Brothers in arms - Thursday 7 July 2016
Transcription
Brothers in arms - Thursday 7 July 2016
#424 Erkenningsnummer P708816 APRIL 6, 2016 \ newsweekly - € 0,75 \ read more at www.flanderstoday.eu current affairs \ p2 Up and away Brussels Airport resumed a limited number of flights at the weekend following the terrorist attacks of 22 March \2 politics \ p4 BUSiNESS \ p6 Teaching the teachers innovation \ p7 education \ p9 art & living \ p10 Still number one Flemish educators help teachers in developing countries improve their courses and bring some of their ideas back to Flanders After nearly 40 years and an internet revolution, Humo’s Rock Rally competition is still pulling in the bands – and the fans \9 \ 13 Brothers in arms © Courtesy In Flanders Fields Museum A new exhibition offers tribute to Canada’s involvement in the First World War Denzil Walton Follow Denzil on Twitter \ @AllWriteDenz During the First World War, many Canadian soldiers crossed the Atlantic to defend Belgium’s freedom, others joined in search of adventure; but as a new exhibition at the In Flanders Fields Museum in Ypres shows, a great number of them paid the ultimate price T heodore Linscott Glasgow was born on 25 May 1898 in Montreal, Canada, the eldest son of Robert and Louise Glasgow. A bright boy, he studied at the University of Toronto and the Royal Military College in Kingston. In August 1916, at the age of 18, Glasgow was recruited by the British Royal Naval Air Service, the predecessor of the current Royal Air Force. The following summer, after almost a year’s training, he was sent with the 10th Squadron to the Western front in Flanders. One month later, on 19 August 1917, the young flight sublieutenant was killed in action over Ypres and buried in Mendinghem Military Cemetery in Poperinge. He was 19 years old. Glasgow was far from the only young Canadian to lose his life in Flanders. As the new exhibition at Ypres’ In Flanders Fields Museum shows, by the time the Armistice was signed, over 60,000 of his compatriots had been killed during the course of the First World War. When Britain went to war on 4 August 1914, all colonies and dominions of the British Empire, such as Canada, were automatically at war, too. The man in charge of the Canadian war effort was Sam Hughes, the Minister of Militia and Defence. He acted quickly and decisively. The day after the British declaration of war, Hughes announced that Canada would send an infantry division of 25,000. Most, but by no means all, Canadians greeted the outbreak of war with enthusiasm; there was much marching and singing in the streets. Those who opposed the war largely stayed silent. Even in Quebec, where pro-British sentiment was traditionally low, there was little apparent hostility to the country’s war effort. Consequently, thousands showed up at their local recruiting stations eager to “do their bit”. Many of them had been born in Britain, or had strong emotional ties to the country. The first contingent was 70% British-born, although many had lived in Canada for years and considered themselves Canadian. The percentage of native-born Canadians would increase throughout the war until, by 1918, more than half of the Canadian Expeditionary Force would be Canadian-born. Their reasons for signing up were much the same as those of continued on page 5 \ CURRENT AFFAIRS First flights after terrorist attack resume at airport Limited flights leaving from and arriving at Brussels Airport this week Alan Hope Follow Alan on Twitter \ @AlanHopeFT A small number of flights resumed from Brussels Airport on Sunday, the first since the terrorist attacks of 22 March, when two suicide bombers blew themselves up in the departures hall. On Sunday, three flights arrived from and departed to Faro, Turin and Athens. Some 20 departures were scheduled for Monday as Flanders Today went to press. The first departure, SN1901 to Faro in Portugal, was assigned to Magritte, the Brussels Airlines Airbus decorated in tribute to the surrealist artist. The plane was launched to the public and press one day before the bomb attacks. The flight (pictured) carried 80 passengers and taxied past a parade of airport emergency services on take-off. “After 12 days during which there were no Brussels Airlines flights from Zaventem, seeing Magritte take to the skies is Clashes between protestors and police in Brussels Last weekend saw clashes in the Brussels municipality of Molenbeek as some 100 local youths attempted to break up a planned demonstration by an anti-Islamic group. Police intervened, and 99 people were arrested. Most were later released, but two men were held after a hit-and-run incident in which a woman on the street was seriously injured. The right-wing group had asked permission to demonstrate, which was refused. The request, however, caught the attention of local youths. Very few of the right-wing group members showed up, and the youths tried to make their way to Beursplein in the centre of the capital, under the impression that the demonstration might be taking place there, where there is a memorial to the victims of the 22 March terrorist attacks. Police tried to prevent them, and clashes ensued. The violence followed an incident when some 450 football hooligans interrupted a memorial on Easter Sunday at Beursplein for the victims of the attacks. Members of the group stepped on flowers, messages and other items placed by the hundreds on Beursplein and confronted Muslims in the crowd. The group, calling itself “Casuals Against Terrorism”, had gathered in Vilvoorde before travelling on to Brussels. The incident has led to criticism among politicians, with Brussels mayor Yvan Mayeur claiming that “Flanders is polluting Brussels with its extremism”. \ AH © Reuters a first step,” said Bernard Gustin, CEO of Brussels Airlines. “This is a symbol of Belgium that offers hope, but also shows Death toll from bombings at 32, prime minister was possible target The death toll from the 22 March attacks at Brussels Airport and Maalbeek metro station has now reached 32, after four of the seriously injured victims died in hospital. All of the dead have now been identified. The number of injured is approximately 340. There are more than 90 patients still in hospitals in Belgium, 55 of them in intensive care. Thirty victims are in specialist burns units in Belgium, France and the US. There has also been an update on the identities of the three suicide bombers responsible for the two attacks. The second bomber at the airport is confirmed to have been Najim Lachraaoui, who blew himself up together with Ibrahim El Bakraoui. El Bakraoui’s brother, Khalid, blew himself up on the metro at Maalbeek. Belgian and French investigators are also looking for a new suspect, Naim al-Hamed, whose DNA was found in the house where the bombs were made in Schaarbeek. According to a report in De Tijd, meanwhile, the terrorists were also planning an attack on the prime minister’s office at 16 Wetstraat or at his official residence on the nearby Lambermontstraat. The information, according to the paper, was obtained from a computer found at the bombers’ apartment in Schaarbeek, which contained plans of both the buildings and photos taken from the street. The 30% employer's contribution to social security charges from 1 April, down from 32.4% as part of the federal government's tax shift. The contribution will go down further to 25% in 2018 \2 that we will never forget what happened here.” Crucial to the decision to restart passenger services was the agreement reached with unions representing Brussels Airport police, involving a review of security measures at the airport after the attacks. The airport is currently only accessible by car or taxi via car park 2. A connection with public transport will be established as soon as possible, airport management said. Cars and passengers will be subject to extra checks, including a number-plate scan. Only passengers can enter the airport and must pass through a metal detector before entering the terminal. Check-in takes place in the connector building. Passengers are advised to arrive at least three hours before their flight and to closely follow instructions from security staff. © Laurie Dieffembacq/BELGA India’s prime minister Narendra Modi (left) visits with Belgian prime minister Charles Michel prime minister’s spokesperson said additional security measures have been put in place. Michel met with India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, last week during an official visit, when Modi laid a wreath at Maalbeek metro station in memory of the victims of the attack there, who included an Indian national. King Filip is due to make a state visit to India next year, to mark the 70th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two countries. In related news, Dutch police claimed last week that they had informed their Belgian counterparts of the criminal and extremist background of the El Bakraoui brothers on 17 March, five days before the suicide bombings. A tip from the FBI to Dutch authorities was delivered one day earlier, on 16 March, and, according to Dutch justice minister Ard van der Steur, concerned “the criminal background of Ibrahim El Bakraoui and the radical and terrorist background of his brother Khalid. On 17 March, this was also discussed in a bilateral contact between Dutch and Belgian police services”. The director-general of Belgium’s judicial police, Claude Fontaine, denied any such communication. “On 17 March, a Dutch colleague visited the federal judicial police. During the visit, various information was given regarding the operation in Vorst on 15 March,” said Fontaine. “No mention was made of a message the FBI may have sent to Dutch police.” Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte, meanwhile, said that the FBI had told authorities in his country that, in any case, their information came from Belgium. “The FBI told us,” said Rutte that these men were on the wanted list in Belgium.” The situation adds to the awkward questions facing federal home affairs minister Jan Jambon, in charge of the police. Jambon had already faced questions about a warning Turkey said it had transmitted to Belgium about suspected terrorist links in connection with Ibrahim El Bakraoui, who was turned out of Turkey last year after travelling there illegally while on parole in Belgium. Back in Belgium, he was not returned to prison for breaking the conditions of his parole. \ AH 111,355 job applicants screened every year by the National Security Authority for positions requiring security clearance, including jobs at Brussels Airport. Only 1% of screenings are negative tonnes of old electrical and electronic appliances collected in 2015 by Recupel, with an increase of 10% in small appliances and 7% in large appliances such as washing machines 37 passengers carried on the inland network by the national rail authority NMBS in 2015, an increase on the previous year of 0.9%. Trains covered a total of 77.9 million kilometres asylum seekers are the subject of screenings for possible links to the Islamic State. According to the justice ministry, none pose a direct threat at this time APRIL 6, 2016 WEEK in brief Slovakia’s Peter Sagan won the 100th edition of the Ronde van Vlaanderen, or Tour of Flanders, road cycle race at the weekend. The current UCI Road World Champion held off Switzerland’s Fabian Cancellara, who was hoping for a record-breaking fourth Flanders win in his final season. Cancellara finished second and Flemish rider Sep Vanmarcke third. Pre-race favourite Greg Van Avermaet was forced out with a suspected broken collarbone following a crash. The UK’s Lizzie Armitstead won the women’s edition of the Ronde, edging out Sweden’s Emma Johansson by a whisker. Police in Brussels have issued an appeal to residents and companies to keep recordings from their security cameras, in case the images might be useful to the investigation into the March terrorist attacks. The appeal concerns any camera that has a view, even partial, of public streets from the period 15 to 31 March. The images should be stored but not handed over to police at this point. Details can be found on the federal police’s website. \ tinyurl.com/securityfootage The number of Belgian chocolatiers has doubled in the last five years, from 259 at the end of 2009 to 543 now, according to figures from the economy ministry. According to NSZ, the union for the self-employed, many bakers have retrained to work in chocolate, which also allows them to escape night shifts. According to a poll of chocolatiers, chocolate is becoming more and more popular, especially products without allergens such as nuts. New arrivals planning on remaining in Belgium for more than three months will in future be required to sign a “newcomer's declaration” of allegiance to common European values, the federal government has decided. The obligation does not extend to those with an automatic right to entry, including EU citizens, asylum seekers and students. Those who refuse to sign will be refused entry, and those who face of flanders refuse to make a “reasonable effort” to integrate will not have their residency permit extended. The declaration covers the right to freedom of expression, assembly, religion and sexual orientation, as well as equality of the sexes and opposition to violence, terrorism and forced marriage. Police investigating the baby who was found dead at a bus stop in Sint-Genesius-Rode in January have issued a new call for witnesses. The infant was found in a shoebox behind the Elvis Presley bus stop on Steenweg naar Grote Hut, close to the border with the Brussels municipality of Ukkel. Any information can be reported to 0800 30 300. Nearly half of all female drivers in Belgium have never had a traffic fine, according to figures from the motoring association VAB. That compares to 27% of male drivers. Last year, 15% of all drivers received a speeding