Alright, let's do an early life check.
In an interview with the Reformatorisch Dagblad (RD), a Dutch Protestant Christian Reformed newspaper, in 2002 Femke Halsema presumed members of her maternal family to have been "assimilated jews", because two nephews of her maternal grandfather Cornelis Nicolaas Fles were named Abram and Izaak, whom she supposed had been tailors. Halsema referred to some families with the surname Fles in the region (Twente) Enschede being jewish. But Halsema's own family is not related to them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Femke_Halsema
Every.single.time
Alright, let's do an early life check.
> In an interview with the Reformatorisch Dagblad (RD), a Dutch Protestant Christian Reformed newspaper, in 2002 Femke Halsema presumed members of **her maternal family to have been "assimilated jews"**, because two nephews of her maternal grandfather Cornelis Nicolaas Fles were named Abram and Izaak, whom she supposed had been tailors. **Halsema referred to some families with the surname Fles in the region (Twente) Enschede being jewish**. But Halsema's own family is not related to them.
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Femke_Halsema
Every.single.time