Free at last
By Khaled Diab
With
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©K. Diab |
April 2008
What began as a regular lazy Sunday in
picturesque Ghent would climax with the university city and one-time industrial
centre declaring its unilateral independence and reverting, after some four
centuries, to its ancient status as a city-state – perhaps hoping to recapture
the past glories of when Ghent was the largest city in Europe after Paris or
the first on the continent to industrialise in the middle ages.
The rebel Nieuw-Gentse Alliantie, or New
Ghent Alliance, marked independence in true Ghent’s style with hours of revelry
on one of the city’s main medieval squares. The musical extravaganza was
interrupted temporarily at 6pm when the assembled citizens – 5,000, according
to police sources, at least 8,000, according to the NGA – marched off to hear
the declaration of independence delivered by NGA’s ideological father Edmond
Cocquyt from the balcony of one of the city’s main theatres.
Jan Hoet, the former curator of
The speed with which the NGA, which was
established only in January, has achieved its declared goal has sent shockwaves
across the country. The secret behind their success may stem from the concern
felt by many of
Some have questioned whether
NGA has also played the populist card, heaping
blame on a particular minority group which has been immigrating to
“We have nothing against West Flemings or the
West Flemish identity in itself,” insisted NGA president Jan Beke. “It’s just
there has been far too much migration from
Despite Beke’s declarations of tolerance, the
NGA accuses West Flemings of bringing their alien farmers’ ways to
A troubling NGA video emerged some
weeks ago in which citizens patrols, or vigilante groups, roam the streets of
Ghent barring West Flemings from entering pubs and clubs, while praising the
“good” immigrants from foreign lands who make the effort to live as good
“Gentenaars”. In order perhaps to make life easier for future vigilantes, the
NGA has also floated plans to force West Flemings to wear a headscarf.
Having originally been drawn to live in
“Because I live near the border with
I went out on to the city’s streets to gauge
the public mood. Although I am normally in
I approached a group of young people sitting on
a bench by the river enjoying the lunchtime sun. One young man, who wished not
to be identified, claimed to be close to the NGA’s top brass. He told me, his
spirits high, that: “After the independence party, everyone has a hangover.”
Somewhat chillingly, he described the declaration of independence as merely a
“foretaste of things to come”.
Sara, who is studying at
I asked her what she thought of NGA’s plans to
force West Flemings to take integration and language courses. “I don’t know how
we’re supposed to integrate – we already are integrated,” was her baffled
response. “But if our language is so confusing, then why not have language
courses?” she laughed.
A group of out-of-town shoppers had no idea
that
The idea of an independent
The organisers of the stunt said that they
hoped that their shock therapy approach would help Flemings become better aware
of their situation through “a social experiment to show what happens when you
systematically turn people against a particular group”.
In Flanders, the far-right and Flemish
nationalists have singled out two groups of people to direct their ire at:
Belgian citizens from
Even though the country finally got a new
government nine months later, the cracks have not been shored up and observes
fear that Flemish demands for and Walloon resistance to greater regional
autonomy could cause the government to collapse.
“We’ve achieved our goal and got our message
across,” said Jan Beke, one of the brains behind the stunt who also posed as
the NGA’s president. “All the newspapers and TV stations have given us a lot of
attention.”
The socialist mayor of Ghent Daniël Termont,
who was in on the joke, said on a TV debating programme: “This is a very smart
stunt which holds up a mirror to
In fact so convincing was the spoof that the
mayor and the NGA received a spate of queries and complaints from concerned
citizens which forced them to come clean, 10 days before the declaration of
independence, and admit that their months-long campaign was a practical joke.
On Monday evening,
This column appeared
in The Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free section on 1
April 2008. Read the related
discussion.
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