Afrikaanderwijk riots

Last updated
Afrikaanderwijk Riots (1972)
Turks riot (the Netherlands) Rotterdam olayları (Turkey)
Een Turkse man ruimt de rommel op in zijn vernielde woning, na rellen in Afrikaa, Bestanddeelnr 925-8093.jpg
A Turk and his destroyed property, 1972
Date9 August - 14 August 1972
Location
Caused by Xenophobia, housing crisis in Rotterdam
Resulted in
  • Rotterdam law
  • Turkish, Morrocan and Spanish guest workers leave Afrikaanderwijk
  • 45 Turks were expelled from the country
Casualties
Injuries4 Turks
Arrested82

Afrikaanderwijk riots were the first race riots of their kind in the Netherlands. The riots broke out on 10 August 1972 and continued until 16 August in the Afrikaanderwijk, Rotterdam. [1] While their precise cause is unknown, the clashes are considered to be an example of xenophobic violence by some and economic tensions by others. [2] The clashes are known for creating new laws towards the city's growing immigrant population and destroying the stereotype of Dutch tolerance. [3] In 2019, it gained renewed popularity due to the events in Ankara: Islamist and activist organizations used the riots of 1972 as an example to create empathy for the Syrian refugees in Turkey. [4]

Contents

Name

The events are known in the Netherlands under various names, including Turkenrellen (Turks riot), [5] Pogrommerdam, [3] Afrikaanderwijk unrest or Pension riots. [6] In Turkey the incident is known as 'Rotterdam olayları', "Rotterdam events". [2]

The riot

As early as July 1971 a local commission warned about a possible race riot between the Dutch and immigrants; the Dutch in Rotterdam viewed the Turks as a community with a housing advantage compared to them. [6] Dutch natives became increasingly financially able to move to the suburbs, leaving behind disadvantaged lower class households, dissatisfied with the lack of social-cultural homogeneity in the neighbourhood. [7] The growing number of immigrants had increased accommodation prices. [8]

According to Marc Schuilenburg, Professor of Digital Surveillance at the Erasmus School of Law, there was a housing crisis in the neighbourhood, the feeling that the municipality neglected the situation and had no interest in the complaints of the residents, combined with racism and xenophobia. [9] According to the Rotterdam Mayor Thomassen the unrest was racially motivated. [3]

Things escalated on Thursday, 9 August, when a Dutch woman got into a dispute over her rent arrears and was illegally evicted, without court order, from a building owned by a Turkish guesthouse owner, [6] called the 'King of the Turks'. [7] A hour later the police arrived and found three Dutch injured and arrested four Turks. Soon a crowd of five hundred Dutch gathered around the place where the three Dutchmen were wounded. The crowd did not leave all night, [3] and people from other neighbourhoods and cities also joined the quarrel. Although the police tried to push back the rioters, the latter appeared every night with stones and sticks. [6] Turkish guest houses were attacked with firebombs and rocks, [9] the Turkish signs from the shops were removed and replaced by Dutch signs saying "this is the Netherlands". [2] One of the leaders of the riots said that their fury was not directed against the Turks, but against the Turkish hostels:

We did not do anything against these Turkish families, we were only about these hostels. First we took soundings in the neighbourhood as to whether we could get any support. After we had some fifteen people assembled, we gave those Turks a good dressing down. They did not have to leave, oh no, they just had to know their place.

The police remained passive most of the time, and did not know how to react, as this was the first time such an event had taken place in the country. The passivity of the police led to the continuation of clashes until 14 August. [10]

Several guest houses for migrants were closed and 82 people were arrested, [9] 4 Turks were injured, [11] 45 Turks, including 40 workers were expelled and the Dutch government paid compensation to 21 Turks. [4]

In the weeks following the incident, the municipality closed more than forty guest houses because they did not meet the requirements of the building and housing supervision. In October 1972, another 200 boarding houses were closed [6] The riots received media attention from the Dutch and Turkish press. They were covered by English-language newspapers such as The Guardian, The Washington post and The New York Times as well. [3]

Aftermath

The riots draw national attention to the problem of housing for foreign workers, who between 1968 and 1974 were recruited by the Dutch government to do mostly dirty and unpleasant work. Their employers signed contracts with cheap hostels near the centre of big cities.

