http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/07/17/opinion/edwinter.php 
 


The Netherlands: Tolerating a time bomb 

By Leon de Winter The New York Times
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MONDAY, JULY 18, 2005
        

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 <http://www.iht.com/cgi-bin/search.cgi?query=AMSTERDAM&sort=swishrank>
AMSTERDAM For centuries the Netherlands has been considered the world's most
tolerant and liberal nation. This attitude is a byproduct of a disciplined
civic society, confident enough to provide space for those with different
ideas. It produced the country in which Descartes found refuge, a center of
freedom of thought and of a free press in Europe. That Netherlands no longer
exists. 
 
The murder of Theo van Gogh last year and the assassination of Pim Fortuyn
in 2002 marked the end of the Holland of Erasmus and Spinoza. Their killings
showed the cumulative effect of two forces that have shaken the foundations
of Dutch civic society over the last 40 years: the cultural and sexual
revolution of the 1960s and 1970s and the influx of Muslim workers during
those years of prosperity. 
 
Perhaps no country was affected as profoundly by the radicalism of the times
as the Netherlands. In less than 15 years, most forms of traditional
authority and hierarchy, the counterbalancing forces that made Dutch
tolerance possible, were undermined. Hence today's image of Dutch tolerance:
marijuana served at coffee shops, police officers with hair as long as the
Grateful Dead, full nudity on public television and, for those who prefer
not to work, a government package of benefits that makes a toil-free life
entirely feasible. 
 
The second, simultaneous, change in Dutch life was the recruitment of young
men from the Rif Mountains of Morocco, most illiterate and many with only a
rudimentary grasp of spoken Dutch, to work in Holland's rapidly expanding
industries. When they arrived, they were faced with a highly educated but
apparently decadent society in the grip of a cultural revolution. Many were
astonished: Was this country some sort of freak show? 
 
No, it certainly wasn't. Under the effusive "anything goes" exterior, the
majority of Dutch people held on to their disciplined Calvinist values. To
the immigrants, however, this core was all but invisible. 
 
During the 1980s and 90s, the demand for unskilled work declined. The "guest
workers" were no longer needed in such numbers, but they were also not
required to return to Morocco. Instead they were given extensive social
benefits and their families were allowed to come from Morocco to join them.
It was the birth of the ethnic-religious ghettos that surround our affluent
cities and towns. 
 
And thus the delicate mechanism of Holland's traditional tolerant society
gradually lost its balance. The news media, politicians and artists gnawed
away at the traditional values of Calvinistic civic society, while in the
bleak Muslim suburbs resentment grew among the Moroccans' Dutch-born
children, who found the promise of an affluent life unfulfillable. 
 
Meanwhile, the news media and politicians maintained an unofficial ban on
any discussion of the problems of immigration: after all, in progressive
Holland only socioeconomic problems were admissible. It was simply not
acceptable to discuss problems relating to religion and culture. 
 
This mix of cultural confusion, religious misunderstanding and political
correctness provided the stage on which Pim Fortuyn performed. In the
international press, Fortuyn was often described as a right-wing radical, a
label he loathed. He was a liberal with respect to personal freedom and a
conservative with respect to social norms and values - that is, he was a
classic tolerant Dutchman. 
 
Proud to be gay, he protested against the religiously-based homophobia
openly espoused in the Muslim ghettos. Yet he also emphasized the need for
integrating Muslims into larger society and tolerance for their faith. His
political incorrectness shocked the establishment, but many among the
traditional citizenry recognized Fortuyn as a kindred spirit. This
unconventional gay politician spoke up for the conventional middle-class
heterosexual. At the time he was killed by an animal-rights advocate in
2002, he was the front-runner to become prime minister. 
 
The films of Theo van Gogh, artiste provocateur nonpareil, were meant to
shock; his newspaper columns (of which I was the target more than once) were
exercises in outlandish mudslinging - though never lacking in humor and
style. In recent years, he had focused increasingly on the problems with
immigration and Muslim intolerance. 
 
The radicalized children of disappointed Islamic immigrants were unable to
appreciate the humorous side of the Van Gogh phenomenon. 
 
Many of these young men have found an expression for their growing sense of
frustration, alienation and anger in orthodox Islam. They have no use for
Holland's tolerance of alternative lifestyles, or for its professional
blasphemers. Last Nov. 2 a young Islamic fundamentalist, born in Amsterdam
to Moroccan parents, shot Van Gogh in the street and then tried to cut off
his head. In a final statement at his trial last week, the murderer declared
that he had killed Van Gogh for insulting the Prophet. 
 
The trial lasted only two days, but the fallout will be with us for many
years. Much of the electorate no longer feels any loyalty to the existing
political parties. Many want to preserve the Dutch welfare state, but it's
unclear how to maintain it in an aging nation that is absorbing immigrants.
Without a radical change in direction, Dutch tolerance may become its own
victim. The first step is enacting laws to curb immigration from Islamic
countries. We must also consider ways to prevent arranged marriages between
Muslims living here and people from the Rif (more than half of Dutch
Moroccans marry a traditional partner from their parents' home village). 
 
In the longer term, we must somehow stimulate young Muslims to identify with
the Calvinist values of the majority. The radicalization among small groups
of young Muslims, a threat that cannot be fought within Holland's borders
alone, is a time bomb. 
 
Perhaps what this country needs most of all is another unconventional,
outspoken gay politician. 
 
