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Turks in the Netherlands

Turks in the Netherlands (occasionally and colloquially Dutch Turks or Turkish-Dutch; Dutch: Turkse Nederlander; Turkish: Hollanda Türkleri) refers to people of full or partial Turkish ethnicity living in the Netherlands. They form the largest ethnic minority group in the country; thus, the Turks are the second-largest ethnic group in the Netherlands after the ethnic Dutch. The majority of Dutch Turks descend from the Republic of Turkey; however, there has also been significant Turkish migration waves from other post-Ottoman countries including ethnic Turkish communities which have come to the Netherlands from the Balkans (e.g. from Bulgaria, Greece, Kosovo, North Macedonia and Romania),[3] the island of Cyprus,[3] as well as from other parts of the Levant (especially Iraq). More recently, during the European migrant crisis significant waves of Turkish minorities from Syria and Kosovo have also arrived in the Netherlands. In addition, there has been migration to the Netherlands from the Turkish diaspora; many Turkish-Belgians and Turkish-Germans have arrived in the country as Belgian and German citizens.[3]

Turks in the Netherlands
Total population
Estimates vary because official Dutch statistics do not collect data on ethnicity.[a]

At least 500,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Religion
Predominantly Sunni Islam
Minority Alevism, other religions (e.g. Christianity), or irreligious

^ a: Data from Statistics Netherlands shows that there are 410,000 people with a migration background from Turkey, regardless of ethnicity (first and second-generation only).[2]

History

There have been various Turkish migration waves to the Netherlands from all modern nation-states which were once part of the Ottoman Empire and which still consist of ethnic Turkish communities. The majority of Dutch-Turks have immigrated from (or descend from) the Republic of Turkey. However, there are also significant ethnic Turkish communities which have come to the Netherlands from the Balkans (especially from Bulgaria, Greece, and North Macedonia),[3] Cyprus,[3] the Levant (especially from Iraq), and North Africa. Due to the European migrant crisis a substantial number of ethnic Turks have also arrived from Syria and Kosovo. Moreover, many Turkish-Belgians and Turkish-Germans in the diaspora have also come to the Netherlands as Belgian and German citizens.[3]

Turkish migration from the Ottoman Empire

 
Gerrit Berckheyde's painting, Stadhuis op de Dam, (1672) depicting a Turk in the foreground with two Jewish men and a Dutchman at the Royal Palace of Amsterdam.

The first Turkish settlers in the Netherlands dates back to the 16th century, when Ottoman Turkish traders settled in many Dutch and Flemish trading towns. The English traveller Andrew Marvell referred to the Netherlands as "the place for Turk, Christian, heathen, Jew; staple place for sects and schisms" due to the religious freedom and the large number of different religious groups there.[4] References to the Ottoman state and Islamic symbolism were also frequently used within 16th century Dutch society itself, most notably in Protestant speeches called hagenpreken, and in the crescent-shaped medals of the Geuzen, bearing the inscription "Rather Turkish than Papists". When Dutch forces broke through the Spanish siege of Leiden in 1574, they carried with them Turkish flags into the city.[5] During the Siege of Sluis in Zeeland in 1604, 1,400 Turkish slaves were freed by Maurice of Orange from captivity by the Spanish army.[6] The Turks were declared free people and the Dutch state paid for their repatriation. To honour the resistance of the Turkish slaves, Prince Maurice named a local embankment "Turkeye".

Diplomat Cornelius Haga gained trading privileges from Constantinople for the Dutch Republic in 1612, some 40 years before any other nation recognized Dutch independence.[7] Two years later the Ottomans sent their emissary Ömer Aga to the Netherlands to intensify the relations between the two states.[8]

Turkish migration from the Republic of Turkey

 
A Turkish "guest worker" at work behind a machine in the Vredestein factory in Loosduinen, 1971.
 
A Turkish Foundation in Amsterdam

During the 1950s, successive Dutch governments strongly stimulated emigration from the Netherlands, while at the same time the economy grew rapidly. The Netherlands began to face a labour shortage by the mid-1950s already, which became more serious during the early 1960s, as the country experienced even higher economic growth rates, comparable to the rest of Europe.[9] At the same time, Turkey had a problem of unemployment, low GNP levels and a high population growth. So the import of labour solved problems on both ends.[10] The first Turkish immigrants arrived in the Netherlands in the beginning of the 1960s at a time when the Dutch economy was wrestling with a shortage of workers.[11] On 19 August 1964, the Dutch government entered into a 'recruitment agreement' with Turkey.[12] Thereafter, the number of Turkish workers in the Netherlands increased rapidly.[13]

There were two distinct periods of recruitment. During the first period, which lasted until 1966, a large number of Turks came to the Netherlands through unofficial channels, either being recruited by employers or immigrating spontaneously. A small economic recession began in 1966. Some of the labour migrants were forced to return to Turkey. In 1968, the economy picked up again and a new recruitment period, which was to last until 1974, commenced. In May 1968, new European Economic Community rules forced the Netherlands to instate a travel visa system to regulate labour immigration and from then on, the state recruited foreign workers. The peak of Turkish labour migration occurred during these years. The Turks eventually surpassed other migrant nationalities in numbers and came to represent the Dutch image of guest workers.[11]

Most Turks came to the Netherlands in order to work and save enough money to build a house, expand the family business or start their own business in Turkey. Thus, the decision to emigrate was made primarily for economic reasons. Most of the labour migrants did not come from the lowest strata of the Turkish population, nor did emigration begin in the least developed parts of Turkey, but in the big cities such as Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir. Only later did less urbanised areas become involved with the immigration process. Ultimately, the largest numbers of Turks did come from these areas. Most Turks in the Netherlands come from villages and provincial cities in the middle of the country and on the coast of the Black Sea.[14]

At the end of 1973, the labour recruitment was nearly brought to a halt, and the Turks were no longer admitted to the Netherlands as labour migrants. Turkish immigration, however, continued practically unabatedly through the process of family reunification.[15] Even more Turkish men began to bring their families to the Netherlands in the 1970s. In the first half of the 1980s, the Turkish net immigration began to decrease, but, in 1985, it began to rise again. Most of them had a bride or bridegroom come over from their native land. Marriage immigration continued into the early twenty-first century, though net immigration again decreased in the 1990s.[16] In 2004, stricter laws largely ended marriage immigration, causing in some years net emigration. After 2016, political persecution lead to an influx of Turkish asylum seekers.

Turkish migration from the Balkans

Bulgaria

In 2009 The Sofia Echo reported that Turkish Bulgarians were now the fastest-growing group of immigrants in the Netherlands. At the time, they numbered between 10,000 and 30,000.[17] Similarly, De Telegraaf and De Pers have also reported that the Turkish Bulgarians were the fast-growing group of migrants; furthermore, the Turkish Bulgarians formed 90% of Bulgarian citizens arriving in the Netherlands.[18][19] The majority, of about 80%, have come from the south-eastern Bulgarian district of Kardzhali (Kırcaali) which has a Turkish majority population.[20]

Although Bulgaria joined the European Union during the 2007 enlargement, the rights of Bulgarian citizens to work freely as EU nationals in the Netherlands came into full effect on 1 January 2014. Consequently, there were strong indications that the migration of Turkish Bulgarians to the Netherlands (as well as other parts of Europe) would continue.[21]

Indeed, a 2015 study by Mérove Gijsberts and Marcel Lubbers found that Turkish Bulgarians were more likely to stay in the Netherlands than ethnic Bulgarians; it also found that Turkish Bulgarians were much more satisfied with their lives in the Netherlands than the ethnic Bulgarians.[22]

Greece

Members of the Turkish minority of Western Thrace in Greece began to migrate to the Netherlands in the 1960s, increasing further in the 1970s. Initially, these early migrants intended to return to Greece after working for a number of years in the Netherlands; however, the Greek government used Article 19 of the 1955 Greek Constitution to strip some members of the Turkish minority living abroad of their Greek citizenship.[23][24] Consequently, many ethnic Turks were forced to remain in the Western European countries they had settled in, which, in turn, also established the permanent Turkish Western Thracian community in the Netherlands.[23] By 1983, the Western Thrace Turks founded their first organisation, the Alblasserdam Batı Trakya Türkleri Cemiyeti ("Alblasserdam Western Thrace Turks Association"), in the town of Alblasserdam.[25]

