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Iranians in the Netherlands

Iranians in the Netherlands form one of the newer and larger populations of the Iranian diaspora in Europe.[6] Iranians in the Netherlands are referred to by hyphenated terms such as Dutch-Iranians, Iranian-Dutch, Dutch-Persian, or Persian-Dutch.[7][8][9][10] Similar terms Iraanse Nederlanders, Nederlandse Iraniërs, and Perzische-Nederlanders may be found in Dutch-language media.[11][12][13]

Iranians in the Netherlands
Iraniërs/Perzen in Nederland
Total population
52,099[1]
Regions with significant populations
Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague, and other urban areas[2]
Languages
Dutch, Persian
Azerbaijani, Armenian, Kurdish, and other languages of Iran. (see Languages of Iran).
Religion
Islam,[3] Atheism
Agnosticism,[4] Christianity,[5] Zoroastrianism
Related ethnic groups
Iranian citizens abroad, Iranian diaspora

Terminology edit

 
The Netherlands' Persian Community's Demonstration "UNITED4IRAN", Amsterdam, 2009

Iranians in the Netherlands are sometimes referred to by hyphenated terms such as "Dutch-Iranians", "Iranian-Dutch", "Dutch-Persian", or "Persian-Dutch".[7][8][9][10] Similar terms Iraanse Nederlanders, Nederlandse Iraniërs, and Perzische-Nederlanders may be found in Dutch-language media.[11][12][13] However, one scholar who uses the term "Dutch-Iranians" also expresses reservations over the validity of such a "hyphenated notion of identity" in the Dutch context, in comparison to the less problematic term "Iranian American".[14]

Other collective terms used to refer to the community include Iraanse gemeenschap, Perzische gemeenschap, and Perzen.[15][16][17]

Migration history edit

Though the Netherlands had a 'Persian population' since the early seventeenth century, mostly Armenian merchants ("Persianen"), which by the beginning of the nineteenth century had largely dissolved into the larger Dutch population,[18] in more recent times other European countries such as Germany and France have had Persian communities since the early 20th century, most of the Iranian population in the Netherlands is of relatively recent provenance; virtually all came to the country after the Iranian Revolution of 1979.[2] The overall migration was quite significant relative to the whole size of Iranian emigration to Europe; from 1990 to 1999, the Netherlands was Europe's second most-popular destination for Iranian asylum seekers, behind Germany.[6] However, from 1981 to 2001, only 1,292 were formally recognised as "invited refugees" (Dutch: Uitgenodigde vluchtelingen), the vast majority in the period 1987–1990.[19]

Demographic characteristics edit

 
People at Sima Bina's Nowruz concert in Amsterdam, 2010

As of 2009, statistics of the Dutch Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek showed:

  • 24,535Iranian-born persons (13,603 men, 10,932 women)
  • 6,082 locally born persons of Iranian background (3,159 men, 2,923 women), of which:
    • 2,491 persons with one parent also born locally (1,321 men, 1,170 women)
    • 3,591 persons with both parents born abroad (1,838 men, 1,753 women)

For a total of 30,617 persons (16,758 men, 13,855 women). This represented nearly double the 1996 total of 16,478 persons. Numerically, most of the growth was in the foreign-born segment of the population, whose numbers increased from 14,628 over the period in question; however, the rate of growth was fastest in the locally born segment of the population, which almost tripled in size from 1,850 persons.[20]

Religion edit

Iran is a largely Muslim country, a fact reflected in the backgrounds of Iranian migrants to the Netherlands.[21] However, most migrants do not continue to practise their religion.[22] Those who do often find themselves viewed as threats and suffer exclusion from Dutch society; this trend strengthened with the growth of political Islam in the 1980s.[3]

In 2007, Ehsan Jami, a Dutch politician of Iranian descent, criticised the Islamic prophet Muhammad, describing him as a "criminal".[23] Together with Loubna Berrada (founder of the Advisory Committee for Integration, part of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy), Jami founded the Central Committee for Ex-Muslims in 2007.[24] The organisation, supported by Afshin Ellian, aims to support apostates from Islam and to bring forth the reality of women's rights violations in the religion.[25] On 4 August 2007, Jami was attacked in his hometown Voorburg by three men. The attack was widely believed to be linked to his activities for the committee. The national anti-terrorism coordinator's office, the public prosecution department, and the police decided during a meeting on 6 August that "additional measures" were necessary for the protection of Jami, who subsequently received extra security.[26]

Education edit

Iranians in the Netherlands are regarded as one of the highest educated and best integrated ethnic groups, according to various sources such as the Erasmus University Rotterdam[27] and the Statistics Netherlands.[28] Not unrelated, the Iranian academic community has grown significantly, including professors Turaj Atabaki, Afshin Ellian, Halleh Ghorashi and Majid Hassanizadeh.

 
Iranian student Fardad Zand receives 2006 "Rector Magnificus" Prize at Delft University.[29]

Discrimination against Iranian students edit

Due to the Iranian government's nuclear activities, United Nations Security Council Resolution 1737, which among other matters called on UN member states to prevent Iranian students from receiving specialised training which might be of use to the nuclear programme of Iran, the Dutch government implemented a variety of restrictions on Iranian students in the Netherlands.

