‘She ought to have a little bit of me’: the Dutch moms combating for his or her youngsters to hold their surname

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‘She ought to have a little bit of me’: the Dutch moms combating for his or her youngsters to hold their surname

When 43-year-old Rebecca Lee took her beginning mom’s Korean surname, it was a revelation. “I used to be adopted and bought a Dutch identify however I by no means felt utterly Dutch,” she says. “When, just a few years in the past, I first went to Korea, issues fell into place. You don’t simply go ‘one, two, three’ and alter your identify, however now I really feel extra complete.”

The entrepreneur from Groningen cut up from her husband and desires to offer her five-year-old daughter “Lee” as a part of a double-barrelled surname – however she can’t, underneath a Dutch regulation that some girls, a leftwing MP and authorized consultants consider is unfair.

“[My ex] thinks I ought to carry my identify for longer earlier than I give it to her,” she says. “However she is with me half of the time and the opposite half along with her father, and I believe that she ought to have a little bit of me. She will be proud that she has Dutch and Korean blood.”

Lee is only one of a gaggle of girls who’ve gone to courtroom in an effort to cross on names to youngsters when their companions have refused, within the surprisingly old style Dutch system.

Till 1811, youngsters within the Netherlands mechanically took their father’s surname. From 1998, dad and mom might select one or the opposite. When a new regulation got here on this 12 months permitting double-barrelled names, dad and mom of these born from January 2016 additionally bought this proper – however provided that each dad and mom agree. And there’s a deadline of 31 December to register.

Ladies’s rights organisation Clara Wichmann is supporting girls who’ve taken their dispute to courtroom. “In our opinion, that is in contradiction with article 13 of the European conference on human rights – [the] proper to an efficient treatment,” mentioned Linde Bryk, its head of strategic courtroom circumstances.

“The regulation builds on a system by which primarily the daddy’s surname was handed on. This now disadvantages and not directly discriminates moms. The regulation is predicated on gender stereotypes that battle with the UN conference on the elimination of all types of discrimination towards girls … why is it not the default possibility {that a} baby receives the surname of each its dad and mom?”

Annemijn Niehof, from Amsterdam, is interesting after dropping a courtroom case to her former associate over the correct to vary her daughter’s identify. {Photograph}: Judith Jockel/The Observer

Because the organisation raised the difficulty, many have come ahead to say the Napoleonic system is sexist. Journalist Christel Don – whose son had no surname for six years as a result of she and her associate didn’t need to select – is happy however mentioned the regulation’s “shadowy facet” means girls are successfully discriminated towards.

GreenLeft-Labour MP Songül Mutluer believes the clumsy formulation of the regulation is a “textbook instance of intercourse discrimination” and has submitted parliamentary questions about it. “Ladies must seek the advice of their associate about which surname their baby will obtain, within the information that in the event that they don’t agree, they’ll get the quick straw,” she mentioned. “The regulation must be amended so it’s not solely the need of 1 mum or dad, the person, that’s decisive in stopping a second surname being registered.”

In contrast to the UK – the place anybody can change the identify by deed ballot – some European international locations have restrictive guidelines. A Dutch regulation wanted to be handed so that folks given denigrating “ex-enslaved” surnames might change them. College of Amsterdam affiliate cultural sociology professor Kobe De Keere mentioned that names carry class indicators and racial stigma: analysis has proven sure ethnic names are much less more likely to be invited for interview, as an illustration.

“Individuals completely do [make assumptions], though folks would undoubtedly say they don’t as a result of that matches the Dutch behavior of pretending that everyone is equal,” he mentioned.

A Dutch justice ministry spokesman mentioned the federal government was engaged on solutions to Mutluer’s questions. However for Annemijn Niehof, 46, from Amsterdam, passing on her household identify to her three-year-old daughter is so necessary that she is interesting after dropping in courtroom to her ex-partner. “She ought to know it is very important battle for equal rights,” she mentioned.

“She is called after [civil rights activist] Rosa Parks – that’s her center identify. Half of her is comprised of him, half from me. That’s her basis.”


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