More recently, the community has increased significantly due to the large numbers of new arrivals since the twenty-first century. For many, the Greek government-debt crisis in 2007-08 was a big factor in seeking better economic opportunities in the Netherlands. In 2009 the Western Thrace Turks established the Hollanda Batı Trakya Türk Kültür ve Dayanışma Derneği ("Western Thrace Turks Culture and Solidarity Association of the Netherlands") which consists of cognates residing in different regions of the Netherlands.[25] By 2017, the Hollanda Lahey Batı Trakya Türk Birlik ve Beraberlik Derneği ("Hague Western Thrace Turks Unity Association of the Netherlands") was established by the community living in The Hague.[26] Many have settled in the Randstad region. After Germany, the Netherlands is the most popular destination for Turkish immigrants from Western Thrace.[27]

Between 1970 and 2018, approximately 100,000 Western Thrace Turks have immigrated to Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.[28]

North Macedonia

Some members of the Turkish Macedonian minority have emigrated to the Netherlands for better economic opportunities.[3]

Romania

Since the first decade of the twenty-first century, there has been a significant decrease in the population of the Turkish Romanian minority group due to the admission of Romania into the European Union and the subsequent relaxation of the travelling and migration regulations. Thus, Turkish Romanians, especially from the Dobruja region, have joined other Romanian citizens in migrating mostly to Western European countries, including the Netherlands.[29]

Turkish migration from the Levant

Cyprus

The majority of the Turkish Cypriots left the island of Cyprus due to economic and political reasons in the 20th century. Traditionally, most who migrated to Western Europe settled in the United Kingdom, Germany, France and Austria; however, since the 1990s, the Netherlands began to attract the bulk of Turkish Cypriot migrants.[30]

 
Iraqi Turks protesting in the Dutch capital city of Amsterdam.

Iraq

Significant migration waves from the Turkish Iraqi community to the Netherlands occurred during the Iran–Iraq War (1980–88), the Gulf War (1991), and the Iraq War (2003–11). According to Professor Suphi Saatçi, in 2010 the Iraqi Turks in the Netherlands numbered around 4,000.[31] Iraqi Turks have continued to migrate to the Netherlands during the European migrant crisis (2014–19).

Syria

Due to the Syrian civil war, many Syrian Turks were forced to initially take refuge in Turkey; from there, many continued Westwards, especially during the European migrant crisis (2014–19). The majority of Turkish Syrian refugees arrived in the Netherlands via the highway through Macedonia, Serbia, Croatia, Austria and Germany.[32]

Turkish migration from the modern diaspora

In addition to ethnic Turkish people that have migrated to the Netherlands from traditional areas of settlement in post-Ottoman modern nation-states, there has also been an increasing migration wave to the Netherlands from other countries in the modern Turkish diaspora. For example, members of the Turkish German and Turkish Belgian communities have also settled in the Netherlands.[3] Most have emigrated using their EU citizenship rights (i.e. the freedom of movement) as German or Belgian nationals.[3]

Demographics

 
Turkish flag and Dutch flag hanging side by side in the multi-ethnic neighborhood Kruidenbuurt, Eindhoven.

Turkish immigrants first began to settle in big cities in the Netherlands such as Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Utrecht as well as the regions of Twente and Limburg, where there was a growing demand for industrial labour. However, not only the large cities but also medium-sized cities, and even small villages attracted the Turks.[33]

The Turkish population is mostly concentrated in large cities in the west of the country;[34] some 36% of Turks live in the Randstad region.[35] The second most common settlements are in the south, in the Limburg region, in Eindhoven and Tilburg, and in the east: in Deventer, as well as in Enschede and Almelo in the Twente region.[33]

Characteristics

Official data published by Statistics Netherlands only collects data on the country of birth and does not provide data on ethnicity. Consequently, the 410,000 people recorded from Turkey (first and second-generation only) in 2019[2] is problematic as a reflection of the total ethnic Turkish population. Firstly, ethnic Turks which have arrived in the Netherlands from the Balkans, Cyprus, the Levant, North Africa, and the diaspora (e.g Belgium and Germany)[3] are recorded according to their citizenship, such as "Belgian", "Bulgarian", "Cypriot", "German", "Greek", "Iraqi", "Lebanese" "Macedonian", "Syrian" etc. rather than by their ethnicity. Although these ethnic Turkish communities have different nationalities, they might share the same ethnic, linguistic, cultural and religious origins as mainland ethnic Turks.[36] Secondly, Statistic Netherlands does not provide any data on Dutch-born citizens of ethnic Turkish origin who are from the third generation.[3]

The percentage of first and second generation Turks marrying a bride or groom from Dutch descent has been stable at around 5-10% from 2001 to 2015.[37]

Population estimates

The estimates on the Turkish-Dutch community have varied. Suzanne Aalberse et al. have said that, despite the official Dutch statistics, "over the years" the Turkish community "must have numbered half a million".[1] Sometimes sources casually mention much higher estimates, equalling the official total number of non-western immigrants and their descendants.

Amount of 1st and 2nd[38] generation Turks in the Netherlands CBS[39]
Year Total Year Total
1996 271.514 2010 383.957
1997 279.708 2011 388.967
1998 289.777 2012 392.923
1999 299.662 2013 395.302
2000 308.890 2014 396.414
2001 319.600 2015 396.555
2002 330.709 2016 397.471
2003 341.400 2017 400.367
2004 351.648 2018 404.459
2005 358.846 2019 409.877
2006 364.333 2020 416.864
2007 368.600 2021 422.030
2008 372.714 2022 429.978
2009 378.330

The total amount of first and second generation Turks increased from 271.514 in 1996 to 429.978 in 2022.

Emigration

According to a study by Petra Wieke de Jong, focusing on second-generation Turkish-Dutch people who were specifically born in the years 1983 to 1992 only, there was 6,914 people from this age group and generation who left the Netherlands and emigrated to other countries as Dutch citizens between the years 2001 and 2017. Of those who reported their destination, the most popular country was to Turkey (37.78%), followed by Belgium (17.47%), Germany (11.64%) and the United Kingdom (1.48%). In addition, some of these emigrants reported moving to other EU countries (3.43%) or to outside the EU (2.7%). However, a large portion of these Turkish-Dutch emigrants, totaling 1,761 (i.e. 25.47%), did not report their destination of emigration.[40]

Culture

Language

The first generation of Turkish immigrants is predominantly Turkish-speaking and has only limited Dutch competence.[41] Thus, for immigrant children, their early language input is Turkish, but the Dutch language quickly enters their lives via playmates and day-care centres. By age six, these children are often bilinguals.[42]

Adolescents have developed a code-switching mode which is reserved for in-group use. With older members of the Turkish community and with strangers, Turkish is used, and if Dutch speakers enter the scene, a switch to Dutch is made.[43] The young bilinguals, therefore, speak normal Turkish with their elders, and a kind of Dutch-Turkish with each other.[44]

Religion

 
The Turkish Mevlana Mosque in Rotterdam was voted the most attractive building in 2006.
 
The Ayasofya Camii, popularly known at the Westermoskee, is located in Amsterdam. It is the largest mosque in the Netherlands.

