Fri Aug 28, 2015 | 1:11 PM EDT
By Yoruk Bahceli
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) -
A U.N. body called on the Netherlands on Friday to revamp its "Black Pete" Christmas tradition, where white performers black up to entertain children, as many saw it as a "vestige of slavery".
The comments from the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination will stoke an already heated debate on the custom,
described as a harmless piece of fun by
defenders, but condemned by other groups as
an offensive stereotype.
Prime Minister Mark Rutte quickly dismissed the recommendations, saying it was not the
government's job to shape folklore.
"Guys. Folk traditions, come on. What Christmas songs you should sing, how you celebrate Christmas and Easter – this isn't what politics is about," he told reporters in The Hague. The Geneva-based U.N. committee, which does not have the power to enforce its
recommendations, said the Dutch government
should actively work to get rid of negative racial stereotypes in the depiction of the colorfully blackfaced assistant to a white St. Nicholas -- who inspired Father Christmas.
"(The stereotypes) are experienced by many
people of African descent as a vestige of
slavery," it added.
Black Pete, who often appears with bright red
lips and a curly black wig, has become a fraught topic in a country which has long regarded itself as progressive and tolerant.
In the run-up to last Christmas, police arrested
90 demonstrators in Gouda, 40 miles south of
Amsterdam, for picketing the annual St.
Nicholas parade.
Some carried "Black Pete is racism" banners as others demonstrated in support of the character.
Surinamese, Antillean and African minorities
perceive the tradition as a legacy of colonial
racism.
The National Platform on Slavery, a group which campaigns for atonement for the
Netherlands' past role in the slave trade, said
many black children found the depiction disturbing.
Last year, an Amsterdam court ruled that Black
Pete was racist, but the decision was
overturned by the country's highest
administrative court.
The U.N. panel also called on the government
to reverse its decision not to give food and
shelter to rejected asylum seekers.
Rutte also defended that policy saying it would
be "crazy" to offer permanent shelter to people
who refused to return to their country of origin.
(Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli, additional
reporting by Toby Sterling; Writing by Thomas
Escritt; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
By Yoruk Bahceli
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) -
A U.N. body called on the Netherlands on Friday to revamp its "Black Pete" Christmas tradition, where white performers black up to entertain children, as many saw it as a "vestige of slavery".
The comments from the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination will stoke an already heated debate on the custom,
described as a harmless piece of fun by
defenders, but condemned by other groups as
an offensive stereotype.
Prime Minister Mark Rutte quickly dismissed the recommendations, saying it was not the
government's job to shape folklore.
"Guys. Folk traditions, come on. What Christmas songs you should sing, how you celebrate Christmas and Easter – this isn't what politics is about," he told reporters in The Hague. The Geneva-based U.N. committee, which does not have the power to enforce its
recommendations, said the Dutch government
should actively work to get rid of negative racial stereotypes in the depiction of the colorfully blackfaced assistant to a white St. Nicholas -- who inspired Father Christmas.
"(The stereotypes) are experienced by many
people of African descent as a vestige of
slavery," it added.
Black Pete, who often appears with bright red
lips and a curly black wig, has become a fraught topic in a country which has long regarded itself as progressive and tolerant.
In the run-up to last Christmas, police arrested
90 demonstrators in Gouda, 40 miles south of
Amsterdam, for picketing the annual St.
Nicholas parade.
Some carried "Black Pete is racism" banners as others demonstrated in support of the character.
Surinamese, Antillean and African minorities
perceive the tradition as a legacy of colonial
racism.
The National Platform on Slavery, a group which campaigns for atonement for the
Netherlands' past role in the slave trade, said
many black children found the depiction disturbing.
Last year, an Amsterdam court ruled that Black
Pete was racist, but the decision was
overturned by the country's highest
administrative court.
The U.N. panel also called on the government
to reverse its decision not to give food and
shelter to rejected asylum seekers.
Rutte also defended that policy saying it would
be "crazy" to offer permanent shelter to people
who refused to return to their country of origin.
(Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli, additional
reporting by Toby Sterling; Writing by Thomas
Escritt; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
Semper Fidelis
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USMC
![[Image: SyAa0qj.png]](https://i.imgur.com/SyAa0qj.png)
USMC
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