At the recommendation of the government, the University of Twente went so far as to halt its admissions of students from Iran entirely, stating that it could not ensure they would have no access to nuclear-related information.[30] However, the government later backed away from this policy.[31] In July, they announced that Iranian students could be admitted but would be restricted from taking certain courses and visiting certain places related to the development of nuclear weapons. In response, a group of Iranian students filed suit against the government, alleging that the restrictions violated the prohibition against all forms of discrimination established by Article 1 of the Constitution of the Netherlands.[32] A local court ruled in February 2010 that the University of Twente discriminate against Iranians by refusing their admission due to their nationalities.[33] The case went up to the Supreme Court of the Netherlands in The Hague. The final verdict of the Supreme Court confirmed the initial verdict that the ban on Iranian students is discriminatory, unlawful and a breach to European Human Rights treaty and therefore the discriminatory regulations were overruled[34]

Iran Academia edit

In September 2011, Iran Academia: The Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities was established in The Hague by a group known as the Iranian Progressive Youth (IPY). The IPY, which had its origins in the Iranian Green Movement in 2009, had grown into a network of students and researchers around the world, including in Europe, North America and Australia. Iran Academia was established with the support of Iranian academics worldwide.[35]

Political activities edit

 
Dutch-Persians Shout for Freedom on Bike, June 2010, a demonstration organized by Iranian Progressive Youth in cooperation with the Persian Dutch Network[36]

The first serious conflicts between the Pahlavi government and students in the Netherlands began in the 1970s. In 1974, a group of Iranians based in the Netherlands and other European countries occupied the Embassy of Iran in Wassenaar.[37] Another group occupied the embassy in August 1978, and were arrested by the police. Their lawyer stated to Dutch daily Nieuwsblad van het Noorden that "Wassenar Police gives information to Persia".[38]

The early migration of political activists and their applications for asylum in the Netherlands following the 1979 Iranian Revolution had a major effect on the development of the Iranian community; the suspected links between the Islamic Republic embassies in Europe and the murders of prominent exiles such as the France-based former prime minister Shapour Bakhtiar, as well as rumours of information leaks to the Iranian embassy in The Hague from within the Dutch government, led to suspicion by Iranians both towards their fellow Iranians and towards the Dutch authorities.[39] In 1996, Dutch daily Trouw revealed that one fairly prominent man in the Iranian community in Amsterdam, Mahmoed Jafhari (known by the alias "Anoosh"), had been working for the Iranian intelligence service to gather information on exiles; he had recorded on tape every conversation held in his house with his fellow Iranians, a fact which was discovered only after his death. The social environment created by that event has resulted in numerous difficulties for later academic research.[40]

Since the 2009–2010 Iranian election protests, the Iranian community in the Netherlands organised many solidarity demonstrations in Amsterdam, The Hague, Delft and Groningen. In January 2010, when the Islamic Republic Embassy in The Hague organized a "Peace Concert" at Rotterdam's De Doelen Concert Hall, it had to be stopped in the middle, because of physical confrontations between angry protesters and the embassy agents.[41]

In April 2010 a group of Iranian and Dutch protesters occupied parts of Islamic Republic Embassy in the Hague in protest to Iran's oppressive and violent policies. During this act of protest, the flag of the Islamic Republic has been lowered and replaced with a banner bearing an image of Neda Agha Soltan, the woman who was shot to death in Tehran's street protests after the disputed June presidential elections.[42]

In June 2010 the Dutch TV Channel NOS organized a visit for Ezzatollah Zarghami, director of Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting, to its headquarters in Hilversum. Radio Zamaneh revealed this news, creating a wave of anger in the Iranian community.[43] The Hague-based Iranian Progressive Youth Network also published a press release entitled "NOS Welcomes the Terrorist".[44] The event was canceled a few days before the visit. The whole affair was reported in mainstream Dutch media such as NRC Handelsblad.[45]

In 2011, Iran executed Zahra Bahrami, a naturalised Dutch citizen of Iranian origin, after holding her in prison since 2009 on drugs charges. The Dutch ambassador in Tehran was not allowed to offer her assistance.[46][47][48]

Media edit

 
The Persian-language Radio Zamaneh in Amsterdam, 2008

In 2004 the Dutch Parliament agreed with the proposal for allocating 15 million Euros to set up a television station, which would broadcast in the Persian language. This was the first time that a European Union country had been involved in establishing a Persian television station on its own.[49]

The Persian-language Radio Zamaneh began operating in Amsterdam in August 2006 with support from the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[50] The Islamic Republic of Iran has on various occasions criticised the Netherlands for funding the station. During the 2009 public unrest and demonstrations in Iran, Majid Ghahremani, Iranian ambassador to The Netherlands, accused the Dutch government of interfering in Iran's internal affairs. At the same time, a Dutch foreign ministry spokeswoman told Reuters that they had decided to continue to provide funding to the radio station, with the aim of improving the situation of human rights in Iran.[51][52]

In January 2010 also Persian Dutch Network has been registered in Amsterdam to introduce Persian culture to Dutch people and make two nations more close to each other. PDN has also released various videos of cultural events, social gatherings and political demonstrations of Persian community in the Netherlands on the Internet.[53]

Integration and community edit

 
Persian piano music recital by Pejman Akbarzadeh at Amsterdam Concertgebouw, April 2012

Iranians in the Netherlands have founded relatively few community organisations compared to Turkish or Moroccan migrants; this may be due to the general atmosphere of distrust and divisiveness among Iranians abroad.[7] In contrast to other migrant groups, there is little sense of community among them. Possibly as a result of this, many Iranians have redirected their ideological energies into participation in mainstream Dutch politics; prominent examples include politician Farah Karimi of the GreenLeft party or commentator and professor Afshin Ellian.[54]

Women tend to report far lower levels of discrimination than men.[55] However, they still often confront mainstream stereotypes of Muslim women, such as the idea that they are victims of domestic violence in need of emancipation from Muslim men.[56]

Art and culture edit

  • In 2023 Virgule Film & Performance Art Compagny (Tehran) created in collaboration with Altstadt Rotterdam the performance 'I AM ANTIGONE'. Internationally celebrated author Naghmeh Samini wrote a new adaptation of the Greek tragedy 'Antigone' especially for this performance. [57]
  • There is an active "Persian Language and Culture" Department at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands.[58]
  • There are Persian artists, writers, musicians, etc. who are active in the Netherlands, among them filmmaker Reza Allamehzadeh and storyteller Sahand Sahebdivani.
  • In 2006, graphic designer Reza Abedini received 2006 Principal Prince Claus Award.[59]
  • In the summer 2008 Amsterdam Branch of Hermitage Museum organized the exhibition "Persia: Thirty Centuries of Culture and Art" for six months.[60]
  • Museum Het Ursulinenconvent – International Museum for Family History / Internationaal Museum voor Familiegeschiedenis in Eijsden, Limburg, has a permanent exhibition on Persian family history and Persian photography. Also in this museum, the harem system is being explained using the Qajar family and dynasty as an example.