When family reunification resulted in the establishment of Turkish communities, the preservation of Turkish culture became a more serious matter. Most Turks consider Islam to be the centre of their culture.[45] Thus, the majority of Dutch Turks adheres to Sunni Islam, although there is also a considerable Alevi fragment. According to the latest figures issued by Statistics Netherlands, approximately five percent of the Dutch population (850,000 persons), were followers of Islam in 2006. Furthermore, eighty-seven percent of Turks were followers of Islam.[46] The Turkish community accounted for almost forty percent of the Muslim population; thus are the largest ethnic group in the Netherlands adhering to Islam.[47]

Turks are considered to be the most organised ethnic group with its activities and organisations.[48] The Turkish Islamic Cultural Federation (TICF) which was founded in 1979, had seventy-eight member associations by the early 1980s, and continued to grow to reach 140 by the end of the 1990s. It works closely with the Turkish-Islamic Union for Religious Affairs (Diyanet), which provides the TICF with the imams which it employs in its member mosques.[49]

The Turkish Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet) established a branch in the Netherlands in 1982 with the intent to oppose the influence of leftist asylum seekers from Turkey as well as rightist members of Islamist movements such as Millî Görüş. In 1983, the Netherlands agreed to allowing Turkey to send its own imams to the Turkish guest worker communities.[50] Critics of this agreement argue that these imams, some of whom do not speak Dutch, hinder the effective integration of Dutch-Turkish Muslims into the society of the Netherlands by promoting allegiance to the Turkish state while neglecting to promote loyalty to the Dutch state.[50]

Of the 475 mosques in the Netherlands in 2018, a plurality (146) are controlled by the Turkish Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet). Diyanet implements the political ideology of the Islamist Turkish AKP party.[50] Diyanet mosques, have stayed out of initiatives to train imams in the Netherlands which were designed to train Islamic preachers who were familiar with the European context and to promote Dutch values and norms.[50] This resistance is based on that it would be more difficult to import Diyanet imams, who are employees of the Turkish state, from Turkey if they cooperated in Dutch imam training programs. Diyanet imams receive benefits and political tasks which are comparable to those of Turkish diplomats.[50]

In April 2006, the Turkish Mevlana Mosque had been voted the most attractive building in Rotterdam in a public survey organised by the City Information Centre. It had beaten the Erasmus Bridge due to the mosques 'symbol of warmth and hospitality'.[51]

Politics

 
Turkish Embassy in The Hague, Netherlands

Dutch Turks generally support left-wing political parties (DENK, PvdA, D66, GroenLinks, and SP) over the right-wing ones (CDA, VVD and SGP).[52] In the past, migrants were not as eager to vote. However, they are now aware that they can become a decisive factor in the Dutch political system. Far-right groups have taunted the Dutch Labour Party, the PvdA, for becoming the Party of the Allochthonous because of the votes they receive from migrants and the increase in the number of elected ethnic Turkish candidates.[53] Turkish votes determine about two seats of the 150 representatives in the Second Chamber of the Staten-Generaal. During the Dutch general election (2002), there were fourteen candidates of Turkish origin spread out over six-party lists which encouraged fifty-five percent of Turks to vote, which was a much higher turnout than any other ethnic minorities.[54]

Political parties founded by Dutch Turks

 
Born to a Turkish father and a Dutch mother, Stephan van Baarle is a member of the Turkish-Dutch founded DENK party and an elected member of the House of Representatives.

In February, 2015, Turkish-born Dutch parliamentarians, Tunahan Kuzu and Selçuk Öztürk, established the political party DENK (which in Dutch means "think" and in Turkish means "equal" or "balanced").[55] In its manifesto, DENK was established to combat their perceived rising intolerance, right-wing thinking, and xenophobia in the Netherlands.[55] The party carries the program advanced by the International Institute for Scientific Research, based in the Hague, with the purpose of decolonization.[56] Consequently, the party has been in direct response to the "nativist and isolationalist positions promoted by Geert Wilders" and his populist right Freedom Party.[56] Among its policies, DENK seeks to: establish a "racism register" to track and condemn the use of hate speech against religion; build a Dutch slavery museum; abolish the black minstrel character Zwarte Piet ("Black Pete"); and ban the use of the derogatory Dutch word "Allochtoon".[56] Although the party has been popularly described as a "Muslim political party", DENK "does not promote Muslim canadidates as do most similar political parties in Europe".[56] In the 2017 elections, votes for DENK exceeded those of the PVdA and Wilders's PVV in Rotterdam and The Hague; moreover, DENK also exceeded the PVV's votes in Amsterdam.[56] The party won three seats at the 2017 election; thus, DENK is the first migrant-founded party to gain seats in the Dutch national parliament.[57] In the 2021 elections the party stayed at 3 seats.

Literature

A number of Turkish-Dutch writers have come to prominence.[58] Halil Gür was one of the earliest, writing short stories about Turkish immigrants. Sadik Yemni is well known for his Turkish-Dutch detective stories. Sevtap Baycili is a more intellectual novelist, who is not limited to migrant themes.

Anti-Turkism

 
Dutch police guarding Turkish homes during the Afrikaanderwijk riots in 1972.

Even though progressive policies are installed, "especially compared with those in some other European countries such as Germany". Managing the multicultural society: The policy making process. Paper presented at the Conference on Today's Youth and Xenophobia: Breaking the Cycle. Wassenaar, Netherlands: Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study. The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance published its third report on Netherlands in 2008. In this report, Turkish minority group is described as a notable community which have been particularly affected by "stigmatisation of and discrimination against members of minority groups"[59] as a result of controversial policies of the governments of Netherlands. The same report also noted that "the tone of Dutch political and public debate around integration and other issues relevant to ethnic minorities has experienced a dramatic deterioration".

Recently, use of the word "allochtonen" as a "catch-all expression" for "the other" emerged as a new development. European Network against Racism, an international organisation supported by European Commission reported that, in Netherlands, half of the Turks reported having experienced racial discrimination.[60] Same report points "dramatic growth of islamophobia" parallel with antisemitism. Another international organisation European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia highlighted negative trend in Netherlands, regarding attitudes towards minorities, compared to average EU results.[61] The analysis also noted that compared to most other Europeans, in the Netherlands, majority group is "more in favour of cultural assimilation of minorities" rather than "cultural enrichment by minority groups".

Crime

In 2015, individuals with a Turkish background were about 2.5 times as likely to be suspected of a crime compared to the overall native Dutch population, with of the first generation 1.7% being suspected, and of the second generation 3.6% (total males 4.28% and women 0.67%).[62] However, when corrected for socio-economic position, Dutch people of Turkish descent are not more often suspected of crime than native Dutch people, according to numbers from 2012[63] and reports from 2014.[64]

Education

According to The Netherlands Institute for Social Research annual report of 2005, most of the original first-generation Turkish migrants of the 1960s and 1970s had a very low level of education with many of them having had little or no schooling at all. In addition to these, many of the Turkish "marriage migrants" who arrived in the Netherlands by marrying an immigrant already living in the country as well as the 'in-between-generation' which arrived while aged 6–18 have a low education. An outcome of this circumstance is a poor command of the Dutch language.[65]

All Turkish children of the second generation have attended primary and secondary education. However, their educational levels were on average lower. While almost half of the native Dutch population (and Iranian origin pupils) had ever attended higher secondary education (HAVO) or pre-university education (VWO), only a fifth of the Turkish second generation had.[65] In 2015, the Turkish second generation percentage had increased to 27%.[66]

Associations and Organisations

  • Alblasserdam Batı Trakya Türkleri Cemiyeti ("Alblasserdam Western Thrace Turks Association")
  • Hollanda Türk Federasyon ("Turkish Federation of the Netherlands")
  • Hollanda Batı Trakya Türk Kültür ve Dayanışma Derneği ("Western Thrace Turks Culture and Solidarity Association of the Netherlands")
  • Hollanda Balkan Türkleri Kültür ve Dayanışma Derneği ("Balkan Turks Culture and Solidarity Association of the Netherlands")
  • Hollanda Bulgaristan Türkleri Derneği ("Bulgarian Turks Association of the Netherlands")
  • Hollanda Irak Türkmen Diasporası Derneği ("Iraqi Turkmen Disapora Association of the Netherlands")
  • Hollanda Lahey Batı Trakya Türk Birlik ve Beraberlik Derneği ("Hague Western Thrace Turks Unity Association of the Netherlands")
  • Irak Türkleri Gök Hilal Vakfı ("Iraqi Turkish Sky Crescent Foundation")
  • Türkmen Tanış Derneği ("Turkmen Meeting Association")

