Assyrians and Syriacs in the Netherlands

Assyrians and Syriacs in the Netherlands

The Assyrian/Syriac-Dutch ( _nl. Assyrische/Syrischen-Nederlanders) are citizens of The Netherlands of Assyrian/Syriacs ancestry. They mainly live in the east of the country, in the province of Overijssel, in such cities as Enschede, Hengelo, Almelo and Borne. The main reason that the Assyrians are concentrated there is because it is an industrial area which lies at the border with Germany, where a large German Assyrian population resides (many Assyrians/Syriacs in the Netherlands have relatives on the West coast of Germany.)

The Assyrians/Syriacs have integrated well into the Dutch culture, and thus do not attract negative press coverage like other immigrant groups. While the Netherlands does not take an ethnic census, the number of Assyrians/Syriacs is estimated to be between the 25,000 and 35,000. Assyrians/Syriacs in the Netherlands have their own monastery in Europe, which lies in the city Glanerbrug near the German border.

History

The first Assyrians/Syriacs came to the Netherlands in the 1970s; most of them were Western Syriacs from Turkey. In the 1980s, Western Syriacs from Syria began to emigrate to the Netherlands. The latest group of Assyrians/Syriacs immigrants come from Iraq, and have been arriving since the first Gulf War.

In the 1980s, as with other immigrants in Europe, a strong feeling of nationalism started to develop among the Assyrians/Syriacs in Holland. This sentiment started to make Assyrians/Syriacs be active in working for projects that helped them preserve their identity. A few projects that started out were Assyrians/Syriacs society building, Assyrians/Syriacs churches and Assyrians/Syriacs language classes, which were being given in Dutch schools to Assyrian children and also on weekends in so-called Bible school classes. They also started camps for Assyrians/Syriacs youth, Assyrians/Syriacs music and dance classes were offered in the community, lectures to adult Assyrians on society building and lots of social events were organized for the Assyrians/Syriacs community.

The Assyrians/Syriacs began to organize demonstrations to bring their situation in the Assyrian homeland to the attention of the media and to bring the 20th century Assyrian genocide to the attention of the Dutch government.

Current situation

The Assyrians/Syriacs have managed to both integrate into Dutch society and maintain their own ethnic identity, as there are a lot of social events organized by Assyrians/Syriacs clubs. One of the latest projects which Assyrians/Syriacs in Holland have started are the Seyfo centre, the Assyrians/Syriacs church choir, representations of Assyrians/Syriacs in the Dutch government (such as Attiya Gamri) and the foundation of the Assyrian youth movement (AJF).

Assyrians/Syriacs in the Netherlands mostly belong to Syriac Orthodox church, but there is also a small community belonging to the Chaldean Catholic Church and Assyrian Church of the East. The first Assyrians/Syriacs mainly worked in factories or opened restaurants, but the youth these days mostly study college and university and work in all sectors of the economy.

ources

* [http://www.ajf-online.nl/news.php Assyrian Youth Federation in Holland]
* [http://www.bethnahrin.nl/ Assyrian Social Club of Holland]
* [http://users.skynet.be/suffrage-universel/nl/assyriens06.htm Les Assyriens d'Enschede seront à nouveau représentés au conseil communal]

External links

* [http://www.aramesebeweging.nl/ Aramaic Movement for Human rights in the Netherlands]
*http://www.assyrie.nl/


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