Posts Tagged ‘Dutch’

Blood and Iron

July 7th, 2010 by John Feehery

The nature of national identity came to my mind as I watched the World Cup yesterday.

South Africa is hosting the soccer tournament, the first time an African nation has been given that honor.  Much was made about the quixotic efforts of Ghana (which beat the United States) to be the first African nation to win the tourney.

Not as much has been made about the fact that the Dutch, who were the first settlers in what is now South Africa, have gone so far in winning the tournament.

When the Dutch first came to South Africa, they had the run of the place.  But eventually they had to adjust to reality.  They later became the Boers, and they fought several wars against British colonial rule to maintain their freedom.  They gave in to the Brits, and eventually, they dismantled apartheid, the systematic discrimination of black Africans which was constructed to keep the black majority out of power.  Whites now make up about 10 percent of the population in South Africa, while black Africans make up about 80 percent.

Greece: Beginning and Ends

May 11th, 2010 by John Feehery

A little more than 2300 years ago, Alexander the Great rampaged out of Greece into Asia Minor, and Greek civilization reached its largest sphere of influence.   A few centuries later, the Romans followed suit, and Western civilization would forever be formed in the minds of the Europeans and the world.

After Roman civilization declined, Europe went through some murky times in the Dark Ages, but soon the Renaissance, the Enlightenment and the ideas of free market capitalism, industrialism, scientific progress, democracy and financial innovation made Western nations the most powerful in the world.  The Spanish, the Portuguese, Dutch, the French, the English, the Germans and the Austro-Hungarians all took turns establishing different spheres of influence and empires of different sizes and shapes.

The 20th Century was tough on the Europeans.  Two world wars decimated its wealth and vibrancy (and growth, especially population growth), and for the last half of the century, the continent was dominated by two non-European powers (the Americans and the Russians).  The once dominant European powers were pawns in a Cold War chess match that featured a former colony squaring off against a backward, Communist behemoth.