fine. In nine out of 10 cases, the infraction was determined by a mobile or fixed speed camera. People should stop feeding birds until the start of the winter season later this year, the bird protection charity Vogelbescherming Vlaanderen has advised. Entering the mating season and following a mild winter, there is now enough food available in nature. Birds need to provide their newly hatched chicks with animal matter, such as worms, spiders and caterpillars; baby birds are unable to digest seeds and nuts from birdfeeders. Family organisation Kind & Gezin last year received 654 complaints relating to child care centres, down from 804 in 2014 and 860 in 2012, according to figures provided to parliament by Flemish welfare minister Jo Vandeurzen. Most complaints are regarding communication, followed by safety and staff training. Federal home affairs minister Jan Jambon met with US secretary OFFSIDE Leo Not Happy It’s one thing to be half-eaten by a bear and left by your comrades for dead; the thing that really annoys Leonardo DiCaprio, as we know now, is the state of the planet. So he was the obvious mascot for a new campaign against rubbish in the streets, launched by one Adel on Instagram. With his campaign #LeoNotHappy, Adel, a 25-year-old marketing student, wants to highlight the sheer quantity of rubbish lying around on Brussels streets. Adel takes photos of the rubbish, always for homeland security, Jeh Johnson, in Washington, DC, last week, where he was attending a conference on nuclear safety. Johnson promised Jambon any help Belgium might need in tracking down those responsible for the March bomb attacks in Brussels. “It is important that we come together, we collaborate, we share resources and information, and that's part of the reason we're here today,” Johnson said. According to De Standaard newspaper, the reason that Daarna, the Flemish-Moroccan cultural centre – formerly known as Daarkom – must move from its home in central Brussels’ Gaité theatre is because the original rental contract was illegal. Former Flemish culture minister Bert Anciaux signed the contract, despite negative advice from the finance ministry and former Flemish budget minister. The contract commits the government of Flanders to pay the €275,000 annual rent until 2021. Anciaux’s successor, Sven Gatz, last month started a search for a new home for the organisation. The parents of a young Antwerp woman who died in 2009 during an exorcism ceremony – designed to cure her lesbianism – have been given harsher sentences on appeal. Layla Hachichi’s mother and father had been sentenced to five years suspended, but the appeal court sentenced them to three years and one year to be served in prison. The so-called exorcist had his prison sentence of 10 years confirmed. Hachichi, 18, died after the exorcist used boiling water and corrosive chemicals in his treatment. The City of Brussels has awarded honorary citizenship to Woltje, the first marionette to receive the honour. Woltje is the mascot of the Royal Theatre of Toone, the puppet theatre and pub established 50 years ago in a narrow alley near Grote Markt. It still offers marionette productions of classics from Shakespeare to Rostand in Brussels dialect. “This traditional and authentic puppet theatre deserves a place of honour in our city,” said Brussels-City mayor Yvan Mayeur. instagram.com/leonothappy © Courtesy LeoNotHappy accompanied – and this where you see the difference between a mere activist and a talented marketer – by a shoebox with DiCapriesque features pulling a disdainful face. “I believe in the power of humour to solve even very negative situations,” Adel told brusselsnieuws. be. “You don’t get anywhere with aggression and extreme points of view. That funny side piques the curiosity. When I started, I would see rubbish on the street from time to time. Now I see it everywhere; nothing gets past me. Campaigning turns to action on 23 April, which in Brussels is CleanUp Day. Adel plans a major operation with the blessing of Net Brussel. Point of departure: Beursplein at noon. \ AH © Delmi Alvarez/BELGA Arnaud Feist Three flights took off from Brussels Airport on Sunday, and three landed. No-one knows what might have been going through the minds of those passengers, but nobody will have breathed a sigh of relief like Arnaud Feist, the CEO of Brussels Airport Company. For Feist, it was the quiet return to normality after a nightmare lasting nearly two weeks. Nobody who was present that Tuesday morning at Zaventem will ever forget the experience. Feist was in his office in the Satelliet building at the airport, and in the days that followed the two suicide bombings in the departures hall. He later wrote an open letter to airport workers, praising them for their “superhuman courage” in tending the injured, helping the emergency services and leading the ambulant to safety. “Take the time to work through all of that,” he advised his staff. “A team of professionals is ready if you need them.” Feist himself would have no time to reflect and process the shock. The airport remained closed in the days that followed, flights diverted to as far as Lille and Frankfurt, the company haemorrhaging money. The necessary forensic investigations had to be carried out, and the clean-up happened as quickly as possible, ready for a major test last Tuesday – one week after the attacks – to see if the airport could open even partially. But then the airport police stopped everything, refusing to go back to work until something was done about “mismanagement” of the security situation. All four levels of the airport building were accessible to anyone, they complained. Badges were given out without adequate screening, and serious lapses in security were not reported to the government. The federal government and police unions came to an agreement last Friday, allowing the airport to re-open by baby steps, starting on Sunday. “The passengers will not receive the quality service they are used to from us,” Feist warned. “But we can’t do it any other way. We are trying to get things back to normal as quickly as possible.” \ Alan Hope Flanders Today, a weekly English-language newspaper, is an initiative of the Flemish Region and is financially supported by the Flemish authorities. The logo and the name Flanders Today belong to the Flemish Region (Benelux Beeldmerk nr 815.088). The editorial team of Flanders Today has full editorial autonomy regarding the content of the newspaper and is responsible for all content, as stipulated in the agreement between Corelio Publishing and the Flemish authorities. Editor Lisa Bradshaw DEPUTY Editor Sally Tipper CONTRIBUTING Editor Alan Hope sub Editor Bartosz Brzeziński Agenda Robyn Boyle, Georgio Valentino Art director Paul Van Dooren Prepress Mediahuis AdPro Contributors Rebecca Benoot, Derek Blyth, Leo Cendrowicz, Andy Furniere, Lee Gillette, Diana Goodwin, Clodagh Kinsella, Catherine Kosters, Toon Lambrechts, Ian Mundell, Anja Otte, Tom Peeters, Senne Starckx, Christophe Verbiest, Denzil Walton General manager Hans De Loore Publisher Mediahuis NV Editorial address Gossetlaan 30 - 1702 Groot-Bijgaarden tel 02 467 23 06 [email protected] subscriptions tel 03 560 17 49 [email protected] or order online at www.flanderstoday.eu Advertising 02 467 24 37 [email protected] Verantwoordelijke uitgever Hans De Loore \3 \ POLITICS 5TH COLUMN A Brussels police reform? The 22 March bombings have left this country in shock. The inability to fathom that such an atrocity could happen to us is comparable only to the Dutroux era. By the time serial killer Marc Dutroux was caught in 1996, girls had been disappearing for months. Not much attention was given to it, until two teenagers were found alive in one of Dutroux’s houses. In the days that followed, the bodies of four more girls were found on his premises. The then prime minister, JeanLuc Dehaene (CD&V), considered these his darkest days in politics. He later admitted that he and his government had been so involved in getting Belgium into the eurozone that they never noticed the failing police and justice system. After the events, a parliamentary committee looked into these failings, leading to a reform of the federal police (but not the justice system). Will Belgium have a similar catharsis now? Another parliamentary committee was set up last week, to investigate how the terrorist networks responsible for the Paris and Brussels bombings went undetected. The outcome, many hope, will be similar to the reforms facilitated by the Dutroux committee in the late 1990s. That explains some of the political nervousness since the bombings. Whereas prime minister Charles Michel (MR) has been widely praised for his serene and guarded initial response after the events, the political debate has heated up since. N-VA’s Bart De Wever has pointed the finger at Philippe Moureaux (PS), the previous mayor of Sint-Jans-Molenbeek, who he holds responsible for much of what went wrong in this Brussels municipality. Brussels-City mayor Yvan Mayeur (PS), meanwhile, has accused both federal interior minister Jan Jambon (N-VA) and Vilvoorde mayor Hans Bonte (SP.A) of failing to stop 400 football hooligans from rioting at the memorial site at the Brussels Beurs. What all of this will lead to remains to be seen, but one thing that is definitely on the table is the unification of the six Brussels police zones. Flemish parties have long been demanding this for reasons of efficiency, but Brussels politicians like Moureaux and Mayeur have always refused. In any city the size of Brussels, some decentralisation is needed, they argued. A unified police, however, would also result in a loss of power for these Brussels politicians. Plenty to be nervous about. \ Anja Otte \4 Government gives green light to vision for Flanders 2050 Ministerial teams to see through long-term priorities for region Alan Hope Follow Alan on Twitter \ @AlanHopeFT T he government of Flanders has approved its long-term vision for the region, Visie 2050. The plan was submitted to stakeholders for consideration last September. According to the government, Visie 2050 aims to create “a strong, social, open, resilient and international Flanders” that promotes wealth and welfare in “a smart, innovative and sustainable manner”. The updated version of the plan includes vision on social policy, labour market and the inclusion of immigrants. It also nominates ministers who will appoint transition managers and map out the government’s strategy in various areas. Environment minister Joke Schauvliege and finance minister Philippe Muyters will work together on the transition towards a circular © Spotter2/Wikimedia economy that makes more efficient use of materials and energy. The two will be joined by minister-president Geert Bourgeois in taking steps towards “industry 4.0” – a more digitalised industry that includes artificial intelligence, 3D printing, robotics, and more. Muyters will also team up with education minister Hilde Crevits on the subject of lifelong learning, while Bourgeois joins housing minister Liesbeth Homans on finding smarter ways of living. Health care and welfare sees minister Jo Vandeurzen team up with culture minister Sven Gatz, while fast and safe mobility will become the domain of minister Ben Weyts, who will work with Schauvliege. Finally, minister Annemie Turtelboom will oversee the transition to sustainable energy. The next phase of Visie 2050 will work out a broad plan of approach that will establish a time-frame and generate public support for the programme. The plans will also be submitted to the Flemish Parliament for approval. Weyts announces €2 billion for improvements to Brussels Ring Belgium has too many emergency departments, says KCE Large-scale works on the Brussels Ring will begin in 2019 and cost an estimated €2 billion, Flemish public works minister Ben Weyts has announced. The biggest part of the project is the creation of parallel lanes over 20 kilometres, splitting local traffic from through traffic, in an attempt to reduce the number of lane changes. There is a fourth lane planned for the Vilvoorde viaduct, and three new tramlines will be added, as well as 41km of cycling infrastructure and green areas. The main problems with the Ring are the lack of alternatives to using a car and the number of lane changes required, which are a major factor in the 1,100 accidents that take place on the road every year. Some 102,000 people a day use the capital’s Ring Road, most of which is located in Flanders. The works include cycle paths, 10 cycle bridges and nine tunnels, for a total cost of €70 million. The Belgium has too many accident and emergency (A&E) departments, according to the Belgian Health Care Knowledge Centre (KCE). Some of them should be closed, the centre has suggested, and the budget and expertise spread over a smaller number of departments. The agency carried out an inquiry into the functioning and financing of A&Es and spoke to representatives of medical staff, hospital administration and government. They also looked at how neighbouring countries organise their systems. Belgium has an average of 1.24 A&Es for every 100,000 inhabitants, compared to 0.33 in the UK and 0.54 in the Netherlands. Belgians also visit A&E more often: an average of 290 consultations per 1,000 inhabitants in 2012, compared to 264 in the UK and 124 in the Netherlands. “Budget and staff for A&Es are inadequate in this country because they have to be shared new tramlines mean an investment of €500 million, but they will replace some 20,000 cars on the Ring every day, Weyts said. The lines – Brussels to Willebroek, Brussels to Brussels Airport and Jette to Brussels Airport – form the new Brabantnet. “Flemish Brabant is the beating heart of the country, but everyone is standing still,” said Weyts, who was born in Leuven and still lives in the province. “To move forward will take spades in the ground of Flemish Brabant.” If