fbpx
Wikipedia

LGBT history in the Netherlands

The history of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the Netherlands has reflected the shades of tolerance or rigidity which were utilized by the rulers of the country at various periods in its history. Since World War II, the movement for LGBT rights has been galvanized by both events abroad and increasing liberalization domestically.

The Westertoren in Amsterdam decorated with a huge rainbow flag during the Amsterdam Gay Pride of 2012

16th Century edit

17th Century edit

 
Lesbianism and hermaphroditism, depicted here in an engraving circa 1690, were very similar concepts during the Renaissance.
  • 1616 -- Willem Baudartius writes and Michiel Colijn illustrates the history book: Afbeeldinghe, ende beschrijvinghe van alle de veld-slagen, belegeringen, en̄ and're notable geschiedenissen, ghevallen in de Nederlanden, geduerende d'oorloghe teghens den coningh van Spaengien . They detail the executions of monks for homosexuality in Ghent on June 28, 1578.[1]
  • 1618, two women, Magdaleene and Mayken are tried over homosexuality in Bruges. Magdeleene's husband, recently tried and condemned to death by hanging for horse thief, accused his wife of being hermaphrodite. He surprised his wife, Magdaleene, in the stable with another woman.[2] Some days later, Magdaleene and the lady are observed running naked in crop fields up to a local lake. The women escape a few days later. Neighbors testify and confirm the sulfurous reputation and behavior of Magdaleene. Textual analysis of the trial's interrogation shows how the judges read the behavior of Magdaleene as man-like, driven, upon passive female victims, seduced while cheated, forced.[2] Historians should be cautious when reading such statements which may reflect more the vision of the judges than actual behaviors. Magdaleene testified that her attraction for women appeared when she was 9 and saw two women having an affair. She married but her husband and her aren't promiscuous, she seduces only women and has affairs with them. Magdaleene prefers being physical with women rather than men, and without citing names, state that many women are like her.[2] Mayken states that the sex drive of Magdaleene is overwhelming, to which Magdaleene comment that Lyve was fine with it and would have been a better partner to escape with. After the trial, Mayken is condemned to pray over her sin, and exiled from Bruges. Magdaleene is exiled from the county of Flanders and would face execution if she came back.[2]
 
Lot (biblical person) and Lot's daughters, Joachim Wtewael

18th and 19th centuries edit

 
18th-century image of shipworm from a pamphlet of a Dutch Christian minister, who thought the shipworm was God's revenge because of the rise of "sodomites" in the Netherlands.

Engaging in sodomy was a public offence in the Dutch Republic from 1730 until 1811, when the Napoleonic Code which decriminalised homosexuality was first put into place, following French annexation.[3] Most of the cases prosecuted involved men engaging in anal intercourse with other men (usually boys under the age of consent or cases of male rape). Heterosexuals who engaged in sodomy, or zoophiles engaging in bestiality, were generally not prosecuted under this legislation. However, a woman attempting a marriage with another woman could be arrested for fraud.[4]

 
A wanted poster, published in Amsterdam on September 1, 1730

In 1725, a young Dutch sailor, Leendert Hasenbosch, was deliberately marooned alone on Ascension Island as a punishment for sodomy; he is presumed to have died of thirst. His story is known because his diary was found on the island in the following year by visiting British sailors, and published in England.

After 1730 (during the Age of Enlightenment), a steep increase regarding arrests and pogroms[5] for sodomy occurred in the Utrecht sodomy trials. Hundreds of men were accused of sodomy with other males, and 200[4] to 300[6] men were executed during this period. Sodomy laws were also being debated in this period; in 1777, an anonymous tract titled Considerations on Punishing a Certain Infamous Crime appeared, which called for the abolition of Dutch sodomy laws. Although this tract did not view homosexuality as a crime, it did view it as asocial behaviour. It stated that homosexuality was preventable by the co-education of males and females in school, as well as promoting heterosexual marriage to young children.[4]

In the eighteenth century, sexual vices such as masturbation came under attack, but at the same time many authors celebrated Socrates and Plato's perceived paederastic friendship. They engaged in what has been called "The Socratic Battle", which discussed whether Socrates was an ancient Greek paederast or a close friend of Plato. Both sides of the debate were clear to emphasise that they were not supportive of sodomy or paederasty per se, but that they were supportive of the same-sex friendship, being purposefully vague as to the dynamics of the latter so as not to offend the sensitivities of the age. Same-sex attractions were still perceived as a sin and often kept quiet, and it has been argued that this silence both prevented and ironically encouraged homosexuality in males.[4]