Notable people edit

See also edit

Images edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Population; sex, age, origin and generation, 1 January
  2. ^ a b Ghorashi 2002, p. 140
  3. ^ a b Ghorashi 2002, p. 228
  4. ^ Hunter, Shireen. Islam, Europe's Second Religion: The New Social, Cultural, and Political Landscape. p. 102.
  5. ^ , FCNN, 5 November 2009, archived from the original on 3 September 2014, retrieved 6 August 2010
  6. ^ a b Hessels 2002, p. 20
  7. ^ a b c van den Bos & Achbari 2007, p. 171
  8. ^ a b Lindert et al. 2008, p. 581
  9. ^ a b Ghorashi 2002, pp. 141, 182
  10. ^ a b "First Documentary on "Hayedeh, Legendary Persian Diva"", Payvand News, 5 January 2009, retrieved 20 August 2009
  11. ^ a b "Nederlandse Iraniër zit gevangen in Syrië", De Volkskrant, 20 May 2006, retrieved 1 June 2009
  12. ^ a b "Executie verijdeld van Iraanse Nederlander", De Volkskrant, 30 June 2003, retrieved 1 June 2009
  13. ^ a b "Iraniërs debatteren in 'Tehrangeles' – daar wel", De Volkskrant, 15 January 2009, retrieved 15 January 2009
  14. ^ Ghorashi 2002, pp. 227–233
  15. ^ "Perzische Referendum", ANP, 8 January 1953, retrieved 8 August 2010
  16. ^ "De illusoire dialoog", IranPY, 1 August 2010, retrieved 8 August 2010
  17. ^ Mulder, Eildert (27 July 1996), "Spionnen von de ajatollah's", Trouw, retrieved 23 July 2010
  18. ^ Martine Gosselink and Dirk J. Tang (ed.), Iran and the Netherlands; interwoven through the ages, Barjesteh van Waalwijk van Doorn & Co's Uitgeversmaatschappij, Gronsveld and Rotterdam 2009.
  19. ^ Hessels 2002, p. 19
  20. ^ CBS 2009
  21. ^ Hessels 2002, p. 10
  22. ^ Hessels 2004, p. 57
  23. ^ Benneker, Bas (23 June 2007), "Ex-moslim PvdA: Mohammed was een crimineel (Labour party Ex-Muslim: "Muhammad was a criminal")", Elsevier (in Dutch), retrieved 3 August 2010
  24. ^ "Ex-moslims krijgen een stem: Ehsan Jami vecht voor geloofsvrijheid met nieuw Comité" [Ex-Muslims get a voice: Ehsan Jami fighting for religious freedom in new committee], Spits (in Dutch), 6 May 2007, retrieved 3 August 2010
  25. ^ "Reacties stromen binnen bij Comité voor Ex-moslims" [Reactions flows within the Committee for Ex-Muslims], NU.nl (in Dutch), 2 June 2007
  26. ^ , Expatica.com, 7 August 2007, archived from the original on 3 November 2007, retrieved 3 July 2010
  27. ^ (in Dutch), 24 April 2013, archived from the original on 4 March 2016, retrieved 24 April 2013
  28. ^ Iraniërs zijn vaak hoog opgeleid, 24 April 2013, retrieved 24 April 2013
  29. ^ "Fardad Zand wint The Rectors Student Prize for Internationalisation 2006". Retrieved 25 April 2015.
  30. ^ Tenming, Ruben (3 January 2008), "Dutch university bans Iranian students", Radio Netherlands Worldwide, retrieved 1 June 2009
  31. ^ Bhattacharjee, Yudhijit (2008), "News of the Week: Dutch Revise Policy Blocking Iranian Students", Science, vol. 319, no. 5863, p. 556, doi:10.1126/science.319.5863.556b, PMID 18239096, S2CID 206578881
  32. ^ de Jong, Perro (3 September 2008), "Iranian students take Dutch state to court", Radio Netherlands Worldwide, retrieved 1 June 2009
  33. ^ "Iranian students face discrimination: court". 3 February 2010. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  34. ^ "Ban on Iranian students is discriminatory, says supreme court". dutchnews.nl. 14 December 2012. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  35. ^ Bahreini, Raha (November 2012). The Future of Iran: Educational Reform: Iran Academia: The Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities (PDF). London: Legatum Institute. This working paper was produced for the Legatum Institute's workshop on Educational Reform on 12 November 2012. The workshop was part of 'The Future of Iran' project...
  36. ^ "Dutch-Persians Shout for Freedom on Bike", Iranian.com, 2 June 2010, retrieved 21 June 2010
  37. ^ "Perzische bezetters mogen hier blijven", Nieuwsblad van het NoordenNieuwsblad van het Noorden, 4 April 1974, retrieved 8 August 2010
  38. ^ "Advocate Perzische Bezetters: "Politie Wassenaar gaf Perzië inlichtingen"", Nieuwsblad van het Noorden, 30 August 1978, retrieved 6 August 2010
  39. ^ Ghorashi 2002, p. 141
  40. ^ Ghorashi 2002, p. 12. The newspaper article cited there is available online: "Iraanse broers blijken spionnen voor Teheran", Trouw, 27 July 1996, retrieved 1 June 2009
  41. ^ "Holland's Persian artists in SOLIDARITY with their People", Payvand News, 7 February 2009, retrieved 7 February 2009
  42. ^ "Protesters occupy parts of Iranian Embassy in the Hague", Payvand News, 7 April 2010, retrieved 20 August 2010
  43. ^ "Protests against Dutch TV's invitation to head of Iranian TV", Payvand News/RadioZamaneh, 30 June 2010, retrieved 30 June 2010
  44. ^ "NOS verwelkomt terroristen!", Iranian Progressive Youth, 29 June 2010, retrieved 29 June 2010
  45. ^ "Hilversum schrapt onder druk bezoek staats-tv Iran", NRC, 2 July 2010, retrieved 2 July 2010
  46. ^ "Death sentence fears for Dutch-Iranian woman", Radio Netherlands Worldwide, 24 August 2010, retrieved 25 August 2010
  47. ^ "Iran hangs Iranian-Dutch woman Sahra Bahrami", BBC News, 29 January 2011, retrieved 29 January 2011
  48. ^ , De Pers, 29 January 2011, archived from the original on 3 February 2011, retrieved 29 January 2011
  49. ^ "Dutch Parliament Gives 15 Million Euro to set up a Persian TV Station", Payvand News, 22 December 2004, retrieved 2 August 2010
  50. ^ "About Us", Radio Zamaneh, 27 October 2009, retrieved 18 December 2009
  51. ^ "Iran boos over hulp Den Haag aan radio oppositie", NRC, 25 June 2009, retrieved 23 June 2010
  52. ^ "Dutch-based Persian radio website defaced by hackers", Reuters, 31 January 2009, retrieved 23 June 2010
  53. ^ "About "Persian Dutch Network"", PDN, 29 January 2010, retrieved 3 October 2011
  54. ^ Ghorashi 2003, pp. 147–148
  55. ^ Lindert et al. 2008, p. 578
  56. ^ Ghorashi 2003, p. 150
  57. ^ "Ik ben Antigone | I am Antigone by Virgule FPAC (Tehran)".
  58. ^ "Faculty of Humanities: Persian Language and Culture", Leiden University, 6 March 2010, retrieved 29 July 2010
  59. ^ , Prince Claus Fund, 10 December 1996, archived from the original on 5 July 2010, retrieved 29 July 2010
  60. ^ Perzië Geschiedenis van Perzië, Hermitage Amsterdam, 6 May 2008, retrieved 29 July 2010

