Amid the long-running protests, people playing the character increasingly use different color face paint, including daubs of soot. Many towns and cities organizing childrenâs parties and parades to welcome the Sinterklaas character have moved away from Black Pete. At the event in the southern city of Breda, Sinterklaas was accompanied by Gray Petes.
One of the founders of the Kick Out Black Pete movement, Jerry Afriyie, welcomed the progress, but said more still has to be done.
âWhat we have achieved is that 10 years later no one can deny that there is racism in the Netherlands,â he said.
âJust like every movement, slowly but surely we are making progress, but we are not there yet,â he said. âIâm optimistic because Iâve seen this country be fully asleep, waking up bit by bit. So I think that it is a matter of time that all these people weâre seeing now in black faces that they make the change.â
Some parents at Saturdayâs event in Breda were angry that the demonstrators were protesting close to the exit of the celebration that was a ticketed event due to coronavirus restrictions.
âI think itâs a scandal that this is being done at the exit where children come out after the Sinterklaas parade. Children are standing there crying, I find it inappropriate,â said Frank Zuidhof, who said he was in favor of Sooty Petes.
âWe live in a democratic country where we have to work together for a good solution and this is not a good solution,â he said.
Police said they arrested seven people who approached the protesters and refused to move away.
Sinterklaas â a Dutch version of St. Nicholas â is celebrated in the Netherlands on Dec. 5 with gifts for children, but tradition has it that he sails to the country from Spain a few weeks earlier, leading to celebrations across the nation to mark his arrival.
Amid the Black Lives Matter movement last year, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte conceded that racism is an issue in his country.
âThere are also people living in the Netherlands who in that regard feel that they donât fully fit in, that they canât play a full role in this society,â he said. âThat is also a Dutch problem. There is racism here, too. There is discrimination here, too.â