While sodomy laws were most often used to prosecute men, some women were subject to punishment by law after being discovered to be in same-sex relationships. Historian Theo van der Meer writes, "The average penalty imposed on these women was six years' confinement, as compared to twelve for men."[7] These women who engaged in same-sex relationships and sometimes dressed like men, were classified as tribades. They were often driven to theft and sex work as a result of living in poverty.[4]

After the Batave Republic was founded in 1795, the number of prosecutions for sodomy increased again, but the severity of the punishments lessened. Some tribades were prosecuted for attempted sodomy and were imprisoned and even executed. In 1810, the Napoleon Bonaparte incorporated the country into the French Empire. In 1811, Holland adopted the French legal code, which had abolished laws against sodomy in 1791.[4]

20th century edit

1900–1939 edit

In 1911 the ruling Christian-based political parties enacted "article 248bis" that raised the age of consent for homosexuality to 21, while the age of consent for heterosexuality remained at 16. Along with the unequal age of consent were various laws against "public indecency" that were often used against gay men. In response to this new law, a Dutch chapter of the German Scientific Humanitarian Committee was organized under the leadership of Jacob Schorer [nl]. The organization was made independent and named Nederlandsch Wetenschappelijk Humanitair Komitee (NWHK) in 1919.

 
Café 't Mandje at Zeedijk in Amsterdam

In Amsterdam, the first gay bars were established during this period. The best known was The Empire, which was first mentioned in 1911 and existed until the late 1930s. From here, the first gay magazine, called Wij ("We"), was published in 1932.[8] The oldest place that still exists is Café 't Mandje, which was opened in 1927 by lesbian Bet van Beeren.[9] Another early gay bar was Du Merlo, which was established in 1928.[10]

1940–1969 edit

The NWHK was shut down by the German Nazis during the Second World War, and the German law that prohibited homosexuality, Paragraph 175 was introduced into Dutch law. The Dutch LGBT rights movement was revived in 1945 when the Center for Culture and Recreation, short COC, was created in The Hague by Niek Engelschman [nl][11] which published the magazine Levensrecht ("Right To Live").

 
LGBT people demonstrating against art. 248bis in The Hague, 1969

In the late 1940s into the 1960s several Dutch psychiatrists and clergy began to see homosexuality as a minor mental illness. During the sexual revolution of the 1960s, this more open-minded point of view resulted in a less repressive attitude towards homosexuality and the legalization of adultery, abortion, and pornography. Prostitution was legalized in 1993.

In Amsterdam, the city government acted rather pragmatic and tolerated the existence of gay bars. In 1952 even a gay dancing hall, called D.O.K. [nl] (De Odeon Kelder), was opened, followed in 1955 by the somewhat more decent dancing hall of gay rights organisation COC, called De Schakel. They both existed for over 30 years, attracted gay men from all over the world and making Amsterdam the Gay Capital of that time.[9]

In the 1960s, the number of gay bars grew rapidly and they clustered in and around a number of streets, although this was limited to bars, clubs and shops and they never became residential areas for gays, like the gay villages in the US. Since the late 1950s the main Amsterdam gay street was Kerkstraat [nl]. Other streets in which there came a concentration of gay bars are Zeedijk, Amstel and Warmoesstraat, the latter being the center of the Amsterdam leather scene, where the first leather bar already opened around 1955.[9][12]

1970–1999 edit

In 1971, Article 248bis was repealed and in 1973 Dutch mental health institutions stopped treating homosexuality as an illness and the military lifted its ban on homosexuals. More Dutch LGBT people started to "come out", gay publications such as "Gay Krant" started to be published and the liberal and left-wing Dutch political parties started to support LGBT rights as part of an overall support of social tolerance and liberalism.

In the early 1980s, Reguliersdwarsstraat [nl] succeeded Kerkstraat as the main Amsterdam gay street. In Reguliersdwarsstraat two of the first openly gay places opened: lunchroom Downtown, followed by the famous cafe April in 1981. Street parties were organized in which gay and straight people partied together and the gay scene became trendsetting for Dutch night life. Gay club iT in Amstelstraat became world-famous for its extravagant parties.[13]

Around 1983, the AIDS pandemic reached Amsterdam too, which prompted most Dutch gay men to change their sexual habits to practice safe sex, and eventually comprehensive sexual education was introduced into the public schools that resulted in a low rate of infection.[citation needed]

 
The Homomonument in Amsterdam, consisting of three pink triangles

In 1987, the world's first gay memorial in public space, the Homomonument, was opened in the centre of Amsterdam. It commemorates all gay men and lesbians who have been subjected to persecution because of their homosexuality.