Turks inspect smashed windows Onrust in de Rotterdamse Afrikaanderbuurt, Turken bekijken schade aan woning na , Bestanddeelnr 925-8057.jpg
Turks inspect smashed windows

A decision was made by the Rotterdam municipality according to which people of non-Western origin (Mediterranean, Surinamese, and Antillean people) should not exceed 5% of the population of a given neighbourhood. [6] This percentage was chosen because the presence of these groups in Rotterdam altogether was 5%. [12] As the decision had no basis in law, it was declared void by the Council of State in 1974.

In 2005, the Wet bijzondere maatregelen grootstedelijke problematiek was adopted, also known as the "Rotterdam Law". [13] The law introduced three housing selection tools to improve the quality of life in Rotterdam's neighbourhoods. These tools excluded home seekers based on income, and prioritized home seekers with certain socio-economic features and exclusion of home seekers that recently caused disturbance or with criminal background. [9] According to the new law, which had its precursor in more informal practices since the 1980's, [14] new immigrants were placed in neighbourhoods where less than 16% of the population was of non-Western background. [15]

In culture

Cihad Caner, a Dutch-Turkish artist dedicated his work (Re)membering the riots in Afrikaanderwijk in 1972 or guest, host, ghos-ti to the riots. He interviewed several witnesses and victims. [16] According to him:

The work revolves around a forgotten event: the 1972 riots directed against guest workers in Afrikaanderwijk, a neighbourhood of Rotterdam. It poses questions such as how we remember, the role of subjectivity in shaping our collective memory, and the transformative potential of re-enactment as a means of reawakening the past. Central to this research is a meticulous focus on memory, as it seeks to unravel the subjective nature of individual recollections, recognising that memory is not a fixed entity but rather a fluid and subjective phenomenon. The aim of the work is to highlight contrasting shades and nuances that exist among various individual remembrances of the Afrikaanderwijk riots, allowing for a diverse range of perspectives to be acknowledged and woven together. Reenactments feature as pivotal elements within the project, which not only allows for the recreation and revisitation of the past, but the process of reenactment itself operates as a potent tool for reclaiming forgotten narratives. [17]

Robert de Hartogh, a Dutch photographer, became interested in the Netherlands' Turkish community after the riots. [18] The photographic series Annotations on Afrikaanderwijk (2019) were dedicated to the 1972 clashes. [19]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Demographics of the Netherlands</span>

Demographic features of the population of the Netherlands include population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the population, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Excelsior Rotterdam</span> Dutch football club

Excelsior Rotterdam, commonly known as Excelsior, is a Dutch professional football club based in Rotterdam, Netherlands. They play in the Eredivisie, the top tier of Dutch football from the 2022–23 season following promotion. The club was founded on 23 July 1902 and was formerly known as "Rotterdamse Voetbal en Atletiek Vereniging Excelsior". Excelsior's home stadium is the Stadion Woudestein – for sponsorship reasons known as the Van Donge & De Roo Stadion – which has a capacity of about 4,500, one of the smallest stadiums hosting professional football in the Netherlands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Islam in the Netherlands</span>

Islam is the second largest religion in the Netherlands, after Christianity, and is practised by 5% of the population according to 2018 estimates. The majority of Muslims in the Netherlands belong to the Sunni denomination. Many reside in the country's four major cities: Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Utrecht.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Erasmus University Rotterdam</span> Public university in the Netherlands

Erasmus University Rotterdam is a public research university located in Rotterdam, Netherlands. The university is named after Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus, a 15th-century Christian humanist and theologian.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Feijenoord</span> Place in South Holland, Netherlands

Feijenoord is a district in Rotterdam and is located south of the Nieuwe Maas. As of 1 January 2004 there were 72,320 inhabitants. The area is 6.44 km². It is not the current home of the city's main football club, Feyenoord, which is now in the neighbouring township of IJsselmonde.

