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Soldier of Orange (1917 - 2007)

Whenever I am asked about Dutch movies I say without hesitation that the best one ever made was Soldier of Orange (1977). It was at the time the most expensive movie production ever made in Holland and it launched the international careers of both Rutger Hauer and Paul Verhoeven. With this movie Verhoeven - who went on to achieve Hollywood fame with 'Basic Instinct' - brought his unique brand of realism to a larger and international audience. It meant that 'Soldier' was enriched with quite a bit of sex and a few torture scenes that stand the test of time and are as haunting today as they were thirty years ago. But above all it was the script that was able to condense the experiences of the Dutch under Nazi rule into a compelling film built around a hero who waged his own struggle against the brutal German oppressor.

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The movie was based on the book written by the man who came to be known as the 'Soldier of Orange', Erik Hazelhoff Roelfzema who died in his home on Hawaii earlier this week at the age of 90. The story follows the adventures of a group of rather privileged Dutch college students whose careless life at Leiden University is disrupted by the Nazi invasion of May 1940. The group falls apart during the war, a few side with the enemy, one Jewish member perishes, and some end up in the resistance, notably Hazelhoff Roelfzema. The movie follows his daring crossing of enemy lines across the North Sea to reach the British shores and a subsequent return with Royal Navy assistance to the occupied beaches of the Dutch mainland. In actual life the Dutch hero made about fourteen such crossings which sought to maintain vital links with Dutch resistance forces in the occupied country. After this he entered the RAF as a pilot carrying out some seventy bombing missions over Germany. Towards the end of the war he became the adjudant to Queen Wilhelmina, a role which earned him his nickname as 'Orange' is not only the Dutch national color, it is the royal family's surname.

Yet, his life after the war proved to be equally interesting. Of course his efforts and hero status had rendered him totally unfit to return to regular Dutch life and a short spell as a diplomat ended rather abruptly after having spoken his mind about the future of the Dutch East Indies. His passion for this part of the world led him to carry out a few missions on behalf of the Republic of the Moluccas, a rather large part of eastern Indonesia that was counting on independence following the Dutch departure in 1949. That quest was stifled by the international community - notably the US - who had a vested interest in the post-war world to keep Indonesia a unified entity and a bulwark against communism. Of course, his mission failed and Hazelhoff Roelfzema started a new life as an immigrant in the US, holding a variety of jobs, working among other things for NBC and Radio Free Europe.

In his biography Hazelhoff Roelfzema makes it clear that he essentially was an adventurer and loved nothing more than writing. It was his second wife who encouraged him to put his Soldier of Orange memories to paper and it became a major bestseller in 1971. It gave Hazelhoff instant celebrity in The Netherlands and as a 'war hero' the small nation got something its own narrative of the Second World War deeply lacked. Hazelhoff himself - by that time retired on Hawaii - never considered himself as such and made it clear that many others had done the same: that what was required under extremely difficult circumstances. He had just been lucky enough to stumble into the limelight.

Despite his American passport and passion for the Big Island, he always remained a Dutchman at heart, visiting his homeland regularly, while at the same time realizing that he could not ever live there again. His life is a remarkable one and the movie remains an absolute must see.

"When Irish Eyes Are Smiling"

It has become incredibly popular for today's conservative politicians to invoke Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher and in some cases to seek the actual blessing from the now octogenarian Iron Lady. Earlier this week in Vancouver, former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney tried to bring the 1980s back to life in order to sell his recently released book, Memoirs.

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It is the sort of sentimental journey that gets a conservative crowd into a feisty mood and when Canadians start applauding the Reagan-name, you know there is something interesting going on. Yet, Mulroney's reach back into history is above all a clear effort to cement his legacy as his record remains mixed at best. Canada's conservative party deconstructed after Mulroney's less than gracious exit from office and the Liberals under Chretien reaped the benefits much in the way Clinton did after Reagan/Bush and Blair after Thatcher/Major. That is what Mulroney is emphasizing. And indeed to his eternal credit, his warm relationship with both Reagan and Bush and his astute awareness of free trade as an engine for Canadian growth resulted in a series of bilateral agreements that continue to fuel both the Canadian and US economies.