Notable people

See also

References

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External links

  Media related to Turks in the Netherlands at Wikimedia Commons

  • Turks in the Netherlands (in Dutch)

turks, netherlands, occasionally, colloquially, dutch, turks, turkish, dutch, dutch, turkse, nederlander, turkish, hollanda, türkleri, refers, people, full, partial, turkish, ethnicity, living, netherlands, they, form, largest, ethnic, minority, group, country. Turks in the Netherlands occasionally and colloquially Dutch Turks or Turkish Dutch Dutch Turkse Nederlander Turkish Hollanda Turkleri refers to people of full or partial Turkish ethnicity living in the Netherlands They form the largest ethnic minority group in the country thus the Turks are the second largest ethnic group in the Netherlands after the ethnic Dutch The majority of Dutch Turks descend from the Republic of Turkey however there has also been significant Turkish migration waves from other post Ottoman countries including ethnic Turkish communities which have come to the Netherlands from the Balkans e g from Bulgaria Greece Kosovo North Macedonia and Romania 3 the island of Cyprus 3 as well as from other parts of the Levant especially Iraq More recently during the European migrant crisis significant waves of Turkish minorities from Syria and Kosovo have also arrived in the Netherlands In addition there has been migration to the Netherlands from the Turkish diaspora many Turkish Belgians and Turkish Germans have arrived in the country as Belgian and German citizens 3 Turks in the NetherlandsTotal populationEstimates vary because official Dutch statistics do not collect data on ethnicity a At least 500 000 1 Regions with significant populationsRotterdamAmsterdamThe HagueUtrechtDeventerLanguagesDutchTurkishDutch dialectsReligionPredominantly Sunni Islam Minority Alevism other religions e g Christianity or irreligious a Data from Statistics Netherlands shows that there are 410 000 people with a migration background from Turkey regardless of ethnicity first and second generation only 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Turkish migration from the Ottoman Empire 1 2 Turkish migration from the Republic of Turkey 1 3 Turkish migration from the Balkans 1 3 1 Bulgaria 1 3 2 Greece 1 3 3 North Macedonia 1 3 4 Romania 1 4 Turkish migration from the Levant 1 4 1 Cyprus 1 4 2 Iraq 1 4 3 Syria 1 5 Turkish migration from the modern diaspora 2 Demographics 2 1 Characteristics 2 2 Population estimates 2 3 Emigration 3 Culture 3 1 Language 3 2 Religion 4 Politics 4 1 Political parties founded by Dutch Turks 5 Literature 6 Anti Turkism 7 Crime 8 Education 9 Associations and Organisations 10 Notable people 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksHistory EditThere have been various Turkish migration waves to the Netherlands from all modern nation states which were once part of the Ottoman Empire and which still consist of ethnic Turkish communities The majority of Dutch Turks have immigrated from or descend from the Republic of Turkey However there are also significant ethnic Turkish communities which have come to the Netherlands from the Balkans especially from Bulgaria Greece and North Macedonia 3 Cyprus 3 the Levant especially from Iraq and North Africa Due to the European migrant crisis a substantial number of ethnic Turks have also arrived from Syria and Kosovo Moreover many Turkish Belgians and Turkish Germans in the diaspora have also come to the Netherlands as Belgian and German citizens 3 Turkish migration from the Ottoman Empire Edit Gerrit Berckheyde s painting Stadhuis op de Dam 1672 depicting a Turk in the foreground with two Jewish men and a Dutchman at the Royal Palace of Amsterdam The first Turkish settlers in the Netherlands dates back to the 16th century when Ottoman Turkish traders settled in many Dutch and Flemish trading towns The English traveller Andrew Marvell referred to the Netherlands as the place for Turk Christian heathen Jew staple place for sects and schisms due to the religious freedom and the large number of different religious groups there 4 References to the Ottoman state and Islamic symbolism were also frequently used within 16th century Dutch society itself most notably in Protestant speeches called hagenpreken and in the crescent shaped medals of the Geuzen bearing the inscription Rather Turkish than Papists When Dutch forces broke through the Spanish siege of Leiden in 1574 they carried with them Turkish flags into the city 5 During the Siege of Sluis in Zeeland in 1604 1 400 Turkish slaves were freed by Maurice of Orange from captivity by the Spanish army 6 The Turks were declared free people and the Dutch state paid for their repatriation To honour the resistance of the Turkish slaves Prince Maurice named a local embankment Turkeye Diplomat Cornelius Haga gained trading privileges from Constantinople for the Dutch Republic in 1612 some 40 years before any other nation recognized Dutch independence 7 Two years later the Ottomans sent their emissary Omer Aga to the Netherlands to intensify the relations between the two states 8 Turkish migration from the Republic of Turkey Edit A Turkish guest worker at work behind a machine in the Vredestein factory in Loosduinen 1971 A Turkish Foundation in Amsterdam During the 1950s successive Dutch governments strongly stimulated emigration from the Netherlands while at the same time the economy grew rapidly The Netherlands began to face a labour shortage by the mid 1950s already which became more serious during the early 1960s as the country experienced even higher economic growth rates comparable to the rest of Europe 9 At the same time Turkey had a problem of unemployment low GNP levels and a high population growth So the import of labour solved problems on both ends 10 The first Turkish immigrants arrived in the Netherlands in the beginning of the 1960s at a time when the Dutch economy was wrestling with a shortage of workers 11 On 19 August 1964 the Dutch government entered into a recruitment agreement with Turkey 12 Thereafter the number of Turkish workers in the Netherlands increased rapidly 13 There were two distinct periods of recruitment During the first period which lasted until 1966 a large number of Turks came to the Netherlands through unofficial channels either being recruited by employers or immigrating spontaneously A small economic recession began in 1966 Some of the labour migrants were forced to return to Turkey In 1968 the economy picked up again and a new recruitment period which was to last until 1974 commenced In May 1968 new European Economic Community rules forced the Netherlands to instate a travel visa system to regulate labour immigration and from then on the state recruited foreign workers The peak of Turkish labour migration occurred during these years The Turks eventually surpassed other migrant nationalities in numbers and came to represent the Dutch image of guest workers 11 Most Turks came to the Netherlands in order to work and save enough money to build a house expand the family business or start their own business in Turkey Thus the decision to emigrate was made primarily for economic reasons Most of the labour migrants did not come from the lowest strata of the Turkish population nor did emigration begin in the least developed parts of Turkey but in the big cities such as Istanbul Ankara and Izmir Only later did less urbanised areas become involved with the immigration process Ultimately the largest numbers of Turks did come from these areas Most Turks in the Netherlands come from villages and provincial cities in the middle of the country and on the coast of the Black Sea 14 At the end of 1973 the labour recruitment was nearly brought to a halt and the Turks were no longer admitted to the Netherlands as labour migrants Turkish immigration however continued practically unabatedly through the process of family reunification 15 Even more Turkish men began to bring their families to the Netherlands in the 1970s In the first half of the 1980s the Turkish net immigration began to decrease but in 1985 it began to rise again Most of them had a bride or bridegroom come over from their native land Marriage immigration continued into the early twenty first century though net immigration again decreased in the 1990s 16 In 2004 stricter laws largely ended marriage immigration causing in some years net emigration After 2016 political persecution lead to an influx