Turks in the Netherlands refers to people of full or partial Turkish ethnicity living in the Netherlands. They form the largest ethnic minority group in the country; thus, the Turks are the second-largest ethnic group in the Netherlands after the ethnic Dutch. The majority of Dutch Turks descend from the Republic of Turkey; however, there has also been significant Turkish migration waves from other post-Ottoman countries including ethnic Turkish communities which have come to the Netherlands from the Balkans, the island of Cyprus, as well as from other parts of the Levant. More recently, during the European migrant crisis significant waves of Turkish minorities from Syria and Kosovo have also arrived in the Netherlands. In addition, there has been migration to the Netherlands from the Turkish diaspora; many Turkish-Belgians and Turkish-Germans have arrived in the country as Belgian and German citizens.

Multiculturalism in the Netherlands began with major increases in immigration during the 1950s and 1960s. As a consequence, an official national policy of multiculturalism was adopted in the early 1980s. This policy subsequently gave way to more assimilationist policies in the 1990s and post-electoral surveys uniformly showed from 1994 onwards that a majority preferred that immigrants assimilated rather than retained the culture of their country of origin. Even though the general acceptance of immigrants increased, opinion polls from the early 1980s and after showed that many were critical of immigration. Following the murders of Pim Fortuyn and Theo van Gogh the political debate on the role of multiculturalism in the Netherlands reached new heights.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Netherlands–Turkey relations</span> Bilateral relations

Dutch–Turkish relations are the bilateral relations between the Netherlands and Turkey. The diplomatic relations widely encompass and span four centuries, beginning in 1612. The first Turkish representative in the Netherlands started activities in 1859.

The term Rotterdam derby refers to the local derbies in Rotterdam played between two of the three professional football clubs Feyenoord, Sparta Rotterdam or Excelsior. It specifically refers to individual matches between the clubs, but can also be used to describe the general ongoing rivalry between the clubs, players and/or fans.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Afrikaanderwijk</span> Neighborhood of Rotterdam in South Holland, Netherlands

Afrikaanderwijk is a neighborhood of Rotterdam, Netherlands. It lies in the Feijenoord district of the city, and is traditionally a working-class neighborhood. The neighborhood was one of the first in the Netherlands to have a majority of residents with a foreign background, primarily consisting of Turks, Moroccans, Surinamese, and Antilleans.

The 1934 Resettlement Law was a policy adopted on 14 June 1934 by the Turkish government which set forth the basic principles of immigration. Joost Jongerden has written that the law constituted a policy of forcible assimilation of non-Turkish minorities through forced and collective resettlement.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Denk (political party)</span> Dutch political party

Denk is a political party in the Netherlands, founded on a minority rights platform. It is legally registered as "Politieke Beweging Denk".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 Dutch–Turkish diplomatic incident</span> Bilateral relations

In March 2017, the Netherlands and Turkey were involved in a diplomatic incident, triggered by Turkish efforts to hold political rallies on Dutch territory and subsequent travel restrictions placed by Dutch authorities on Turkish officials seeking to promote the campaign for a 'yes' vote in the upcoming Turkish constitutional referendum to Turkish citizens living in the Netherlands. Such foreign campaigning is illegal under Turkish law.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amsterdam coronation riots</span> 1980 riots in The Netherlands

The Amsterdam coronation riots refers to major violence and rioting in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, on the day of the accession of Queen Beatrix, 30 April 1980. It was one of the biggest episodes of such disturbances in the country since the end of World War II and the most significant event of the Dutch squatters' movement (Krakersrellen).

The 1999 Rotterdam riots refers to serious riots and clashes between Dutch security forces and football hooligans in Rotterdam, the Netherlands on 26 April 1999.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">COVID-19 pandemic in the Netherlands</span> Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in the Netherlands

The COVID-19 pandemic in the Netherlands has resulted in 8,635,061 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 22,986 deaths.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2021 Dutch curfew riots</span> Riots against restrictions imposed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Netherlands

The 2021 Dutch curfew riots were a series of riots in the Netherlands that initiated as protests against the government's COVID-19 prevention measures and specifically the 21:00–4:30 curfew that was introduced on 23 January 2021. The police have described the riots as the worst in the country since the 1980 coronation riots.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2021 Altındağ attack</span>

