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Flemish Movement

The Flemish Movement (Dutch: Vlaamse Beweging) is an umbrella term which encompasses various political groups in the Belgian region of Flanders and, less commonly, in French Flanders. Ideologically, it encompasses groups which have sought to promote Flemish culture and the Dutch language as well as those seeking greater political autonomy for Flanders within Belgium. It also encompassed nationalists who seek the secession of Flanders from Belgium, either through outright independence or unification with the Netherlands.

Flemish strijdvlag as adopted by large parts of the Flemish Movement

In the 19th century, the Flemish Movement emerged around a form of cultural patriotism which celebrated Flemish traditions and history and sought equal status for Dutch in the Belgian nation-state, often under the auspices of the Catholic Church. Although gaining many of its initial objectives, it became increasingly radical in the aftermath of World War I. Inspired by authoritarian and fascist politics, it was widely discredited for its association with collaboration in German-occupied Belgium during World War II. However, it re-emerged in the post-war period under the auspices of the Volksunie (1954–2002) and increasingly permeated into other parties in Flanders. The Flemish Movement's right wing is dominated by right-wing nationalist organizations such as Vlaams Belang, Voorpost, Nationalistische Studentenvereniging (Nationalist Students Union), and several others. The most radical group on the left side is the socialist and Flemish independentist Flemish-Socialist Movement. The militant wing also still comprises several moderate groups such as the New Flemish Alliance (N-VA, Nieuw-Vlaamse Alliantie), and several extra-parliamentary organisations, many of which are represented in the Overlegcentrum van Vlaamse Verenigingen (OVV, Consultation Centre of Flemish Associations). The most important of these is the Vlaamse Volksbeweging (VVB, Flemish People's Movement).

In recent history, the Flemish Movement has increasingly grown amid the 2007-2011 Belgian political crisis and its aftermath.[1][2][3] Since 2010, the separatist N-VA party has been the biggest polled in Flanders,[4] while Vlaams Belang has become the second largest in the 2019 federal and regional elections.[5]

History edit

Early roots edit

 
Jan Frans Willems

In the Spanish and then Austrian Netherlands in the 18th century and until the Brabant Revolution, the language of the literate was Spanish and then gradually French, but accompanied by a vernacular language. Language problems did not arise at that time.

In 1788 Jan Baptist Chrysostomus Verlooy (1747–1797), a jurist and politician from the Southern Netherlands, wrote an essay titled Verhandeling op d'Onacht der moederlycke tael in de Nederlanden[6] (Essay on the disregard of the native language in the Low Countries). It is considered to be the first movement in favour of the Flemish language, but also in favour of freedom and democracy.

Before the creation of the Belgian state, the French language had already been for centuries a lingua franca for the bourgeoisie and noble elites among Europe (including the territories that would then become Belgium). With the French Revolution and Napoleon's conquests, today's Belgium was attached to France in 1795. France imposed its official language on the Belgian territory with the result of accelerating the conversion of the upper class from current Wallonia and Flanders to the French language.

At that time, most of the population however spoke Germanic languages and dialects in the north and south (Flemish, Brabantian, Limburgish and Luxembourgish) as well as Romance languages and dialects in the south of the territory (Walloon, Picard, Champenois and Lorrain) which were not standardized and unified languages. Those people often could not understand or speak any French.

Belgian Independence edit

After the fall of Napoleon, the Congress of Vienna of 1815 led to the creation of a buffer state: the United Kingdom of the Netherlands composed of today's Netherlands, Luxembourg and Belgium.

The United Kingdom of the Netherlands survived for a short period of 15 years; that was put to an end by the Belgian revolution. The revolution was due to a combination of factors, the main one being the difference of religion (Catholic in today's Belgium, Protestant in today's Netherlands). Other important factors also played a role in the independence. Among those factors, we can cite:

  • The under-representation of Belgians in the parliament (62% of the population for 50% of the seats);[7]
  • The over-representation of Dutch people in the administration and important positions (4 times more);[8]
  • The fact that the public debt of the Netherlands (higher than the one of the south) had to be supported by the today's Belgium as well;[9]
  • The diminution in the freedom of the press and freedom of assembly.
  • William I of the Netherlands imposed the standard Dutch everywhere in the Flemish-speaking part of Belgium, provoking the anger of the Flemish (albeit close to their language, Flemish people did not master at the time standard Dutch and were not considering this language as theirs [citation needed]) and of the French-speaking upper-class of today's Belgium. On 4 June 1830 (before the revolution) linguistic freedom was however restored.[10]

A common grievance of the Flemish movement is that the Belgian revolution was a will of the French-speaking Belgians. They invoke that the volunteers were mainly Walloons and from the French-speaking bourgeoisie. This argument has also been invoked by Walloon nationalists in the past.[11]

Two studies conducted by prof. John W. Rooney Jr.[12] and prof. Jean Stengers[13] however contradict those statements. These studies have shown that the vast majority of the revolutionaries originated from Brussels and from the province of Brabant and were of modest origin. According to John W. Rooney Jr., between 73% and 88% of the dead and injured were from Brussels and 91% and 95% were from Brabant.[14] Jean Stengers reaches the same conclusion (76% of the fighters from Brussels[15]). Prof. Els Witte comes to the same conclusion regarding the origin of the fighters.[16] At the time, Brussels and the province of Brabant are mainly Brabantian-speaking (close to Flemish), which shows that Flemish speakers actively took part in the Belgian revolution. Rooney concludes that 60% of the workers who took part in the revolution were Flemish speakers.[17] According to the same study, the upper class accounted for only 5% of revolutionaries.[18]

A large part of the Francophone Belgian elites were in fact opposed to the revolution and wanted to remain within the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, considering that their interests would be better served there. This led to a movement called "Orangism" which spread among a substantial part of the French-speaking elites of Flanders, Brussels and Wallonia.

After the Belgian revolution, protests occurred in large Flemish cities, notably in Ghent, where the textile industry was deeply hurt by the new political situation.[19] Those events are however not to be misplaced in time, as they occurred months after the actual revolution.

French Flanders edit

Upon Belgium becoming an independent state from the Netherlands, there was an (administrative) reaction against the Dutch and their language. In an attempt to remove Dutch from the new country, Belgian officials declared that the only official language in Belgium now was French. The Administration, Justice System, and higher education (apart from elementary schools in Flanders) all functioned in the French language.[20] Even Brussels, the capital where more than 95% of the population spoke Dutch, lacked a formal, state-sanctioned Flemish school of higher education.[21] The consequence was that every contact with the government and justice was conducted in French. This led to a number of erroneous legal judgements where innocent people received the death penalty because they were not able to verbally defend themselves at trials.[22]

The French-speaking Belgian government succeeded in removing the Dutch language from all levels of government more quickly in Brussels than in any other part of Flanders.[23] Because the administration was centered in Brussels, more and more French-speaking officials took up residency there. Education in Brussels was only in French which led to a surplus of young, unskilled and uneducated Flemish men. Dutch was hardly taught in the French schools.[24] For example: Dutch was worth 10 points in French schools, but drawing earned 15 points.[20] Today 16% of Brussels is Dutch-speaking, whereas in 1830 it was over 95%.[25]

The French-speaking bourgeoisie showed very little respect for the Flemish portion of the population. Belgium's co-founder, Charles Rogier, wrote in 1832 to Jean-Joseph Raikem, the minister of justice:

"Les premiers principes d'une bonne administration sont basés sur l'emploi exclusif d'une langue, et il est évident que la seule langue des Belges doit être le français. Pour arriver à ce résultat, il est nécessaire que toutes les fonctions civiles et militaires soient confiées à des Wallons et à des Luxembourgeois; de cette manière, les Flamands, privés temporairement des avantages attachés à ces emplois, seront contraints d'apprendre le français, et l'on détruira ainsi peu à peu l'élément germanique en Belgique."[25]

"The first principles of a good administration are based upon the exclusive use of one language, and it is evident that the only language of the Belgians should be French. In order to achieve this result, it is necessary that all civil and military functions are entrusted to Walloons and Luxemburgers; this way, the Flemish, temporarily deprived of the advantages of these offices, will be constrained to learn French, and we will hence destroy bit by bit the Germanic element in Belgium."