In 1993 the Dutch parliament enacted the "Equal Rights Law", which included sexual orientation as a category legally protected against discrimination, for example in employment, housing, and the provision of both public and private goods and services. However, a leaked report in 2005 stated that religious schools, most of which are financed by the government, can exclude teachers if their behaviour outside of school goes against the ethos of the school, and a teacher was suspended in April 2005 solely for being in a same-sex relationship.[14] In 1998 the Dutch parliament granted same-sex couples domestic partnership benefits.

To celebrate freedom and diversity, the Amsterdam Gay Pride was established in 1996, which became famous for the Canal Parade of boats. Two years later, this parade was the start of the 1998 edition of the Gay Games, which was the by then largest gay event ever held in the Netherlands.

21st century edit

2000–2004 edit

In 2001 the Netherlands granted legal recognition to same-sex marriage, becoming the first nation to do so.[15]

Isolated verbal and physical attacks on LGBT people tend to come from the socially conservative leadership of the Muslim community and their followers[16][17][18] (more than 5% of the population).[19] Political leaders of the conservative Christian parties (accounting for another 5%) oppose gay-rights legislation, however, they do recognise the gay community and all oppose discrimination against LGBT people.[20] Furthermore, the ChristenUnie (ChristianUnion), who, together with the CDA and PvdA forms the fourth Balkenende cabinet, doesn't want to reverse the same-sex marriage law (while in the Balkenende IV cabinet), for they recognise it as something that has a large social basis, and thus "a given fact".[21] ChristenUnie remains, however, against same-sex marriage. For the Netherlands, it is a conservative point of view, but compared with other Christian parties in the world, it is rather progressive.

The two autonomous overseas territories within the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles, reject the Netherlands' liberal legislation regarding sexual orientation, and have not legalized same-sex marriages. However, the Netherlands Supreme Court in 2007 declared that all marriages contracted in the different parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands should be accepted in the other parts of the Kingdom as well, forcing Aruba to recognize same-sex marriages concluded in the Netherlands. This does not mean however that Aruba or the Netherlands Antilles are bound to introduce laws legalizing same-sex marriages to be concluded within their countries, since the constituent countries of the Kingdom have separate private law (see Same-sex marriage in Aruba). While homosexual relations between consenting adults in private are legal, most of the people in the island territories affiliate with the socially conservative Roman Catholic Church. As a result, many Antillians and Arubans do not support LGBT rights.

In 2002 the Dutch Red Cross Society started to participate in the annual gay pride festival to promote AIDS-HIV education.[22]

2005–2009 edit

In 2005 American journalist Chris Crain and his boyfriend were the victims of a gay-bashing while in the Netherlands by two men described as having "Moroccan features".[23]

In 2005 the Dutch government started allowing married same-sex couples to adopt children from overseas.

In 2005 Aruba, a constituent country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, refused to recognize same-sex marriages, although it has legalized homosexual relations between consenting adults in private.[24] In 2007, the Dutch Supreme Court declared that all marriages contracted in the different parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands should be accepted in the other parts of the Kingdom as well, forcing Aruba to recognize same-sex marriages.

In 2006 the Dutch government acted to deport several Iranian LGBT immigrants who claimed that they would be killed if they were sent back, but after protests from the Dutch population, the government let them stay.[25]

A 2006 European Union member poll showed the Dutch to be the strongest supporters of same-sex marriage at 82%.[26]

In 2007 the Dutch Equal Treatment commission confirmed the policy of Sanquin (the Dutch organization that regulates blood donation) not to allow MSMs (Men who have Sex with Men) to donate blood. It had previously done so in 1998.[27]