works stay on schedule, they will be completed in four years. The government of Flanders approved a proposal last week to simplify the procedure involved in taking over private property for public projects. Expropriations will be more limited in this case than usual, Weyts promised – “more a question of ground than homes,” he said. He expects about 10 homes to be involved in the expropriation process. \ AH among too many hospitals,” said Koen Van den Heede, co-author of the report. Almost every hospital in Belgium has its own A&E, which in cities means there is a concentration of emergency departments. That proximity of A&E leads patients to make use of the departments for complaints that ought to be dealt with by a general practitioner (GP), which, the centre argued, would be faster and less expensive. KCE also proposed that remaining A&Es should have a GP practice attached, which could be open 24 hours and handle the simpler cases. The report did not go into which departments, or how many, it thought should close. Federal health minister Maggie De Block, herself a GP, agreed that something has to be done about the A&E situation. The recent terrorist attacks, she said, “showed that a well-organised, high performance emergency service has enormous value. But that’s not an answer to overcapacity.” \ AH Bourgeois honours Red Cross rapid response volunteers Flemish minister-president Geert Bourgeois paid tribute last week to volunteers with the Flemish Red Cross who took part in the emergency response to the 22 March terrorist attacks at Brussels Airport and Maalbeek metro station. He also honoured those who worked to help the city recover afterwards. Among the first to respond to both bombing sites was the Red Cross’ Rapid Intervention Team, which responded together with 30 ambulances to transport the injured to area hospitals. The Red Cross, together with the army, provided beds, sanitary supplies and blankets to some 1,300 people stranded at the airport, who had been taken into temporary shelter at barracks in Vilvoorde and Leuven. Teams of volunteers looked after the disoriented and frightened victims, many of who were foreign travellers. Members of the Red Cross © Laurie Dieffembacq/BELGA Youth provided activities for the children. Specially trained volunteers staffed emergency telephone numbers, handling queries from distressed relatives, while others carried out interviews with family members to make identification of victims easier. Others organised the transport of bodies from inside the airport to the Leuven University Hospital. Bourgeois will meet some 400 volunteers in the Red Cross building Sango in Mechelen this afternoon to thank them personally and talk to them about their experiences. In related news, last week’s friendly match between the Red Devils and Portugal in Leiria included a tribute to the victims of the attacks. During the singing of the national anthems, the players stood in mixed ranks, wearing shirts with the message: “In memory of all victims Brussels, 22.03.2016”. Fans carried banners reading “Ik ben Brussel” and waved Belgian flags. The Portuguese sports daily A Bola devoted its front page to the colours of the Belgian flag, with the message “Today we are also Belgians”. The match had originally been planned for Brussels but was switched to Leiria following the attacks. \ AH \ COVER STORY APRIL 6, 2016 Brothers in arms Canada in Flanders tells the story of arduous journey and ultimate sacrifice INFLANDERSFIELDS.BE continued from page 1 soldiers from the UK or anywhere else. Many Canadians were shocked by Germany’s brutal invasion of Belgium. Others saw war as a romantic adventure, an opportunity to escape the monotony of work – or the economic recession that Canada was experiencing. Recruits were given basic training at the hastily built camp at Valcartier, Quebec. Only two months after the outbreak of war, on 3 October 1914, the first 32,000-strong contingent of the Canadian Expeditionary Force sailed for the UK. The journey across the Atlantic took two weeks. After arriving at Plymouth, the soldiers disembarked and boarded trains for Salisbury Plain in the southwest of England. Here, the Canadians trained for four months, most of it in terrible mud, as England was experiencing one of its wettest winters in decades. Little did they know that this was nothing compared to the mud of Flanders in which they would soon be mired. The haste to send forces had unfortunate consequences. The soldiers’ boots, for instance, proved unable to withstand the UK’s wet weather. “Our nice soft Canadian brown shoes quickly took on the appearance of soggy moccasins,” recalled William Peden of the 8th Battalion. Backpacks were dumped because they were uncomfortable and could not carry enough ammunition. The trucks brought over were scrapped because spares could not be found. The horse-drawn wagons were found to be too flimsy. Re-equipped with British Army’s equipment, by February 1915 the Canadian Expeditionary Force – organised into combat formations, the largest of which was the Canadian Corps – had taken up positions along the Western front in France and Belgium. They were soon called into action. In April 1915, the 1st Canadian Division fought in the Second Battle of Ypres. The outnumbered Canadians faced not only the German guns but also a newly released weapon: chlorine gas. Ypres was the site of the first mass use of this chemical as a battlefield agent. Lieutenant-Colonel George Nasmith, a Canadian chemist charged with testing drinking water, was the first to identify the cloud of greenish-yellow gas rolling towards the Canadian positions. He told the men around him to urinate on their cotton handkerchiefs and hold them over their noses. It wasn’t particularly effective, but it was probably better than nothing. As the battle progressed, a third of the force – 6,000 soldiers – were killed, wounded or captured. But the Canadians kept the Germans from breaking through. © Courtesy In Flanders Fields Museum St Julien Canadian Memorial, also known as the Brooding Soldier, at Vancouver Corner, Ypres Salient By October 1916, with the Canadian government ensuring a steady stream of soldiers crossing the Atlantic, the Canadian Corps had grown to four infantry divisions supported by strong artillery, cavalry, engineers and auxiliary forces. There was a total of more than 80,000 men. In the autumn of 1917, LieutenantGeneral Sir Arthur Currie led the Canadian Corps during the Battle of Passchendaele. Canadian troops played a key role in the battle, although they suffered huge losses: 16,000 killed or wounded. “Of all the battlefields in which Canadians fought during this war, Passchendaele was by far the worst,” writes John Marteinson in his illustrated history of the Canadian Army, We Stand on Guard. Canadian men and women served in many different capacities during the First World War. Members of the Canadian Forestry Corps cut timber; Canadian railway troops operated light railway networks immediately behind the lines; medical units and Canadian Nursing Sisters served on the Western Front. Canadian airmen – like Theodore Glasgow – distinguished themselves serving in British air forces, as fighter and reconnaissance pilots, aerial observers, mechanics and flight instructors. By the end of the war, some 619,000 Canadians had enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force for service overseas. This was an enormous contribution from a country of just under 8 million in 1914. Approximately 7% of the total population of Canada was in uniform at some point during the conflict, and hundreds of thousands of additional Canadians worked on the home front in support of the war effort. ern front. But the final casualty figures make stark reading. Out of over 600,000 who enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, more than 60,000 were killed and 172,000 wounded. On the occasion of the commemoration of the centennial anniversary of the Battles of Mount Sorrel and Hill 62 (2-13 June 1916), the Our nice soft Canadian brown shoes quickly took on the appearance of soggy moccasins While initially consisting mostly of white British-born Canadians, the Canadian Expeditionary Force also included other cultural groups: aboriginals of the First Nations, black Canadians and Americans, and even West Indians from the island of Bermuda. Canadians were in the forefront of the Allied advance that finally defeated Germany. By the end of the war, Canadian soldiers had come to be regarded as exceptional fighters. Both Allied and German military commanders considered the Canadian Corps as one of the most effective Allied military formations on the West- exhibition Canada in Flanders in Ypres examines how Canada in Flanders – as well as Flanders in Canada – lives on in many ways 100 years on. The exhibition traces the lives and deaths of a number of Canadian soldiers during the First World War. Their stories are backed up by a wealth of original material. These include hopeful letters written to fearful parents and emotional notes scribbled to anguished sweethearts on picture postcards Until 3 July of Ypres, but also cigarette packs with trading cards that would have been swapped during card games in the trenches. There are Brodie helmets with holes drilled in them to carry cap badges, and gas masks that make you wonder whether or not they were put on in time. You can also find fascinating aerial photos, monochrome snaps of desolation and despair, as well as hastily drawn sketches and painstakingly composed poems. Canada in Flanders wouldn’t be complete without a profile of the war’s most famous Canadian – John McCrae, writer of the wellknown poem “In Flanders Fields”, which led to the adoption of the poppy as a symbol of Remembrance Day. But McCrae does not outshine other Canadian writers who served in and wrote about the war in Flanders and who remained undeservedly in his shadow: Robert Service, Frank Prewett, Harry Amoss, Frank S Brown and Robert Stanley Weir. And if you look carefully, you might find a poem written not by a soldier, but by a soldier’s mother: “At Mendinghem near Provan, NW of Ypres”. It’s attributed to Louise C Glasgow, mother of young Theodore. In Flanders Fields Museum Grote Markt 34, Ypres \5 \ BUSINESS week in business Air Brussels Airlines Brussels Airlines has drawn up plans for an immediate return to Brussels Airport as soon as it is ready to open again after the attacks of 22 March. Priority will go to long-haul flights to Africa and North America, spokesperson Geert Sciot said. Meanwhile, Ryanair said it would fly out of Charleroi until at least 7 April. Cinemas Kinepolis Cinema chain Kinepolis must sell off two cinemas belonging to Utopolis in order for its takeover of Utpolis to be approved by competition authorities. The cinemas, in Mechelen and Aarschot, need to be sold to prevent the new group becoming too dominant. Fitness Basic Fit The Basic Fit chain is the latest to sign on to consumer affairs minister Kris Peeters’ code of conduct for fitness centres, bringing the number to 320 out of a total of 800 in the country. The code covers matters like automatic prolonging of membership and the ability to rescind a contract on medical advice. Hotels BHA The Brussels Hotel Association has called for the government to take urgent measures as hotel occupancy in Brussels dropped below 20% during the Easter holidays, following the terrorist attacks and the closure of Brussels Airport. Retail Metro Germany’s Metro group, parent company of Makro and Media Markt, is to split in two, the company said. Metro will continue to operate wholesale and food activities, including Makro, while consumer electronics – Media Markt and Saturn – will be hived off under a new company. Temping Accent Jobs Management at the temp agency has succeeded in convincing its staff not to stand in union elections. As the deadline for nominations passed, no-one from Accent had put their name forward, earning each member of the company’s 800-strong workforce a new smartphone and an extra day’s holiday. \6 €47 million fund to bring top scientists to Flanders Odysseus programme to establish 25 research groups for five years Andy Furniere More articles by Andy \ flanderstoday.eu T he Flemish Fund for Scientific Research is investing €47.5 million to attract top international scientists to Flanders. Through the Odysseus programme, 25 researchers will receive substantial funding for five years. The scientists will start working at one of the five Flemish universities from 1 October. The largest budget was allocated to Indian-American microbiologist Kodi Ravichandran, who receives €7.5 million to swap the University of Virginia in the US for Ghent University (UGent). Italian medical scientist Andrea Cerutti gets €6.2 million to come to UGent, after working at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. In total, 25 researchers of seven nationalities will come to Flanders. Fifteen are Belgians returning after a stint abroad. Among them are medical scientist Annelies van Rie, who will move from the University of North Carolina in the US to Antwerp University, and physicist Mounem Mouazen Abdul, who moves from Cranfield University in the UK to UGent. Ten researchers go to the University of Leuven, six to UGent and five to the Free University of Brussels (VUB). The universities of Antwerp and Hasselt each welcome two new scientists. The funding will be used to set up research groups led by the scientists. In total, the investment will create jobs for 134 extra researchers. University of Virginia’s chair of microbiology and immunology, Kodi Ravichandran, will spend the next five years in Ghent Zeebrugge loses major Far East container service Pop-up initiatives to take over vacant shops in Antwerp The port of Zeebrugge has lost one of the most important Far East container shipping services in the world, according to the trade magazine Flows. As