In 1838, another co-founder, senator Alexandre Gendebien, even declared that the Flemish were "one of the more inferior races on the Earth, just like the negroes".[26]

The economic heart of Belgium in those days was Flanders.[27] However, Wallonia would soon take the lead due to the Industrial Revolution. The Belgian establishment deemed it unnecessary to invest in Flanders and no less than 80% of the Belgian GNP between 1830 and 1918 went to Wallonia.[28] This had as a consequence that Wallonia had a surplus of large coal mines and iron ore facilities, while Flanders, to a large extent, remained a rural, farming region. When Belgium became independent, the economy of Flanders was hard hit. Antwerp was now almost impossible to reach by ships (The Scheldt River was blocked by the Netherlands) and foreign trade was drastically affected. The prosperous textile industry of Ghent lost a major portion of its market to Amsterdam.[29]

A call for change edit

 
Bust of Hugo Verriest [nl] in Roeselare, Belgium.

It was decades after the Belgian revolution that Flemish intellectuals such as Jan Frans Willems, Philip Blommaert, Karel Lodewijk Ledeganck, Ferdinand Augustijn Snellaert, August Snieders, Prudens van Duyse, and Hendrik Conscience began to call for recognition of the Dutch language and Flemish culture in Belgium. This movement became known as the Flemish Movement, but was more intellectual than social, with contributors such as the poets Guido Gezelle, Hugo Verriest [nl], and Albrecht Rodenbach (all of whom were associated with the Minor Seminary, Roeselare).

Cultural organizations promoting the Dutch language and Flemish culture were founded, such as the Willemsfonds in 1851, and the Davidsfonds in 1875. The first Vlaemsch Verbond (Constant Leirens, Ghent) and the Nederduitse Bond, were founded in 1861. The Liberale Vlaemsche Bond was founded in 1867. Writers such as Julius de Geyter and Max Rooses were active in the Nederduitse Bond. On 26 September 1866, Julius de Geyter founded the Vlaamsche Bond in Antwerp. The Flemish weekly magazine Het Volksbelang, founded by Julius Vuylsteke, appeared for the first time on 12 January 1867.

In 1861, the first Flemish political party, the Meetingpartij was founded in Antwerp, by radical liberals, Catholics and Flamingants (Jan Theodoor van Rijswijck, J. De Laet and E. Coremans), and it existed until 1914. In 1888, Julius Hoste Sr. founded the moderate liberal Flemish newspaper Het Laatste Nieuws, to support the Flemish Movement in Brussels. In 1893, the Flemish priest Adolf Daens, founded the Christene Volkspartij, which would cause a radicalization and democratization of the Catholic party. The first Flemish political success was the passing of the Gelijkheidswet (Equality law) in 1898 that for the first time recognized Dutch as equal to French in judicial matters (legal documents).

World War I edit

The liberal politician Louis Franck, the Roman Catholic Frans Van Cauwelaert and the socialist Camille Huysmans (together they were called the three crowing cocks) worked together for the introduction of Dutch at Ghent University. In 1911 the proposal by Lodewijk De Raet to this end was accepted, though it would not be implemented until 1930. With the coming of the 20th century the Flemish Movement became more radical and during World War I some activists welcomed the occupiers as "liberating Germanic brothers". The young Marnix Gijsen and the poet Paul van Ostaijen were involved in this activist movement during the war. The Germans did indeed help out their "Germanic brothers" by setting Dutch as the sole administrative language and by creating the Dutch language Von Bissing University in Ghent. Such steps were dictated by the German tactics of taking advantage of the Flemish-Walloon animosity in order to further Germany's own aims and to boost the occupying power's position known as the Flamenpolitik. With German support, Flemish activists formed a regional government, known as the Raad van Vlaanderen (RVV) which declared Flemish autonomy in December 1917. During World War I several Flemish soldiers were punished for their active or passive involvement in the Flemish Movement. Ten of these soldiers were sent to a penal military unit in 1918 called the Special Forestry Platoon in Orne, Normandy, France. They were forced to work as woodchoppers in hard living conditions until several months after the war ended.[30][31][32][33] Most of the Flemish population disapproved of those who collaborated with the German occupiers.[citation needed] The language reforms implemented by the Germans during occupation did not remain in place after the defeat of Germany. The collaboration and subsequent prosecution of certain leaders of the Flemish Movement did not produce a climate congenial to compromise.

 
Excerpt from the newspaper De Vlaamsche Strijd of 1899. Preserverd in the Ghent University Library. Good example of the propaganda that was held.[34]

Post World War I edit

The Flemish Movement became more socially oriented through the Frontbeweging (Front Movement), an organization of Flemish soldiers who complained about the lack of consideration for their language in the army, and in Belgium in general, and harbored pacifistic feelings. The Frontbeweging became a political movement, dedicated to peace, tolerance and autonomy (Nooit Meer Oorlog, Godsvrede, Zelfbestuur). A yearly pilgrimage to the IJzertoren is still held to this day. The poet Anton van Wilderode wrote many texts for this occasion. Many rumours arose regarding the treatment of Flemish soldiers in World War I, though Flemish historians debunked many of these. One such rumour is that many Dutch-speaking soldiers were slaughtered because they could not understand orders given to them in French by French speaking officers. Whether a disproportionate number of Flemish died in the war compared to Walloons remains a point of contention to this day. It is clear, however, that the Belgian army de facto had only French as the official language. The phrase "et pour les Flamands, la meme chose" originated in this environment also, allegedly being used by the French-speaking officers to "translate" their orders into Dutch. It literally means "and for the Flemish, the same thing", which adds insult to injury for Flemish soldiers not understanding French. Another source of further frustration was the Belgian royal family's poor knowledge of Dutch. King Albert I enjoyed some popularity in the early ages of the war because he was a proponent of the bilingual status of Flanders – even though Wallonia was monolingual French, because he declared his oath to be king in both French and Dutch, and because he gave a speech at the start of the war in Dutch, referring to the Battle of the Golden Spurs. In the last years of the war, however, it became clear that his only wish was to keep his country peaceful, and not to give the Flemish the rights the French-speaking establishment denied them.[citation needed]

In the 1920s the first Flemish nationalist party was elected. In the 1930s the Flemish Movement grew ever larger and Dutch was recognized for the first time as the sole language of Flanders. In 1931, Joris Van Severen founded the Verbond van Dietse Nationaal-Solidaristen Verdinaso, a fascist movement in Flanders.

World War II edit

During World War II, Belgium was once again occupied by Germany. The Third Reich enacted laws to protect and encourage the Dutch language in Belgium and, generally, to propagate ill-feelings between Flemings and Francophones, e.g. by setting free only Flemish prisoners-of-war (see Flamenpolitik). The Nazis had no intentions of allowing the creation of an independent Flemish state or of a Greater Netherlands, and instead desired the complete annexation of not only Flanders (which they did de jure during the war through the establishment of a "Reichsgau Flandern" in late 1944), but all of the Low Countries as "racially Germanic" components of a Greater Germanic Reich.[35] Most [who?] Flemish nationalists embraced collaboration as a means to more autonomy. Because of this collaboration by a few, after the war being part of the Flemish movement was associated with having collaborated with the enemy.

Post War edit

While the Vermeylenfonds had been founded in 1945, the Flemish Movement lay dormant for nearly 20 years following the Second World War. In the 1960s the Flemish movement once more gathered momentum and, in 1962, the linguistic borders within Belgium were finally drawn up with Brussels being designated as a bilingual city. Also, in 1967 an official Dutch version of the Belgian Constitution was adopted.[36] For more than 130 years, the Dutch version of the Belgian constitution had been only a translation without legal value. The late 1960s saw all major Belgian political parties splitting up into either Flemish or Francophone wings. It also saw the emergence of the first major nationalist Flemish party, the Volksunie (Popular Union). In 1977 more radical far right-wing factions of the Volksunie became united and, together with earlier far right nationalist groups, formed Vlaams Blok. This party eventually overtook the Volksunie, only to be forced later, on the grounds of a discrimination conviction, to change its name to Vlaams Belang. It has become an important right-wing party of the Flemish Movement.

