Posted on 11/13/2007 9:29:42 AM PST by goldstategop
To continue the literary analogy, consider the library at Belgium's Leuven University. Make that two libraries.
German armies had burned down Leuven's library in the two world wars, and it was rebuilt after each. But then in 1970, the last time the Flemings and the Walloons got seriously restive, the million-volume collection was carved into two: Odd-numbered books remained on the original campus in the Dutch-speaking part of the country, while even-numbered books went to a new Francophone school built in a field 17 miles to the south.
Thirty-seven years later, Belgium's national identity is still so elusive, so fragile and so fractured that the little country wedged between the Netherlands and France may be on the verge of breaking apart.
The more prosperous Dutch-speakers in Flanders in the north want to shake off their relatively poor French-speaking neighbors in Wallonia to the south.
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
How can I take seriously an article that doesn’t even get the name of one-half of its subject correct?
It’s FlemISH, not Fleming.
Geraldine. time for a refresher in Belgian history.
I think the term Flemish is an adjective or collective term, like “British,” whereas an individual is a Fleming, analogous to a “Briton.” I.e. the Flemish people are a bunch of Flemings.
Ain’t really that new. Remember Leon Dagrelle?
I prefer to refer to them as the “Phlegms.”
(Or just “Miserable Fat Belgian Bastards!”)
The country will be split by 2010...you can see it coming and almost everyone in Belgium has an opinion on it. The interesting thing...is that this split will have an effect on other countries as well. Germany’s Bavaria has a similar feeling being the “pump” of Germany. Most German politicians don’t want this topic to take off...realizing the impact on the rest of the country. If Bavaria were to split off...it’d be the most wealthy country in Europe within five years.
IF Bavaria split off and lowered it’s capital gains tax rates, tens of thousands of high net worth Bavarian families would repatriate their wealth to the Bavarian soil. Don’t see why the Swiss should be getting all that banking business anyway.
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