a result, the port is left with only one such service. According to Flows, Zeebrugge was dropped out of the shipping loop of AEX1/AEC1/FAL8 Service. This particular loop, which is made up of preset routes for container ships, is serviced by the United Arab Shipping Company, which includes some of the largest ships in the world, each capable of carrying close to 20,000 containers. Ships that are on their way to Zeebrugge will be handled at APM Terminals; the last of them is scheduled to arrive at the port on 6 May. The next container ship destined for Belgium was set to begin loading last week in Qingdao, China, but from then on the shipping schedules show no more arrivals at Zeebrugge. According to Flows, Zeebrugge has been dropped from the loop because of insufficiently large volumes. The port now retains only one service from the Far East, the FAL1. \ AH On 16 April, a group of start-ups is taking over eight vacant shops on Bredabaan in Antwerp’s Merksem district. The team of 14 entrepreneurs will spend the next 11 weeks trying out concepts on one of the city’s busiest shopping streets. The start-ups range from children’s clothing to street food to upcycling second-hand furniture. “There’s been a lot of interest among the entrepreneurs involved in this project,” said the project leader, Dette van Zeeland. “Pop-up Bredabaan has created a lot of new collaborations.” WoRkpalace, formerly a Chinese restaurant known as Wokpalace, is a co-working project. The five women behind Droom, on the other hand, offer creative Two major takeovers in transport sector Two major takeovers in the transport sector took place last week: Genk-based H Essers took over the West Flanders family firm Verstraete of Moorslede, and Antwerp-based Trafuco took over Alfred Talke Transport Service (ATTS), the subsidiary of German group Alfred Talke. Verstraete is active in the transport of construction materials as well as transport and installation of machines. The company employs 65 people and has a fleet of 56 wagons and 76 trailers. Annual turnover in recent years has been around €7 million, with a profit of €165,000 in 2014. Essers will take over the fleet and staff. Verstraete is mainly active in the west of the country and in northern France, while Essers is principally present in the east of Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. No financial details of the deal were revealed. ATTS of Zwijndrecht, meanwhile, has a fleet of 30 trucks and is mainly active in the liquid chem- © Courtesy Droom workshops, as well as individually designed children’s toys and clothing. Eveline Van Oystaeyen will bring old furniture back to life, while the self-service restaurant Den 2170 will offer healthy meals. Nearby Café De Ziel resembles a living room. Van Zeeland hopes at least some of the entrepreneurs will find a permanent spot in the area. \ AH Lorry drivers having problems with road toll equipment © Jimmy/Flickr Commons icals market in western Europe. The acquisition is the first for Trafuco since a capital injection last year, and the arrival of venture capital fund Down2Earth, but it will not be the last, according to founder Marc Van den Broeck. “We aim to double the group within five years,” he said. “We are looking for interested parties with whom we can achieve economies of scale.” ATTS has 40 employees and turnover of €7 million in 2014, but losses that year of €328,000. The acquisition brings Trafuco’s employees up to 265, with 215 wagons and turnover of €35 million. \ AH New road tolls for goods vehicles weighing more than 3.5 tonnes came into force on Belgium’s roads last week, as six out of 10 lorry operators were experiencing problems with the equipment required, according to a survey carried out by the transport industry federation Febetra. The main problem concerns the On-Board Units (OBUs) – the computers installed in each truck that calculate the number of kilometres travelled on Belgian roads and how much toll is owed. Users complain that OBUs have a tendency to stop working abruptly. There are also complaints that the call centre of Satellic, the company that runs the system, is not accessible. Some users report spending 40 minutes on hold trying to report a problem. Febetra spokesperson Isabelle De Maegt has called for the problems to be sorted out urgently. “We cannot have a situation where transporters who have done everything possible to follow the rules find themselves being fined after 1 April because the system has broken down,” she said. According to Satellic, the defective OBUs require a software update, which can be applied automatically, without the need for the unit to be replaced. According to Satellic CEO Rudolf Pospichil, of the 2,000 OBUs that have been reported defective, 90% have already been fixed. The first day of the toll saw long lines of trucks queuing at border crossings from the Netherlands at Meer, Mol-Postel and Maasmechelen, with foreign truckers anxious to buy one of the OBUs being sold from vending machines, in an effort to avoid a fine of up to €1,000. \ AH \ INNOVATION APRIL 6, 2016 Fear no more week in innovation Nurses to give unsupervised vaccinations KU Leuven launches study to find a cure for phobias Andy Furniere More articles by Andy \ flanderstoday.eu I s there a pill that can impact the power of our fears? It may sound like science fiction, but researchers at the University of Leuven (KU Leuven) are working to make it happen in the not-toodistant future. If the study WipeOutFear proves successful, many common ailments both physical and psychological – like vertigo, addiction and depression – could be treated with just a single pill, says psychology professor Tom Beckers, who heads up the project. Until the beginning of the 21st century, crucial life experiences were thought to leave permanent – and stable – memory traces in the brain, which could later evoke certain emotional reactions, like anxiety, if people were to undergo a relatively similar experience. Scientists eventually discovered that memories could degrade over time as other memories interfered with them. But they still believed that some of the traces in the brain had to remain unchanged. This theory was ultimately disproven by research carried out at New York University in 2000. Through tests on rats, researchers discovered that memory traces – or engrams – can be altered by strong antibiotics. “The rats would receive an electric shock when they were put in a cage, and they would exhibit anxiety the next time they were placed in there,” explains Beckers. “But when they were administered a strong antibiotic, the rats became insensitive to the experience, as if the memory of the pain had gone away.” The reasoning was that the antibiotic had affected protein synthesis, essential to the formation of memory traces. But because of its toxic characteristics, the drugs © Ingimage could not be used on human subjects, so the New York researchers had to look for an alternative. They found it a few years later – in the form of the beta blocker propranolol, a pill commonly used to treat high blood pressure. In 2009, the University of Amsterdam (UvA) took the research a step further through innovative tests on people. Beckers, who obtained his PhD from KU Leuven in 2002 and joined UvA in 2008, was involved in the experiments. The Dutch researchers confirmed the effect of the beta blocker on anxiety. The team administered an electric shock to their subjects while showing them a photo of a spider; they eventually became conditioned to be frightened by the picture even in the absence of a shock. The subjects who received a beta blocker were no longer startled by the photos; those who got a placebo were. The team of researchers then tested the effects of the beta blocker on people suffering from arachnophobia, a fear of spiders. What they found was remarkable: The beta blocker not only helped the research participants become more courageous in the presence of spiders, but some of them even went as far as to approach the spiders. In surveys taken later, the participants clearly indicated that they felt less afraid. According to Becker, however, the tests did not prove that the memory of the scary experience – either that of the electric shocks or of seeing a hairy spider – could disappear altogether. Instead, he explains, the findings revealed that the beta blockers may have an effect on the specific part of the brain that is responsible for maintaining the emotional elements of each memory, separate from where the factual elements are stored. Similar experiments were later conducted on people with psychological traumas and smoking addictions. But “while you would expect that smokers could be helped if you adjusted the emotional memories associated with a pack of cigarettes,” Beckers says, that didn’t happen. Instead, all subsequent experiments failed to repeat the results of the Dutch study. That didn’t discourage Beckers, who returned to KU Leuven in 2010. To put the memory research back on track, the professor and his team will now examine in detail the basic mechanisms involved in altering our memories. The WipeOutFear project has received a grant of €2 million for five years from the EU. Among other things, the researchers suspect that an element of surprise may play an important role. In the arachnophobia test, for example, the participants were first misled into believing that they would do an experiment with spiders, but they just got a beta blocker that day instead. “We think that the experience of anticipating something frightening and then being surprised makes the memory traces unstable and thus more susceptible to changes,” Beckers explains. If the results of WipeOutFear meet the expectations and confirm the effectiveness of beta blockers, the findings could fundamentally change the field of psychiatry. According to Beckers, taking just one pill could help people with all kinds of phobias, anxiety disorders, addictions and depression. “It could work in all cases where emotional memories play a role and thus significantly improve people’s lives,” he says. The drugs, he adds, could even help people overcome a breakup or the death of a loved one ‒ to a certain extent. “Mourning experiences enrich our personalities,” Beckers says. “So the medication should only be given to people who cannot cope with the sadness and don’t see a way out anymore.” But the possibilities may also lead to questions of ethics. As Beckers warns: “We wouldn’t want to see pills used by criminals or soldiers who committed war crimes to clear their conscience.” Q&A UZLEUVEN.BE Greet Van den Berghe, head of the paediatric intensive care unit at Leuven University Hospital, has co-ordinated a study that shows that administering little to no nutrition to children in the ICU helps them recover faster No food for up to a week sounds a little dangerous… And yet our research has shown that during the first week in the intensive care unit receiving little to no nutrition helps critically ill children recover much faster than if they were to be given food intravenously. During our study, when little to no enteral feeding was provided, children had less severe infections, and there were fewer cases of kidney and liver failure. We also didn’t need to administer as much mechanical ventilation, and the children had to spend less time in the ICU and from shock and trauma to lifethreatening complications after heart surgery. in the hospital overall. What’s the explanation? We think that the underlying mechanisms relate to the impact of fasting on the repair of cell damage that accumulates when one is seriously ill. Fasting also has a positive effect on white blood cells, making them more capable of killing invading microorganisms. Who were the subjects of your study? The children ranged from newborn babies to 17-year-olds, but nearly © Courtesy UZ Leuven half of them were younger than one year old. We wanted the study to have broad applicability, so we included patients who suffer from all kinds of illnesses. These ranged Will more ICUs adopt your approach? The three participating intensive care centres have already implemented the new feeding strategy in their practice. But the list of benefits goes further: artificial feeding can be expensive, so our strategy is not only clinically effective, it is also highly cost-effective. And on average the duration of stay in the intensive care unit has been reduced from nine to six days, and the duration of hospital stay from 21 to 17 days. That’s significant. So yes, I expect more ICUs will implement our approach. \ Interview by Senne Starckx Nurses are to be allowed to administer vaccinations without the supervision of a doctor from 9 April, health minister Maggie De Block has announced. The vaccinations must still be prescribed by a doctor, but vaccinations will be able to be better organised within government services like family agency Kind en Gezin, where until now only doctors were allowed to vaccinate babies and children. In the run-up to the annual flu season, home nurses will be allowed to administer vaccinations, as long as they have access to a doctor in the case of complications. De Block said that she hopes that the change in the legislation “will have a positive influence on the number of vaccinations among the population”. New app for non-Dutch speaking patients Flemish family agency Kind en Gezin is collaborating with Ghent University to develop a multilingual app that will facilitate the communication between nurses and nonDutch speakers. According to the agency, communication between nurses and nonDutch speaking patients can be problematic and require gestures and visual tools. Thanks to the app, patients will also be able to communicate emotions and, if necessary, request the help of an interpreter. The first version of the app focuses on potty training, and, for people who cannot read, the app will include a spoken variant. In