Language border edit

 
Bilingual road sign in Linkebeek. The French words have been painted over, leaving the Dutch words only.

During the existence of Belgium more and more Dutch-speaking regions have become French-speaking regions; for example, Mouscron (Moeskroen), Comines (Komen), and particularly Brussels (see Francization of Brussels). Every ten years the government counted the people who spoke Dutch and those who spoke French. These countings always favoured the French-speaking part of Belgium.[20] In 1962 the Linguistic Border was drawn. In order to do so, a complicated compromise with the French-speakers was orchestrated: Brussels had to be recognised as an autonomous and bilingual region while Flanders and Wallonia remained monolingual regions. The French-speakers also demanded that in certain regions where there was a minority of more than 30% French-speaking or Dutch-speaking people; there would be language facilities. This means that these people can communicate with the government in their birth language.

Present day edit

The Flemish saw these facilities as a measure of integration to another language, as opposed to viewing it as a recognition of a permanent linguistic minority. The French-speaking people, however, saw these language facilities as an acquired right, and a step for an eventual addition to the bilingual region of Brussels, even though that would be unconstitutional.[37] As a result, the amount of French-speaking people in these regions (mostly around Brussels) did not decline, and contain a growing majority of French-speaking Belgians, even though they reside in the officially monolingual Flanders.[citation needed] Francization is considered frustrating by the Flemish Movement and a reason for a call to separate.

The situation is intensified due to a lack of Dutch language classes in the French-speaking schools.[38]

Transfers edit

Since the 1960s and continuing into the present time, Flanders is significantly richer than Wallonia. Based on population[39] and GDP[40] figures for 2007, GDP per capita in that year was €28,286 (US$38,186) in Flanders and €20,191 (US$27,258) in Wallonia. Although equalization payments between richer and poorer regions are common in federal states, the amount, the visibility and the utilization of these financial transfers are a singularly important issue for the Flemish Movement. A study by the University of Leuven[41] has estimated the size of the annual transfers from Flanders to Wallonia and Brussels in 2007 at 5.7 billion euros. If the effect of interest payments on the national debt is taken into account the figure could be as high as 11.3 billion euros or more than 6% of Flemish GDP.[42][43] Flemish criticism is not limited to the size of the transfers but also extends to the lack of transparency and the presumed inability or unwillingness of the recipients to use the money wisely and thus close the economic gap with Flanders. Although no longer relevant in the current economic context, the discussion is often exacerbated by the historic fact that even in the 19th century, when Flanders was much the poorer region, there was a net transfer from Flanders to Wallonia; this was mainly because of relatively heavier taxation of agriculture than of industrial activity.[44] The tax system was never adjusted to reflect the industrial affluence of Wallonia, which led to an imbalance in tax revenue placing Flanders (average for 1832–1912 period: 44% of the population, 44% of total taxes) at a disadvantage compared with Wallonia (38% of population, 30% of taxes).[45] [neutrality is disputed]

Current Belgian politics edit

As a result of escalating internal conflicts the Volksunie ceased to exist in 2000, splitting into two new parties: Spirit and N-VA (Nieuwe Vlaamse Alliantie, New Flemish Alliance). Both parties tried their luck in cartel with a bigger party, N-VA allying with the Christian Democrats of CD&V, and Spirit with the Flemish socialists of SP.a. The cartel CD&V – N-VA emerged as the clear winner of the Belgian general election in June 2007 on a platform promising a far-reaching reform of the state. However, coalition negotiations with the French-speaking parties, who rejected any reform, proved extremely difficult. When the CD&V leader Yves Leterme was eventually able to form a government, his reform plans had been greatly diluted and with the onset of the financial crisis in the autumn of 2008 they were shelved completely. This led N-VA to break up the cartel in September 2008, withdrawing its parliamentary support for the federal government (which was thus left without a parliamentary majority in Flanders, a situation that is not unconstitutional but has been deemed undesirable by politicians and constitutional experts).

The role of Spirit, which represented the more left-leaning part of the former Volksunie, gradually declined. After a series of defections, two unsuccessful attempts to broaden its appeal (each time accompanied by a name change) and ending far below the 5% threshold in the Flemish regional elections of 2009, what was left of the party merged with Groen! (the Flemish green party) at the end of 2009.

In the Belgian general election of June 2010, N-VA became the leading party in Flanders and even in Belgium as a whole, polling 28% of the Flemish vote, dwarfing the senior partner of their former cartel, CD&V, which ended at an all-time low of 17.5%.[46] The enormous growth of N-VA is generally explained as caused by an influx of "moderate" Flemish voters who do not support the party's eventual aim of Flemish independence but do want consistent and far-reaching reforms with greater autonomy for the regions, something they no longer trust the traditional parties to be able to achieve.[47] On the Walloon side, the Parti Socialiste (PS), led by Elio Di Rupo, received an even stronger electoral mandate with 37% of the vote. After the election, coalition negotiations started with seven parties: N-VA, CD&V, SP.a and Groen! on the Flemish side, and PS, CDH (nominally Christian Democrat but very much left of centre) and the green party Ecolo on the Francophone side. The talks soon ran into serious difficulties, mainly because of the totally opposed objectives of the two victors: the N-VA economically conservative but with a radical constitutional agenda, the PS socialist and very reluctant to agree to any significant reform of the state. The ensuing deadlock led to an 18-month government formation crisis. In the end, a coalition was formed by CD&V, SP.a, Open VLD on the Flemish side, and PS, CDH and MR on the Walloon side. This coalition however didn't contain a majority of the Flemish representatives, with only 43 of 88 Flemish seats supporting it. This situation had never happened since the split of the political parties into Flemish and Walloon wings. The following 2014 election saw large electoral gains for N-VA, mostly at the expense of VB.

Modern internal trends edit

Separatists edit

The militant wing of the Flemish Movement such as the Vlaams Belang advocates the foundation of an independent Flemish republic, separating from Wallonia. A part of this militant wing also advocates reunion with the Netherlands. This view is shared with several Dutch right-winged activists and nationalists, as well as some mainstream politicians both in the Netherlands and Flanders (such as Louis Tobback, the former mayor of Leuven and former minister of defence and Eurocommissioner Frits Bolkestein).[48]

The N-VA takes a gradualist approach looking to transfer powers to Flanders and the EU working towards the final goal of an independent Flanders as a European Member State.[47]

Confederalists edit

The liberal List Dedecker, as well as several representatives of important Flemish parties belonging to the moderate wing, including the Christian Democratic and Flemish (CD&V) party, the Flemish Liberals and Democrats (VLD) party, and, to a lesser extent, the Different Socialist Party (SP.A), prefer a confederal organisation of the Belgian state over the current federal organisation. Such a scheme would make the Flemish government responsible for nearly all aspects of government,[citation needed] whereas some important aspects of government are currently the responsibility of the Belgian federal government. The Belgian capital of Brussels would remain a city where both Dutch-speaking and French-speaking citizens share equal rights.[citation needed]

As of 2010, the confederalist parties make up more than half of the Flemish Parliament, which combined with the separatist parties, would result in about 80% of the Flemish Parliament (and at least this much of the Flemish part of the Belgian Federal Parliament) occupied by parties who wish to see Flanders obtaining greater autonomy than is the case today.

Federalists edit

Several representatives of the SP.A and, to a lesser extent, the CD&V and VLD parties, prefer an improved federal organisation of the Belgian state over a confederal one. This view is shared with several social and cultural organisations such as the Vermeylenfonds (Vermeylen Foundation) or Willemsfonds, with labor unions, and with mutual health insurance organisations. The advocates of this view hope to improve the Belgian institutions so that they work correctly.

