Belgium may seem like a strong and unified state, but from
within Belgium is very divided between three regions: Flanders, Wallonia and
Brussels. But what is this disruption and when did it actually start?
Well, this
disruption begins in Roman times, where in the regions of Belgium there was a
fierce struggle between the Franks (today Germans) and the Roman Gauls (today
French). In the 4th and 5th centuries A.D. the war continued between the two
sides.
Only one
forest shared these hostile tribes. Even today, this forest is the borderline
between Flemish (German/Dutch section) and Wallonia (French section). When
finally the Franks took the territory they sought, they enforced there their
language, while the Gaulish was preserved in the south, which later turned into
French.
This
situation continued until 1830, when the Belgium province of the Netherlands
started massive riots, especially in the north. Soon, the south joined in, and
even thought the king of Netherlands, William I, tried to stop them, Belgium
was proclaimed independent.
This small
country was surrounded by the French and German Empire, and Flanders quickly
understood that Wallonia wanted to become the leading province and not
let Flanders have any representation in the new parliament. After this,
Flanders began reforming to proclaim independence, but French nobles in the
south wanted to stop this reform.
Very
soon the French stopped the reform and declared that the headship of the state
belonged to them. Even the Belgian constitution, in 1830, cited that "the
French are the majority of the population and they must be in charge. Another
article cited that " The Dutch population will be acknowledged by the
government, but as a minority, they have no rights to ask for state leadership
rights. " This was one of the biggest contradictory declarations in
history, because the Dutch were 61% of the population, and the French only 39%.
In
1896, Flanders started riots to declare Dutch as an official language. One big
step was the recognition of them as the majority of Belgium by Germany and the
Netherlands. After two years, in 1898, the Dutch was declared an official
language, but by 1962 it was not used in any formal letter of the government.
In
1963, Flanders officially requested that the constitution should be translated
to Dutch, so that the majority of the population could understand it. This
request was accepted in 1967, and until then the relations between the two
provinces were not stable.
Belgium
then took a series of reforms to establish a stable republic and to finally
bring peace. In 1970, the first reform created cultural communities, which was
the first territorial division between the two provinces. Then, in 1980, the
cultural communities were replaced with regions, and each region had
communities in it. After the two main regions (Flanders and Wallonia), the
third and fourth regions were created; respectively Brussels and the East
Cantons, which were the German part of the population.
In
the end, there were four regions: Flanders (Dutch); Walloon (French); Brussels
(bilingual French-Dutch) and East Cantons (German) and twelve communities, or
provinces today.
Unity
today is better in the sense of politics than the 1960s, but still not amazing.
During the political elections, the two main regions have many debates, as
residents are in equal numbers, and in each region their parties win. For
example, in the 2010 elections, pro-Flanders parties took all the seats of the
Flemish Regional Parliament, while the pro-Walloon parties took all the seats
in Wallonia. It took 541 days for the conflict to be resolved.
Stronger
separation effects are felt close to that separating forest, and especially in
Linkebeek and Voeren, where French tables are covered with graffiti. Even on
the other side of that forest, in Bawette and Waterloo, the tables are covered
with graffiti, but only the Dutch tables. Even in Brussels, in the bilingual
city, there is some tension.
So,
even though with different stories, Flanders and Wallonia try to coexist until
a major conflict brings the independence of these countries.
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