Sources edit

  • Ghorashi, Halleh (2002), Ways to survive, battles to win: Iranian women exiles in the Netherlands and United States, Nova Publishers, ISBN 978-1-59033-552-9
  • Hessels, Thomas (2002), Iraniërs in Nederland, een profiel (PDF), The Hague: Ministry of Justice, retrieved 1 June 2009
  • Ghorashi, Halleh (2003), "Iraanse vrouwen, transnationaal of nationaal? Een (de)territoriale benadering van 'thuis' in Nederland en de Verenigde Staten", Migrantenstudies, 19 (3): 140–155, ISSN 0169-5169
  • Hessels, Thomas (2004), "Iraniërs in Nederland", Bevolkingstrends, 52 (2): 54–58, ISSN 1571-0998
  • van den Bos, Matthijs; Achbari, Wahideh (2007), "Cultural migration: Networks of Iranian Organizations in the Netherlands", Migration Letters, 4 (2): 171–181, ISSN 1741-8992
  • Lindert, Annette; Korzilius, Hubert; van de Vijver, Fons J. R.; Kroon, Sjaak; Arends-Tóth, Judit (2008), "Perceived discrimination and acculturation among Iranian refugees in the Netherlands", International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 32 (6): 578–588, doi:10.1016/j.ijintrel.2008.09.003, hdl:2066/67619
  • Population by origin and generation, 1 January, The Hague: Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek, 11 April 2011, retrieved 1 April 2011

Further reading edit

  • Koser, Khalid (1997), "Social Networks and the Asylum Cycle: The Case of Iranians in the Netherlands", International Migration Review, 31 (3): 591–611, doi:10.2307/2547287, JSTOR 2547287, PMID 12292955
  • Verkuyten, M.; Nekuee, S. (1999), "Ingroup bias: the effect of self-stereotyping, identification and group threat", European Journal of Social Psychology, 29 (2–3): 411–418, doi:10.1002/(SICI)1099-0992(199903/05)29:2/3<411::AID-EJSP952>3.0.CO;2-8, ISSN 0046-2772. A study of self-stereotyping among Iranians living in the Netherlands.
  • Verkuyten, Markel; Nekuee, Shervin (2004), "Subjective Well-Being, Discrimination and Cultural Conflict: Iranians Living in The Netherlands", Social Indicators Research, 47 (3): 281–306, doi:10.1023/A:1006970410593, S2CID 142567195
  • van den Bos, Matthijs (2005), , Annual Meeting of the Middle East Studies Association, Washington, D.C., archived from the original on 9 December 2006, retrieved 1 June 2009{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • van den Bos, Matthijs; Nell, Liza (2006), "Territorial bounds to virtual space: Transnational online and offline networks of Iranian and Turkish-Kurdish immigrants in the Netherlands", Global Networks, 6 (2): 201–220, doi:10.1111/j.1471-0374.2006.00141.x
  • van den Bos, Matthijs (2006), "Landmarks for 'Nowhereland': Scratching the surface of transnational Dutch-Iranian hyperlink networks", Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 12 (3): 643–661, doi:10.1111/j.1467-9655.2006.00357.x
  • van den Bos, Matthijs (2006), "Hyperlinked Dutch-Iranian Cyberspace", International Sociology, 21 (1): 83–99, doi:10.1177/0268580906059292, S2CID 220878840
  • Safdar, Saba; Struthers, Ward; van Oudenhoven, Jan Pieter (2009), "Acculturation of Iranians in the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands", Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 40 (3): 468–491, doi:10.1177/0022022108330990, S2CID 146535674