Opinion polling edit

 
Visual representation of a May 2021 poll commissioned from De Stemming

In June 2006 a poll published by VRT found that 40% percent of respondents support Flemish independence.[49]

In December 2019 a poll published by Le Soir and RTL found that 37% percent of Flemish respondents would vote for Flemish independence, as opposed to only 14% percent of Walloons and 17% percent of Brussels residents.[50]

In May 2021, an article by VRT showed a poll taken by De Stemming[a] gauging preferences in how the country is run (depicted). The research ran from late March to 19 April. Correspondents could choose between a grade ranging from 0 to 10, with 0 tending towards 'more Flanders' and 10 referring to 'more Belgium'. The study found that 63% wanted 'more Belgium' and only 27% 'more Flanders', with 10% indicating the status quo is fine.[51]

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Belgian Political Crisis and Talk of Linguistic Divisions Continue | DW | 02.10.2007". DW.COM.
  2. ^ "An artificial kingdom moves closer to its end". The Economist.
  3. ^ Voice, European (26 May 2014). "Flemish separatism gains ground in Belgium". POLITICO.
  4. ^ Brzozowski, Alexandra; Matthews-Ferrero, Daniel; Papalamprou, Ery; An, Fengwei David; Steenland, Robert; Putte, Thomas van de (3 May 2019). "EU country briefing: Belgium".
  5. ^ "Vlaams Belang surges, N-VA biggest". 26 May 2019.
  6. ^ Van der Wal, Marijke (1992) Geschiedenis van het Nederlands [History of Dutch] (in Dutch), Utrecht, Het Spectrum, p. 379, ISBN 90 274 1839 X.
  7. ^ Jacques Logie, De la régionalisation à l'indépendance, 1830, Paris-Gembloux, éditions Duculot, 1980, 248 p. (ISBN 2-8011-0332-2), p. 13
  8. ^ Jacques Logie, op. cit., p. 12
  9. ^ Jacques Logie, op. cit., p. 12.
  10. ^ Jacques Logie, op. cit., p. 21
  11. ^ vCharles PLISNIER, Nationalisme wallon, p. 9, Bruxelles, Union wallonne des Écrivains et artistes, 1979 (1941)
  12. ^ John W. Rooney Jr., « Profil du combattant de 1830 », in Revue belge d'histoire contemporaine, T. 12, 1981, p. 489-490.
  13. ^ Jean Stengers, « La Révolution de 1830 », in Anne Morelli (dir.), Les Grands Mythes de l'histoire de Belgique, éditions Vie Ouvrière, Brussels, 1995
  14. ^ John W. Rooney Jr., op. cit., p. 486-487.
  15. ^ Jean Stengers, op. cit., p. 140 and No 1.
  16. ^ De constructie van België : 1828-1847, LannooCampus, Leuven, 2006, 214 p. ISBN 90-209-6678-2
  17. ^ John W. Rooney Jr., op. cit., p. 488.
  18. ^ John W. Rooney Jr., op. cit., p. 486.
  19. ^ Gita Deneckere, De plundering van de orangistische adel in April 1834
  20. ^ a b c De Schryver, Reginald (1973), Encyclopedie van de Vlaamse Beweging [Encyclopedia of the Flemish Movement] (in Dutch), Leuven: Lannoo, ISBN 90-209-0455-8
  21. ^ [about Dutch education in Brussels], VGC (in Dutch), Commission of the Flemish Community, archived from the original on 20 November 2012
  22. ^ Vande Lanotte, Johan & Goedertier, Geert (2007), Overzicht publiekrecht [Outline public law] (in Dutch), Brugge: die Keure, p. 23, ISBN 978-90-8661-397-7
  23. ^ Fleerackers, J. (1973), Colloqium Neerlandicum:De historische kracht van de Vlaamse beweging in België [Colloqium Neerlandicum:The Historical Power of the Flemish Movement in Belgium] (in Dutch), Digitale Bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse Letteren
  24. ^ Rudi, Janssens (2001), Taalgebruik in Brussel — Taalverhoudingen, taalverschuivingen en taalidentiteit in een meertalige stad [Language Use in Brussels - language-relation, movement and identity in a multilingual city] (PDF) (in Dutch), VUBPress (Vrije Universiteit Brussel), ISBN 90-5487-293-4
  25. ^ a b Leclerc, Jacques (2008), [Small history of Belgium and their linguistic consequences] (in French), Université Laval, archived from the original on 18 January 2009, retrieved 28 January 2011
  26. ^ Gaus, H. (2007), Alexander Gendebien en de organisatie van de Belgische revolutie van 1830 [Alexander Gendebien and the organisation of the Belgian revolution in 1830] (in Dutch and French)
  27. ^ Van Daele, Henri (2005), Een geschiedenis van Vlaanderen [A history of Flanders] (in Dutch), Uitgeverij Lannoo
  28. ^ Reynebeau, Marc (2006), Een geschiedenis van België [A history of Belgium] (in Dutch), Lannoo, p. 143
  29. ^ Reynebeau, Marc (2006), Een geschiedenis van België [A history of Belgium] (in Dutch), Lannoo, pp. 142–44
  30. ^ Geert Herman, Nieuwsblad, 7 juli 2014, article in Dutch
  31. ^ Peter Verplancke, VRT, 15 juli 2018
  32. ^ Tom Simoens, CHTP-BEG - n° 23 / 2011, article in Dutch, Van arrangeren tot renseigneren. Smaad en geweld Van militairen Tegen hun oversten tijdens de eerste wereldoorlog
  33. ^ Didden, Kris (1 January 1997). "De Houthakkers van de Orne". WT. Tijdschrift over de Geschiedenis van de Vlaamse Beweging. 56 (4): 195–219. doi:10.21825/wt.v56i4.13075.
  34. ^ "De Vlaamsche Strijd. Maandschrift van het Algemeen Nederlandsch Verbond, vereeniging tot handhaving en verbreiding van de Nederlandsche taal". lib.ugent.be. Retrieved 28 September 2020.
  35. ^ Rich, Norman (1974). Hitler's War Aims: the Establishment of the New Order. W.W. Norton & Company Inc., New York, pp. 179–80, 195–96.
  36. ^ Deschouwer, Kris (January 2004). "Ethnic Structure, Inequality And Governance of the Public Sector in Belgium" (PDF). United Nations Research Institute for Social Development. (PDF) from the original on 14 June 2007. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  37. ^ (in Dutch) "Vlaanderen en de taalwetgeving" (Flanders and language legislation) 2013-11-01 at the Wayback Machine, vlaanderen.be (ministerie van de Vlaamse Gemeenschap)
  38. ^ Prof. W. Dewachter (2006), [The cultural differences between Flanders and Wallonia], archived from the original on 12 August 2011
  39. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
  40. ^ "NBB.be" (PDF).
  41. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
  42. ^ (in Dutch) "Geldstroom naar Wallonië bereikt recordhoogte" (Money transfers reach record height), nieuwsblad.be
  43. ^ (in Dutch) "Vlaanderen en Wallonië zijn beter af zonder transfers" (Flanders and Wallonia are better off without transfers) 2010-05-10 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Juul Hannes, De mythe van de omgekeerde transfers, retrieved 21 October 2008
  45. ^ Filip van Laenen (20 May 2002), , archived from the original on 7 June 2008, retrieved 4 September 2008
  46. ^ . verkiezingen2010.belgium.be. Archived from the original on 9 July 2015.
  47. ^ a b "N-VA moet flanken verzoenen". De Standaard. 21 June 2010.
  48. ^ Louis Tobback's opinion can be read in knack.rnews.be, Frits Bolkestein's in fritsbolkestein.com
  49. ^ Kapitsinis, Nikolaos; Karampini, Eleftheria; Bakratsa, Fani; Nikolakopoulou, Xristina (August 2010). ""Regional inequalities and localist movements: relational complexities beyond linear determination" (PDF). Jönköping, Sweden: 50th Congress of the European Regional Science Association. Retrieved 23 August 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  50. ^ Galindo, Gabriela (17 December 2019). "Nearly 40% of Flemish would vote for independence". The Brussels Times. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  51. ^ Lefevere, Fabian (23 May 2021). "Is de Vlaming een flamingant? Of willen we toch liever meer België? Dit zegt "De Stemming"". vrtnws.be (in Dutch). Retrieved 12 July 2022.

