN, he, along with Postma, instead joined the BKSP on 24 January 1925. Postma went on to become editor of De Kommunist, the magazine of the BKSP.
Six months later, the BKSP party leadership split, David Wijnkoop along with most of the leadership was forced to resign and a large sector of BKSP opted to rejoin the Communist Party of Holland ("Communistisch Party Holland") (CPH). By 1925, Goulooze had become an active communist and in 1926, became a member of the CPH. Due to his age, Goulooze became an active member of the Young Communist League (CJB, 'Communistische Jongeren Beweging). Goulooze became a popular and later important member of the CJB. Under Goulooze and in agreement with the political line take by the Young Communist International (KJI, Kommunist Jeugd Internationale) the CJB decided to take direct action, instead of the usual discussion of politics.
The De Spelbreker newspaper was created by the Committee of Action, a group of the Dutch labour movement, made up of Communists, Syndicalists and Anarchists, who wanted to protest the 1923 Fleet Act and the 25th anniversary of Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands. During this period, Goulooze was also working for the NAS. His name appeared in De Arbeid, the legal body of trade union on 17 November 1923.
Postma would go camping with the group, and they would hold discussions and debate politics, communism, trade unionionism and the Russian Revolution. Postma strongly supported trade unionism, the soviet revolution, dictatorship for the proletariat and the group initially shared his enthusiasm, but some eventually rejected his views. Goulooze for the most part, found himself in agreement with Postma and this, in turn, developed into a lifelong friendship. The heated debates eventually led to a group withdrawing from the SAJO that included Goulooze, leaving to join the Federation of Social Anarchists of which Postma was a member. On 22 July 1922, Goulooze became the administrator for the Social Anarchists magazine, De Toekomst.
The International Red Aid (MOPR) was an international social service organization established by the Communist International in 1922. When the Nazis came to power at the end of January 1933, hundreds of German communists made a direct appeal to the MOPR for help. In 1933, it became clear the MOPR was insufficient in design and strength to deal with the number of people who were applying for help. The CPN instructed Jan Postma to expand the organisation.
Living a nomadic life did not prevent Goulooze from taking part in a number of political actions in the 1920s and early 1930s. In 1923, Goulooze was responsible for the transportation and distribution of the special newspaper De Spelbreker, not only in Amsterdam, but in the rest of the country.
In 1919, Goulooze was elected treasurer. In September 1920, Goulooze took over administration for publishing the organisations magazine, De Opstandeling (The Insurgent). Around this time, Goulooze became part of a group of young men and women, that formed around Dutch communist and chemigrapher Jan Postma [nl].
In 1916, Goulooze joined the Social-Anarchist Youth Organisation (SAJO, Sociaal-Anarchistische Jeugd Organisatie). his was an organisation that was established in several cities including Amsterdam, that consisted of several dozen young rebellious people who refused to do their military service, instead, spending their time going on rambles, and making music as well as planning bombings.
Daniël "Daan" Goulooze (28 April 1901 – 10 September 1965) was a Dutch Jewish construction worker who was a committed communist and resistance fighter. In 1925, he became a member of the Communist Party of the Netherlands (CPN) and by 1930 had become an executive member of the organisation. In 1934, he formed Pegasus publishing house that published many left-wing writers and intellectuals in the Netherlands, some for the first time. In 1935–1936, Goulooze formed the Dutch Information Service (DIS), an organisation that supplied information to the Soviet Union. Goulooze become the liaison between the organisation and the CPN. In 1937, he went to the Soviet Union, where he received intelligence training at the Marx–Engels–Lenin Institute in Moscow. Upon returning, he became the liaison officer of Communist International (Comintern) in the Netherlands, his main duty being to maintain on-going radio contact with Soviet intelligence.