External links edit

  • The Information Center of Persian (Iranian) Community in the Netherlands (English & Dutch)
  • Radio Zamaneh website (English and Persian)

iranians, netherlands, form, newer, larger, populations, iranian, diaspora, europe, referred, hyphenated, terms, such, dutch, iranians, iranian, dutch, dutch, persian, persian, dutch, similar, terms, iraanse, nederlanders, nederlandse, iraniërs, perzische, ned. Iranians in the Netherlands form one of the newer and larger populations of the Iranian diaspora in Europe 6 Iranians in the Netherlands are referred to by hyphenated terms such as Dutch Iranians Iranian Dutch Dutch Persian or Persian Dutch 7 8 9 10 Similar terms Iraanse Nederlanders Nederlandse Iraniers and Perzische Nederlanders may be found in Dutch language media 11 12 13 Iranians in the NetherlandsIraniers Perzen in NederlandTotal population52 099 1 Regions with significant populationsAmsterdam Rotterdam The Hague and other urban areas 2 LanguagesDutch Persian Azerbaijani Armenian Kurdish and other languages of Iran see Languages of Iran ReligionIslam 3 Atheism Agnosticism 4 Christianity 5 ZoroastrianismRelated ethnic groupsIranian citizens abroad Iranian diaspora Contents 1 Terminology 2 Migration history 3 Demographic characteristics 4 Religion 5 Education 5 1 Discrimination against Iranian students 5 2 Iran Academia 6 Political activities 7 Media 8 Integration and community 9 Art and culture 10 Notable people 11 See also 12 Images 13 References 13 1 Notes 13 2 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksTerminology editSee also Name of Iran nbsp The Netherlands Persian Community s Demonstration UNITED4IRAN Amsterdam 2009 Iranians in the Netherlands are sometimes referred to by hyphenated terms such as Dutch Iranians Iranian Dutch Dutch Persian or Persian Dutch 7 8 9 10 Similar terms Iraanse Nederlanders Nederlandse Iraniers and Perzische Nederlanders may be found in Dutch language media 11 12 13 However one scholar who uses the term Dutch Iranians also expresses reservations over the validity of such a hyphenated notion of identity in the Dutch context in comparison to the less problematic term Iranian American 14 Other collective terms used to refer to the community include Iraanse gemeenschap Perzische gemeenschap and Perzen 15 16 17 Migration history editThough the Netherlands had a Persian population since the early seventeenth century mostly Armenian merchants Persianen which by the beginning of the nineteenth century had largely dissolved into the larger Dutch population 18 in more recent times other European countries such as Germany and France have had Persian communities since the early 20th century most of the Iranian population in the Netherlands is of relatively recent provenance virtually all came to the country after the Iranian Revolution of 1979 2 The overall migration was quite significant relative to the whole size of Iranian emigration to Europe from 1990 to 1999 the Netherlands was Europe s second most popular destination for Iranian asylum seekers behind Germany 6 However from 1981 to 2001 only 1 292 were formally recognised as invited refugees Dutch Uitgenodigde vluchtelingen the vast majority in the period 1987 1990 19 Demographic characteristics edit nbsp People at Sima Bina s Nowruz concert in Amsterdam 2010 As of 2009 update statistics of the Dutch Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek showed 24 535Iranian born persons 13 603 men 10 932 women 6 082 locally born persons of Iranian background 3 159 men 2 923 women of which 2 491 persons with one parent also born locally 1 321 men 1 170 women 3 591 persons with both parents born abroad 1 838 men 1 753 women For a total of 30 617 persons 16 758 men 13 855 women This represented nearly double the 1996 total of 16 478 persons Numerically most of the growth was in the foreign born segment of the population whose numbers increased from 14 628 over the period in question however the rate of growth was fastest in the locally born segment of the population which almost tripled in size from 1 850 persons 20 Religion editIran is a largely Muslim country a fact reflected in the backgrounds of Iranian migrants to the Netherlands 21 However most migrants do not continue to practise their religion 22 Those who do often find themselves viewed as threats and suffer exclusion from Dutch society this trend strengthened with the growth of political Islam in the 1980s 3 In 2007 Ehsan Jami a Dutch politician of Iranian descent criticised the Islamic prophet Muhammad describing him as a criminal 23 Together with Loubna Berrada founder of the Advisory Committee for Integration part of the People s Party for Freedom and Democracy Jami founded the Central Committee for Ex Muslims in 2007 24 The organisation supported by Afshin Ellian aims to support apostates from Islam and to bring forth the reality of women s rights violations in the religion 25 On 4 August 2007 Jami was attacked in his hometown Voorburg by three men The attack was widely believed to be linked to his activities for the committee The national anti terrorism coordinator s office the public prosecution department and the police decided during a meeting on 6 August that additional measures were necessary for the protection of Jami who subsequently received extra security 26 Education editIranians in the Netherlands are regarded as one of the highest educated and best integrated ethnic groups according to various sources such as the Erasmus University Rotterdam 27 and the Statistics Netherlands 28 Not unrelated the Iranian academic community has grown significantly including professors Turaj Atabaki Afshin Ellian Halleh Ghorashi and Majid Hassanizadeh nbsp Iranian student Fardad Zand receives 2006 Rector Magnificus Prize at Delft University 29 Discrimination against Iranian students edit Due to the Iranian government s nuclear activities United Nations Security Council Resolution 1737 which among other matters called on UN member states to prevent Iranian students from receiving specialised training which might be of use to the nuclear programme of Iran the Dutch government implemented a variety of restrictions on Iranian students in the Netherlands At the recommendation of the government the University of Twente went so far as