of Turkish asylum seekers Turkish migration from the Balkans Edit Bulgaria Edit See also Bulgarian Turks In 2009 The Sofia Echo reported that Turkish Bulgarians were now the fastest growing group of immigrants in the Netherlands At the time they numbered between 10 000 and 30 000 17 Similarly De Telegraaf and De Pers have also reported that the Turkish Bulgarians were the fast growing group of migrants furthermore the Turkish Bulgarians formed 90 of Bulgarian citizens arriving in the Netherlands 18 19 The majority of about 80 have come from the south eastern Bulgarian district of Kardzhali Kircaali which has a Turkish majority population 20 Although Bulgaria joined the European Union during the 2007 enlargement the rights of Bulgarian citizens to work freely as EU nationals in the Netherlands came into full effect on 1 January 2014 Consequently there were strong indications that the migration of Turkish Bulgarians to the Netherlands as well as other parts of Europe would continue 21 Indeed a 2015 study by Merove Gijsberts and Marcel Lubbers found that Turkish Bulgarians were more likely to stay in the Netherlands than ethnic Bulgarians it also found that Turkish Bulgarians were much more satisfied with their lives in the Netherlands than the ethnic Bulgarians 22 Greece Edit See also Turks in Greece and Turks of Western Thrace Members of the Turkish minority of Western Thrace in Greece began to migrate to the Netherlands in the 1960s increasing further in the 1970s Initially these early migrants intended to return to Greece after working for a number of years in the Netherlands however the Greek government used Article 19 of the 1955 Greek Constitution to strip some members of the Turkish minority living abroad of their Greek citizenship 23 24 Consequently many ethnic Turks were forced to remain in the Western European countries they had settled in which in turn also established the permanent Turkish Western Thracian community in the Netherlands 23 By 1983 the Western Thrace Turks founded their first organisation the Alblasserdam Bati Trakya Turkleri Cemiyeti Alblasserdam Western Thrace Turks Association in the town of Alblasserdam 25 More recently the community has increased significantly due to the large numbers of new arrivals since the twenty first century For many the Greek government debt crisis in 2007 08 was a big factor in seeking better economic opportunities in the Netherlands In 2009 the Western Thrace Turks established the Hollanda Bati Trakya Turk Kultur ve Dayanisma Dernegi Western Thrace Turks Culture and Solidarity Association of the Netherlands which consists of cognates residing in different regions of the Netherlands 25 By 2017 the Hollanda Lahey Bati Trakya Turk Birlik ve Beraberlik Dernegi Hague Western Thrace Turks Unity Association of the Netherlands was established by the community living in The Hague 26 Many have settled in the Randstad region After Germany the Netherlands is the most popular destination for Turkish immigrants from Western Thrace 27 Between 1970 and 2018 approximately 100 000 Western Thrace Turks have immigrated to Germany the Netherlands and the United Kingdom 28 North Macedonia Edit See also Turks in North Macedonia Some members of the Turkish Macedonian minority have emigrated to the Netherlands for better economic opportunities 3 Romania Edit Since the first decade of the twenty first century there has been a significant decrease in the population of the Turkish Romanian minority group due to the admission of Romania into the European Union and the subsequent relaxation of the travelling and migration regulations Thus Turkish Romanians especially from the Dobruja region have joined other Romanian citizens in migrating mostly to Western European countries including the Netherlands 29 Turkish migration from the Levant Edit Cyprus Edit See also Turkish Cypriots and Turkish Cypriot diaspora The majority of the Turkish Cypriots left the island of Cyprus due to economic and political reasons in the 20th century Traditionally most who migrated to Western Europe settled in the United Kingdom Germany France and Austria however since the 1990s the Netherlands began to attract the bulk of Turkish Cypriot migrants 30 Iraqi Turks protesting in the Dutch capital city of Amsterdam Iraq Edit See also Iraqi Turkmen and Iraqis in the Netherlands Significant migration waves from the Turkish Iraqi community to the Netherlands occurred during the Iran Iraq War 1980 88 the Gulf War 1991 and the Iraq War 2003 11 According to Professor Suphi Saatci in 2010 the Iraqi Turks in the Netherlands numbered around 4 000 31 Iraqi Turks have continued to migrate to the Netherlands during the European migrant crisis 2014 19 Syria Edit See also Syrian Turkmen and Syrians in the Netherlands Due to the Syrian civil war many Syrian Turks were forced to initially take refuge in Turkey from there many continued Westwards especially during the European migrant crisis 2014 19 The majority of Turkish Syrian refugees arrived in the Netherlands via the highway through Macedonia Serbia Croatia Austria and Germany 32 Turkish migration from the modern diaspora Edit See also Turkish diaspora In addition to ethnic Turkish people that have migrated to the Netherlands from traditional areas of settlement in post Ottoman modern nation states there has also been an increasing migration wave to the Netherlands from other countries in the modern Turkish diaspora For example members of the Turkish German and Turkish Belgian communities have also settled in the Netherlands 3 Most have emigrated using their EU citizenship rights i e the freedom of movement as German or Belgian nationals 3 Demographics Edit Turkish flag and Dutch flag hanging side by side in the multi ethnic neighborhood Kruidenbuurt Eindhoven See also Demographics of the Netherlands Turkish immigrants first began to settle in big cities in the Netherlands such as Amsterdam Rotterdam The Hague and Utrecht as well as the regions of Twente and Limburg where there was a growing demand for industrial labour However not only the large cities but also medium sized cities and even small villages attracted the Turks 33 The Turkish population is mostly concentrated in large cities in the west of the country 34 some 36 of Turks live in the Randstad region 35 The second most common settlements are in the south in the Limburg region in Eindhoven and Tilburg and in the east in Deventer as well as in Enschede and Almelo in the Twente region 33 Characteristics Edit Official data published by Statistics Netherlands only collects data on the country of birth and does not provide data on ethnicity Consequently the 410 000 people recorded from Turkey first and second generation only in 2019 2 is problematic as a reflection of the total ethnic Turkish population Firstly ethnic Turks which have arrived in the Netherlands from the Balkans Cyprus the Levant North Africa and the diaspora e g Belgium and Germany 3 are recorded according to their citizenship such as Belgian Bulgarian Cypriot German Greek Iraqi Lebanese Macedonian Syrian etc rather than by their ethnicity Although these ethnic Turkish communities have different nationalities they might share the same ethnic linguistic cultural and religious origins as mainland ethnic Turks 36 Secondly Statistic Netherlands does not provide any data on Dutch born citizens of ethnic Turkish origin who are from the third generation 3 The percentage of first and second generation Turks marrying a bride or groom from Dutch descent has been stable at around 5 10 from 2001 to 2015 37 Population estimates Edit The estimates on the Turkish Dutch community have varied Suzanne Aalberse et al have said that despite the official Dutch statistics over the years the Turkish community must have numbered half a million 1 Sometimes sources casually mention much higher estimates equalling the official total number of non western immigrants and their descendants Amount of 1st and 2nd 38 generation Turks in the Netherlands CBS 39 Year Total Year Total1996 271 514 2010 383 9571997 279 708 2011 388 9671998 289 777 2012 392 9231999 299 662 2013 395 3022000 308 890 2014 396 4142001 319 600 2015 396 5552002 330 709 2016 397 4712003 341 400 2017 400 3672004 351 648 2018 404 4592005 358 846 2019 409 8772006 364 333 2020 416 8642007 368 600 2021 422 0302008 372 714 2022 429 9782009 378 330The total amount of first and second generation Turks increased from 271 514 in 1996 to 429 978 in 2022 Emigration Edit