From the Netherlands to Suriname, pride is swelling at the number of Dutch players in Friday’s World Cup quarterfinal who trace their roots to the South American former colony.
On a pitch beneath the Amsterdam tower blocks where they grew up, two young friends of Surinamese origin practice free kicks and dream of wearing the Netherlands’ famed orange jersey.
“We’re people of color ourselves. It’s good that people of color have been so successful. We’re proud,” said Nigel Marengo, 18, a junior player for Heerenveen, a club whose first team is in the Eredivisie.
They idolize Dutch players like Virgil van Dijk, born in the Dutch city of Breda to a Dutch father and Surinamese mother; Denzel Dumfries, whose mother is from Suriname and whose father is from Aruba, the Caribbean island that is part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands; and Xavi Simons, whose father is of Surinamese descent.
Marengo and his friends will cheer on the “Oranje” against Argentina on Friday, in a match that he said will be tough but winnable, largely thanks to Van Dijk in defense.
“I’m happy that he chose to play for the Netherlands” instead of Suriname, the tiny Caribbean coast nation ranked 139 by FIFA, aded Marengo.
His friend Divayo Olf, 18, said that while it “drags down Suriname in terms of football … they were all born here or grew up here and they all started their careers here, so I understand their choice.”
The Netherlands boasts a long line of footballing legends with Surinamese heritage, from Ruud Gullit and Frank Rijkaard in the 1980s to Clarence Seedorf and Edgar Davids in the 1990s.
‘Historical connection’
But that also reflects the tangled history of the Netherlands as rulers of a string of colonies — including Suriname, which became independent in 1975 — that the Dutch are wrestling with to this day.
In the Surinamese capital Paramaribo, two huge TV screens hang on the wall of the Sportcafe Munder, a Suriname flag hangs in the middle, and the room is decorated with Dutch banners.
“I have been a fan of the Netherlands since 1978, because I grew up there. … And boys with a Surinamese background playing, that also plays a role,” said owner Ramesh Jagesar.
For Friday’s match they will serve Dutch meatball snacks called “bitterballen” with Netherlands flags on cocktail sticks.
But he adds that “you do have groups that are really against the Netherlands, they would rather go for Brazil or Argentina.”
Retired doctor Ruben del Prado said he was supporting the Dutch team.
“I love the Netherlands but my heart is in Suriname … there is a natural historical connection between them,” he said.
But Micky van Leeuwaarde will be wearing light blue instead of orange, as he is a member of the Argentina Fan Club of Suriname.
“This generation of football players with Surinamese roots means nothing to me,” he said. “I am more of the old generation: Seedorf, Davids and Rijkaard.”
He said he was born in 1978 when Argentina beat Netherlands in the World Cup final, loved Maradona and had been a fan all his life.
‘Makes me proud’
A corner kick away from Amsterdam’s famed Ajax stadium, a father and son recall the glory days of Dutch football and the key role players of Surinamese heritage have played in it.
“It’s important that the whole of Dutch society is represented in the national football team,” says Giovanni Qureshe, 21, behind the counter of his family’s Surinamese restaurant, P&G Roti. “That’s the case under the current manager Louis van Gaal. I am very proud that we, the Surinamese, are also part of the Netherlands team.
“And we’re doing very well, I hope we’ll be world champions!”
Despite the multicultural image of both the Netherlands and its football teams, racism remains a problem in a society where far-right parties command significant support.
Gullit, who led the Dutch to their only major trophy when they won the European Championships in 1988, complained of receiving racial abuse when he was one of only a few Black players.
But he has said that things have changed now that football has become more diverse.
Near the Ajax stadium, Urbian Fitz-James runs a shop selling products from his native Suriname but “will always have a link with the Netherlands.”
“When I see a Surinamese kid playing in the national team, of course it makes me proud,” he said.
A saleswoman in the shop, Xafiera Schipper, 34, believes that players from Suriname, where her parents were born, “would do better to play for their own country.”
But she adds: “That would mean the Dutch team wouldn’t be so strong anymore.”