to halt its admissions of students from Iran entirely stating that it could not ensure they would have no access to nuclear related information 30 However the government later backed away from this policy 31 In July they announced that Iranian students could be admitted but would be restricted from taking certain courses and visiting certain places related to the development of nuclear weapons In response a group of Iranian students filed suit against the government alleging that the restrictions violated the prohibition against all forms of discrimination established by Article 1 of the Constitution of the Netherlands 32 A local court ruled in February 2010 that the University of Twente discriminate against Iranians by refusing their admission due to their nationalities 33 The case went up to the Supreme Court of the Netherlands in The Hague The final verdict of the Supreme Court confirmed the initial verdict that the ban on Iranian students is discriminatory unlawful and a breach to European Human Rights treaty and therefore the discriminatory regulations were overruled 34 Iran Academia edit Main article Iran Academia In September 2011 Iran Academia The Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities was established in The Hague by a group known as the Iranian Progressive Youth IPY The IPY which had its origins in the Iranian Green Movement in 2009 had grown into a network of students and researchers around the world including in Europe North America and Australia Iran Academia was established with the support of Iranian academics worldwide 35 Political activities edit nbsp Dutch Persians Shout for Freedom on Bike June 2010 a demonstration organized by Iranian Progressive Youth in cooperation with the Persian Dutch Network 36 The first serious conflicts between the Pahlavi government and students in the Netherlands began in the 1970s In 1974 a group of Iranians based in the Netherlands and other European countries occupied the Embassy of Iran in Wassenaar 37 Another group occupied the embassy in August 1978 and were arrested by the police Their lawyer stated to Dutch daily Nieuwsblad van het Noorden that Wassenar Police gives information to Persia 38 The early migration of political activists and their applications for asylum in the Netherlands following the 1979 Iranian Revolution had a major effect on the development of the Iranian community the suspected links between the Islamic Republic embassies in Europe and the murders of prominent exiles such as the France based former prime minister Shapour Bakhtiar as well as rumours of information leaks to the Iranian embassy in The Hague from within the Dutch government led to suspicion by Iranians both towards their fellow Iranians and towards the Dutch authorities 39 In 1996 Dutch daily Trouw revealed that one fairly prominent man in the Iranian community in Amsterdam Mahmoed Jafhari known by the alias Anoosh had been working for the Iranian intelligence service to gather information on exiles he had recorded on tape every conversation held in his house with his fellow Iranians a fact which was discovered only after his death The social environment created by that event has resulted in numerous difficulties for later academic research 40 Since the 2009 2010 Iranian election protests the Iranian community in the Netherlands organised many solidarity demonstrations in Amsterdam The Hague Delft and Groningen In January 2010 when the Islamic Republic Embassy in The Hague organized a Peace Concert at Rotterdam s De Doelen Concert Hall it had to be stopped in the middle because of physical confrontations between angry protesters and the embassy agents 41 In April 2010 a group of Iranian and Dutch protesters occupied parts of Islamic Republic Embassy in the Hague in protest to Iran s oppressive and violent policies During this act of protest the flag of the Islamic Republic has been lowered and replaced with a banner bearing an image of Neda Agha Soltan the woman who was shot to death in Tehran s street protests after the disputed June presidential elections 42 In June 2010 the Dutch TV Channel NOS organized a visit for Ezzatollah Zarghami director of Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting to its headquarters in Hilversum Radio Zamaneh revealed this news creating a wave of anger in the Iranian community 43 The Hague based Iranian Progressive Youth Network also published a press release entitled NOS Welcomes the Terrorist 44 The event was canceled a few days before the visit The whole affair was reported in mainstream Dutch media such as NRC Handelsblad 45 In 2011 Iran executed Zahra Bahrami a naturalised Dutch citizen of Iranian origin after holding her in prison since 2009 on drugs charges The Dutch ambassador in Tehran was not allowed to offer her assistance 46 47 48 Media edit nbsp The Persian language Radio Zamaneh in Amsterdam 2008 In 2004 the Dutch Parliament agreed with the proposal for allocating 15 million Euros to set up a television station which would broadcast in the Persian language This was the first time that a European Union country had been involved in establishing a Persian television station on its own 49 The Persian language Radio Zamaneh began operating in Amsterdam in August 2006 with support from the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs 50 The Islamic Republic of Iran has on various occasions criticised the Netherlands for funding the station During the 2009 public unrest and demonstrations in Iran Majid Ghahremani Iranian ambassador to The Netherlands accused the Dutch government of interfering in Iran s internal affairs At the same time a Dutch foreign ministry spokeswoman told Reuters that they had decided to continue to provide funding to the radio station with the aim of improving the situation of human rights in Iran 51 52 In January 2010 also Persian Dutch Network has been registered in Amsterdam to introduce Persian culture to Dutch people and make two nations more close to each other PDN has also released various videos of cultural events social gatherings and political demonstrations of Persian community in the Netherlands on the Internet 53 Integration and community edit nbsp Persian piano music recital by Pejman Akbarzadeh at Amsterdam Concertgebouw April 2012 Iranians