2010–2014 edit

In 2010 a Catholic priest in Reusel denied the openly gay Prince Carnaval the sacramental bread. The gay community turned out in large number during the subsequent mass, leading the preacher to cancel the Eucharist.[28] The bishop of 's-Hertogenbosch backed the priest, after which the gay community, backed by the chair of political party PvdA (English: Labour Party), announced a protest at the bishop's mass.[29] While much of the Dutch discourse about acceptance of homosexuality within religion was focused on the lack of acceptance in Islam, this case showed that the acceptance of homosexuality in some Christian churches remains low as well in the Netherlands.[30]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Baudartius, Willem (1616). Afbeeldinghe, ende beschrijvinghe van alle de veld-slagen, belegeringen, en̄ and're notable geschiedenissen, ghevallen in de Nederlanden, geduerende d'oorloghe teghens den coningh van Spaengien. Michiel Colijn.
  2. ^ a b c d Roelens, Jonas (2017), "A Woman Like Any Other: Female Sodomy, Hermaphroditism, and Witchcraft in Seventeenth-Century Bruges", Journal of Women's History, 29 (4) (Winter ed.): 11–34, doi:10.1353/jowh.2017.0049, hdl:1854/LU-8500676, S2CID 148944381
  3. ^ Murphy, Timothy (18 October 2013). Reader's Guide to Lesbian and Gay Studies. Routledge. p. 418. ISBN 9781135942342. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d e f . glbtq.com. Archived from the original on 2012-09-10. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
  5. ^ Rictor Norton (17 November 2011). "Newspaper Reports: The Dutch Purge of Homosexuals, 1730". Homosexuality in Eighteenth-Century England: A Sourcebook.
  6. ^ D. J. Noordam (1995). Riskante relaties: vijf eeuwen homoseksualiteit in Nederland, 1233-1733 (in Dutch). Hilversum: Verloren. ISBN 906550513X.
  7. ^ van der Meer, Theo (1991). "Tribades on Trial: Female Same-Sex Offenders in Late Eighteenth-Century Amsterdam". Journal of the History of Sexuality. 1 (3): 437. JSTOR 3704310. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  8. ^ Pieter Koenders, Tussen christelijk réveil en seksuele revolutie - Bestrijding van zedeloosheid in Nederland, Amsterdam 1996, p. 704-706
  9. ^ a b c Gert Hekma (Gay Studies University of Amsterdam),
  10. ^ Gert Hekma. . Gay Studies Department, University of Amsterdam. Archived from the original on March 6, 2005.
  11. ^ . July 18, 2006. Archived from the original on July 18, 2006. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  12. ^ About the history of the Amsterdam Leather Scene
  13. ^ "History of Reguliersdwarsstraat in Amsterdam < Reguliers.net". www.reguliers.net. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  14. ^ . PinkNews. Archived from the original on 2009-08-14. Retrieved 2011-06-30.
  15. ^ "Netherlands legalises gay marriage". BBC News. 2000-09-12. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  16. ^ "Country Report on Human Rights Practices in the Netherlands". State.gov. 2007-03-06. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  17. ^ Imams tegen homo's 2009-12-26 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Door Winfried Baijens en Hein Hansen. "Intolerantie Onder Allochtonen Tegen Homo's Neemt Toe". Novatv.nl. Retrieved 2013-02-12.
  19. ^ "Bevolking; Islamieten en hindoes in Nederland, 1 januari". Statline.cbs.nl. Retrieved 2013-02-12.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on October 2, 2011. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on June 8, 2011. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  22. ^ . Aegis.com. 2002-08-07. Archived from the original on 2011-06-04. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 October 2006. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  24. ^ Prengaman, Peter (2005-08-22). "Aruba, Holland miles apart on gay marriages". Seattletimes.nwsource.com. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  25. ^ . Hrw.org. 2006-03-07. Archived from the original on 2008-05-12. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 January 2008. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  27. ^ TFE, tfe.nl (2012-10-17). . Sanquin.nl. Archived from the original on 2011-12-24. Retrieved 2013-02-12.
  28. ^ . Nos.nl. Archived from the original on 2012-09-28. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  29. ^ Van onze verslaggever Raoul du Pré. "Ploumen: kom naar protest bij mis Sint-Jan - Binnenland - VK". Volkskrant.nl. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  30. ^ "Katholieke homo's - de Volkskrant - Opinie". Extra.volkskrant.nl. Archived from the original on 2012-07-08. Retrieved 2011-01-09.