According to a study by Petra Wieke de Jong focusing on second generation Turkish Dutch people who were specifically born in the years 1983 to 1992 only there was 6 914 people from this age group and generation who left the Netherlands and emigrated to other countries as Dutch citizens between the years 2001 and 2017 Of those who reported their destination the most popular country was to Turkey 37 78 followed by Belgium 17 47 Germany 11 64 and the United Kingdom 1 48 In addition some of these emigrants reported moving to other EU countries 3 43 or to outside the EU 2 7 However a large portion of these Turkish Dutch emigrants totaling 1 761 i e 25 47 did not report their destination of emigration 40 Culture EditLanguage Edit See also Languages of the Netherlands The first generation of Turkish immigrants is predominantly Turkish speaking and has only limited Dutch competence 41 Thus for immigrant children their early language input is Turkish but the Dutch language quickly enters their lives via playmates and day care centres By age six these children are often bilinguals 42 Adolescents have developed a code switching mode which is reserved for in group use With older members of the Turkish community and with strangers Turkish is used and if Dutch speakers enter the scene a switch to Dutch is made 43 The young bilinguals therefore speak normal Turkish with their elders and a kind of Dutch Turkish with each other 44 Religion Edit The Turkish Mevlana Mosque in Rotterdam was voted the most attractive building in 2006 The Ayasofya Camii popularly known at the Westermoskee is located in Amsterdam It is the largest mosque in the Netherlands See also Religion in the Netherlands and Islam in the Netherlands When family reunification resulted in the establishment of Turkish communities the preservation of Turkish culture became a more serious matter Most Turks consider Islam to be the centre of their culture 45 Thus the majority of Dutch Turks adheres to Sunni Islam although there is also a considerable Alevi fragment According to the latest figures issued by Statistics Netherlands approximately five percent of the Dutch population 850 000 persons were followers of Islam in 2006 Furthermore eighty seven percent of Turks were followers of Islam 46 The Turkish community accounted for almost forty percent of the Muslim population thus are the largest ethnic group in the Netherlands adhering to Islam 47 Turks are considered to be the most organised ethnic group with its activities and organisations 48 The Turkish Islamic Cultural Federation TICF which was founded in 1979 had seventy eight member associations by the early 1980s and continued to grow to reach 140 by the end of the 1990s It works closely with the Turkish Islamic Union for Religious Affairs Diyanet which provides the TICF with the imams which it employs in its member mosques 49 The Turkish Directorate of Religious Affairs Diyanet established a branch in the Netherlands in 1982 with the intent to oppose the influence of leftist asylum seekers from Turkey as well as rightist members of Islamist movements such as Milli Gorus In 1983 the Netherlands agreed to allowing Turkey to send its own imams to the Turkish guest worker communities 50 Critics of this agreement argue that these imams some of whom do not speak Dutch hinder the effective integration of Dutch Turkish Muslims into the society of the Netherlands by promoting allegiance to the Turkish state while neglecting to promote loyalty to the Dutch state 50 Of the 475 mosques in the Netherlands in 2018 a plurality 146 are controlled by the Turkish Directorate of Religious Affairs Diyanet Diyanet implements the political ideology of the Islamist Turkish AKP party 50 Diyanet mosques have stayed out of initiatives to train imams in the Netherlands which were designed to train Islamic preachers who were familiar with the European context and to promote Dutch values and norms 50 This resistance is based on that it would be more difficult to import Diyanet imams who are employees of the Turkish state from Turkey if they cooperated in Dutch imam training programs Diyanet imams receive benefits and political tasks which are comparable to those of Turkish diplomats 50 In April 2006 the Turkish Mevlana Mosque had been voted the most attractive building in Rotterdam in a public survey organised by the City Information Centre It had beaten the Erasmus Bridge due to the mosques symbol of warmth and hospitality 51 Politics EditSee also Politics of the Netherlands Turkish Embassy in The Hague Netherlands Dutch Turks generally support left wing political parties DENK PvdA D66 GroenLinks and SP over the right wing ones CDA VVD and SGP 52 In the past migrants were not as eager to vote However they are now aware that they can become a decisive factor in the Dutch political system Far right groups have taunted the Dutch Labour Party the PvdA for becoming the Party of the Allochthonous because of the votes they receive from migrants and the increase in the number of elected ethnic Turkish candidates 53 Turkish votes determine about two seats of the 150 representatives in the Second Chamber of the Staten Generaal During the Dutch general election 2002 there were fourteen candidates of Turkish origin spread out over six party lists which encouraged fifty five percent of Turks to vote which was a much higher turnout than any other ethnic minorities 54 Political parties founded by Dutch Turks Edit Born to a Turkish father and a Dutch mother Stephan van Baarle is a member of the Turkish Dutch founded DENK party and an elected member of the House of Representatives In February 2015 Turkish born Dutch parliamentarians Tunahan Kuzu and Selcuk Ozturk established the political party DENK which in Dutch means think and in Turkish means equal or balanced 55 In its manifesto DENK was established to combat their perceived rising intolerance right wing thinking and xenophobia in the Netherlands 55 The party carries the program advanced by the International Institute for Scientific Research based in the Hague with the purpose of decolonization 56 Consequently the party has been in direct response to the nativist and isolationalist positions promoted by Geert Wilders and his populist right Freedom Party 56 Among its policies DENK seeks to establish a racism register to track and condemn the use of hate speech against religion build a Dutch slavery museum abolish the black minstrel character Zwarte Piet Black Pete and ban the use of the derogatory Dutch word Allochtoon 56 Although the party has been popularly described as a Muslim political party DENK does not promote Muslim canadidates as do most similar political parties in Europe 56 In the 2017 elections votes for DENK exceeded those of the PVdA and Wilders s PVV in Rotterdam and The Hague moreover DENK also exceeded the PVV s votes in Amsterdam 56 The party won three seats at the 2017 election thus DENK is the first migrant founded party to gain seats in the Dutch national parliament 57 In the 2021 elections the party stayed at 3 seats Literature EditA number of Turkish Dutch writers have come to prominence 58 Halil Gur was one of the earliest writing short stories about Turkish immigrants Sadik Yemni is well known for his Turkish Dutch detective stories Sevtap Baycili is a more intellectual novelist who is not limited to migrant themes Anti Turkism Edit Dutch police guarding Turkish homes during the Afrikaanderwijk riots in 1972 Even though progressive policies are installed especially compared with those in some other European countries such as Germany Managing the multicultural society The policy making process Paper presented at the Conference on Today s Youth and Xenophobia Breaking the Cycle Wassenaar Netherlands Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance published its third report on Netherlands in 2008 In this report Turkish minority group is described as a notable community which have been particularly affected by stigmatisation of and discrimination against members of minority groups 59 as a result of controversial policies of the governments of Netherlands The same report also noted that the tone of Dutch political and public debate around integration and other issues relevant to ethnic minorities has experienced a dramatic deterioration Recently use of the word allochtonen as a catch all expression for the other emerged as a new development European Network against Racism an international organisation supported