in the Netherlands have founded relatively few community organisations compared to Turkish or Moroccan migrants this may be due to the general atmosphere of distrust and divisiveness among Iranians abroad 7 In contrast to other migrant groups there is little sense of community among them Possibly as a result of this many Iranians have redirected their ideological energies into participation in mainstream Dutch politics prominent examples include politician Farah Karimi of the GreenLeft party or commentator and professor Afshin Ellian 54 Women tend to report far lower levels of discrimination than men 55 However they still often confront mainstream stereotypes of Muslim women such as the idea that they are victims of domestic violence in need of emancipation from Muslim men 56 Art and culture editIn 2023 Virgule Film amp Performance Art Compagny Tehran created in collaboration with Altstadt Rotterdam the performance I AM ANTIGONE Internationally celebrated author Naghmeh Samini wrote a new adaptation of the Greek tragedy Antigone especially for this performance 57 There is an active Persian Language and Culture Department at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands 58 There are Persian artists writers musicians etc who are active in the Netherlands among them filmmaker Reza Allamehzadeh and storyteller Sahand Sahebdivani In 2006 graphic designer Reza Abedini received 2006 Principal Prince Claus Award 59 In the summer 2008 Amsterdam Branch of Hermitage Museum organized the exhibition Persia Thirty Centuries of Culture and Art for six months 60 Museum Het Ursulinenconvent International Museum for Family History Internationaal Museum voor Familiegeschiedenis in Eijsden Limburg has a permanent exhibition on Persian family history and Persian photography Also in this museum the harem system is being explained using the Qajar family and dynasty as an example Notable people editAli Niknam Entrepreneur founder of Bunq Kader Abdolah author Pejman Akbarzadeh musician and journalist Sevda Alizadeh born 1987 singer Reza Allamehzadeh filmmaker Touraj Atabaki professor of social history of the Middle East and Central Asia International Institute of Social History Zahra Bahrami convicted of drug trafficking and executed in Iran in 2011 Leo Barjesteh historian publisher and museum director Afshin Ellian university professor Reza Ghoochannejhad born 1987 footballer Alireza Jahanbakhsh born 1993 footballer Farah Karimi politician and former MP Biurakn Hakhverdian water polo player olympic gold medalist and former captain of the Dutch national junior water polo team Majid Hassanizadeh professor of hydrogeology Gegard Mousasi mixed martial artist Sholeh Rezazadeh born 1989 Iranian born Dutch writer and poetSee also edit nbsp Iran portal nbsp Netherlands portal Iran Netherlands relations Iranian diaspora Immigration to the NetherlandsImages edit nbsp The Netherlands Prince Bernhard Shah of Persia and Queen Farah Tehran 1970s nbsp Angry Persian protester shouts Death to Islamic Republic at Peace Concert organized by the Islamic Republic Embassy at Rotterdam s De Doelen Concert Hall nbsp An Old Persian Carpet Gallery in Amersfoort Central Netherlands nbsp Persian language books section at the Amsterdam Public Library nbsp A Persian carpet Gallery in Old center Amsterdam July 2010 nbsp Persian Ironwood Tree brought from Persia to the Netherlands in 1895 nbsp A Persian restaurant in Amsterdam 2006 nbsp Haft Sin table for Nowruz Persian New Year Celebration in Uitgeest 2010References editNotes edit Population sex age origin and generation 1 January a b Ghorashi 2002 p 140 a b Ghorashi 2002 p 228 Hunter Shireen Islam Europe s Second Religion The New Social Cultural and Political Landscape p 102 A Conference for Persian Christians FCNN 5 November 2009 archived from the original on 3 September 2014 retrieved 6 August 2010 a b Hessels 2002 p 20 a b c van den Bos amp Achbari 2007 p 171 a b Lindert et al 2008 p 581 a b Ghorashi 2002 pp 141 182 a b First Documentary on Hayedeh Legendary Persian Diva Payvand News 5 January 2009 retrieved 20 August 2009 a b Nederlandse Iranier zit gevangen in Syrie De Volkskrant 20 May 2006 retrieved 1 June 2009 a b Executie verijdeld van Iraanse Nederlander De Volkskrant 30 June 2003 retrieved 1 June 2009 a b Iraniers debatteren in Tehrangeles daar wel De Volkskrant 15 January 2009 retrieved 15 January 2009 Ghorashi 2002 pp 227 233 Perzische Referendum ANP 8 January 1953 retrieved 8 August 2010 De illusoire dialoog IranPY 1 August 2010 retrieved 8 August 2010 Mulder Eildert 27 July 1996 Spionnen von de ajatollah s Trouw retrieved 23 July 2010 Martine Gosselink and Dirk J Tang ed Iran and the Netherlands interwoven through the ages Barjesteh van Waalwijk van Doorn amp Co s Uitgeversmaatschappij Gronsveld and Rotterdam 2009 Hessels 2002 p 19 CBS 2009 Hessels 2002 p 10 Hessels 2004 p 57 Benneker Bas 23 June 2007 Ex moslim PvdA Mohammed was een crimineel Labour party Ex Muslim Muhammad was a criminal Elsevier in Dutch retrieved 3 August 2010 Ex moslims krijgen een stem Ehsan Jami vecht voor geloofsvrijheid met nieuw Comite Ex Muslims get a voice Ehsan Jami fighting for religious freedom in new committee Spits in Dutch 6 May 2007 retrieved 3 August 2010 Reacties stromen binnen bij Comite voor Ex moslims Reactions flows within the Committee for Ex Muslims NU nl in Dutch 2 June 2007 Extra security for Ehsan Jami Expatica com 7 August 2007 archived from the original on 3 November 2007 retrieved 3 July 2010 Iraniers en voormalig Joegoslaven zijn hoog opgeleid in Dutch 24 April 2013 archived from the original on 4 March 2016 retrieved 24 April 2013 Iraniers zijn vaak hoog opgeleid 24 April 2013 retrieved 24 April 2013 Fardad Zand wint The Rectors Student Prize for Internationalisation 2006 Retrieved 25 April 2015 Tenming Ruben 3 January 2008 Dutch university bans Iranian students Radio Netherlands Worldwide retrieved 1 June 2009 Bhattacharjee Yudhijit 2008 News of the Week Dutch Revise Policy Blocking Iranian Students Science vol 319 no 5863 p 556 doi 10 1126 science 319 5863 556b PMID 18239096 S2CID 206578881 de Jong Perro 3 September 2008 Iranian students take Dutch state to court Radio Netherlands Worldwide retrieved 1 June 2009 Iranian students face discrimination court 3 February 2010 