Dutch police arrest 100 protesting ‘Black Pete’ | Lifestyle.INQ

OCTOBER 27, 2022

Black Pete with Saint Nicholas
A man dressed as Sinterklaas (Saint Nicolas) and another one dressed as Zwarte Piet (Black Pete) gesture from a balcony on Nov. 12, 2016 in Antwerp. Black Pete is the companion of Saint Nicolas during the Sinterklaas festival celebrated on the evening of Dec. 5, and has become the subject of much controversy in recent years as some people think it is racist. —KRISTOF VAN ACCOM/ANP/AFP
Black Pete with Saint Nicholas
A man dressed as Sinterklaas (Saint Nicolas) and another one dressed as Zwarte Piet (Black Pete) gesture from a balcony on Nov. 12, 2016 in Antwerp. Black Pete is the companion of Saint Nicolas during the Sinterklaas festival celebrated on the evening of Dec. 5, and has become the subject of much controversy in recent years as some people think it is racist. —KRISTOF VAN ACCOM/ANP/AFP

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Dutch police said Saturday they had arrested about 100 protestors demonstrating against Black Pete, the jolly sidekick of Dutch Saint Nicholas accused of being a racist stereotype.

“We arrested about 100 people who were demonstrating in Rotterdam, where the protests were banned for the day,” local police spokeswoman Lillian van Duijvenbode told AFP.

“We asked them to stop their demonstration at three different places in town, but they refused,” she added, saying possible legal action would be decided on a case-by-case basis.

Several thousand people including many children had gathered earlier in the day in Maasluis, a small town between Rotterdam and The Hague, to watch the arrival by boat and rally of Saint-Nicholas and his companions.

They traditionally bring gifts for children at the start of December, but every year there is a debate on whether Black Pete represents a racist stereotype.

While many Dutch people refuse to countenance a change in the tradition, critics say his Afro hair, black sink, red lips and earrings are a reminder of the era when the Netherlands exploited slaves, notably in Surinam.

The traditional festivities for Saint Nicolas dates back to the 16th century, with the first appearance of Black Pete in the 1850s.

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