External links edit

  Media related to LGBT history in the Netherlands at Wikimedia Commons

lgbt, history, netherlands, confused, with, dutch, history, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, people, netherlands, reflected, shades, tolerance, rigidity, which, were, utilized, rulers, country, various, periods, history, since, world, movement, lgbt, rights, be. Not to be confused with Gay Dutch The history of lesbian gay bisexual and transgender people in the Netherlands has reflected the shades of tolerance or rigidity which were utilized by the rulers of the country at various periods in its history Since World War II the movement for LGBT rights has been galvanized by both events abroad and increasing liberalization domestically The Westertoren in Amsterdam decorated with a huge rainbow flag during the Amsterdam Gay Pride of 2012 Contents 1 16th Century 2 17th Century 3 18th and 19th centuries 4 20th century 4 1 1900 1939 4 2 1940 1969 4 3 1970 1999 5 21st century 5 1 2000 2004 5 2 2005 2009 5 3 2010 2014 6 See also 7 References 8 External links16th Century edit1520 Lucas van Leyden paints Lot biblical person and Daughters of Lot The Book of Genesis describes Lot s escape from the fire and brimstone of Sodom and Gomorrah for homosexuality nbsp Lot and his Daughters by Lucas van Leyden nbsp Illustration of the Execution of Homosexual Monks 1578 by Michiel Colijn Afbeeldinghe ende beschrijvinghe van alle de veld slagen belegeringen en and re notable geschiedenissen ghevallen in de Nederlanden geduerende d oorloghe teghens den coningh van Spaengien 1616 17th Century edit nbsp Lesbianism and hermaphroditism depicted here in an engraving circa 1690 were very similar concepts during the Renaissance 1616 Willem Baudartius writes and Michiel Colijn illustrates the history book Afbeeldinghe ende beschrijvinghe van alle de veld slagen belegeringen en and re notable geschiedenissen ghevallen in de Nederlanden geduerende d oorloghe teghens den coningh van Spaengien They detail the executions of monks for homosexuality in Ghent on June 28 1578 1 1618 two women Magdaleene and Mayken are tried over homosexuality in Bruges Magdeleene s husband recently tried and condemned to death by hanging for horse thief accused his wife of being hermaphrodite He surprised his wife Magdaleene in the stable with another woman 2 Some days later Magdaleene and the lady are observed running naked in crop fields up to a local lake The women escape a few days later Neighbors testify and confirm the sulfurous reputation and behavior of Magdaleene Textual analysis of the trial s interrogation shows how the judges read the behavior of Magdaleene as man like driven upon passive female victims seduced while cheated forced 2 Historians should be cautious when reading such statements which may reflect more the vision of the judges than actual behaviors Magdaleene testified that her attraction for women appeared when she was 9 and saw two women having an affair She married but her husband and her aren t promiscuous she seduces only women and has affairs with them Magdaleene prefers being physical with women rather than men and without citing names state that many women are like her 2 Mayken states that the sex drive of Magdaleene is overwhelming to which Magdaleene comment that Lyve was fine with it and would have been a better partner to escape with After the trial Mayken is condemned to pray over her sin and exiled from Bruges Magdaleene is exiled from the county of Flanders and would face execution if she came back 2 nbsp Lot biblical person and Lot s daughters Joachim Wtewael 1630 Joachim Wtewael paints Lot and his Daughters after the Book of Genesis 18 and 19 that describes the fire and brimstone against Sodom and Gomorrah as punishment for homosexuality 18th and 19th centuries edit nbsp 18th century image of shipworm from a pamphlet of a Dutch Christian minister who thought the shipworm was God s revenge because of the rise of sodomites in the Netherlands Engaging in sodomy was a public offence in the Dutch Republic from 1730 until 1811 when the Napoleonic Code which decriminalised homosexuality was first put into place following French annexation 3 Most of the cases prosecuted involved men engaging in anal intercourse with other men usually boys under the age of consent or cases of male rape Heterosexuals who engaged in sodomy or zoophiles engaging in bestiality were generally not prosecuted under this legislation However a woman attempting a marriage with another woman could be arrested for fraud 4 nbsp A wanted poster published in Amsterdam on September 1 1730 In 1725 a young Dutch sailor Leendert Hasenbosch was deliberately marooned alone on Ascension Island as a punishment for sodomy he is presumed to have died of thirst His story is known because his diary was found on the island in the following year by visiting British sailors and published in England After 1730 during the Age of Enlightenment a steep increase regarding arrests and pogroms 5 for sodomy occurred in the Utrecht sodomy trials Hundreds of men were accused of sodomy with other males and 200 4 to 300 6 men were executed during this period