Altındağ Incidents is a protest that took place on 10 August 2021 in Battalgazi neighbourhood of Altındağ district of Ankara, as a result of a quarrel between a Syrian group and 2 young people, and the Syrian group stabbed 2 Turkish young people. As a result of the incident, one of the young people lost his life and 2 people were detained. After this incident, crowded activist groups organized marches. These groups attacked the houses and shops of Syrians. Riot police and riot police were deployed to the tense areas. According to Ankara Security Directorate, 148 people were detained for their involvement in the incidents in Altındağ.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">COVID-19 protests in Netherlands</span> Protests against restrictions introduced in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Netherlands

Protests against COVID-19 in the Netherlands were a series of protests and riots in the Netherlands against the government COVID-19 prevention measures, which were in force between 27 January 2020 and 20 May 2022, with travel restrictions lifted on 17 September 2022. The protests came to a head with the 2021 Dutch curfew riots in response to a nationwide night-time curfew between 23 January and 28 April 2021. Since the end of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Netherlands, a number of anti-lockdown protest groups and individual protesters have shifted their attention to the ongoing, largely concurrent Dutch farmers' protests against government legislation to limit agricultural pollution by downsizing livestock production.

The Schiedam riots broke out in 6 August 1976 in Schiedam, Netherlands, when two Dutch teens were stabbed, one fatally, after an argument between two Turkish and five Dutch teens. On that night, several Dutch youth planned, and later attacked Turkish bars and residents in the neighbourhood, smashing their windows. Local residents were among the leaders of the clashes. The riot continued for five to six days. The police were passive during the riots, and when trying to stop the rioters, they were also attacked.

References

  1. Freehouse: Radicalizing the local
  2. 1 2 3 "1972 yılında Rotterdam'da ne olmuştu?". Serbestiyet (in Turkish). 2021-08-15. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Rellen in de Afrikaanderwijk" (PDF). Meent. 2012.
  4. 1 2 "Suriyelilere Düşmanlık Körükleyenlere 1972'daki Rotterdam Olayları Hatırlatması". Haksöz Haber (in Turkish). 2019-06-30. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  5. Hijlkema, Manou (2019). (T)RACES IN THE AFRIKAANDERWIJK.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "50 jaar na rellen Rotterdamse Afrikaanderwijk: 'Acht dagen niet normaal slapen'". nos.nl (in Dutch). 2022-08-07. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  7. 1 2 Popken, Bart. "The social impacts of gentrification policy in the Tweebosbuurt in Rotterdam". Social Impact.
  8. "Onrust in de Afrikaanderwijk". geschiedenislokaal010.nl. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  9. 1 2 3 4 ""Safety cannot improve with just the law and a baton" | Erasmus School of Law | Erasmus University Rotterdam". www.eur.nl. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  10. Witte, Rob (2014). Racist Violence and the State: A comparative Analysis of Britain, France and the Netherlands. Routledge. ISBN   9781317889199.
  11. "IRKÇI SÖYLEMLER VE EYLEMLER İNSANLIK AYIBIDIR. ROTTERDAM'DA YAŞANANLAR HOLLANDA TARİHİNE KARA LEKE OLDU | İlhan Karaçay" (in Turkish). Retrieved 2024-02-24.
  12. Boven, Leana. SPATIAL INJUSTICE IN ROTTERDAM: PAST AND PRESENT PRACTICES OF RACIAL VIOLENCE INFLICTED UPON CERTAIN RACIALIZED BODIES THROUGH THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT (PDF).
  13. "Wet bijzondere maatregelen grootstedelijke problematiek". Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en Koninkrijksrelaties. 2005.
  14. Ouwehand, André; Doff, Wenda (2013). "Who Is Afraid of a Changing Population? Reflections on Housing Policy in Rotterdam". Geography Research Forum. 33.
  15. Foundations, Open Society (2010). Muslims in Rotterdam (PDF). Open Society Foundations. pp. 93–101. JSTOR   resrep27162.14.
  16. "'It's important to me that people know about the history of their own neighborhoods' – in conversation with Cihad Caner". Metropolis M. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  17. "(Re)membering the riots in Afrikaanderwijk in 1972 or guest, host, ghos-ti : Cihad Caner". www.cihadcaner.com. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  18. "Afrikaanderwijk". The Hotstepper's Blog. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  19. "Annotations on Afrikaanderwijk - Hannah Dawn Henderson". www.hannahdawnhenderson.net. Retrieved 2024-02-23.