the near future, it will also be expanded by topics related to raising younger children, including feeding and vaccination. Survey looks at impact of terrorist attacks Scientists at the Free University of Brussels (VUB) have launched a survey to measure the impact of the terrorist attacks at Brussels Airport and Maalbeek metro station on the health of the population. The survey will focus on residents’ physical and mental condition following the attacks, particularly feelings of anxiety. It will also measure the extent to which respondents express these emotions. The goal of the study is to get a comprehensive overview of the impact of terrorism to ensure that proper measures are taken to limit the impact and negative consequences on public health following any future incidents. \ AF \ wellbeing.brussels \7 \ EDUCATION APRIL 6, 2016 Teaching the teachers week in education Flemish educators exchange advice with teachers in developing countries Andy Furniere More articles by Andy \ flanderstoday.eu VVOB.BE Since the 1980s, the non-profit VVOB has been sending Flemish teachers to developing countries to help create educational programmes with real-life benefits for local students. And the advice works both ways. A t any given time, educators across Flanders are travelling abroad – be it to Congo, Suriname or Vietnam – to provide assistance and advice to locals about best practices in education. But it’s not a one-way street. The Flemish education sector also profits from the experience gained by VVOB abroad. Since the 1980s, the non-profit Flemish Association for Development Co-operation and Technical Assistance (VVOB) has been sending Flemish education advisors to developing countries to improve the quality of lessons in primary and secondary schools. Thirty Flemish education experts are currently working on VVOB programmes in 10 countries in Africa, Asia and South America. They mainly provide expertise and training to the local teachers’ education departments, with a team of local staff and in co-operation with local education ministries, so that their advice can be integrated in a structural way in the education systems. VVOB’s mission has remained fundamentally unchanged since the late politician Daniël Coens launched it in 1982: stimulating development by strengthening education. “In the 1980s, Coens was both minister of education and of development co-operation, so he fully understood the necessity of quality education in the development of a country,” explains VVOB director Bart Dewaele. “A good education is essential to ensuring democratic participation, economic opportunities and conflict management.” Throughout the years, VVOB’s methods have evolved. The number of projects, for instance, has been reduced significantly in favour of a more focused approach. Today, VVOB concentrates on three areas: developing quality preschool education, improving lessons in primary education and optimising technical and professional studies in secondary education in order to expand job opportunities. “Flanders is a global frontrunner in fun learning methods for pre-school pupils, with much attention paid to attitude, diversity and physical activities,” says Dewaele. “We also have a wealth of expertise concerning lessons on mathematics and problem-solving techniques in primary education and concerning the preparation of students in technical and professional education for the job market.” VVOB co-operates closely with Flemish higher education institutions to assemble this expertise. In Flanders, schools and companies are increasingly joining forces to prepare students for the work floor, while the potential of this kind of collaboration is not yet well-known in many developing countries. For example, VVOB set up a project in Ecuador in which companies send technical equipment and staff to schools, so students in technical and professional studies can be better trained for future jobs. Flemish steel wire manufacturer Bekaert works with educators to improve lessons on metalworking in Ecuador. VVOB also concentrates its efforts on equal opportunities in education, which are often linked to gender issues. In Congo for example, the non-profit is trying to break down the stereotype that girls shouldn’t study for jobs in, among other sectors, construction and metalworking. In Suriname, VVOB staff offer ideas Teaching union to tackle stress To improve burnout rates among teachers, education union ACOD Onderwijs Limburg is setting up a free series of psychological sessions. According to the union, teachers in their 20s or early 30s are increasingly vulnerable to burnout. The M decree, a legislative measure that moved many children from special education into mainstream education, and the Smartschool communication platform also increase the pressure on teachers, said the union. Now, 80 teachers in Limburg can register for a programme aimed at preventing burnout. The sessions will focus on helping teachers to not judge themselves when the pressure gets too much and to consciously take care of themselves and accept their limits. Reform of teaching studies approved © Courtesy VVOB Secondary school girls in Congo, where Flemish educators have helped to break down gender barriers in education on making lessons more appealing for teenage boys, who often drop out to get low-skilled jobs. In general, the Flemish experts try to make the lessons more interactive. They suggest more practical tasks, varied assignments and group work. “Ministries abroad are also often inspired by our policy of giving teachers a lot of responsibility regarding the progress of students,” says Dewaele. Unlike students in many other regions, Flemish students in the final year of secondary school don’t have to pass standardised exams – created by the government – to get into higher education. A good education is essential to ensuring democratic participation and economic opportunities Flemish teachers have a lot of autonomy in how they help students achieve the eindtermen – the final requirements for pupils to graduate. “This way, teachers are often more committed,” says Dewaele. VVOB, however, realises Flanders can also benefit from its experience abroad and so has set up the project Scholenbanden (School Links). Scholenbanden helps schools in Flanders and in developing countries to organise activities that focus on learning about each other, from each other and with each other. Thirty Flemish schools have established such a partnership with a school in a developing country. The partnerships serve to enrich the knowledge of students but also of teachers and school heads. “We can learn a lot, for example, from the way schools in Zimbabwe integrate children with disabilities into regular education, without many facilities. Among other methods, they let children assist each other,” explains Dewaele. “Many schools in developing countries are also better at involving parents in the running of the schools, which helps to create a positive environment for youngsters at home.” School staff in developing countries are also often remarkably passionate and determined, says Veerle Cnudde, who has been working for VVOB for 17 years. “It takes a lot of courage to teach a class of, say, 50 students every day, in difficult circumstances and for a low wage,” she says. Cnudde will start a new programme in Cambodia next year, following on having participated in a different programme there four years ago. She has also worked for VVOB in Chile and Zambia. For the next five years, Cnudde will concentrate on improving maths education in primary schools. The programme has been launched at the request of the education ministry, she explains, “because Cambodian youngsters are scoring badly on mathematics tests compared to other countries in the region”. Her team provides advice to teaching educators at workshops and by developing new materials for them. “Most of the children in Cambodia go to school, but many of them can’t read or write at the end of primary school,” says Cnudde. “Teachers often have a lack of knowledge about the subject they are teaching, and they also tend to teach passively, by just reading the theory out loud in front of the classroom, for example.” VVOB will try to help make the lessons in Cambodia more interactive, more rooted in practical aspects and more linked to the real lives of the students. “Instead of abstract assignments, you can link certain exercises to a common activity, like buying food at the market,” explains Cnudde. VVOB also strives to integrate group work and will help to provide materials that can make lessons more fun. The organisation recently received the assistance of an influential Flemish ambassador: former European Council president Herman Van Rompuy. He will use his network to attract the interest of other EU member states and perhaps also additional funding. VVOB has in the past received EU support for certain projects and receives structural funding from both the Belgian and Flemish governments. The Flemish government has approved the reform of teaching studies in institutions of higher education. The reform aims to improve the image of the teaching profession and make it easier for students to transition from another discipline to teaching studies. From January 2019, centres for adult education (CVOs) will not be accredited to offer the courses. The government is also launching the “educative Master’s degree”, which students can start immediately after graduating from secondary school. Furthermore, all study programmes will incorporate more learning material focusing on social issues. An obligatory but non-binding entrance exam is also being introduced. 3% extra marks to on-time graduates Ghent University (UGent) is considering offering students an extra 3% on their final results if they complete their studies within the minimum period. According to a UGent spokesperson, some education experts think the education system is too flexible and measures are necessary to ensure that students don’t take too long to finish their diplomas. The new system would be introduced in both Bachelor’s and Master’s programmes. The system will not apply to students who wouldn’t pass their exams without the extra 3%. The final decision on the matter is to be taken in May. Some experts question the legality of the procedure. \ AF \9 \ LIVING week in activities Play Outside Day An annual event sponsored by the government of Flanders and children’s TV stations, which will go dark for an afternoon so that kids have one less reason to stay inside (parents might want to take away the smartphones and tablets). There are outdoor activities organised in every province. 13 April 13.00-17.00, across Flanders; free \ buitenspeeldag.be Musical walks The Merode Festival, a weekend of classical music held during the Ascension Day holiday, includes four guided walks through beautiful countryside and heritage sites, with stops for performances and storytelling. Registration required. 5-8 May, across Flemish Brabant; €12.50 \ merodefestival.be Floralia Brussels Held on the grounds of a castle, this spring flower festival features more than one million bulbs in bloom – 500 varieties, with a whopping 400 kinds of tulips. Flower arrangements and decorative plants are displayed inside the large greenhouse. Don’t miss the flower labyrinth, the restored 14th-century tower and the azalea and rhododendron garden. 6 April to 6 May 10.00-18.00, Groot-Bijgaarden Castle, Isidoor Van Beverenstraat 5; €12 \ floralia-brussels.be Start to Golf Thinking about taking up a new sport? How about golf? (It’ll be a competition sport at this summer’s Olympic Games for the first time since 1904.) You can sign up for a free introductory group lesson at one of dozens of golf clubs across Flanders during this annual event. Registration required. 10 April, across Flanders; free \ starttogolf.be Hares and Rabbits It might be over for the rest of us, but Easter is still in full swing at Nature Education Centre De Vroente. Kids are invited to spend the morning searching for the rabbit families Stamper and Huppel in the nearby fields and learning all about the animals in the process. The afternoon is spent on a game pitting the bunny families against each other. 