I am not sure if I have the time to dig through the 1100 pages, but for political junkies it is laden with remarkable anecdotes. Here is a nice one. Mulroney's cordial relationship with Reagan did not always go down well among Canada's left-leaning elites, known for pathological levels of anti-Americanism. After a dinner at a summit in the mid-80s, Reagan and Mulroney, both descendants of Irish immigrants went on stage to sing "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling", from page 369:

Canadians in general loved the Irish duet, but the CBC replayed the clip constantly with commentary that it was symbolic of a humiliating "toadyism" and a sub-ordination of Canada's interests. "I must say, these people really have a serious inferiority complex", said Margaret Thatcher after she saw a replay of such commentary during a visit to Toronto. "I certainly hope they don't go off their medication."

NOTE: This post appeared originally on The Gazette under the title Canada's Conservative Icon. Mulroney continued his book tour in Calgary where he expanded on the Reagan theme by comparing current Canadian PM Harper to the Gipper. Not sure if that comparison works all that well, nor am I convinced that it will help Harper in getting more traction in the center of Canada's political landscape. But if Harper compensates his lack of folksy ease by following Reagan's instincts and implementing his ideas on freedom and the limited role of government, things should be looking up for Canada.

More Doubt Required

As much as I believe in poise, certainty and focus there is as Robert Wright so eloquently puts it in his latest diavlog, no better friend to have than doubt. He's absolutely right and I recommend his regular diavlogs (this week with Joel Achenbach instead of Mickey Kaus) as mandatory material, it is some of the best blogospheric content currently available.

This Week on The Gazette

As most of you are aware by now, I post my political thoughts on The Gazette, some weeks more than others. This week I touched on The Bush Speech, Public Funds for Religious Schools and Jane Wyman's death.

Luciano Pavarotti

One of opera's greatest performers passed away following a long struggle with cancer. There are many ways to remember him today, but this rendition by a younger Pavarotti of one of my favorite arias is surely a fitting one.

And the stars were shining
and the earth smelled sweet
the garden gate scraped,
and a step brushed the sand
She came in, fragrant
and fell into my arms

Oh! sweetest of kisses, oh! languorous caresses,
while I trembled as I loosed her lovely features
concealed by her mantle!
My dream of love has vanished for ever,
The moment has passed, and I die in despair!
And I never have loved life so much!

(E lucevan le stelle, From Puccini's Tosca)


The Power of Alcohol

As we 're inundated with quotes from Robert Draper's revealing book on Bush, I kind of enjoyed this one, on drinking:

Discussing his past battles with alcohol, he says he would never be able to make decision on war if he was still drinking.

"Exercise helps. And I think prayer helps," he says. "I wouldn't be President if I kept drinking. You can get sloppy, can't make decisions. It clouds your reason, absolutely."

Wasn't the War on Terror modeled after the struggle against Nazism? And didn't Sir Winston Churchill make a resounding re-entry in the daily lexicon after the events of 9/11? What would the world have looked like if Sir Winston had applied the same rigor to his alcohol consumption as GWB? Here's a clue:

His drinking habits were admirably fetishistic - preferably Pol Roger, served at precisely the right temperature (he was delighted when the gift of a refrigerator from Beaverbrook in 1926 obviated the need to dilute it with ice) and interspersed with much brandy and port.

The papers of Harry Hopkins, Roosevelt's lend-lease administrator, contain several good examples of the war leader's zealous interest in his own consumption. For instance, Hopkins describes finding Churchill in January 1943 'in bed in his customary pink robe, and having, of all things, a bottle of wine for breakfast'. Viscount Alanbrooke made the same observation, and Eden's diary mentions Churchill taking a 'stiff whiskey and soda, at 8.45 a.m'.

A Foreign Office official described a dinner with Churchill as ,a varied and noble procession of wines with which I could not keep pace - champagne, port, brandy, Cointreau: Winston drank a good deal of all, and ended with two glasses of whisky and soda.'

Cheers.

UPDATE: A lively discussion about this post is taking place in the comments section at The Gazette where it was posted originally.

Dutch Numbers

Michael van der Galien posted some interesting Dutch poll numbers earlier today. They represent exactly what I have argued a little while ago in my essay called 'Dutch Confusion'. The traditional parties have lost their appeal and new outfits on both the left and right are increasingly able to pick up disgruntled and directionless floating voters. Beware the next election.

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