NY400 on July 17th, 2009

NY400 Events: No Sleep till Breukelen

 

Danielle LatzmanBy Danielle Latman

American expat Danielle Latman takes the train to Breukelen, exploring the past, present and future of the two Brooklyns.

Present

The train ride from Amsterdam to Breukelen is a little different from the commute I used to take from Stuyvesant High School in lower Manhattan back home to Brooklyn. The train here passes through city streets to grassland dotted with grazing animals in less than half an hour.

I took the train in late June to attend Brooklyn Night, organised by the Breukelen gemeente (local government) to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the Dutch settling in New York.

One to two hundred Breukelenites, mostly native Dutch, gathered in Boom en Bosch, a park by the Town Hall, to watch videos of Brooklyn and eat hot dogs.

Breukelen Burgemeester (Mayor) Ger Mik, wearing a traditional chain of office, led children in a lantern competition and later to a dazzling fireworks display.

It was a warm show of friendship and community, but I couldn’t help wondering… what is the point? Why should anyone outside of tiny Breukelen care?

My answer came from Carla Koopmans, general manager of the gemeente. “If you don’t know your historical roots, you lack something,” she said.

Past

So I visited the related exhibit, “Breukelen-Brooklyn 400″, at the Regionaal Historisch Centrum. The one-room display, all in Dutch, uses old maps, newspaper clippings, books, videos and old materials to tell the story of the two Brooklyns.

The Dutch settled in Breukelen, a small section of the current Brooklyn that is now located around Borough Hall, in 1646. They developed five other towns as well: Gravesend, Nieuw Amersfoort (now Flatlands), Midwout (now Flatbush), Nieuw Utrecht, and Boswijk (Bushwick).

After the British takeover of New Amsterdam in the 1660s, many Brooklyn streets and neighbourhoods retained their Dutch names. Even the Brooklyn motto remains Dutch: “Een Draght Maakt Maght”, translated to “In Unity there is Strength”.

Future

So why is the bridge to Brooklyn – both physical and historical — important here?

“It’s a brand that has emotional value,” said Bram Donkers, project manager of BrooklynBridgeBreukelen, a small grassroots organisation aimed to re-establish the connection between the two places.. “A lot of Americans started in Brooklyn. For a lot of Americans the Brooklyn brand stands for coming home.

“We’d like to remain on the world map as the original Brooklyn,” he said.

I got on the train back home thinking that new Brooklyn may be key to old Breukelen’s survival.

 

About the author
Danielle Latman is a writer and editor from Brooklyn, NY now living in Amsterdam, NL. She currently works at Expatica.com, and her articles can be found at http://claimid.com/danielle_latman

 

RELATED FEATURES
-New York City Strenghens its Ties with the Dutch
-Brooklyn Revealed

Last 5 posts by NY400

NY400 Events No Comments

Trackback URI Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

I'm not a SPAMBOT!