Crosswords0 min ago
holland/netherlands
i have heard it said that the dutch generally like the british as we helped them during the war. why is this so, what happened exactly. the dutch are very close knit and dont mix well with foreigners, i have friends in amsterdam who are finding it very difficult to integrate. this surely contradicts the former notion.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Before the war, there was a certain amount of anti-British feeling among some sections of the Dutch people. This was a hangover from the Boer war, and was connected with the British practice of putting people in concentration camps. Not surprisingly, during WW2 Britain was seen as a possible saviour of the Dutch and feelings changed. Air drops of weapons, etc. to the Dutch resistance, plus the provision of a place of refuge for the Dutch government in exile, a safe haven for Prince Bernhard, and (I think) for Queen Wilhelmina, all served to raise the profile of Britain in the wartime Netherlands. Of course, the sight of British troops on Dutch soil was the ultimate blessing for the Dutch people. The Dutch are well known for welcoming (some) foreigners, so a comment on your friends' case, in Amsterdam, is not really possible here. Do your friends speak Dutch? That in itself is not a major problem in the big cities, as many Dutch people speak English, but it is seen as a compliment if a foreigner makes an effort to learn something of the language.
In history, the Dutch were colonisers, just as the British were. They were to be found all over the world, mixed well, and probably got on better with the locals than the British did. Indeed, they somehow came to an agreement with the Caribs of the Caribbean, (no-one knows how) and while other nationalities were for years the subject of frenzied attacks, the Dutch tended to be left alone.
Apropos VHG's post: my wife and I stayed in a hotel in the Netherlands, and the car park was accessible to anyone (not locked). A German car got a deep scratch along one side, and it wasn't accidental. It went right down to the primer. Our car was OK. We once stayed with Dutch friends in Rotterdam, and we had to park on the street. Our friends joked next morning that our car still had all 4 wheels, "but then, it is a British car" they said.
On holiday, a long long time ago, we took a sick car into a Dutch garage, asking, in German, if they could fix it. They were very unhelpful, until they heard us talking English between ourselves. The owner was apoplectic, "Don't ever speak German in Holland if you're asking for something" We got the car fixed pdq, though I think nowadays the situation is different.