Notes edit

  1. ^ A research commissioned by VRT NWS and De Standaard, conducted by the University of Antwerp and KU Leuven.

Notations edit

  • Van geyt et al., The Flemish Movement, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.1946; 247: 128-130
  • Vos Hermans, The Flemish Movement: A Documentary History, 1780–1990, Continuum International Publishing Group – Athlone (Feb 1992), ISBN 0-485-11368-6
  • Clough Shepard B., History of the Flemish Movement in Belgium: A study in nationalism, New York, 1930, 316 pp.
  • Ludo Simons (ed.), Nieuwe Encyclopedie van de Vlaamse Beweging, Lannoo, 1998, ISBN 978-90-209-3042-9
  • M. Van Haegendoren, The Flemish movement in Belgium, (J. Deleu) Ons Erfdeel – 1965, nr 1, p. 145
  • J. Dewulf, The Flemish Movement: On the Intersection of Language and Politics in the Dutch-Speaking Part of Belgium, Georgetown Journal of International Affairs, vol. 13, issue 1 (Winter/Spring 2012): 23–33.

flemish, movement, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Flemish Movement news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message The Flemish Movement Dutch Vlaamse Beweging is an umbrella term which encompasses various political groups in the Belgian region of Flanders and less commonly in French Flanders Ideologically it encompasses groups which have sought to promote Flemish culture and the Dutch language as well as those seeking greater political autonomy for Flanders within Belgium It also encompassed nationalists who seek the secession of Flanders from Belgium either through outright independence or unification with the Netherlands Flemish strijdvlag as adopted by large parts of the Flemish Movement In the 19th century the Flemish Movement emerged around a form of cultural patriotism which celebrated Flemish traditions and history and sought equal status for Dutch in the Belgian nation state often under the auspices of the Catholic Church Although gaining many of its initial objectives it became increasingly radical in the aftermath of World War I Inspired by authoritarian and fascist politics it was widely discredited for its association with collaboration in German occupied Belgium during World War II However it re emerged in the post war period under the auspices of the Volksunie 1954 2002 and increasingly permeated into other parties in Flanders The Flemish Movement s right wing is dominated by right wing nationalist organizations such as Vlaams Belang Voorpost Nationalistische Studentenvereniging Nationalist Students Union and several others The most radical group on the left side is the socialist and Flemish independentist Flemish Socialist Movement The militant wing also still comprises several moderate groups such as the New Flemish Alliance N VA Nieuw Vlaamse Alliantie and several extra parliamentary organisations many of which are represented in the Overlegcentrum van Vlaamse Verenigingen OVV Consultation Centre of Flemish Associations The most important of these is the Vlaamse Volksbeweging VVB Flemish People s Movement In recent history the Flemish Movement has increasingly grown amid the 2007 2011 Belgian political crisis and its aftermath 1 2 3 Since 2010 the separatist N VA party has been the biggest polled in Flanders 4 while Vlaams Belang has become the second largest in the 2019 federal and regional elections 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early roots 1 2 Belgian Independence 1 3 French Flanders 1 4 A call for change 1 5 World War I 1 6 Post World War I 1 7 World War II 1 8 Post War 1 9 Language border 1 10 Present day 1 11 Transfers 1 12 Current Belgian politics 2 Modern internal trends 2 1 Separatists 2 2 Confederalists 2 3 Federalists 3 Opinion polling 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Notes 5 3 NotationsHistory editSee also History of Belgium Early roots edit nbsp Jan Frans Willems In the Spanish and then Austrian Netherlands in the 18th century and until the Brabant Revolution the language of the literate was Spanish and then gradually French but accompanied by a vernacular language Language problems did not arise at that time In 1788 Jan Baptist Chrysostomus Verlooy 1747 1797 a jurist and politician from the Southern Netherlands wrote an essay titled Verhandeling op d Onacht der moederlycke tael in de Nederlanden 6 Essay on the disregard of the native language in the Low Countries It is considered to be the first movement in favour of the Flemish language but also in favour of freedom and democracy Before the creation of the Belgian state the French language had already been for centuries a lingua franca for the bourgeoisie and noble elites among Europe including the territories that would then become Belgium With the French Revolution and Napoleon s conquests today s Belgium was attached to France in 1795 France imposed its official language on the Belgian territory with the result of accelerating the conversion of the upper class from current Wallonia and Flanders to the French language At that time most of the population however spoke Germanic languages and dialects in the north and south Flemish Brabantian Limburgish and Luxembourgish as well as Romance languages and dialects in the south of the territory Walloon Picard Champenois and Lorrain which were not standardized and unified languages Those people often could not understand or speak any French Belgian Independence edit After the fall of Napoleon the Congress of Vienna of 1815 led to the creation of a buffer state the United Kingdom of the Netherlands composed of today s Netherlands Luxembourg and Belgium The United Kingdom of the Netherlands survived for a short period of 15 years that was put to an end by the Belgian revolution The revolution was due to a combination of factors the main one being the difference of religion Catholic in today s Belgium Protestant in today s Netherlands Other important factors also played a role in the independence Among those factors we can cite The under representation of Belgians in the parliament 62 of the population for 50 of the seats 7 The over representation of Dutch people in the administration and important positions 4 times more 8 The fact that the public debt of the Netherlands higher than the one of the south had to be supported by the today s Belgium as well 9 The diminution in the freedom of the press and freedom of assembly William I of the Netherlands imposed the standard Dutch everywhere in the Flemish speaking part of Belgium provoking the anger of the Flemish albeit close to their language Flemish people did not master at the time standard Dutch and were not considering this language as theirs citation needed and of the French speaking upper class of today s Belgium On 4 June 1830 before the revolution linguistic freedom was however restored 10 A common grievance of the Flemish movement is that the Belgian revolution was a will of the French speaking Belgians They invoke that the volunteers were mainly Walloons and from the French speaking bourgeoisie This argument has also been invoked by Walloon nationalists in the past 11 Two studies conducted by prof John W Rooney Jr 12 and prof Jean Stengers 13 however contradict those statements These studies have shown that the vast majority of the revolutionaries originated from Brussels and from the province of Brabant and were of modest origin According to John W Rooney Jr between 73 and 88 of the dead and injured were from Brussels and 91 and 95 were from Brabant 14 Jean Stengers reaches the same conclusion 76 of the fighters from Brussels 15 Prof Els Witte comes to the same conclusion regarding the origin of the fighters 16 At the time Brussels and the province of Brabant are mainly Brabantian speaking close to Flemish which shows that Flemish speakers actively took part in the Belgian revolution Rooney concludes that 60 of the workers who took part in the revolution were Flemish speakers 17 According to the same study the upper class accounted for only 5 of revolutionaries 18 A large part of the Francophone Belgian elites were in fact opposed to the revolution and wanted to remain within the United Kingdom of the Netherlands considering that their interests would be better served there This led to a movement called Orangism which spread among a substantial part of the French speaking elites of Flanders Brussels and Wallonia After the Belgian revolution protests occurred in large Flemish cities notably in Ghent where the textile industry was deeply hurt by the new political situation 19 Those events are however not to be misplaced in time as they occurred months after the actual revolution French Flanders edit Upon Belgium becoming an independent state from the Netherlands there was an administrative reaction against the Dutch and their language In an attempt to remove Dutch from the new country Belgian officials declared that the only official language in Belgium now was French The Administration Justice System and higher education apart from elementary schools in Flanders all functioned in the French language 20 Even Brussels the capital where more than 95 of the population spoke Dutch lacked a formal state sanctioned Flemish school of higher education 21 The consequence was that every contact with the government and justice was conducted in French This led to a number of erroneous legal judgements where innocent people received the death penalty because they were not able