(Leon de Winter is a novelist and political columnist for Elsevier
magazine.) 
 
 <http://www.iht.com/cgi-bin/search.cgi?query=AMSTERDAM&sort=swishrank>
AMSTERDAM For centuries the Netherlands has been considered the world's most
tolerant and liberal nation. This attitude is a byproduct of a disciplined
civic society, confident enough to provide space for those with different
ideas. It produced the country in which Descartes found refuge, a center of
freedom of thought and of a free press in Europe. That Netherlands no longer
exists. 
 
The murder of Theo van Gogh last year and the assassination of Pim Fortuyn
in 2002 marked the end of the Holland of Erasmus and Spinoza. Their killings
showed the cumulative effect of two forces that have shaken the foundations
of Dutch civic society over the last 40 years: the cultural and sexual
revolution of the 1960s and 1970s and the influx of Muslim workers during
those years of prosperity. 
 
Perhaps no country was affected as profoundly by the radicalism of the times
as the Netherlands. In less than 15 years, most forms of traditional
authority and hierarchy, the counterbalancing forces that made Dutch
tolerance possible, were undermined. Hence today's image of Dutch tolerance:
marijuana served at coffee shops, police officers with hair as long as the
Grateful Dead, full nudity on public television and, for those who prefer
not to work, a government package of benefits that makes a toil-free life
entirely feasible. 
 
The second, simultaneous, change in Dutch life was the recruitment of young
men from the Rif Mountains of Morocco, most illiterate and many with only a
rudimentary grasp of spoken Dutch, to work in Holland's rapidly expanding
industries. When they arrived, they were faced with a highly educated but
apparently decadent society in the grip of a cultural revolution. Many were
astonished: Was this country some sort of freak show? 
 
No, it certainly wasn't. Under the effusive "anything goes" exterior, the
majority of Dutch people held on to their disciplined Calvinist values. To
the immigrants, however, this core was all but invisible. 
 
During the 1980s and 90s, the demand for unskilled work declined. The "guest
workers" were no longer needed in such numbers, but they were also not
required to return to Morocco. Instead they were given extensive social
benefits and their families were allowed to come from Morocco to join them.
It was the birth of the ethnic-religious ghettos that surround our affluent
cities and towns. 
 
And thus the delicate mechanism of Holland's traditional tolerant society
gradually lost its balance. The news media, politicians and artists gnawed
away at the traditional values of Calvinistic civic society, while in the
bleak Muslim suburbs resentment grew among the Moroccans' Dutch-born
children, who found the promise of an affluent life unfulfillable. 
 
Meanwhile, the news media and politicians maintained an unofficial ban on
any discussion of the problems of immigration: after all, in progressive
Holland only socioeconomic problems were admissible. It was simply not
acceptable to discuss problems relating to religion and culture. 
 
This mix of cultural confusion, religious misunderstanding and political
correctness provided the stage on which Pim Fortuyn performed. In the
international press, Fortuyn was often described as a right-wing radical, a
label he loathed. He was a liberal with respect to personal freedom and a
conservative with respect to social norms and values - that is, he was a
classic tolerant Dutchman. 
 
Proud to be gay, he protested against the religiously-based homophobia
openly espoused in the Muslim ghettos. Yet he also emphasized the need for
integrating Muslims into larger society and tolerance for their faith. His
political incorrectness shocked the establishment, but many among the
traditional citizenry recognized Fortuyn as a kindred spirit. This
unconventional gay politician spoke up for the conventional middle-class
heterosexual. At the time he was killed by an animal-rights advocate in
2002, he was the front-runner to become prime minister. 
 
The films of Theo van Gogh, artiste provocateur nonpareil, were meant to
shock; his newspaper columns (of which I was the target more than once) were
exercises in outlandish mudslinging - though never lacking in humor and
style. In recent years, he had focused increasingly on the problems with
immigration and Muslim intolerance. 
 
The radicalized children of disappointed Islamic immigrants were unable to
appreciate the humorous side of the Van Gogh phenomenon. 
 
Many of these young men have found an expression for their growing sense of
frustration, alienation and anger in orthodox Islam. They have no use for
Holland's tolerance of alternative lifestyles, or for its professional
blasphemers. Last Nov. 2 a young Islamic fundamentalist, born in Amsterdam
to Moroccan parents, shot Van Gogh in the street and then tried to cut off
his head. In a final statement at his trial last week, the murderer declared
that he had killed Van Gogh for insulting the Prophet. 
 
The trial lasted only two days, but the fallout will be with us for many
years. Much of the electorate no longer feels any loyalty to the existing
political parties. Many want to preserve the Dutch welfare state, but it's
unclear how to maintain it in an aging nation that is absorbing immigrants.
Without a radical change in direction, Dutch tolerance may become its own
victim. The first step is enacting laws to curb immigration from Islamic
countries. We must also consider ways to prevent arranged marriages between
Muslims living here and people from the Rif (more than half of Dutch
Moroccans marry a traditional partner from their parents' home village). 
 
In the longer term, we must somehow stimulate young Muslims to identify with
the Calvinist values of the majority. The radicalization among small groups
of young Muslims, a threat that cannot be fought within Holland's borders
alone, is a time bomb. 
 
Perhaps what this country needs most of all is another unconventional,
outspoken gay politician. 
 
(Leon de Winter is a novelist and political columnist for Elsevier
magazine.)


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