Sodomy laws were also being debated in this period in 1777 an anonymous tract titled Considerations on Punishing a Certain Infamous Crime appeared which called for the abolition of Dutch sodomy laws Although this tract did not view homosexuality as a crime it did view it as asocial behaviour It stated that homosexuality was preventable by the co education of males and females in school as well as promoting heterosexual marriage to young children 4 In the eighteenth century sexual vices such as masturbation came under attack but at the same time many authors celebrated Socrates and Plato s perceived paederastic friendship They engaged in what has been called The Socratic Battle which discussed whether Socrates was an ancient Greek paederast or a close friend of Plato Both sides of the debate were clear to emphasise that they were not supportive of sodomy or paederasty per se but that they were supportive of the same sex friendship being purposefully vague as to the dynamics of the latter so as not to offend the sensitivities of the age Same sex attractions were still perceived as a sin and often kept quiet and it has been argued that this silence both prevented and ironically encouraged homosexuality in males 4 While sodomy laws were most often used to prosecute men some women were subject to punishment by law after being discovered to be in same sex relationships Historian Theo van der Meer writes The average penalty imposed on these women was six years confinement as compared to twelve for men 7 These women who engaged in same sex relationships and sometimes dressed like men were classified as tribades They were often driven to theft and sex work as a result of living in poverty 4 After the Batave Republic was founded in 1795 the number of prosecutions for sodomy increased again but the severity of the punishments lessened Some tribades were prosecuted for attempted sodomy and were imprisoned and even executed In 1810 the Napoleon Bonaparte incorporated the country into the French Empire In 1811 Holland adopted the French legal code which had abolished laws against sodomy in 1791 4 20th century edit1900 1939 edit In 1911 the ruling Christian based political parties enacted article 248bis that raised the age of consent for homosexuality to 21 while the age of consent for heterosexuality remained at 16 Along with the unequal age of consent were various laws against public indecency that were often used against gay men In response to this new law a Dutch chapter of the German Scientific Humanitarian Committee was organized under the leadership of Jacob Schorer nl The organization was made independent and named Nederlandsch Wetenschappelijk Humanitair Komitee NWHK in 1919 nbsp Cafe t Mandje at Zeedijk in Amsterdam In Amsterdam the first gay bars were established during this period The best known was The Empire which was first mentioned in 1911 and existed until the late 1930s From here the first gay magazine called Wij We was published in 1932 8 The oldest place that still exists is Cafe t Mandje which was opened in 1927 by lesbian Bet van Beeren 9 Another early gay bar was Du Merlo which was established in 1928 10 1940 1969 edit The NWHK was shut down by the German Nazis during the Second World War and the German law that prohibited homosexuality Paragraph 175 was introduced into Dutch law The Dutch LGBT rights movement was revived in 1945 when the Center for Culture and Recreation short COC was created in The Hague by Niek Engelschman nl 11 which published the magazine Levensrecht Right To Live nbsp LGBT people demonstrating against art 248bis in The Hague 1969 In the late 1940s into the 1960s several Dutch psychiatrists and clergy began to see homosexuality as a minor mental illness During the sexual revolution of the 1960s this more open minded point of view resulted in a less repressive attitude towards homosexuality and the legalization of adultery abortion and pornography Prostitution was legalized in 1993 In Amsterdam the city government acted rather pragmatic and tolerated the existence of gay bars In 1952 even a gay dancing hall called D O K nl De Odeon Kelder was opened followed in 1955 by the somewhat more decent dancing hall of gay rights organisation COC called De Schakel They both existed for over 30 years attracted gay men from all over the world and making Amsterdam the Gay Capital of that time 9 In the 1960s the number of gay bars grew rapidly and they clustered in and around a number of streets although this was limited to bars clubs and shops and they never became residential areas for gays like the gay villages in the US Since the late 1950s the main Amsterdam gay street was Kerkstraat nl Other streets in which there came a concentration of gay bars are Zeedijk Amstel and Warmoesstraat the latter being the center of the Amsterdam leather scene where the first leather bar already opened around 1955 9 12 1970 1999 edit In 1971 Article 248bis was repealed and in 1973 Dutch mental health institutions stopped treating homosexuality as an illness and the military lifted its ban on homosexuals More Dutch LGBT people started to come out gay publications such as Gay Krant started to