7 April, De Vroente, Kalmthout (Antwerp province); free \ devroente.be \ 10 Movies from home Pop-up cinema for refugees outgrows its modest roots Liz Newmark More articles by Liz \ flanderstoday.eu CINEMAXIMILIAAN.COM S tarting with just a projector and a screen under a tent in Brussels’ Maximiliaan Park, Cinemaximiliaan is expanding its activities throughout Belgium and internationally, with sub-groups emerging in Antwerp, Ghent, Hasselt and Liège. Described by its founders, Gawan Fagard and Gwendolyn Lootens, as “a pop-up cinema for and with people on the move”, Cinemaximiliaan travels to remote asylum centres, offering film screenings, art exhibitions and museum visits to the centre’s residents. It is currently hosting, for example, a show at Hasselt’s Z33 arts centre featuring 21 artists, including four refugees. Fagard, 30, says that film and art will remain key “because that makes up our professional background and is also our passion. Now many volunteers and arts institutions support us”. Projects coming up include the 2 May premiere of Syrian film The Emigrants at Bozar, with a discussion and master class. Cinemaximiliaan also stars in next month’s kick-off of the annual Brussels arts festival Kunstenfestivaldesarts, organising a debate on Egyptian artist Wael Shawky’s video trilogy Cabaret Crusades. Later in the month, Cinemaximiliaan hosts “an evening of dance and music from Syria, Iraq and Palestine,” says Fagard. Cinemaximiliaan is particularly big in Flanders, he continues, with regular film screenings in asylum centres in Sint-Niklaas, Ghent, Lombardsijde, Broechem, Houthalen-Helchteren, Hechtel-Eksel and Lubbeek. “From there, many other projects have emerged, like visiting Ghent’s contemporary art museum SMAK and taking part in Ghent’s Courtisane and Turnhout’s MOOOV film festivals,” Fagard © Courtesy Cinemaximiliaan says. “We also spearhead educational programmes for schools and newcomers in Hasselt and Antwerp.” The project further collaborates with art house cinemas and schools, including Zebra cinema in Hasselt and the OFFOff series of screenings at Ghent’s school of arts to make “less mainstream programme choices,” explains Fagard. “We’ve discovered that many newcomers have rarely seen films from their own countries. So we’re trying to show Middle Eastern as well as classic Syrian films. Evenings include a space for debate, as these films often talk about the region’s problems.” Fagard, an art historian from SintNiklaas, and Ghent visual artist Lootens, 34, previously collaborated on the Brussels Wolke project for creatives, which ended last year. When the refugee crisis escalated last summer, they decided to launch Cinemaximiliaan at the camp that sprouted up in Brussels’ city farm, the Maximiliaan Park. Starting small, Cinemaximiliaan now involves a large community of people dispersed in asylum centres all over the country. “It is important to keep it fluid, but Cinemaximiliaan can only grow, as unfortunately more and more people will be forced by the hardships in some parts of the world to come here,” says Fagard. “Our activities will probably shift according to the ever-changing needs of newcomers.” People on the run, he continues, “have often been through very harsh and difficult conditions and, once they arrive in Belgium, waiting for their papers is very stressful. We aim to give them a moment to escape this hard reality by watching films or visiting an exhibition – sharing a good time. We don’t just work for refugees; we work with them.” In the future, he says, “we hope the people who took part in our programmes can help others to find their way, and that, in 10 years’ time, Cinemaximiliaan will be a big family”. With an ever-changing team involving many volunteers, Cinemaximiliaan have always wanted to stay “as non-bureaucratic as possible,” Fagard says. But after nearly six months without institutional or financial support, it has now become an official non-profit organisation, thanks to a crowdfunding campaign and funding from foundations like the Goethe Institute. “We are looking into finding more structured funding to keep the platform financially healthy,” Fagard concludes, adding hopefully: “Ideas, information and help are always welcome.” BITE Ginius gin wins gold medal in San Francisco Ginius, a gin made in West Flanders, just won a gold medal at the San Francisco World Spirits Competition as Best Gin. It is the second gin developed by Frederik Van Duuren in the unlikely setting of Oostduinkerke, a district of Koksijde, on the Flemish coast. The distiller calls it “the herbal little brother of Duingin”, his first spirit. Ginius is made with nine botanicals: grapefruit and lime for a fresh citrus touch; lavender for floral notes; black pepper for warmth, angelica root for dryness and bay for complexity. The recipe also includes iris, cardamom and, of course, juniper. Because of the high concentration of volatile essential oils, the spirit goes cloudy when ice is added. Van Duuren was delighted to get the news from San Francisco. “Duingin was already a dream come true – my very own craft spirit made with ingredients from this area. Now that Ginius has proved to be to appeal to the taste of the people in San Francisco, it’s beyond my wildest dreams.” The San Francisco World Spirits Competition, launched in 2000, attracts more than 1,000 entries a year from distillers across the globe and calls itself the “most respected and influential spirits competition in the world”. While the name of Ginius might point modestly to Van Duuren’s skill as a taste-maker, the name of Duingin puts its home firmly at the coast and in the duinen (dunes). The main flavour note of that gin is the berry of the sea buckthorn (Hippophae rhamnooides), a plant that © Courtesy Ginius ginginius.be grows all over the dunes – incidentally helping to hold the sandy barriers together against wind and water. The berries bring a pronounced bitter taste, they are balanced by a mix of botanicals, including cardamom, iris, lavender, angelica and juniper. Caution: The Duingin is 43% alcohol; the little green baby Ginius packs a serious 50%. To serve, Van Duuren recommends a Britvic Indian tonic, Schweppes Orange Blossom Lavender or Fever Tree Indian tonic, one part gin to two parts mixer. Add ice (more is more), lime zest and one mint leaf (less is more) and serve. \ Alan Hope APRIL 6, 2016 Conflict management An Jacobs on the British sense of humour and work that never gets boring Sally Tipper Follow Sally on Twitter \ @sallybtipper In the second instalment of our series on Flemish people living and working in the UK, we talk to An Jacobs, who’s a lecturer at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. explain it.” This genuine interest in international affairs and security issues is key to her job. But, Jacobs points out, it’s probably just as important to understand what the military is all about and to develop both working relationships with military colleagues and positive interactions with the cadets. Cadets who are accepted to Sandhurst have an extremely tough programme ahead of them. “They get physical training, military tactics, academic subjects, exercises and so on, all mixed up and often on the same days,” says Jacobs. “The officer cadets are extremely tired, but they’re eager to learn, and have a good sense of humour, which I appreciate. I really admire them for what they do.” T he journey from Limburg to south-east England isn’t an especially long one, but An Jacobs from Genk did it the long way round. Her route has taken in a music degree, a spot of performing arts, working for a think-tank in Switzerland and as a political advisor to the EU mission in Kosovo. And for the past two years, she’s been a senior lecturer at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, that most British of institutions. “My first degree was in music, and I tried teaching and performing arts for a while,” she says of her early academic career. Then, while working towards a degree in European studies and international relations in Maastricht, she discovered a real interest in foreign policy and security. A job with the Centre for Security Studies in Zurich followed, where she carried out research into European security and defence policy, and EU-Africa relations. It was during her two years in Kosovo that she met her British partner. “The agreement was that we both would find a job either in Belgium or in England, and then this position came up,” she says, referring to Sandhurst. “But I didn’t think I was going to be successful, applying to work at such a British institution. Now I love it.” Is it unusual for foreigners to be taken on there? “Historically, staff have mainly been British, and they’re still the majority, of course,” she explains, “but since I’ve joined we’ve had quite a few other foreigners, and it’s becoming a bit of a mix. In my department particularly, though that might be down to the nature of what we teach. It’s interesting for our subjects to have people from different places.” The department she’s referring to is Defence and International Affairs, and it covers international relations, security policy, armed conflict, terrorism, counter-terrorism, insurgencies and more. “It’s really about understanding current world Whenever I switch on the telly, my work is always there From studying music to lecturing cadets: An Jacobs from Genk works for the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst conflicts, their causes and consequences, and which actors are involved,” she explains. The British army has been heavily engaged in the most challenging recent conflicts, which makes teaching the officers a rewarding job. “We give the cadets a framework for their deployment,” she says, “to help them understand the operational context and the world they’re operating in.” That’s a world that’s never out of the news, not least in the light of last month’s terrorist attacks in Brussels. “It’s current, it’s immediate, and that’s one of the things I love about the job,” says Jacobs. “I have to be constantly following what’s happening in the world, in a substantial amount of depth, which is what keeps it fresh for me. In a lot of academic jobs you teach the same thing over and over again, and it can get a bit boring. Whereas I get paid to study what’s changing in the world and 50 weekends in Flanders: City trip to Ypres Flanders Today has launched an e-book with ideas for how to spend a year’s worth of weekends. Visit the link mentioned to the right to get your copy of 50 Weekends in Flanders. We’ll also print one of our suggestions every week here, too. soldiers whose bodies vanished in the Ypres battlefields. It is not even all of them. There are a further 35,000 names on a wall at Tyne Cot cemetery and still more on other monuments, making a total of 102,000 bodies that were never recovered. It’s hard to forget the First World War when you spend a weekend in Ypres. The town is full of reminders of the four-year global conflict, from the quiet cemetery overlooking the town moat to the revamped war museum in the cloth hall. But Ypres is changing from a town of memories to a place where you can also sleep and eat in style. \ toerisme-ieper.be Stop for coffee at ’T BINNENHUYS 1772 A secret romantic cafe (pictured) is hidden at the back of this rambling interior design store located in an 18th-century townhouse. Furnished with an old leather sofas, antique lamps and faded photographs, it offers a place to while away an hour with coffee and cake sitting next to the old iron stove. Gustave De Stuersstraat 8 Look at MENIN GATE Nothing prepares you for the Menin Gate. This huge limestone arch on the edge of the old town is carved with the names of 54,896 Eat at SOUVENIR This stylish restaurant with a modern Scandinavian interior of white walls and pale wood is not like Ypres at all. The young Icelandic This isn’t Jacobs’ first time living in England; she also did her PhD in Manchester. Having lived in both north and south, has she noticed a divide? “It’s very different, but I was also at different stages in my life and career,” she says. “Being a student in Manchester was great: I met some fun people, enjoyed the music scene, and it was a really terrific experience. For the life I had, Manchester was perfect, but for the life I have now, I think Hampshire is ideal.” It’s a lovely part of the world, she says: London on the doorstep, the south coast not far away and plenty of nice countryside and small market towns nearby. “I love living here, and I find that the Brits have a great sense of humour,” she says. “I sometimes forget that I’m not from here, I just get on with life.” Asked what she does in her free time, she laughs. “Free time? I work! Whenever I switch on the telly, my work is always there. I always end up thinking, ‘Oh, I really need to read up on that, I’m not sure I know enough about it’.” TINYURL.COM/50WEEKENDS filled with religious statues, paintings of the Virgin and faded LP covers. The beer list is not long, but it includes some fine local bottles like Sint-Bernardus 12 and Omer. The friendly owner attracts young musicians, teenagers drinking mojitos and tourists who have strayed here from the main square. ’d Hondtstraat 18 chef Vilhjalmur Sigurdarson used to work in the kitchens of In De Wulf in Dranouter, where he learned to create sublime dishes using the simplest local ingredients. He cooks with meat from small West Flanders farms, vegetables grown in the region and the freshest fish from the North Sea. \ souvenir-restaurant.be Drink at DE 12 APOSTELS This relaxed spot sports a dark red interior Stay at MAIN STREET HOTEL This cool hotel occupies a red brick building with a small courtyard at the back. It is an odd, fun place crammed with vintage ornaments and old photographs. The six guest rooms are decorated with vintage wallpaper and antique bathtubs. The breakfast menu rounds off a delightfully surprising stay with fried black pudding served with onions and apples. \ Derek Blyth \ mainstreet-hotel.be \ 11 Your dailY news Sign up now for our daily and weekly newsletters with local headlines, events and features, tailor-made for expats in Belgium Subscribe for free at www.thebulletin.be Newsletter marketing Newcomer half page.indd 1 19/05/15 10:38 Hey you. Yes, you, with the smartphone. There is an app for Flanders Today, you know, which makes it super easy to keep up with daily news and features anywhere at any time on your smartphone or tablet There are 2 easy ways to download the app: visit www.fl www.flanderstoday.eu anderstoday.eu and click on “Download the Flanders Today app” or go straight to your app store – Android or iOS, makes no diff difference erence CHECK OUT OUR COOL-LOOKING, EASY TO MANOEUVRE APP HOMEPAGE O CTLY T THE LEFT SIDE TAKES YOU DIRE THE ’RE YOU N IO SECT D TE ES R E INT IN D LOA WN O D CAN YOU T A H T ISSUE Y PRINT L K E E W R U O THE RIGHT SIDE IS A PDF OF U GO DIRECTLY TO A SECTION, AR IF YO TICLE S LOO K LI KE T HIS If you download the pdf, it looks just like the paper you’re holding in your hand (but your fingers fingers won’t get all black) Did we mention that the Flanders Today app is free? It’s free. \ ARTS APRIL 6, 2016 Long live the Rock Rally week in arts & CULTURE Biennial rock and pop competition still relevant after all these years Christophe Verbiest More articles by Christophe \ flanderstoday.eu humo.be/rock-rally I f they wanted to, a new rock band in Flanders could sign up for a rock contest every month. OK, I’m exaggerating; but only slightly. There are plenty of band competitions in Flanders, but the original one is still the most