Nine out of 10 Dutch are happy
Heres a small fact I learned.
I fond this one out onMonday 09 May 2011 and I thought it was pretty cool and very true about the Dutch People.
An overwhelming majority of the Dutch feel happy, according to research involving 7,000 people carried out by the Trimbos Institute.Asked how often they had felt happy in the previous four weeks, 89% said 'often or more'. Asked to give their life marks out of 10, most give it 7.5 or eight, researcher Ad Bergsma told news agency ANP.People who take anti-depressants also consider themselves to be happy, the research shows. 'One million people in the Netherlands may take anti-depressants but the idea that we are not a happy nation is just not true,' Bergsma said.
http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2011/05/nine_out_of_10_dutch_are_happy.php
The Netherlands celebrates Queen's Day, royals in Limburg
The traditional ‘night before Queen’s Day’ passed of peacefully in the big cities on Friday night and there was no more trouble than normal on a busy club night, police said on Saturday.
Some 175,000 people turned up for the Koninginnenach night in The Hague and 30 people were arrested, mainly for fighting.In Utrecht, where the traditional market begins at 18.00 hours, police said it was less busy than in 2010.
Amsterdam. In Amsterdam, it was busy but the atmosphere was good and there were no problems, police said.
Up to 800,000 people are expected to head to the capital for the day’s – Koninginnedag events, including a concert on the Museumplein featuring artists such Gerard Joling, Alain Clark and award-winning dj Armin van Buuren. New Queen’s Day rules in the capital mean all outside activities must end by 20.00. The Museumplein show will end at 21.00 to make sure people have enough time to catch a train home.
Royal visit
The royal family is celebrating Queen’s Day in Limburg this year with visits to the towns of Thorn and Weert.
There is tight security in both towns, with up to 1,300 police officers on duty and widespread camera surveillance. Regional traditions will be at the centre of the celebrations, Nos television reports.
Some 10,000 to 15,000 are expected to turn out to see the queen in Thorn – the first port of call, while up to 80,000 are expected in Weert.
Folding chairs
In Weert well-wishers have been banned from taking folding chairs, stools and large bags to the area where the royal party will be. Cool boxes and alcohol is also banned, Nos says.The royal family was last in Limburg for Queen’s Day in 1995.April 30 was the birthday of queen Beatrix’s mother, Juliana. When Beatrix succeeded her mother in 1980, she decided to keep the celebrations on that day which is public holiday.
Traditionally citizens do not need a permit to sell goods on the street on Queens Day which is why the streets turn into a giant flea market.
The Netherlands celebrates Liberation day with military and music
The Netherlands celebrates Liberation Day on Thursday, marking 66 years since Germany surrendered and the end of World War II. Events started in Wageningen where the Liberation flame was lit shortly before midnight. Torches were then taken by runners to other fires all over the country. Germany signed the capitulation documents in Wageningen on May 5, 1945. The south of the country had been liberated months earlier. Later on Thursday, the university town will stage the traditional military parade, featuring veterans and their vehicles, a parachute drop and gun salute. Fourteen formal Liberation Day festivals are being staged all over the country: one in each of 12 provinces and one in The Hague and Amsterdam. Queen Beatrix will attend the concert in the capital, which ends the celebrations.
Airlifts
Waylong, The Opposites, Moke and The Partysquad are this year's freedom ambassadors and will be airlifted to as many of the concerts as possible. Former foreign affairs minister and Nato secretary general Jaap de Hoop Scheffer is giving this year's May 5 lecture which is supposed to bridge the Remembrance Day celebrations on May 4 and the Liberation Day events. The theme of this year's events is worldwide freedom.
© DutchNews.nl
“I am still so naïve; I know pretty much what I like and dislike; but please, don’t ask me who I am. A passionate, fragmentary girl, maybe?”
About Me

- Becca Fafard
- Summerland, B.C, Canada
- I'm a train wreck in the morning I'm a bitch in the afternoon Every now and then without warning I can be really mean towards you I'm a puzzle yes indeed Ever-complex in every way And all the pieces aren't even in the box And yet, you see the picture clear as day
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Monday, May 9, 2011
Remembrance of the Dead
Here a small segment of what this day is and what happens on this day.
Remembrance of the Dead (Dutch: Dodenherdenking) is held annually on May 4 in the Netherlands. It commemorates all civilians and members of the armed forces of the Kingdom of the Netherlands who have died in wars or peacekeeping missions since the outbreak of World War II.
Until 1961, the commemoration only related to the Dutch victims of World War II. Since 1961, the victims of other military conflicts (such as the Indonesian National Revolution in Indonesia) and peacekeeping missions (such as in Lebanon or Bosnia) are remembered on May 4 as well.
Traditionally, the main ceremonies are observed in Amsterdam at the National Monument on Dam Square. This ceremony is usually attended by members of the cabinet and the royal family, military leaders, representatives of the resistance movement and other social groups. At 8:00 p.m., two minutes of silence are observed throughout the Netherlands. Public transport is stopped, as well as all other traffic. Radio and TV only broadcast the ceremonies from 19.00 until 20.30. Since May 4, 1994, the flags, having hung at half-staff during the day, are then hoisted to the music of the "Wilhelmus", the Dutch national anthem. Since 2001 the new protocol says it is correct to let the flag hang half-staff.
Then On May 5th I sorta celebrated the Liberation but i really celebrated it on Sunday the 8 on train that showed the history of the Oorlogsjaren.
In the Netherlands, Liberation Day (Dutch: Bevrijdingsdag) is celebrated each year on May 5th, to mark the end of the occupation by Nazi Germany during World War II.
The nation was liberated largely by Canadian troops, with the assistance of the British and American Armies (see Operation Market Garden) and French airborne (see Operation Amherst). On the 5th of May 1945, the Canadian General Charles Foulkes and the German Commander-in-Chief Johannes Blaskowitz reached an agreement on the capitulation of German forces in the Netherlands in Hotel de Wereld in Wageningen. One day later, the capitulation document was signed in the auditorium of Wageningen University, located next-door to the hotel.
After the liberation in 1945, Liberation Day was commemorated every 5 years. Finally, in 1990, the day was declared to be a national holiday, when the liberation would be commemorated and celebrated every year.
On Suday the 8th i went on a train ride the showed me certen event in the past.
Travel conducted almost litteral by the history. The visitor experiences how our country would be possible will have seen during the mobilisation of the Dutch army (on station Wognum), the German bezetting (station Twisk) and the release of the Netherlands by the Canadian and British army (station Opperdoes). Finally co-vendor to become of exuberant release festivals (Medemblik).
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