to verbally defend themselves at trials 22 The French speaking Belgian government succeeded in removing the Dutch language from all levels of government more quickly in Brussels than in any other part of Flanders 23 Because the administration was centered in Brussels more and more French speaking officials took up residency there Education in Brussels was only in French which led to a surplus of young unskilled and uneducated Flemish men Dutch was hardly taught in the French schools 24 For example Dutch was worth 10 points in French schools but drawing earned 15 points 20 Today 16 of Brussels is Dutch speaking whereas in 1830 it was over 95 25 The French speaking bourgeoisie showed very little respect for the Flemish portion of the population Belgium s co founder Charles Rogier wrote in 1832 to Jean Joseph Raikem the minister of justice Les premiers principes d une bonne administration sont bases sur l emploi exclusif d une langue et il est evident que la seule langue des Belges doit etre le francais Pour arriver a ce resultat il est necessaire que toutes les fonctions civiles et militaires soient confiees a des Wallons et a des Luxembourgeois de cette maniere les Flamands prives temporairement des avantages attaches a ces emplois seront contraints d apprendre le francais et l on detruira ainsi peu a peu l element germanique en Belgique 25 The first principles of a good administration are based upon the exclusive use of one language and it is evident that the only language of the Belgians should be French In order to achieve this result it is necessary that all civil and military functions are entrusted to Walloons and Luxemburgers this way the Flemish temporarily deprived of the advantages of these offices will be constrained to learn French and we will hence destroy bit by bit the Germanic element in Belgium In 1838 another co founder senator Alexandre Gendebien even declared that the Flemish were one of the more inferior races on the Earth just like the negroes 26 The economic heart of Belgium in those days was Flanders 27 However Wallonia would soon take the lead due to the Industrial Revolution The Belgian establishment deemed it unnecessary to invest in Flanders and no less than 80 of the Belgian GNP between 1830 and 1918 went to Wallonia 28 This had as a consequence that Wallonia had a surplus of large coal mines and iron ore facilities while Flanders to a large extent remained a rural farming region When Belgium became independent the economy of Flanders was hard hit Antwerp was now almost impossible to reach by ships The Scheldt River was blocked by the Netherlands and foreign trade was drastically affected The prosperous textile industry of Ghent lost a major portion of its market to Amsterdam 29 A call for change edit nbsp Bust of Hugo Verriest nl in Roeselare Belgium It was decades after the Belgian revolution that Flemish intellectuals such as Jan Frans Willems Philip Blommaert Karel Lodewijk Ledeganck Ferdinand Augustijn Snellaert August Snieders Prudens van Duyse and Hendrik Conscience began to call for recognition of the Dutch language and Flemish culture in Belgium This movement became known as the Flemish Movement but was more intellectual than social with contributors such as the poets Guido Gezelle Hugo Verriest nl and Albrecht Rodenbach all of whom were associated with the Minor Seminary Roeselare Cultural organizations promoting the Dutch language and Flemish culture were founded such as the Willemsfonds in 1851 and the Davidsfonds in 1875 The first Vlaemsch Verbond Constant Leirens Ghent and the Nederduitse Bond were founded in 1861 The Liberale Vlaemsche Bond was founded in 1867 Writers such as Julius de Geyter and Max Rooses were active in the Nederduitse Bond On 26 September 1866 Julius de Geyter founded the Vlaamsche Bond in Antwerp The Flemish weekly magazine Het Volksbelang founded by Julius Vuylsteke appeared for the first time on 12 January 1867 In 1861 the first Flemish political party the Meetingpartij was founded in Antwerp by radical liberals Catholics and Flamingants Jan Theodoor van Rijswijck J De Laet and E Coremans and it existed until 1914 In 1888 Julius Hoste Sr founded the moderate liberal Flemish newspaper Het Laatste Nieuws to support the Flemish Movement in Brussels In 1893 the Flemish priest Adolf Daens founded the Christene Volkspartij which would cause a radicalization and democratization of the Catholic party The first Flemish political success was the passing of the Gelijkheidswet Equality law in 1898 that for the first time recognized Dutch as equal to French in judicial matters legal documents World War I edit The liberal politician Louis Franck the Roman Catholic Frans Van Cauwelaert and the socialist Camille Huysmans together they were called the three crowing cocks worked together for the introduction of Dutch at Ghent University In 1911 the proposal by Lodewijk De Raet to this end was accepted though it would not be implemented until 1930 With the coming of the 20th century the Flemish Movement became more radical and during World War I some activists welcomed the occupiers as liberating Germanic brothers The young Marnix Gijsen and the poet Paul van Ostaijen were involved in this activist movement during the war The Germans did indeed help out their Germanic brothers by setting Dutch as the sole administrative language and by creating the Dutch language Von Bissing University in Ghent Such steps were dictated by the German tactics of taking advantage of the Flemish Walloon animosity in order to further Germany s own aims and to boost the occupying power s position known as the Flamenpolitik With German support Flemish activists formed a regional government known as the Raad van Vlaanderen RVV which declared Flemish autonomy in December 1917 During World War I several Flemish soldiers were punished for their active or passive involvement in the Flemish Movement Ten of these soldiers were sent to a penal military unit in 1918 called the Special Forestry Platoon in Orne Normandy France They were forced to work as woodchoppers in hard living conditions until several months after the war ended 30 31 32 33 Most of the Flemish population disapproved of those who collaborated with the German occupiers citation needed The language reforms implemented by the Germans during occupation did not remain in place after the defeat of Germany The collaboration and subsequent prosecution of certain leaders of the Flemish Movement did not produce a climate congenial to compromise nbsp Excerpt from the newspaper De Vlaamsche Strijd of 1899 Preserverd in the Ghent University Library Good example of the propaganda that was held 34 Post World War I edit The Flemish Movement became more socially oriented through the Frontbeweging Front Movement an organization of Flemish soldiers who complained about the lack of consideration for their language in the army and in Belgium in general and harbored pacifistic feelings The Frontbeweging became a political movement dedicated to peace tolerance and autonomy Nooit Meer Oorlog Godsvrede Zelfbestuur A yearly pilgrimage to the IJzertoren is still held to this day The poet Anton van Wilderode wrote many texts for this occasion Many rumours arose regarding the treatment of Flemish soldiers in World War I though Flemish historians debunked many of these One such rumour is that many Dutch speaking soldiers were slaughtered because they could not understand orders given to them in French by French speaking officers Whether a disproportionate number of Flemish died in the war compared to Walloons remains a point of contention to this day It is clear however that the Belgian army de facto had only French as the official language The phrase et pour les Flamands la meme chose originated in this environment also allegedly being used by the French speaking officers to translate their orders into Dutch It literally means and for the Flemish the same thing which adds insult to injury for Flemish soldiers not understanding French Another source of further frustration was the Belgian royal family s poor knowledge of Dutch King Albert I enjoyed some popularity in the early ages of the war because he was a proponent of the bilingual status of Flanders even though Wallonia was monolingual French because he declared his oath to be king in both French and Dutch and because he gave a speech at the start of the war in Dutch referring to the Battle of the Golden Spurs In the last years of the war however it became clear that his only wish was to keep his country peaceful and not to give the Flemish the rights the French speaking establishment denied them citation needed In the 1920s the first Flemish nationalist party was elected In the 1930s the Flemish Movement grew ever larger and Dutch was recognized for the first time as the sole language of Flanders In 1931 Joris Van Severen founded the Verbond van Dietse Nationaal Solidaristen Verdinaso a fascist movement in Flanders World War II edit During World War II Belgium was once again occupied by Germany The Third Reich enacted laws to protect and encourage the Dutch language in Belgium and generally to propagate ill feelings between Flemings and Francophones e g by setting free only Flemish prisoners of war see Flamenpolitik The Nazis had no intentions of allowing the creation of an independent Flemish state or of a Greater Netherlands and instead desired