be published and the liberal and left wing Dutch political parties started to support LGBT rights as part of an overall support of social tolerance and liberalism In the early 1980s Reguliersdwarsstraat nl succeeded Kerkstraat as the main Amsterdam gay street In Reguliersdwarsstraat two of the first openly gay places opened lunchroom Downtown followed by the famous cafe April in 1981 Street parties were organized in which gay and straight people partied together and the gay scene became trendsetting for Dutch night life Gay club iT in Amstelstraat became world famous for its extravagant parties 13 Around 1983 the AIDS pandemic reached Amsterdam too which prompted most Dutch gay men to change their sexual habits to practice safe sex and eventually comprehensive sexual education was introduced into the public schools that resulted in a low rate of infection citation needed nbsp The Homomonument in Amsterdam consisting of three pink triangles In 1987 the world s first gay memorial in public space the Homomonument was opened in the centre of Amsterdam It commemorates all gay men and lesbians who have been subjected to persecution because of their homosexuality In 1993 the Dutch parliament enacted the Equal Rights Law which included sexual orientation as a category legally protected against discrimination for example in employment housing and the provision of both public and private goods and services However a leaked report in 2005 stated that religious schools most of which are financed by the government can exclude teachers if their behaviour outside of school goes against the ethos of the school and a teacher was suspended in April 2005 solely for being in a same sex relationship 14 In 1998 the Dutch parliament granted same sex couples domestic partnership benefits To celebrate freedom and diversity the Amsterdam Gay Pride was established in 1996 which became famous for the Canal Parade of boats Two years later this parade was the start of the 1998 edition of the Gay Games which was the by then largest gay event ever held in the Netherlands 21st century edit2000 2004 edit In 2001 the Netherlands granted legal recognition to same sex marriage becoming the first nation to do so 15 Isolated verbal and physical attacks on LGBT people tend to come from the socially conservative leadership of the Muslim community and their followers 16 17 18 more than 5 of the population 19 Political leaders of the conservative Christian parties accounting for another 5 oppose gay rights legislation however they do recognise the gay community and all oppose discrimination against LGBT people 20 Furthermore the ChristenUnie ChristianUnion who together with the CDA and PvdA forms the fourth Balkenende cabinet doesn t want to reverse the same sex marriage law while in the Balkenende IV cabinet for they recognise it as something that has a large social basis and thus a given fact 21 ChristenUnie remains however against same sex marriage For the Netherlands it is a conservative point of view but compared with other Christian parties in the world it is rather progressive The two autonomous overseas territories within the Kingdom of the Netherlands Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles reject the Netherlands liberal legislation regarding sexual orientation and have not legalized same sex marriages However the Netherlands Supreme Court in 2007 declared that all marriages contracted in the different parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands should be accepted in the other parts of the Kingdom as well forcing Aruba to recognize same sex marriages concluded in the Netherlands This does not mean however that Aruba or the Netherlands Antilles are bound to introduce laws legalizing same sex marriages to be concluded within their countries since the constituent countries of the Kingdom have separate private law see Same sex marriage in Aruba While homosexual relations between consenting adults in private are legal most of the people in the island territories affiliate with the socially conservative Roman Catholic Church As a result many Antillians and Arubans do not support LGBT rights In 2002 the Dutch Red Cross Society started to participate in the annual gay pride festival to promote AIDS HIV education 22 2005 2009 edit In 2005 American journalist Chris Crain and his boyfriend were the victims of a gay bashing while in the Netherlands by two men described as having Moroccan features 23 In 2005 the Dutch government started allowing married same sex couples to adopt children from overseas In 2005 Aruba a constituent country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands refused to recognize same sex marriages although it has legalized homosexual relations between consenting adults in private 24 In 2007 the Dutch Supreme Court declared that all marriages contracted in the different parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands should be accepted in the other parts of the Kingdom as well forcing Aruba to recognize same sex marriages In 2006 the Dutch government acted to deport several Iranian LGBT immigrants who claimed that they would be killed if they were sent back