โ€œRasta Ruudโ€ retires after blackface sparks social media storm

By Lucas De Jong Jun 19, 2024

A Dutch football fan who dressed up as his boyhood hero Ruud Gullit, complete with blackface make-up, for the Netherlandsโ€™ opening Euro 2024 match has pledged to put the outfit away after triggering a backlash on social media.

Bart van de Ven said he was โ€œshockedโ€ by the response to photographs of himself and two friends at the match against Poland that went viral on social media.

He told Omroep Brabant he was retiring his โ€œRasta Ruudโ€ persona after tweets denouncing the outfit as racist were shared on X, better known as Twitter, and picked up by newspapers including the UKโ€™s Daily Mail.

Van de Ven, from Breda, said the reactions โ€œset me thinkingโ€, but insisted he had not intended to cause offence. โ€œMaybe I made a mistake or itโ€™s a blind spot. The last thing I want to do is hurt people and thatโ€™s why Iโ€™ve decided to stop.โ€

Van de Ven said his costume of retro football shirt, bushy afro wig, fake moustache and blackface was intended as a tribute to the midfielder who scored the opening goal in the 1988 final, sending the Netherlands on their way to their only international trophy.

โ€œUnpleasant associationsโ€

โ€œIโ€™ve had a lot of really nice responses as well, but clearly there is a group who feel differently,โ€ he said. โ€œI have to respect that and listen to it. The last thing I want is for people to have a certain unpleasant association with my act.โ€

Van de Ven wore the outfit at World Cups and European Championship tournaments between 2008 and 2014, but kept it in his dressing-up box for the last 10 years.

But when Rasta Ruud came out again, it was into a world that had been changed by a long and intense debate about Zwarte Piet (black Pete), the helper who hands out presents with Sinterklaas (St Nicholas) on December 5.

Ten years ago the character was usually portrayed by white actors in blackface make-up, but after several years of protests against its racist connotations the childrenโ€™s TV show Sinterklaasjournaal and the carnival-style parades in major towns and cities introduced โ€œsooty Petesโ€ with soot-marked faces.

The prime minister, Mark Rutte, and king Willem-Alexander have apologised for the Netherlandsโ€™ slave trading past, in recent years, while Rutte has acknowleged that โ€œsystemic racismโ€ is a problem.

Tolerance under fire

Gullit himself called four years ago for an open discussion of racism in sport and society. โ€œWhat makes me angry most of all is when people say itโ€™s not so bad,โ€ he told Ziggo sports show Rondo.

However, the player has not responded to requests to comment on the latest controversy.

Sociologist Aspha Bijnaar, who specialises in colonial history at the University of Amsterdam, said many Dutch fans were aggravated by the suggestion that dressing up as Ruud Gullit could be seen as racist.

โ€œIt trips easily off the tongue to say itโ€™s not what you meant. But when people do that it ignores the impact of that intention,โ€ she told RTL Nieuws.

Arrogance

โ€œWe see the Netherlands as a tolerant country, we think we can say anything. Thatโ€™s a product of arrogance: โ€˜Who are they to say that we canโ€™t act out our โ€˜traditionsโ€™?โ€

Van de Ven said he had planned to wear the โ€œRasta Ruudโ€ outfit as a DJ at fan discos during Euro 2024 and donate his income to the Princess Maxima Centrum, a hospital specialising in childrenโ€™s cancer.

โ€œI do the act purely for my own enjoyment and wanted to raise money for a good causes as Rasta Ruud during the European championships,โ€ he said. โ€œThatโ€™s not happening now. If the fun stops, it stops for me too.โ€

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