influential. The biennial Rock Rally is organised by the weekly magazine Humo. Previous winners like Das Pop, Goose and The Van Jets have become household names in Flanders and have healthy careers abroad. The next edition – on 10 April in Brussels’ Ancienne Belgique – is the 20th. Since the first edition, in 1978, the music world has undergone massive changes. For starters, at the end of the 1970s, Humo was one of the very few popular publications in Flanders to regularly cover rock music. In those internetless days, information was scarce, so Humo’s pages were thoroughly scrutinised by music fans. Flanders also counted few radio stations focussing on contemporary rock. Now this music forms the backbone of several stations. And of course, in this day and age, anyone with the slightest ambition to play live can promote themselves on various social media platforms. Is there still the need for a music competition if you can launch your career with a catchy video on YouTube? Apparently there is: 876 bands registered for this year’s Rock Rally. Jurgen Beckers, a Humo rock scribe for nearly two decades, is one of the two people who listened to all those demos sent in by the aspiring candidates. It took them two weeks to get through them all. “Sometimes you know after 30 seconds that you can skip a song,” he admits. “Even so, we still check out the other songs on the demo.” Exactly 100 bands were chosen to perform at 10 preselections across Flanders. A jury narrowed them down to 20. These competed at two semifinals, in Ghent and Antwerp. From there, 10 made it to the final. Flanders has seen a rise in rock competitions, but none has become as successful as the Rock Rally. Beckers, who’s performing jury duties for the ninth time – a record – says that the Rally’s strength is its simplicity. “All the other competitions have a more complicated formula, which, in the end, waters down the essence. Our approach is simple: The best band wins.” The rules haven’t changed in 38 years: At each stage of the competition, the selected artists have to play three songs. During the semi-final, one of those has to be a cover. That’s it. “When internet and social media became Delta Crash Britpop rules when Delta Crash are around. After being eliminated in the preselections in 2014, they should be happy they made it to the final this year Dirk. This foursome combines the lamest band name with some of Ghent city council has approved a proposal to name part of Walpoortstraat after the late theatre director Romain Deconinck. The new Deconinckplein is a small square in front of Minardschouwburg, the theatre where he produced his greatest successes. The building’s front steps are already home to a statue of Deconinck, considered one of the leading figures in Flemish popular theatre, who died in 1994. Strip shop B-Gevaar saved by auction Brussels’ only Dutch-language comic strip shop, B-Gevaar, on Greepstraat in the centre, has been saved from closure, thanks to an auction organised to raise funds. Eric Deneyer, the shop’s owner, put out the word that he was experiencing financial problems and received hundreds of donations of original drawings to sell, including work by Marc Sleen (Nero), Charel Cambré (Amoras) and Marvano (The Forever War). Some of the drawings were rareties, such as the first original page from Amoras ever to be sold. The auction took place at the weekend and raised €25,000. The online auction house Catawiki also donated its commission to B-Gevaar, which celebrates its 25th anniversary this year. Who’s going to win the Rock Rally? Our money’s on Rewind Productions (above) or Billie Rodney (right) more important,” Beckers says, “I feared that we would be forced to change the formula. But in the end, there was no need for that. Only our coverage has changed.” Because of the weekly magazine’s deadline bands used to have to wait 10 days before they could read what the jury thought of them. Now those comments are published online the next day. Another element that explains the broad appeal of the Rock Rally is its diversity. A singer-songwriter or a metal band, a Beatlesque quartet or a hip-hop posse: If they’re good, they all stand the same chance of being a finalist. But what is the jury looking for? Explaining that is like dancing to architecture, Beckers says with a smile, referring to a famous quote about music critics. “We’re just looking for the best band. For me personally, the best winners of the Rock Rally, like The Hickey Underworld or Steak Number Eight, all had a strong physical impact on me.” Only when it’s absolutely impossible for the jury to choose between two acts do non-musical aspects come into play. “In 2004, we placed The Van Jets and Absynthe Minded on the same level. They both would have been worthy winners, but we decided to give the former the first prize because Absynthe Minded had just released their debut album. We thought they would be more motivated by placing them behind The Van Jets. But it’s very rare that we resort to this kind of argument.” \ b-gevaar.com Six nominations for Bevergem in TV awards 10 April, from 15.00 Ancienne Belgique Anspachlaan 110, Brussels Rock Rally 2016: The 10 finalists Billie Rodney The voice of singer Bie Van Landeghem elevates the slow-burning dramatic songs of band Billie Rodney to a higher level. Outsiders for the podium Ghent names square after Romain Deconinck the best songs of the final. Though their grungy sound might be considered too out-dated for the highest trophy frøwst A grumbling voice, a dreampop atmosphere, some 1980s remnants and a wink to The Kinks. No, I have no idea why they’re in the final. Nor what their name means Equal Idiots Young trashy drum & guitar duo that seem to be more influenced by the Flemish duo The Black Box Revelation than The White Stripes. Likeable but limited Kasablanka Did New Romanticism come into vogue again overnight? Thought so. Kasablanka – more Duran Duran than The Beatles – should be very, very, very happy they made it to the final milpool Edgy guitar rock hesitating between a very young R.E.M. and ditto The Church. Podium is only in sight if the jury goes nostalgic Portland Trio that delivers lo-fi with an electronic side. Charming but slightly immature Rewind Productions Three 16-year-old rappers from Leuven who bring some colour to the Rock Rally. A hip-hop group have never got to the podium before. Will it a be a first this year? Whispering Sons Five-piece with a new wave fixation (The Sisters of Mercy meets Joy Division) and an impressive frontwoman. Ready for the podium Canvas’ eight-episode comedydrama Bevergem has earned the most nominations of any programme for the annual Flemish TV awards, with six. Bevergem is the story of stand-up comedian Freddy De Vadder, who rents an apartment over a pub in the fictitious West Flemish town only to find that the residents are even more bizarre than he is. Created and directed by Flemish actor Gilles Coulier, the dark comedy series was a huge hit for Canvas last year. Nominations for Bevergem include Piet De Praitere for Best Actor, Ann Tuts for Best Actress and Best Comedy Series. Police series T., starring Koen De Bouw (Broer) as a crimesolving Antwerp professor, earned four nominations, including Best Script and Best Actor for De Bouw. Other nominations include The Team and Vermist as Best Drama and De slimste mens ter wereld and K3 zoekt K3 for Best Entertainment. The ceremony will be broadcast live on 23 April from the Plopsa Theater in De Panne. \ vlaamsetelevisiesterren.be \ 13 \ ARTS The forgotten avant-gardist Ghent exhibition showcases the unique work of the largely ignored Marthe Donas Ian Mundell follow Ian on Twitter \ @IanMundell An exhibition in Ghent’s Museum of Fine Arts offers a look at the work of Marthe Donas, the only Belgian woman to make it big in the international avant-garde movement. M arthe Donas was an unusual figure, a Flemish woman who made a name for herself in the Parisian avant-garde following the First World War. Only the name she made – Tour Donas – was a mask, calculated to hide her gender in a world with no time for female painters. How she won her reputation as an artist, and then lost it, are explored in the new exhibition Donas: The Belgian Avant-Gardist at the Museum of Fine Arts in Ghent. Donas was born into a wealthy Antwerp family in 1885. She was allowed to indulge her artistic leanings up to a point, but her strict father forbade her from enrolling at the city’s art academy. A spectacular accident in 1912 – she fell through a glass roof while watching King Albert’s entry into Antwerp – made her reassess her situation. She broke off a marriage engagement, went to the academy and began studying art in earnest. The German bombardment of Antwerp in 1914 drove the family to the Netherlands, with Donas and one of her sisters later going on to Dublin. There she continued to study, eventually joining the workshop of stained-glass artist Sarah Purser, an important figure in the artistic life of the city. The Easter Rising in 1916 prompted another move, to live with a Flemish family in Eastbourne on the south coast of England. This isolation would not last long. Despite the war, boats were still running to Dieppe, and Donas was able to slip away to Paris, where she resumed her work. There she encountered paintings by Picasso, Matisse and Modigliani, but it was the lesser-known André Lhote who made the greatest impression. His work combined the novelty of Cubism with the traditions of the Italian Renaissance. “It stays very figurative, very easy, but full of colour,” observes Peter Pauwels, curator of the Ghent exhibition. Donas studied with Lhote for two months in 1917 and started to produce Cubist work of her own. Then that summer in Nice, she met the Ukrainian sculptor Alexander Archipenko, at the time considered an important innovator in Cubist sculpture. They became lovers and shared a studio. Archipenko’s interest in conjuring movement out of abstract shapes is mirrored in Donas’ paintings from 1917 and 1918, while the materials he used inspired her to create remarkable metallic effects with her paint. But Lhote’s Renaissance themes and vibrant colours also persist, giving Donas a powerful individual style. The couple returned to Paris in 1918, and the following year Archipenko began energetically promoting his partner’s work. Told by friends that she was too much of an artist to keep a woman’s name, she was now signing her paintings Tour Donas. The cryptic first name was inspired by Purser’s workshop in Dublin, An Tur Gloine, or the Tower of Glass. This subterfuge is ironic given how feminine Donas’ work can be. She worked with fabrics and had a subtlety of line that many of her male contemporaries lacked. This is most apparent in a striking series of Cubist pencil drawings that put the emphasis on women’s faces and clothes rather than on their anatomy. “I think she is at her most original in these drawings,” says Pauwels. By 1920, Donas and Archipenko were growing apart, and another set of influences took hold, this time the geometric abstraction of Piet Mondrian and Theo Van Doesburg (currently the subject of MSKGENT.BE © Private Collection (Courtesy Roberto Polo Gallery, Brussels) “The Picture Book” by Marthe Donas, 1917-18 a retrospective at Bozar in Brussels). Following their lead, her images became flatter and increasingly abstract, but the themes and the colours of her Cubist period persisted. By this time, Donas was receiving a good deal of attention, appearing in group and solo exhibitions across Europe. But this recognition did not mean commercial success, and by 1921 she had run out of money. Gravely ill, she had little choice but to return to her family in Antwerp. This was the beginning of a run of bad luck, and bad choices, that put an end to her international career. In 1922 she married Henri Franke, who was studying philosophy at the Sorbonne and seemed to offer a way back to Paris. It worked for a while, but she continued to be Until 5 June unwell, and he failed, or lost interest, in his academic career. In 1923 the couple retreated from Paris to Ittre, a village in Walloon Brabant. “They lived with Henri’s mother and two aunts, who were into art but not that kind of art,” Pauwels explains. This is borne out in the stylised sketches Donas made of the Walloon landscape, which would evolve into more conventional paintings for the sitting room wall. Cut off from both the Parisian and Belgian avant-gardists, Donas set aside her research in abstraction and took inspiration from nature. As the years passed, she tentatively made connections with the Brussels art world, eventually moving to the city. In 1928, as part of the Assaut group, she once more exhibited in Paris. This return was to be short-lived. In 1930, at the age of 45, she became pregnant, which, on top of the family’s continuing financial difficulties, put an end to her career as an artist. When she picked up her brushes again in 1947, it was to paint in a different style. “There are some good things, but also some very bad things,” says Pauwels, who has limited the exhibition to the first, international phase of her career. When interest in the Paris avantgarde revived in the 1960s, Donas was overlooked. Her short career and lack of commercial success meant that few works were in circulation. Some disappeared in Germany during the war, while others vanished closer to home as the artist recycled her canvases. The other problem with Donas is that her influences are plain to see. “She didn’t invent anything,” Pauwels concedes, “but she never copies. She looks, she reads, she thinks and then she puts something of her own into each painting.” Museum of Fine Arts Ghent Fernand Scribedreef 1 More visual arts this month The Crystal Ship The Van Beers Affair Riddle of the Burial Grounds The Crystal Ship is a new event in Ostend, with 16 Belgian and international street artists invited to decorate the