but after protests from the Dutch population the government let them stay 25 A 2006 European Union member poll showed the Dutch to be the strongest supporters of same sex marriage at 82 26 In 2007 the Dutch Equal Treatment commission confirmed the policy of Sanquin the Dutch organization that regulates blood donation not to allow MSMs Men who have Sex with Men to donate blood It had previously done so in 1998 27 2010 2014 edit In 2010 a Catholic priest in Reusel denied the openly gay Prince Carnaval the sacramental bread The gay community turned out in large number during the subsequent mass leading the preacher to cancel the Eucharist 28 The bishop of s Hertogenbosch backed the priest after which the gay community backed by the chair of political party PvdA English Labour Party announced a protest at the bishop s mass 29 While much of the Dutch discourse about acceptance of homosexuality within religion was focused on the lack of acceptance in Islam this case showed that the acceptance of homosexuality in some Christian churches remains low as well in the Netherlands 30 See also editLGBT rights in the NetherlandsReferences edit Baudartius Willem 1616 Afbeeldinghe ende beschrijvinghe van alle de veld slagen belegeringen en and re notable geschiedenissen ghevallen in de Nederlanden geduerende d oorloghe teghens den coningh van Spaengien Michiel Colijn a b c d Roelens Jonas 2017 A Woman Like Any Other Female Sodomy Hermaphroditism and Witchcraft in Seventeenth Century Bruges Journal of Women s History 29 4 Winter ed 11 34 doi 10 1353 jowh 2017 0049 hdl 1854 LU 8500676 S2CID 148944381 Murphy Timothy 18 October 2013 Reader s Guide to Lesbian and Gay Studies Routledge p 418 ISBN 9781135942342 Retrieved 24 June 2015 a b c d e f The Netherlands glbtq com Archived from the original on 2012 09 10 Retrieved 24 June 2015 Rictor Norton 17 November 2011 Newspaper Reports The Dutch Purge of Homosexuals 1730 Homosexuality in Eighteenth Century England A Sourcebook D J Noordam 1995 Riskante relaties vijf eeuwen homoseksualiteit in Nederland 1233 1733 in Dutch Hilversum Verloren ISBN 906550513X van der Meer Theo 1991 Tribades on Trial Female Same Sex Offenders in Late Eighteenth Century Amsterdam Journal of the History of Sexuality 1 3 437 JSTOR 3704310 Retrieved 13 November 2021 Pieter Koenders Tussen christelijk reveil en seksuele revolutie Bestrijding van zedeloosheid in Nederland Amsterdam 1996 p 704 706 a b c Gert Hekma Gay Studies University of Amsterdam The Amsterdam Bar Culture And Changing Gay Lesbian Identities Gert Hekma The Amsterdam Bar Culture And Changing Gay Lesbian Identities Gay Studies Department University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on March 6 2005 Knitting Circle Lesbian and Gay Movement in the Netherlands July 18 2006 Archived from the original on July 18 2006 Retrieved August 13 2019 About the history of the Amsterdam Leather Scene History of Reguliersdwarsstraat in Amsterdam lt Reguliers net www reguliers net Retrieved August 13 2019 Leaked Dutch report says schools can ban gay teachers PinkNews Archived from the original on 2009 08 14 Retrieved 2011 06 30 Netherlands legalises gay marriage BBC News 2000 09 12 Retrieved 2011 01 09 Country Report on Human Rights Practices in the Netherlands State gov 2007 03 06 Retrieved 2011 01 09 Imams tegen homo s Archived 2009 12 26 at the Wayback Machine Door Winfried Baijens en Hein Hansen Intolerantie Onder Allochtonen Tegen Homo s Neemt Toe Novatv nl Retrieved 2013 02 12 Bevolking Islamieten en hindoes in Nederland 1 januari Statline cbs nl Retrieved 2013 02 12 Eerste huiskamerbijeenkomst RefoAnders Rouvoet wil gesprekspartner Archived from the original on October 2 2011 Retrieved August 13 2019 Bijdrage debat over adoptie Archived from the original on June 8 2011 Retrieved August 13 2019 Netherlands Red Cross promotes tolerance during Gay Pride parade Aegis com 2002 08 07 Archived from the original on 2011 06 04 Retrieved 2011 01 09 U S journalist gay bashed in Netherlands Archived from the original on 27 October 2006 Retrieved 2011 01 09 Prengaman Peter 2005 08 22 Aruba Holland miles apart on gay marriages Seattletimes nwsource com Retrieved 2011 01 09 Netherlands Threat to Return Gay and Lesbian Iranians Hrw org 2006 03 07 Archived from the original on 2008 05 12 Retrieved 2011 01 09 Europe Split On Gay Marriage Archived from the original on 29 January 2008 Retrieved 2011 01 09 TFE tfe nl 2012 10 17 Dutch Equal Treatment Commission confirms Sanquin policy Sanquin nl Archived from the original on 2011 12 24 Retrieved 2013 02 12 Gays protest against Catholic priest in Reusel Nos nl Archived from the original on 2012 09 28 Retrieved 2011 01 09 Van onze verslaggever Raoul du Pre Ploumen kom naar protest bij mis Sint Jan Binnenland VK Volkskrant nl Retrieved 2011 01 09 Katholieke homo s de Volkskrant Opinie Extra volkskrant nl Archived from the original on 2012 07 08 Retrieved 2011 01 09 External links edit nbsp Media related to LGBT history in the Netherlands at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LGBT history in the Netherlands amp oldid 1204722027, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.