http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/05/06/the-orange-land-a-republic-with-a-new-king.html

The Orange land: A republic with a new king
Aboeprijadi Santoso, Amsterdam | Opinion | Mon, May 06 2013, 9:00 AM 
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Paper Edition | Page: 6

The Netherlands may have been a kingdom for two centuries, but the way the 
state and the public behave makes it appear as if it was a republic. 

Its constitution reduces the head of state, be it king or queen, to a symbolic 
figurehead; even so, some political parties still want to make the institution 
purely ceremonial. 

Its rituals and ceremonies, far from being pompous and religious, are 
definitely modest as members of the Royal House of Orange tend to behave more 
informally compared to their counterparts in the United Kingdom and Spain. 
Nowhere other than in Holland would the monarch be happy to be addressed simply 
by his name rather than by the title, “Your Majesty”. 

Indeed, they are even ready to indicate — with some subtlety — that they may 
someday be useless if and when a new Zeitgeist arrives and the political 
parties push toward the abolition of the kingdom. 

In other words, royal legitimacy is not static: It rests more on its symbolic 
significance and, above all, on popular sentiment rather than its ancient 
history, which in fact shows that the country has actually existed far longer 
as a republic than a monarchy. 

But neither has the Netherlands truly manifested itself as a republic — 
demonstrating its significance as implied in the concept, res publica, as a 
structure or way of life that is felt as both owned by and serving the public — 
as when the country turned orange, the color (and name) of the Dutch royal 
house. 

And that is precisely what happened when Queen Beatrix after 33 years on the 
throne abdicated in favor of her eldest son Willem-Alexander who, on April 30, 
became the country’s first king in 123 years.

Millions watched on television throughout the day, while hundreds of thousands 
celebrated on the streets and another 30,000 or so flocked to the capital, 
Amsterdam, and into Dam Square to watch the former queen, the new king and his 
queen and their three daughters appear on the palace balcony after the 
inauguration. Most revelers wore something orange, and many shed tears of 
happiness.

Even the next day, thousands of people queued to see for themselves the site of 
the royal ceremony.  

The House of Orange has become enormously popular during the last two decades, 
thanks in particular to Queen Beatrix and her late husband, Prince Claus, a 
somewhat leftist prince with a great interest in development cooperation and 
Africa. 

The royal house’s popularity was boosted in 2002 when then Crown Prince 
Willem-Alexander married Maxima Zorreguieta, an Argentine girl who quickly 
mastered the Dutch language and way of life.

This is not to say the royal house has been without problems. 

Until the early 2000s, a powerful lobby of former soldiers who had fought in 
Indonesia had resisted attempts by the Dutch state to offer some form of 
apology for what were termed “police actions” in 1947 and 1949. 

Any concept or image of “aggression” was what they desperately hoped to avoid. 
With the support of Beatrix’s father, Prince Bernhard, and the conservative 
party, the VVD, the veterans’ lobby was generally successful. 

One consequence of this was that Queen Beatrix had to stay two days in 
Singapore rather than arriving in Jakarta in time to celebrate the 50th 
anniversary of Indonesian independence on Aug. 17, 1995, as originally planned.

At home, not only was Prince Bernhard involved in Westerling’s 1950 attempt to 
topple Indonesia’s first post-independence president Sukarno and vice president 
Mohammad Hatta, creating a headache for then prime minister Willem Drees, but 
also his corruption scandal with Lockheed in the 1970s severely damaged the 
royal house’s standing.

Likewise in the case of Maxima, whose father’s past as a senior official in 
Gen. Videla’s regime, caused problems for the house’s image among the Dutch 
public, for there is little doubt that Jorge Zorreguieta knew about thousands 
of disappearances during Argentina’s “Dirty War” in the late-1970s. As a 
consequence, he was persuaded not to attend his daughter’s marriage in 2002 or, 
now, her ascension to the Dutch throne. 

Such is the great popularity of the House of Orange today that Dutch media, 
often critical of the monarchy, are now noticeably uncritical of almost every 
aspect of what has occurred concerning the royal abdication and crowning. 

Little has been reported about the counter festivities organized by a few 
anti-monarchists at Waterloo Square. The Nieuwe Republikeins Genootschap (New 
Republican Society), comprising students and anarchic groupings with a few 
hundred supporters, has pointed out how undemocratic and expensive the monarchy 
has been and how much the House of Orange allegedly owed to their links to the 
British-Dutch oil giant, Shell.      

Beatrix is now popularly referred to as the “mother of the nation”. Ironically, 
it was her crowning as queen in 1980 that turned Amsterdam into a battlefield, 
as a section of the population protested against a lack of housing in contrast 
to the wealth of the House of Orange, which is reportedly the second-richest 
royal house (after the 
Windsors) in the world.

Now with the more informal King Willem-Alexander, who aspires to be Royal 
Business Ambassador, no major change should be expected anytime soon. 

Anything a Dutch monarch says or does is the political responsibility of the 
ruling administration. Given the constitution, all one can expect is a change 
in style of rule and diplomacy. 

As with most European constitutional monarchies, change that occurs will likely 
come from the royal house itself or from parliament. Kings and queens, commonly 
linked to some business interests, should be wary of any involvement in 
potentially sensitive matters. 

To survive, modern monarchies need to constantly correct their courses.  

>From an Indonesian point of view, William-Alexander is the first Dutch monarch 
>free from any shadow of the Dutch colonial past — a tabula rasa. 

As he has a great interest in water management sciences and Queen Maxima is an 
expert on micro-credit, the House of Orange may be about to begin a new chapter 
in international relationships. 

The author is a journalist residing in The Netherlands.


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