by European Commission reported that in Netherlands half of the Turks reported having experienced racial discrimination 60 Same report points dramatic growth of islamophobia parallel with antisemitism Another international organisation European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia highlighted negative trend in Netherlands regarding attitudes towards minorities compared to average EU results 61 The analysis also noted that compared to most other Europeans in the Netherlands majority group is more in favour of cultural assimilation of minorities rather than cultural enrichment by minority groups Crime EditIn 2015 individuals with a Turkish background were about 2 5 times as likely to be suspected of a crime compared to the overall native Dutch population with of the first generation 1 7 being suspected and of the second generation 3 6 total males 4 28 and women 0 67 62 However when corrected for socio economic position Dutch people of Turkish descent are not more often suspected of crime than native Dutch people according to numbers from 2012 63 and reports from 2014 64 Education EditAccording to The Netherlands Institute for Social Research annual report of 2005 most of the original first generation Turkish migrants of the 1960s and 1970s had a very low level of education with many of them having had little or no schooling at all In addition to these many of the Turkish marriage migrants who arrived in the Netherlands by marrying an immigrant already living in the country as well as the in between generation which arrived while aged 6 18 have a low education An outcome of this circumstance is a poor command of the Dutch language 65 All Turkish children of the second generation have attended primary and secondary education However their educational levels were on average lower While almost half of the native Dutch population and Iranian origin pupils had ever attended higher secondary education HAVO or pre university education VWO only a fifth of the Turkish second generation had 65 In 2015 the Turkish second generation percentage had increased to 27 66 Associations and Organisations EditAlblasserdam Bati Trakya Turkleri Cemiyeti Alblasserdam Western Thrace Turks Association Hollanda Turk Federasyon Turkish Federation of the Netherlands Hollanda Bati Trakya Turk Kultur ve Dayanisma Dernegi Western Thrace Turks Culture and Solidarity Association of the Netherlands Hollanda Balkan Turkleri Kultur ve Dayanisma Dernegi Balkan Turks Culture and Solidarity Association of the Netherlands Hollanda Bulgaristan Turkleri Dernegi Bulgarian Turks Association of the Netherlands Hollanda Irak Turkmen Diasporasi Dernegi Iraqi Turkmen Disapora Association of the Netherlands Hollanda Lahey Bati Trakya Turk Birlik ve Beraberlik Dernegi Hague Western Thrace Turks Unity Association of the Netherlands Irak Turkleri Gok Hilal Vakfi Iraqi Turkish Sky Crescent Foundation Turkmen Tanis Dernegi Turkmen Meeting Association Notable people EditSee also List of Turkish Dutch people Azra Akin crowned Miss Turkey and Miss World 2002 Deniz Akkoyun nl crowned Miss Nederland 2008 Omer Bayram football player Emine Bozkurt Member of the European Parliament 2004 14 Sinan Can nl journalist Fidan Ekiz nl TV presenter and journalist Reyhan Erdogan nl actress Mete Erker nl saxophonist Joan Franka singer Halil Gur author Hamit Karakus Member of the Senate 2021 present Tunahan Kuzu co founder of the DENK political party Gurkan Kucuksenturk nl actor Senay Ozdemir nl journalist Selcuk Ozturk co founder of the DENK political party Oguzhan Ozyakup football player Gokhan Saki mixed martial artist and former kickboxer Sefa Vlaarkamp nl disc jockey and music producer Lale Gul writerSee also EditList of Turkish Dutch people Netherlands Turkey relations FC Turkiyemspor Turkeye Turkish Workers Union in the Netherlands Turkish diaspora Turks in Europe Turks in Belgium Turks in France Turks in Germany Turks in the United Kingdom 2017 Dutch Turkish diplomatic incidentReferences Edit a b Aalberse Suzanne Backus Ad Muysken Pieter in Dutch 2019 Heritage Languages A language Contact Approach John Benjamins Publishing Company p 90 ISBN 978 9027261762 the Dutch Turkish community out of a population that over the years must have numbered half a million a b Non Western population of the Netherlands in 2019 by background Statistics Netherlands 2019 retrieved 25 December 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k Sag Armand 2016 De destinteresse in Nederland Platform Dergisi December 2016 59 Officieel zijn ze met bijna 500 000 mensen aanwezig in Nederland meer omdat Turken uit Bulgarije Griekenland Cyprus Macedonie en bijvoorbeeld Turken die geen Turkse ntionaliteit meer habben of Turken uit Belgie en Duitsland die zich nu gevestigd hebben in Nederland Hiermee zouden er bijna driekwart miljon tot een miljoen Turken in Nederland wonen Veinguer Aurora Alvarez Dietz Gunther Jozsa Dan Paul Knauth Thorsten 2009 01 01 Islam in Education in European Countries Pedagogical Concepts and Empirical Findings Waxmann Verlag p 71 ISBN 9783830972822 Archived from the original on 2017 04 16 Retrieved 2017 04 16 Bevrijders Leiden droegen Turkse vlaggen Archived 2016 10 31 at the Wayback Machine Historian Ewout Klei on Joop nl 14 April 2012 Motley John Lothrop 1869 History of the United Netherlands from the death of William the silent to the Synod of Dort with a full view of the English Dutch struggle against Spain and of the origin and destruction of the Spanish armada Volume 4 pp 198 200 Haga Biography Archived 2011 08 17 at the Wayback Machine in the NNBW Kaplan Benjamin J 23 May 2006 Muslims in the Dutch Golden Age Representations and realities of religious toleration Amsterdam Netherlands University of Amsterdam p 17 Archived from the original on 16 April 2017 Retrieved 16 April 2017 Panayi 1999 140 Ogan 2001 23 24 a b Vermeulen amp Penninx 2000 154 Akgunduz 2008 61 Baumann amp Sunier 1995 37 Vermeulen amp Penninx 2000 156 Kennedy amp Roudometof 2002 60 Vermeulen amp Penninx 2000 155 TheSophiaEcho Turkish Bulgarians fastest growing group of immigrants in the Netherlands Archived from the original on 2016 08 10 Retrieved 2009 07 26 Nieuwe Turk is Bulgaar De Telegraaf 2009 De Bulgaren de snelst groeiende groep nieuwkomers in Nederland En veruit het grootste deel 90 procent van die groep is van etnisch Turkse origine Vaessen Thieu 2009 De nieuwe Turk is een Bulgaar Welingelichte Kringen retrieved 7 May 2021 Guentcheva Kabakchieva amp Kolarski 2003 44 Seidler Y van den Heerik A de Boom J Weltevrede A M 2017 Schaduweffecten van EU arbeidsmigratie in Rotterdam Erasmus University Rotterdam p 47 ISBN 9789037705713 In Bulgarije leeft been grote groep etnische Turken Van de ca zeven miljoen Bulgaren is ongeveer een miljoen van Turkse afkomst Er bestaan sterke aanwijzingen dat met name de groep Turkse Bulgaren naar Europa en Nederland zijn gekomen naar de volwaardige toetreding van Bulgarije tot de EU Gijsberts Merove Lubbers Marcel 2015 Langer in Nederland Ontwikkelingen in de leefsituatie van migranten uit Polen en Bulgarije in de eerste jaren na migratie Sociaal en Cultureel Planbureau p 12 ISBN 9789037705713 Er is binnen de Bulgaarse groep een duidelijk verschil zichtbaar in ervaringen met en in Nederland Turkse Bulgaren waren vlak na migratie positiever over de leefsituatie in Nederland en het contrast met de etnische Bulgaren is in de afgelopen anderhalf jaar verder gegroeid Van de Turkse Bulgaren vond 89 de leefsituatie in 2012 13 beter dan in het land van herkomst tegen 68 van de etnische Bulgaren Ook zijn etnische Bulgaren zich duidelijk minder thuis gaan voelen en zien zij een grotere toename in discriminatie veel meer dan de Turkse Bulgaren Voor de etnische Bulgaren is er ook meer veranderd na hun migratie zij hadden een betere uitgangspositie in Bulgarije zelf en zijn hier in een minderheidspositie terechtgekomen terwijl de Turkse Bulgaren dat al gewend waren in Bulgarije en wellicht als gevolg daarvan lagere verwachtingen hadden a b Avrupa da Bati Trakya Bati Trakya Turkleri Gercegi ve Avrupa Bati Trakya Turk Federasyonu Avrupa Bati Trakya Turk Federasyonu archived from the original on 20 July 2021 retrieved 8 May 2021 Avustralya ve Amerika Birlesik Devletleri Kanada gibi uzak ulkelerin disinda aralarinda Hollanda Ingiltere Isvec Fransa Belcika ve Avusturya gibi ulkelerde de sayisi yadsinamayacak bir Bati Trakyali Turk kitlesi yasamaktadir Whitman Lois 1990 Destroying Ethnic Identity The Turks of