Why the Dutch apology for slavery leaves a bitter taste in my mouth | Jermain Ostiana
An apology only counts when there is a genuine process of reparation and reform. The people of the Dutch Caribbean are still waiting
Jermain Ostiana is a writer and poet from Curacao
Elis Juliana, a poet, artist and intellectual from the Dutch Caribbean island of Curacao, who died in 2013, once said: The scars of my people's feet from Dutch enslavement are still bawling pus." It's a vivid statement that captures the dominance of Dutch political and economic power over the Black people of Curacao and its sister islands, including Saba, Statia, Bonaire, Aruba and St Maarten. And it still holds true - even after the surprising apology from the Netherlands last month for the atrocities of Dutch slavery in the region.
In that apology, the prime minister, Mark Rutte, said: On behalf of the Dutch government, I apologise for the past actions of the Dutch state: to enslaved people in the past, everywhere in the world, who suffered as a consequence of those actions, as well as to their daughters and sons, and to all their descendants, up to the present day."
Jermain Ostiana is a writer and poet from Curacao
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