the complete annexation of not only Flanders which they did de jure during the war through the establishment of a Reichsgau Flandern in late 1944 but all of the Low Countries as racially Germanic components of a Greater Germanic Reich 35 Most who Flemish nationalists embraced collaboration as a means to more autonomy Because of this collaboration by a few after the war being part of the Flemish movement was associated with having collaborated with the enemy Post War edit While the Vermeylenfonds had been founded in 1945 the Flemish Movement lay dormant for nearly 20 years following the Second World War In the 1960s the Flemish movement once more gathered momentum and in 1962 the linguistic borders within Belgium were finally drawn up with Brussels being designated as a bilingual city Also in 1967 an official Dutch version of the Belgian Constitution was adopted 36 For more than 130 years the Dutch version of the Belgian constitution had been only a translation without legal value The late 1960s saw all major Belgian political parties splitting up into either Flemish or Francophone wings It also saw the emergence of the first major nationalist Flemish party the Volksunie Popular Union In 1977 more radical far right wing factions of the Volksunie became united and together with earlier far right nationalist groups formed Vlaams Blok This party eventually overtook the Volksunie only to be forced later on the grounds of a discrimination conviction to change its name to Vlaams Belang It has become an important right wing party of the Flemish Movement Language border edit Main article Language legislation in Belgium nbsp Bilingual road sign in Linkebeek The French words have been painted over leaving the Dutch words only During the existence of Belgium more and more Dutch speaking regions have become French speaking regions for example Mouscron Moeskroen Comines Komen and particularly Brussels see Francization of Brussels Every ten years the government counted the people who spoke Dutch and those who spoke French These countings always favoured the French speaking part of Belgium 20 In 1962 the Linguistic Border was drawn In order to do so a complicated compromise with the French speakers was orchestrated Brussels had to be recognised as an autonomous and bilingual region while Flanders and Wallonia remained monolingual regions The French speakers also demanded that in certain regions where there was a minority of more than 30 French speaking or Dutch speaking people there would be language facilities This means that these people can communicate with the government in their birth language Present day edit The Flemish saw these facilities as a measure of integration to another language as opposed to viewing it as a recognition of a permanent linguistic minority The French speaking people however saw these language facilities as an acquired right and a step for an eventual addition to the bilingual region of Brussels even though that would be unconstitutional 37 As a result the amount of French speaking people in these regions mostly around Brussels did not decline and contain a growing majority of French speaking Belgians even though they reside in the officially monolingual Flanders citation needed Francization is considered frustrating by the Flemish Movement and a reason for a call to separate The situation is intensified due to a lack of Dutch language classes in the French speaking schools 38 Transfers edit Since the 1960s and continuing into the present time Flanders is significantly richer than Wallonia Based on population 39 and GDP 40 figures for 2007 GDP per capita in that year was 28 286 US 38 186 in Flanders and 20 191 US 27 258 in Wallonia Although equalization payments between richer and poorer regions are common in federal states the amount the visibility and the utilization of these financial transfers are a singularly important issue for the Flemish Movement A study by the University of Leuven 41 has estimated the size of the annual transfers from Flanders to Wallonia and Brussels in 2007 at 5 7 billion euros If the effect of interest payments on the national debt is taken into account the figure could be as high as 11 3 billion euros or more than 6 of Flemish GDP 42 43 Flemish criticism is not limited to the size of the transfers but also extends to the lack of transparency and the presumed inability or unwillingness of the recipients to use the money wisely and thus close the economic gap with Flanders Although no longer relevant in the current economic context the discussion is often exacerbated by the historic fact that even in the 19th century when Flanders was much the poorer region there was a net transfer from Flanders to Wallonia this was mainly because of relatively heavier taxation of agriculture than of industrial activity 44 The tax system was never adjusted to reflect the industrial affluence of Wallonia which led to an imbalance in tax revenue placing Flanders average for 1832 1912 period 44 of the population 44 of total taxes at a disadvantage compared with Wallonia 38 of population 30 of taxes 45 neutrality is disputed Current Belgian politics edit As a result of escalating internal conflicts the Volksunie ceased to exist in 2000 splitting into two new parties Spirit and N VA Nieuwe Vlaamse Alliantie New Flemish Alliance Both parties tried their luck in cartel with a bigger party N VA allying with the Christian Democrats of CD amp V and Spirit with the Flemish socialists of SP a The cartel CD amp V N VA emerged as the clear winner of the Belgian general election in June 2007 on a platform promising a far reaching reform of the state However coalition negotiations with the French speaking parties who rejected any reform proved extremely difficult When the CD amp V leader Yves Leterme was eventually able to form a government his reform plans had been greatly diluted and with the onset of the financial crisis in the autumn of 2008 they were shelved completely This led N VA to break up the cartel in September 2008 withdrawing its parliamentary support for the federal government which was thus left without a parliamentary majority in Flanders a situation that is not unconstitutional but has been deemed undesirable by politicians and constitutional experts The role of Spirit which represented the more left leaning part of the former Volksunie gradually declined After a series of defections two unsuccessful attempts to broaden its appeal each time accompanied by a name change and ending far below the 5 threshold in the Flemish regional elections of 2009 what was left of the party merged with Groen the Flemish green party at the end of 2009 In the Belgian general election of June 2010 N VA became the leading party in Flanders and even in Belgium as a whole polling 28 of the Flemish vote dwarfing the senior partner of their former cartel CD amp V which ended at an all time low of 17 5 46 The enormous growth of N VA is generally explained as caused by an influx of moderate Flemish voters who do not support the party s eventual aim of Flemish independence but do want consistent and far reaching reforms with greater autonomy for the regions something they no longer trust the traditional parties to be able to achieve 47 On the Walloon side the Parti Socialiste PS led by Elio Di Rupo received an even stronger electoral mandate with 37 of the vote After the election coalition negotiations started with seven parties N VA CD amp V SP a and Groen on the Flemish side and PS CDH nominally Christian Democrat but very much left of centre and the green party Ecolo on the Francophone side The talks soon ran into serious difficulties mainly because of the totally opposed objectives of the two victors the N VA economically conservative but with a radical constitutional agenda the PS socialist and very reluctant to agree to any significant reform of the state The ensuing deadlock led to an 18 month government formation crisis In the end a coalition was formed by CD amp V SP a Open VLD on the Flemish side and PS CDH and MR on the Walloon side This coalition however didn t contain a majority of the Flemish representatives with only 43 of 88 Flemish seats supporting it This situation had never happened since the split of the political parties into Flemish and Walloon wings The following 2014 election saw large electoral gains for N VA mostly at the expense of VB Modern internal trends editSeparatists edit The militant wing of the Flemish Movement such as the Vlaams Belang advocates the foundation of an independent Flemish republic separating from Wallonia A part of this militant wing also advocates reunion with the Netherlands This view is shared with several Dutch right winged activists and nationalists as well as some mainstream politicians both in the Netherlands and Flanders such as Louis Tobback the former mayor of Leuven and former minister of defence and Eurocommissioner Frits Bolkestein 48 The N VA takes a gradualist approach looking to transfer powers to Flanders and the EU working towards the final goal of an independent Flanders as a European Member State 47 Confederalists edit The liberal List Dedecker as well as several representatives of important Flemish parties belonging to the moderate wing including the Christian Democratic and Flemish CD amp V party the Flemish Liberals and Democrats VLD party and to a lesser extent the Different Socialist