Black Pete: the scandal we Dutch can’t stay silent about any more
Black Pete: the scandal we Dutch can’t stay silent about any more
Last month in the city of Leeuwarden, in the north of the Netherlands, 34 people – mostly men – stood trial, charged with one of the oddest crimes in recent history.
The crime had been committed a year earlier. Here are the circumstances: in mid-November, as the tradition has it, Sinterklaas, or Saint Nicholas, was due to arrive in Dokkum, a nearby town in the region of Friesland.
Each year children flock to see the Sint (Saint) come off his boat – it’s a highly popular televised event. And each year, more and more activists set out to protest against the tradition.
What they protest against is not Sinterklaas himself – who rides a grey horse called Amerigo and hands out presents on his birthday. No, the problem is Black Pete.
Originally Black Pete was to Sint what Luca Brasi was to Don Corleone: his muscle man, his enforcer.
In the olden days, if children had behaved badly during the year, Pete would give them “the switch”.
Or worse, he would stuff them in a sack and take them away. An elderly white man plays Sinterklaas.
Pete is played by a white man too, dressed in minstrel clothing with his face painted black.