Retrieved 29 June 2015 Ban on Iranian students is discriminatory says supreme court dutchnews nl 14 December 2012 Retrieved 29 June 2015 Bahreini Raha November 2012 The Future of Iran Educational Reform Iran Academia The Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities PDF London Legatum Institute This working paper was produced for the Legatum Institute s workshop on Educational Reform on 12 November 2012 The workshop was part of The Future of Iran project Dutch Persians Shout for Freedom on Bike Iranian com 2 June 2010 retrieved 21 June 2010 Perzische bezetters mogen hier blijven Nieuwsblad van het NoordenNieuwsblad van het Noorden 4 April 1974 retrieved 8 August 2010 Advocate Perzische Bezetters Politie Wassenaar gaf Perzie inlichtingen Nieuwsblad van het Noorden 30 August 1978 retrieved 6 August 2010 Ghorashi 2002 p 141 Ghorashi 2002 p 12 The newspaper article cited there is available online Iraanse broers blijken spionnen voor Teheran Trouw 27 July 1996 retrieved 1 June 2009 Holland s Persian artists in SOLIDARITY with their People Payvand News 7 February 2009 retrieved 7 February 2009 Protesters occupy parts of Iranian Embassy in the Hague Payvand News 7 April 2010 retrieved 20 August 2010 Protests against Dutch TV s invitation to head of Iranian TV Payvand News RadioZamaneh 30 June 2010 retrieved 30 June 2010 NOS verwelkomt terroristen Iranian Progressive Youth 29 June 2010 retrieved 29 June 2010 Hilversum schrapt onder druk bezoek staats tv Iran NRC 2 July 2010 retrieved 2 July 2010 Death sentence fears for Dutch Iranian woman Radio Netherlands Worldwide 24 August 2010 retrieved 25 August 2010 Iran hangs Iranian Dutch woman Sahra Bahrami BBC News 29 January 2011 retrieved 29 January 2011 Haal ambassadeur terug uit Iran De Pers 29 January 2011 archived from the original on 3 February 2011 retrieved 29 January 2011 Dutch Parliament Gives 15 Million Euro to set up a Persian TV Station Payvand News 22 December 2004 retrieved 2 August 2010 About Us Radio Zamaneh 27 October 2009 retrieved 18 December 2009 Iran boos over hulp Den Haag aan radio oppositie NRC 25 June 2009 retrieved 23 June 2010 Dutch based Persian radio website defaced by hackers Reuters 31 January 2009 retrieved 23 June 2010 About Persian Dutch Network PDN 29 January 2010 retrieved 3 October 2011 Ghorashi 2003 pp 147 148 Lindert et al 2008 p 578 Ghorashi 2003 p 150 Ik ben Antigone I am Antigone by Virgule FPAC Tehran Faculty of Humanities Persian Language and Culture Leiden University 6 March 2010 retrieved 29 July 2010 Reza Abedini The Principal Prince Claus Award of 100 000 Prince Claus Fund 10 December 1996 archived from the original on 5 July 2010 retrieved 29 July 2010 Perzie Geschiedenis van Perzie Hermitage Amsterdam 6 May 2008 retrieved 29 July 2010 Sources edit Ghorashi Halleh 2002 Ways to survive battles to win Iranian women exiles in the Netherlands and United States Nova Publishers ISBN 978 1 59033 552 9 Hessels Thomas 2002 Iraniers in Nederland een profiel PDF The Hague Ministry of Justice retrieved 1 June 2009 Ghorashi Halleh 2003 Iraanse vrouwen transnationaal of nationaal Een de territoriale benadering van thuis in Nederland en de Verenigde Staten Migrantenstudies 19 3 140 155 ISSN 0169 5169 Hessels Thomas 2004 Iraniers in Nederland Bevolkingstrends 52 2 54 58 ISSN 1571 0998 van den Bos Matthijs Achbari Wahideh 2007 Cultural migration Networks of Iranian Organizations in the Netherlands Migration Letters 4 2 171 181 ISSN 1741 8992 Lindert Annette Korzilius Hubert van de Vijver Fons J R Kroon Sjaak Arends Toth Judit 2008 Perceived discrimination and acculturation among Iranian refugees in the Netherlands International Journal of Intercultural Relations 32 6 578 588 doi 10 1016 j ijintrel 2008 09 003 hdl 2066 67619 Population by origin and generation 1 January The Hague Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek 11 April 2011 retrieved 1 April 2011Further reading editKoser Khalid 1997 Social Networks and the Asylum Cycle The Case of Iranians in the Netherlands International Migration Review 31 3 591 611 doi 10 2307 2547287 JSTOR 2547287 PMID 12292955 Verkuyten M Nekuee S 1999 Ingroup bias the effect of self stereotyping identification and group threat European Journal of Social Psychology 29 2 3 411 418 doi 10 1002 SICI 1099 0992 199903 05 29 2 3 lt 411 AID EJSP952 gt 3 0 CO 2 8 ISSN 0046 2772 A study of self stereotyping among Iranians living in the Netherlands Verkuyten Markel Nekuee Shervin 2004 Subjective Well Being Discrimination and Cultural Conflict Iranians Living in The Netherlands Social Indicators Research 47 3 281 306 doi 10 1023 A 1006970410593 S2CID 142567195 van den Bos Matthijs 2005 Relocating Dutch Iranian Exile On And Off line Dutch Iranian Transnational Networks And Their Comparison with Turkish Kurdish Networks Annual Meeting of the Middle East Studies Association Washington D C archived from the original on 9 December 2006 retrieved 1 June 2009 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link van den Bos Matthijs Nell Liza 2006 Territorial bounds to virtual space Transnational online and offline networks of Iranian and Turkish Kurdish immigrants in the Netherlands Global Networks 6 2 201 220 doi 10 1111 j 1471 0374 2006 00141 x van den Bos Matthijs 2006 Landmarks for Nowhereland Scratching the surface of transnational Dutch Iranian hyperlink networks Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 12 3 643 661 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9655 2006 00357 x van den Bos Matthijs 2006 Hyperlinked Dutch Iranian Cyberspace International Sociology 21 1 83 99 doi 10 1177 0268580906059292 S2CID 220878840 Safdar Saba Struthers Ward van Oudenhoven Jan Pieter 2009 Acculturation of Iranians in the United States the United Kingdom and the Netherlands Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology 40 3 468 491 doi 10 1177 0022022108330990 S2CID 146535674External links editThe Information Center of Persian Iranian Community in the Netherlands English amp Dutch Radio Zamaneh website English and Persian Portals nbsp Iran nbsp Netherlands Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iranians in the Netherlands amp oldid 1218933678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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