Party SP A prefer a confederal organisation of the Belgian state over the current federal organisation Such a scheme would make the Flemish government responsible for nearly all aspects of government citation needed whereas some important aspects of government are currently the responsibility of the Belgian federal government The Belgian capital of Brussels would remain a city where both Dutch speaking and French speaking citizens share equal rights citation needed As of 2010 the confederalist parties make up more than half of the Flemish Parliament which combined with the separatist parties would result in about 80 of the Flemish Parliament and at least this much of the Flemish part of the Belgian Federal Parliament occupied by parties who wish to see Flanders obtaining greater autonomy than is the case today Federalists edit Several representatives of the SP A and to a lesser extent the CD amp V and VLD parties prefer an improved federal organisation of the Belgian state over a confederal one This view is shared with several social and cultural organisations such as the Vermeylenfonds Vermeylen Foundation or Willemsfonds with labor unions and with mutual health insurance organisations The advocates of this view hope to improve the Belgian institutions so that they work correctly Opinion polling edit nbsp Visual representation of a May 2021 poll commissioned from De Stemming In June 2006 a poll published by VRT found that 40 percent of respondents support Flemish independence 49 In December 2019 a poll published by Le Soir and RTL found that 37 percent of Flemish respondents would vote for Flemish independence as opposed to only 14 percent of Walloons and 17 percent of Brussels residents 50 In May 2021 an article by VRT showed a poll taken by De Stemming a gauging preferences in how the country is run depicted The research ran from late March to 19 April Correspondents could choose between a grade ranging from 0 to 10 with 0 tending towards more Flanders and 10 referring to more Belgium The study found that 63 wanted more Belgium and only 27 more Flanders with 10 indicating the status quo is fine 51 See also editBurgundian Netherlands Dietsland Flemish literature French Flemish Partition of Belgium Politics of Flanders Seventeen Provinces Walloon movement List of active separatist movements in EuropeReferences editFootnotes edit Belgian Political Crisis and Talk of Linguistic Divisions Continue DW 02 10 2007 DW COM An artificial kingdom moves closer to its end The Economist Voice European 26 May 2014 Flemish separatism gains ground in Belgium POLITICO Brzozowski Alexandra Matthews Ferrero Daniel Papalamprou Ery An Fengwei David Steenland Robert Putte Thomas van de 3 May 2019 EU country briefing Belgium Vlaams Belang surges N VA biggest 26 May 2019 Van der Wal Marijke 1992 Geschiedenis van het Nederlands History of Dutch in Dutch Utrecht Het Spectrum p 379 ISBN 90 274 1839 X Jacques Logie De la regionalisation a l independance 1830 Paris Gembloux editions Duculot 1980 248 p ISBN 2 8011 0332 2 p 13 Jacques Logie op cit p 12 Jacques Logie op cit p 12 Jacques Logie op cit p 21 vCharles PLISNIER Nationalisme wallon p 9 Bruxelles Union wallonne des Ecrivains et artistes 1979 1941 John W Rooney Jr Profil du combattant de 1830 in Revue belge d histoire contemporaine T 12 1981 p 489 490 Jean Stengers La Revolution de 1830 in Anne Morelli dir Les Grands Mythes de l histoire de Belgique editions Vie Ouvriere Brussels 1995 John W Rooney Jr op cit p 486 487 Jean Stengers op cit p 140 and No 1 De constructie van Belgie 1828 1847 LannooCampus Leuven 2006 214 p ISBN 90 209 6678 2 John W Rooney Jr op cit p 488 John W Rooney Jr op cit p 486 Gita Deneckere De plundering van de orangistische adel in April 1834 a b c De Schryver Reginald 1973 Encyclopedie van de Vlaamse Beweging Encyclopedia of the Flemish Movement in Dutch Leuven Lannoo ISBN 90 209 0455 8 Over het Brussels Nederlandstalig onderwijs about Dutch education in Brussels VGC in Dutch Commission of the Flemish Community archived from the original on 20 November 2012 Vande Lanotte Johan amp Goedertier Geert 2007 Overzicht publiekrecht Outline public law in Dutch Brugge die Keure p 23 ISBN 978 90 8661 397 7 Fleerackers J 1973 Colloqium Neerlandicum De historische kracht van de Vlaamse beweging in Belgie Colloqium Neerlandicum The Historical Power of the Flemish Movement in Belgium in Dutch Digitale Bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse Letteren Rudi Janssens 2001 Taalgebruik in Brussel Taalverhoudingen taalverschuivingen en taalidentiteit in een meertalige stad Language Use in Brussels language relation movement and identity in a multilingual city PDF in Dutch VUBPress Vrije Universiteit Brussel ISBN 90 5487 293 4 a b Leclerc Jacques 2008 Petite histoire de la Belgique et ses consequences linguistices Small history of Belgium and their linguistic consequences in French Universite Laval archived from the original on 18 January 2009 retrieved 28 January 2011 Gaus H 2007 Alexander Gendebien en de organisatie van de Belgische revolutie van 1830 Alexander Gendebien and the organisation of the Belgian revolution in 1830 in Dutch and French Van Daele Henri 2005 Een geschiedenis van Vlaanderen A history of Flanders in Dutch Uitgeverij Lannoo Reynebeau Marc 2006 Een geschiedenis van Belgie A history of Belgium in Dutch Lannoo p 143 Reynebeau Marc 2006 Een geschiedenis van Belgie A history of Belgium in Dutch Lannoo pp 142 44 Geert Herman Nieuwsblad 7 juli 2014 article in Dutch Peter Verplancke VRT 15 juli 2018 Tom Simoens CHTP BEG n 23 2011 article in Dutch Van arrangeren tot renseigneren Smaad en geweld Van militairen Tegen hun oversten tijdens de eerste wereldoorlog Didden Kris 1 January 1997 De Houthakkers van de Orne WT Tijdschrift over de Geschiedenis van de Vlaamse Beweging 56 4 195 219 doi 10 21825 wt v56i4 13075 De Vlaamsche Strijd Maandschrift van het Algemeen Nederlandsch Verbond vereeniging tot handhaving en verbreiding van de Nederlandsche taal lib ugent be Retrieved 28 September 2020 Rich Norman 1974 Hitler s War Aims the Establishment of the New Order W W Norton amp Company Inc New York pp 179 80 195 96 Deschouwer Kris January 2004 Ethnic Structure Inequality And Governance of the Public Sector in Belgium PDF United Nations Research Institute for Social Development Archived PDF from the original on 14 June 2007 Retrieved 23 August 2021 in Dutch Vlaanderen en de taalwetgeving Flanders and language legislation Archived 2013 11 01 at the Wayback Machine vlaanderen be ministerie van de Vlaamse Gemeenschap Prof W Dewachter 2006 De maatschappelijke identiteiten Vlaanderen en Wallonie The cultural differences between Flanders and Wallonia archived from the original on 12 August 2011 Statbel fgov be PDF Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 January 2011 NBB be PDF Econ kuleuven be PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 22 January 2011 in Dutch Geldstroom naar Wallonie bereikt recordhoogte Money transfers reach record height nieuwsblad be in Dutch Vlaanderen en Wallonie zijn beter af zonder transfers Flanders and Wallonia are better off without transfers Archived 2010 05 10 at the Wayback Machine Juul Hannes De mythe van de omgekeerde transfers retrieved 21 October 2008 Filip van Laenen 20 May 2002 Flemish Questions Flows of money out of Flanders archived from the original on 7 June 2008 retrieved 4 September 2008 Verkiezingen 2010 verkiezingen2010 belgium be Archived from the original on 9 July 2015 a b N VA moet flanken verzoenen De Standaard 21 June 2010 Louis Tobback s opinion can be read in knack rnews be Frits Bolkestein s in fritsbolkestein com Kapitsinis Nikolaos Karampini Eleftheria Bakratsa Fani Nikolakopoulou Xristina August 2010 Regional inequalities and localist movements relational complexities beyond linear determination PDF Jonkoping Sweden 50th Congress of the European Regional Science Association Retrieved 23 August 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Galindo Gabriela 17 December 2019 Nearly 40 of Flemish would vote for independence The Brussels Times Retrieved 23 August 2021 Lefevere Fabian 23 May 2021 Is de Vlaming een flamingant Of willen we toch liever meer Belgie Dit zegt De Stemming vrtnws be in Dutch Retrieved 12 July 2022 Notes edit A research commissioned by VRT NWS and De Standaard conducted by the University of Antwerp and KU Leuven Notations edit Van geyt et al The Flemish Movement The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 1946 247 128 130 Vos Hermans The Flemish Movement A Documentary History 1780 1990 Continuum International Publishing Group Athlone Feb 1992 ISBN 0 485 11368 6 Clough Shepard B History of the Flemish Movement in Belgium A study in nationalism New York 1930 316 pp Ludo Simons ed Nieuwe Encyclopedie van de Vlaamse Beweging Lannoo 1998 ISBN 978 90 209 3042 9 M Van Haegendoren The Flemish movement in Belgium J Deleu Ons Erfdeel 1965 nr 1 p 145 J Dewulf The Flemish Movement On the Intersection of Language and Politics in the Dutch Speaking Part of Belgium Georgetown Journal of International Affairs vol 13 issue 1 Winter Spring 2012 23 33 Portals nbsp Politics nbsp Belgium nbsp France nbsp Netherlands Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flemish Movement amp oldid 1219085875, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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