Good review in Salon by Matt Steinglass of a new book by the Dutch writer Ian Buruma, Murder in Amsterdam: The Death of Theo van Gogh and the Limits of Tolerance, about the murder of film-maker Theo van Gogh by the native-born son of Morrocan immigrants in 2004. The review does a nice job of giving a pocket view of the various issues raised in the book and in particular of highlighting a few of the interesting people the book talks about, from Theo Van Gogh himself, 'whose public persona was that of a fat, abusive, witty, politically incorrect buffoon, equal parts Johnny Knoxville and Michael Moore, the self-proclaimed "dorpsgek" ("village idiot") of the Netherlands,' to Pim Fortuyn, 'a bespoke-suited, flamboyantly gay university professor in a chauffeured Bentley who used the anti-Muslim card to upend the Dutch political landscape in two short years, becoming a favorite for prime minister before himself being assassinated, in 2002, by an environmental extremist,' and Ayaan Hirsi Ali, 'a brilliant and stunningly beautiful Somali from a prominent political family who fled to Holland to escape a forced marriage, learned perfect Dutch, joined the left-wing Labor Party to advocate for abused Muslim women immigrants, and by 2002 was a Member of Parliament and rising star in the conservative free-market Liberal Party.'
Quite an interesting brief portrait of modern Holland and all its contradictions, not least the confrontation between Dutch "gezellig" or "nice" and immigrant Muslim alienation. I hadn't realized until I read this review that Ali was forced out of the country this spring and now lives in the US.
Quite an interesting brief portrait of modern Holland and all its contradictions, not least the confrontation between Dutch "gezellig" or "nice" and immigrant Muslim alienation. I hadn't realized until I read this review that Ali was forced out of the country this spring and now lives in the US.