Greece Human Rights Watch pp 11 12 ISBN 978 0929692708 a b HOLLANDA BATI TRAKYA TURK KULTUR DERNEGI BUYUMEYE DEVAM EDIYOR Burasi Bati Trakya 2017 retrieved 13 February 2021 Hollanda Lahey Bati Trakyalilar Dernegi nden bildiri Millet Gazetesi 2017 retrieved 13 February 2021 Senturk 2008 427 Yunanistan da Bati Trakya Turklerinin dis ulkelere gocu endise ve kaygi verici boyutlara ulasti TRT 2018 archived from the original on 14 February 2021 retrieved 14 February 2021 Catalina Andreea Mihai 2016 Cultural resilience or the Interethnic Dobrujan Model as a Black Sea alternative to EuroIslam in the Romanian Turkish Tatar community University of Bergamo p 150 Yurtdisindaki Kibrisli Turk sayisi 645 bin Kibris Postasi 2015 retrieved 13 February 2021 Duman Bilgay 2010 Turkiye ye Yonelik Turkmen Gocu ve Turkiye deki Turkmen Varligi Center for Middle Eastern Strategic Studies p 11 ISBN 978 605 5330 64 4 Kerkuk Vakfi Genel Sekreteri Prof Dr Suphi Saatci nin verdigi rakamlara gore yaklasik olarak Kanada da 1000 Danimarka da 2000 Hollanda da ise 4000 e yakin Turkmen in yasadigi ve Turkiye uzerinden bu ulkelere goc ettigi bilinmektedir Dogan Basri 2019 Hollanda nin yaptigi iyiligi ne Eset yapti ne de baska bir Musluman ulke TR724 retrieved 16 February 2021 a b Yucesoy 2008 26 Vermeulen amp Penninx 2000 158 Haug Compton amp Courbage 2002 277 Gulcicek 2006 8harvnb error no target CITEREFGulcicek2006 help Ooijevaar Jeroen Bloemendal Caroline Boerdam Annelies 2016 Jaarrapport integratie 2016 The Hague Centraal bureau voor de statistiek ISBN 978 90 357 2086 2 OCLC 986745767 At least one 1st generation Turkish immigrant Bevolking generatie geslacht leeftijd en herkomstgroepering 1 januari de Jong Petra Wieke 2021 Patterns and Drivers of Emigration of the Turkish Second Generation in the Netherlands European Journal of Population Springer 38 1 15 36 doi 10 1007 s10680 021 09598 w PMC 8924341 PMID 35370530 S2CID 244511118 Stromqvist amp Verhoeven 2004 437 Stromqvist amp Verhoeven 2004 438 Extra amp Verhoeven 1993 223 Extra amp Verhoeven 1993 224 Kennedy amp Roudometof 2002 60 CBS 2007 51 CBS StatLine More than 850 thousand Muslims in the Netherlands 2007 Retrieved 2009 04 04 Nielsen 2004 64 Nielsen 2004 65 a b c d e Ozturk Ahmet Erdi Sozeri Semiha Diyanet as a Turkish Foreign Policy Tool Evidence from the Netherlands and Bulgaria Religion and Politics Section of the American Political Science Association 11 3 3 12 13 15 Archived from the original on 19 September 2018 Ulzen 2007 214 215 Messina 2007 205 206 Farrell Vladychenko amp Oliveri 2006 195 Ireland 2004 146 a b Vermeulen Floris Harteveld Eelco van Heelsum Anja van der Veen Aad 2018 The potential of immigrant parties insights from the Dutch case Acta Politica Springer Publishing 55 3 434 a b c d e Spektorowski Alberto Elfersy Daphna 2020 From Multiculturalism to Democratic Discrimination The Challenge of Islam and the Re emergence of Europe s Nationalism University of Michigan Press p 204 ISBN 9780472132164 Otjesa Simon Krouwel Andre 2018 Why do newcomers vote for a newcomer Support for an immigrant party Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Routledge 45 7 1 Graeme Dunphy Migrant Emigrant Immigrant Recent Developments in Turkish Dutch Literature Neophilologus 85 2001 1 23 ECRI 2008 Third report on the Netherlands Strasbourg FRANCE The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance Archived 2009 02 14 at the Wayback Machine Dinsbach W Walz G amp Boog I 2009 ENAR shadow report 2008 Racism in the Netherlands Brussels Netherlands ENAR Netherlands Thalhammer E Zucha V Enzenhofer E Salfinger B amp Ogris G 2001 Attitudes towards minority groups in the European Union A special analysis of the Eurobarometer 2000 survey on behalf of the European Monitoring Centre on racism and xenophobia Vienna Austria EUMC Sora Archived 2007 11 10 at the Wayback Machine Annual Report on Integration 2016 PDF in Dutch The Hague Statistics Netherlands 2016 p 15 Archived from the original PDF on 4 May 2018 Jaarrapport integratie 2012 in Dutch Statistics Netherlands 2012 p 190 Hoeveel criminaliteit is er onder Marokkanen in Dutch RTL Nieuws 1 April 2014 Retrieved 2 December 2020 a b Jaarrapport Integratie 2005 SCP Summary www scp nl in Dutch pp 2 4 Retrieved 2018 09 15 Willem Huijnk amp Iris Andriessen 2016 Integratie in zicht De integratie van migranten in Nederland op acht terreinen nader bekeken Sociaal en Cultureel Planbureau Den Haag p 64Bibliography EditAkgunduz Ahmet 2008 Labour Migration from Turkey to Western Europe 1960 1974 A Multidisciplinary Analysis Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 7390 3 Baumann Gerd Sunier Thijl 1995 Post Migration Ethnicity De essentializing Cohesion Commitments and Comparison Het Spinhuis ISBN 90 5589 020 0 CBS 2007 Naar een nieuwe schatting van het aantal islamieten in Nederland PDF Statistics Netherlands Centrum voor Onderzoek en Statistiek 2005 Key figures Rotterdam 2005 PDF Centre for Research and Statistics Centrum voor Onderzoek en Statistiek 2006 Key figures Rotterdam 2006 PDF Centre for Research and Statistics archived from the original PDF on 2011 10 09 retrieved 2009 09 30 Dienst Onderzoek en Statistiek 2009 Amsterdam in cijfers 2009 PDF Stadsdrukkerij Amsterdam Extra Guus Verhoeven Ludo Th 1993 Immigrant Languages in Europe Multilingual Matters ISBN 1 85359 179 3 Farrell Gilda Vladychenko Alexander Oliveri Federico 2006 Achieving Social Cohesion in a Multicultural Europe Concepts Situation and Developments Council of Europe ISBN 92 871 6033 3 Gemeente Utrecht 2007 Bevolking van Utrecht per 1 januari 2007 PDF Gemeente Utrecht Guentcheva Rossitza Kabakchieva Petya Kolarski Plamen 2003 Migrant Trends VOLUME I Bulgaria The social impact of seasonal migration PDF International Organization for Migration Haug Werner Compton Paul Courbage Youssef 2002 The Demographic Characteristics of Immigrant Populations Het Spinhuis ISBN 90 5589 020 0 Huis Mila van Nicolaas Han Croes Michel 1997 Migration of the four largest cities in the Netherlands PDF Statistics Netherlands archived from the original PDF on 2012 09 24 retrieved 2009 09 29 Ireland Patrick Richard 2004 Becoming Europe Immigration Integration and the Welfare State University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 0 8229 5845 7 Kennedy Paul T Roudometof Victor 2002 Communities Across Borders New Immigrants and Transnational Cultures Routledge ISBN 0 415 25293 8 Messina Anthony M 2007 The Logics and Politics of post WWII Migration to Western Europe Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82134 6 Nicolaas Han Sprangers Arno 2000 Migration Motives of non Dutch immigrants in the Netherlands PDF Statistics Netherlands archived from the original PDF on 2012 09 24 retrieved 2009 09 29 Nielsen Jorgen S 2004 Muslims in Western Europe Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1844 9 Ogan Christine L 2001 Communication and Identity in the Diaspora Turkish Migrants in Amsterdam and their Use of Media Lexington Books ISBN 0 7391 0269 9 Panayi Panikos 1999 Outsiders A History of European Minorities Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 1 85285 179 1 Senturk Cem 2008 West Thrace Turkish s Immigration to Europe PDF The Journal of International Social Research Statistics Netherlands 2008 Sustainability Monitor for the Netherlands 2009 PDF Statistics Netherlands ISBN 978 90 357 1688 9 archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 01 retrieved 2009 09 29 Statistics Netherlands 2009 Statistical yearbook 2009 PDF Statistics Netherlands ISBN 978 90 357 1737 4 Stromqvist Sven Verhoeven Ludo Th 2004 Relating Events in Narrative Volume 2 Typological and Contextual Perspectives Lawrence Erlbaum Associates ISBN 0 8058 4672 7 Turkiye Buyuk Millet Meclisi 2008 Insan Haklarini Inceleme Komisyonu num Hollanda Ziyareti 16 21 Haziran 2008 PDF Grand National Assembly of Turkey Vermeulen Hans Penninx Rinus 2000 Immigrant Integration The Dutch Case Het Spinhuis ISBN 90 5589 176 2 Yucesoy Eda Unlu 2008 Everyday Urban Public Space Turkish Immigrant Women s Perspective Het Spinhuis ISBN 978 90 5589 273 0 Ulzen Patricia van 2007 Imagine a Metropolis Rotterdam s Creative Class 1970 2000 010 Publishers ISBN 978 90 6450 621 5 External links Edit Media related to Turks in the Netherlands at Wikimedia Commons Turks in the Netherlands in Dutch Portals Netherlands Turkey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turks in the Netherlands amp 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