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Letters from Europe

by Nermin Aydemir     

   
After One Year of the Murder of van Gogh

           Theo van Gogh was murdered by Morocco originated Mohammed Bouyeri on the 2nd of November 2004. The murder of the controversial name had great repercussions. The Netherlands faced serious challenges towards its multicultural structure after the long morning of the 2nd November last year. 

Van Gogh was killed by a Muslim immigrant, M. Bouyeri, and this gave the chance for the ones who lacked legitimate ground for their racist tendencies. It is by no means possible to justify the act of murdering, particularly the brutal scenes taken place in Amsterdam last year. But it also not fair to blame the whole Muslim society for this individual criminality.  Not only the case itself but the one sided attitudes of the Dutch media and prominent politicians hampered the already fragile balance in the society to a significant extent. 20% of the people, living in the Netherlands are foreigners; about one million Muslims live in this country. The municipality of Amsterdam declared last summer that 49% of its population was constituted by foreigners. People have to think twice when raising the extreme nationalist tendencies in such a demographic structure. Moreover, the Netherlands is one of the best examples of peaceful coexistence and has a mission to keep its humanitarian values in an era in which the clash of civilizations is persistently promoted.

Van Gogh has been reflected as the spoilt child of television, a genius intellectual, and completely innocent. Nobody mentioned how he used to insult Muslims as well as people from different religions and of course nobody quoted his slang language when talking about his “intellectuality”. Media had something very popular in hand and used it roughly. Framing the case as the fight between Islam and the “modern world” really increased the audience. Society was divided into two camps- us and them, just like Mr. Bush said after the 11th September.

            Nowadays, the Netherlands seems to overcome the turmoil to an important extent. However things changed considerably after the 2nd November last year and the multicultural structure of this country has been wounded severely.

nermin@turkishweekly.net

02 November 2005
Nermin Aydemir is Netherland representative for Journal of Turkish Weekly

  Previous Comments
Advancement within the Immigrant Society: Not an Easy Task to Achieve   2008-11-28 10:00:33
Some Socio-Economic Variables among Migrants in the Netherlands   2008-11-13 01:00:57
Changing Conceptualizations in Security   2008-06-16 16:40:35
Saving the Agenda from Extremists: The Dutch Case   2008-04-02 13:42:24
Anti-Koran Film in the Netherlands: Commonsense Prevails  2008-03-21 17:52:20
Judges in Berlin?   2008-03-07 16:47:00
Germany Capable of Solving Racism?  2008-03-04 18:53:34
Germany Capable of Solving Racism?  2008-03-04 18:46:09
Fire in the German City of Ludwigshafen  2008-02-14 10:41:02
Fire in the German City of Ludwigshafen  2008-02-13 16:42:27
Ashura- The Best Symbol to Describe Multiculturalism in Turkey   2008-01-19 16:20:39
When Parliaments Take over the Place of Courts   2007-10-23 19:45:06
The Immigrant Youth: Shortcomings in Participation   2007-10-10 09:32:06
Voting among the Turkish-Dutch  2007-06-01 11:25:22
The Dual Citizenship Debate in the Netherlands  2007-04-03 18:36:50
To Miss Hilda Darian, My Armenian Reader  2006-12-21 15:08:23
The Armenian Issue in the Netherlands: The removal of the three Turkish-originated MPs from the Candidacy List  2006-10-18 11:21:19
Fundamentalism  2006-07-12 13:46:07
Losing Freedom of Speech  2006-05-05 14:11:37
The New Naturalization Regulations in the Netherlands  2006-03-29 13:56:22
Change in Education Policies in ex-Communist Regimes  2006-03-21 11:20:18
The Identity Issue  2006-03-21 11:18:09
Remarks over Dutch Politics before Municipal Elections  2006-03-21 11:16:01
Naturalization in Germany: Not Easy to Become German  2006-01-26 19:13:11
Immigrant Rebels in France: A Difficult Process of Reconstructing Identities  2005-12-04 11:26:44
Consensus Democracies in Deadlock  2005-11-07 17:35:46
After One Year of the Murder of van Gogh  2005-11-02 13:35:38
Civilizations are Coming Together  2005-10-18 18:04:43
Missing the Humanitarian Values of Europe  2005-08-05 16:33:28
Dutch Multiculturalism in Question: The Case of Ayaan Ali Hirsi  2005-08-05 16:04:04
The Case of Theo van Gogh: Is it the End of Multiculturalism?  2005-08-05 15:58:44
The Dutch Says “Nee” to the Constitution  2005-08-05 15:55:20


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