city’s walls and other public spaces. Giant murals (pictured) started going up on 28 March, created by the likes of Roa, Fintan Magee, Faith47 and Robert Montgomery. There are also installations, including work by Brussels-based miniature sculptor Isaac Cordal and Italy’s Biancoshock. Completion of the works on 10 April will be marked with a street party. Lier celebrates one of its most colourful sons in The Van Beers Affair: Master Painter or Conman? at the Municipal Museum. Jan Van Beers started out in Antwerp painting scenes from history, but switched to portraits and romantic genre painting when he moved to Paris around 1880. Scandal followed an accusation that his precise miniatures were painted over photographs, a slur he turned into a marketing coup. Until 5 March 2017 Taking a cue from the underground disposal of radioactive waste, the Riddle of the Burial Grounds at Extra City in Antwerp collects artworks that explore the friction between human, atomic and geological time. Topics addressed by 22 contemporary artists include man-made ruins and excavations, wastelands and wildernesses, the rituals of burial and how to leave messages for the future. Until 17 July \ thecrystalship.org \ 14 \ bruegelland.be \ extracitykunsthal.org \ AGENDA APRIL 6, 2016 Disturbing chronicle of obsession Taking Off: Henry My Neighbour FoMu Antwerpen Until 5 June fotomuseum.be M ariken Wessels is an installation artist and photographer, but her new show Taking Off: Henry My Neighbour at Antwerp’s photography museum is a collection of hundreds of photos taken by someone else. You enter the exhibition through a very small room that is covered from floor to ceiling with mostly black-and-white images of Martha, a middle-aged woman, in various states of undress. The room’s claustrophobic feel reflects that of the photographs, each of which was taken by Martha’s husband, Henry, an electrician, in the bedroom of their New York home between 1984 and 1986. CONCERT Diamanda Galás Little changes except for Martha’s ‘erotic’ poses, many of which seem reluctant, at best. The state of the plants in a stand by the bed offer the only clue to the passage of time. After 25 months of being photographed in this way, Martha finally gathered the resolve to visit the little room her husband used as a studio to classify the photographs. There she found nearly 5,500 images of herself. Shocked and ashamed, she immediately began to throw the photographs onto the street. She left Henry shortly thereafter. Henry saved as many photographs as he could, cut them up to form collages and then created clay figurines get tic 20 April, 20.15 kets n ow Handelsbeurs, Ghent HANDELSBEURS.BE Diamanda Galas celebrates a lifetime of cutting-edge art and advocacy in the solo performance Death Will Come and Have Your Eyes. The Greek-American singer paid her dues as an Aids activist in 1980s California before cementing her status as a cult artist with a series of albums and multidisciplinary collaborations aiming to bridge the divide between the popular and the avant-garde. Her experiments with the blues and folk music from the Near East have led audiences into uncharted, sometimes uncomfortable, sonic territory. Decades later her practice remains as politically charged as it is musically adventurous. using the photos as source material. He then disappeared into the woods to practise his survivalist skills, which goes some way towards describing his psychological state in general. No-one ever heard from him again. Wessels was Henry’s neighbour for a time in New York, and the entire archive was eventually entrusted to her. Was it Henry’s obsession with photography, or with Martha, that drove him to take so many images of her? It’s a question that intrigues Wessels to this day: “I think it shows that we never quite know what is going on behind closed doors.” \ Dan Smith Brussels Kurbasy & Les Divas Dugazon: Three young musicians from Ukraine and Belgium sing a cappella, with influences ranging from Brazilian samba to jazz, klezmer and Gypsy. 9 April 20.00, Muziek Publique, Molière - Naamsepoortgalerij, Bolwerksquare 3 \ muziekpublique.be PERFORMANCE Hasselt Monchichi: Contemporary dance by Company Wang Ramirez, a Korean-Catalan duo performing “living poetry”, with thoughtful images and humorous familyfriendly skits about immigration and cultural diversity (ages 12 and up). 7 April 20.00, Cultuurcentrum Hasselt, Kunstlaan 5 \ ccha.be VISUAL ARTS Andres Serrano: Uncensored Photographs Until 21 August CONCERT Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Brussels FINE-ARTS-MUSEUM.BE American artist Andres Serrano brings his provocative brand of photography to Brussels. Serrano’s irreverent, decades-long exploration of religion and excrement has earned him a reputation as an enfant terrible of the art world. Uncensored Photographs is a retrospective of his entire career, including controversial works that have in the past been banned, vandalised or otherwise attacked. This exhibition proves that freedom can’t be censored. The museum does warn, however, that “some images may be disturbing” and are quarantined in a separate room. \ GV VISUAL ARTS Aalst Belgian Solutions: Works by David Helbich, featuring the many absurd, funny, clever, smart and 'typically Belgian' solutions to daily survival discovered by the photographer across the country. Until 8 May, CC De Werf, Molenstraat 51 \ ccdewerf.be Across Flanders Slow Art Day: Annual worldwide art initiative encouraging people to visit participating museums and galleries to look at the art slowly, on their own, and then meet up to discuss the experience. 9 April in Antwerp, Bruges, Brussels, Ghent \ slowartday.com \ Georgio Valentino FESTIVAL FESTIVAL FILM Balkan Trafik Night of Experimental Film 14-17 April The music festival Balkan Trafik throws a tin anniversary party with a guest list that spans the entire continent. The festival was inaugurated in 2007 as a means of opening a dialogue between Brussels and the Balkans. Organisers sought above all to challenge the perennial stereotype of south- Bozar, Brussels BALKANTRAFIK.COM east Europe as a “powder keg” and to showcase instead its diversity. So for the past decade Balkan Trafik has shown us the cream of the region’s cultural crop, with a focus on music and film. The offerings are traditional, contemporary and everything in-between. \ GV 15 April, 19.00 Art Cinema OFFoff ’s annual Night of Experimental Film meditates on the past, present and future of avantgarde cinema. In addition to reaching into the archives to recover seminal celluloid artefacts like Japanese novelist Yukio Mishima’s only film Yukoku (1966) and American performance artist Carolee Schneemann’s Ypres 019, Ghent 019-GHENT.ORG sexually explicit Fuses (1965), the event promotes 10 contemporary filmmakers under the aegis of the Young Vagrants Selection. Archival films are accompanied by live soundtracks performed by European musicians. The night ends with a DJ set and dance party. \ GV De Gevleugelde Stad Ieper (Ypres, City with Wings): Ostensibly an event where street theatre artists can promote their acts to local and international scouts, it’s also open to the public for three days of non-stop openair acts in and around the city. 8-10 April, across Ypres \ gevleugeldestad.com FAMILY Knokke-Heist Paaspeddel: Discover the nature between Sluis and Damme on a stand-up paddle board, with surprises scattered along the way. 10 April 14.00 departing from Sluis (NL); registration via Surfers Paradise, Knokke-Heist \ surfersparadise.be \ 15 \ BACKPAGE APRIL 6, 2016 Talking Dutch A bird in the cam Derek Blyth More articles by Derek \ flanderstoday.eu T hey already have huge viewing figures in the US and the Netherlands. Now bird nest webcams are being introduced to Flanders. But not everyone agrees that it is a good idea to turn a bird’s nest into a reality TV show. The webcam debate was sparked off locally following the installation of a webcam in the tower of Onze-Lieve-Vrouw church in Sint-Niklaas, East Flanders. Vogelbescherming Vlaanderen laat u binnenkort via een webcamstream live getuige zijn van een broedend koppel slechtvalken – Flanders Bird Protection will allow you to watch a brooding pair of peregrine falcons via a live stream (pictured). Mooi toch, die rauwe, echte natuur? – Lovely, isn’t it, that raw, authentic nature? reported De Standaard. The bird protection society in the Netherlands already has at least 10 cameras pointed into birds’ nests across the country. Volg de populaire vogelsoap – Follow the popular bird soap, it says on the website, where it posts clips with catchy captions like Man verleidt vrouw met visje – Male seduces female with fish. CONNECT WITH US It might not ever get as tense as Big Brother, but Dutch academic Nienke Endenburg believes it is becoming a new form of reality TV. Je gaat meeleven met de personages – You sympathise with the personalities, ontwikkelt favorieten – pick your favourites. The only problem is that nature can be a little too brutal for some people. Slechtvalken leggen gemiddeld drie tot vier eieren – Peregrine falcons lay an average of three to four eggs, explains Jan Rodts of Vogelbescherming Vlaanderen. Wanneer er een tekort aan voedsel is – When there is a shortage of food, de kans bestaat dat een jong en zwak kuiken als voedsel gaat dienen voor zijn oudere broers en zussen – there’s a serious possibility that a weak, young chick will be sacrificed to feed its older brothers and sisters. slechtvalken-sint-niklaas.be When this happened to a webcam bird family in the US, people became very angry. Mensen die naar de webcambeelden keken – People who were watching the webcam images, noemden de vogel Momzilla – called the parent Momzilla, naar het monster Godzilla – after the monster Godzilla. Iemand móést Momzilla stoppen – Someone has to stop Momzilla, was the cry. And there is another problem that arises when you point a webcam at a bird’s nest. Naar je buurvrouw kijk je niet met de verrekijker – You don’t spy on the woman next door with your binoculars, dus waarom zou je wel stiekelm de godganse dag naar binnen mogen gluren in een vogelnestje? – so what on earth are you doing spending the whole day peering into a bird’s nest? asked the Dutch writer Midas Dekkers in a recent article in De Volkskrant. Ook dieren hebben recht op een privéleven – Animals have the right to a private life, too, he argued. It’s probably not going to stop people peering into that nest in the Sint-Niklaas tower. But they should at least be warned that there will be blood. Tweet us your thoughts @FlandersToday Poll In response to: School principals want to abolish tenure system Susanne De Witte: There should be some provision made where tenure can be ended for underperforming teachers but I would like to see rewarded the teachers who work hard for their students. In response to: New Belgian Academy helps explain country’s shared history Eric Becker: I live in Belgium but I’m American. I find Belgium to be incredibly fascinating. There’s nothing else like it In response to: West Flanders’ Ginius wins gold medal in San Francisco Peter O’Reilly: It is on my list now as I drink my way through the gins of Flanders. Paul Lewis @paullewismoney When I was in Ghent cyclists, pedestrians, cars all shared space peacefully with no aggression. Model to follow? Flugella @flugella Hubby off on train to Leuven again 😢. Small person and Mummy consoling themselves with cake Stephanie Verhaegen @bookfever11 On my way to the zoo with my little brother and mom. 🐨 🐒🐘🐧#FamilyTime #Zoo #Antwerp LIKE US facebook.com/flanderstoday the last word Should the city of Ghent open up frietkot locations to the highest bidder even if it means kicking out long-time owners? a. No, totally unfair! Some of these people have been in place for decades, and they should be allowed to stay 44% b. It’s unfortunate, but yes. Public property has to be put out to tender, otherwise it could lead to corruption 56% Although no-one wants to say goodbye to their local frietkot server, there’s a majority in favour of making the competition for a licence to operate a caravan or stand selling fries on public property in Ghent truly democratic. In the past, a sitting tenant of VoiceS of flanders today a friet caravan on city property was allowed to outbid the highest bidder by 5% to hold on to the concession. This year the rule has changed so that the highest bidder gets the spot. It’s unfortunate for someone to lose their spot, perhaps after many years, but it’s not unfair, says the city. The old system was the one that was unfair, both making a mockery of the idea of an open tender and encouraging bid inflation, with some of the more popular locations going for astronomic prices of up to €25,000, compared to average bids of €3,300. Ready for take-off Spoiled for choice “There were staff members and security personnel everywhere. They were very helpful. There was certainly no sense of danger.” “The fruit and vegetable sector has been relatively conservative for decades. But now innovation has really taken hold. Ten years ago there were eight kinds of salad in the supermarket, now there are 38. Eight years ago there were 10 types of tomato. Now there are 65.” Former Miss Belgium Tanja Dexters was one of the first passengers to fly out of Brussels Airport when it re-opened on Sunday TV hero “There were nerdy scenes, some of the ideas were a bit far-fetched, and the production was here and there ramshackle. But I’m proud of it.” Richard Dean Anderson, better known as McGyver, was in Ghent at the weekend for the science fiction fair FACTS Filip Fontaine of the fruit and vegetable auction BelOrta Practice makes perfect “Last year I had to keep on getting off. I hope this year I can make it over all of the climbs.” Yoshiyuki Ogajin of Japan travelled 9,400 kilometres to cycle in the amateur division of the Ronde van Vlaanderen at the weekend 5ELNGFR*bbgbcg+[L\E \ 16