Zwarte Piet

legendary figure
print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://mainten.top/topic/Zwarte-Piet
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites
Also known as: Black Peter
Also called:
Black Pete
Related Topics:
legend

Zwarte Piet is a character in Dutch folklore who serves St. Nicholas (in Dutch, Sinterklaas) in St. Nicholas Day (December 6 and its eve) festivities in the Netherlands. Usually performed in blackface, Zwarte Piet is widely considered a racist caricature, though some defend the character as part of traditional Dutch culture.

Origins

One of the character’s first appearances is found in Jan Schenkman’s popular children’s book Sint-Nicolaas en zijn Knecht (1850; “Saint Nicholas and His Servant”), written while the Netherlands was still active in the slave trade. Several possible origins exist for the story’s titular, yet unnamed, Black servant. One popular theory posits that the character was modeled after the Moors of Al-Andalus (in what is now Spain and Portugal): an identity group defined by white Europeans from the Middle Ages to the 17th century as including all Black European Muslims. Some scholars argue that the character evolved from early stories of a devil who was enslaved and forced to act as a helper to St. Nicholas; after the Netherlands entered the slave trade, the “blackness” or evil of the devil may have been transmuted to his skin color. Still others believe that the character is based on an enslaved Ethiopian man liberated by St. Nicholas who was subsequently depicted as a Moor.

Following Schenkman’s story, the character of a Black servant continued to appear in Dutch folklore surrounding St. Nicholas. The name Zwarte Piet (“Zwarten Pieter”) appeared in print for the first time in 1891 in Lina’s children’s book Het feest van Sint-Nicolaas (“Saint Nicholas’s Party”), and the character’s story began to solidify. St. Nicholas evaluated children’s behavior, similar to the “naughty” or “nice” lists seen in Santa Claus folklore, and Zwarte Piet served as the administrator of St. Nicholas’s judgment. To good children, Zwarte Piet distributed sweets or gifts; to bad children, he distributed coal, potatoes, or a switch for corporal punishment. Though the character was initially portrayed as fearsome, apt to punish bad children or kidnap them from their homes, his and St. Nicholas’s judgment softened over time. By the 1940s Zwarte Piet became an entertaining figure, the saint’s cheerful and playful companion. In some St. Nicholas Day celebrations, not one, but many Zwarte Piets attend St. Nicholas and entertain Dutch crowds.

Controversy

Zwarte Piet is a highly controversial figure. He is almost always depicted with the traits of racist blackface minstrelsy: painted blackface, a curly black wig, bright red lips, and often with gold earrings. When speaking, actors tend to put on a caricatural Surinamese accent (Suriname is a former Dutch colony in South America with a substantial Black population). The people who portray Zwarte Piet and dress in this costume are usually white, although Black people who dress as Zwarte Piet also typically wear blackface makeup.

“The Dutch tend to argue that Black Pete is a Dutch thing, and other people outside the Netherlands don’t understand our culture. But it is part of an international tradition of racial stereotyping.” — Mitchell Esajas, founder of Kick Out Zwarte Piet

Racist depictions of Zwarte Piet have been the subject of criticism and public protests from activist groups since at least the 1980s. In the 20th century campaigns such as Kick Out Zwarte Piet and Zwarte Piet Is Racisme have advocated for ending the tradition of Zwarte Piet. “The Dutch tend to argue that Black Pete is a Dutch thing, and other people outside the Netherlands don’t understand our culture,” Kick Out Zwarte Piet founder Mitchell Esajas told National Geographic in 2018. “But it is part of an international tradition of racial stereotyping.”

Some critics have argued not for removing Zwarte Piet from St. Nicholas Day celebrations, but for changing him. In 2015 a United Nations committee called for “the elimination of those features of the character of Black Pete which reflect negative stereotypes and are experienced by many people of African descent as a vestige of slavery.” This suggestion was echoed the next year by the Dutch ombudsman for children, who also suggested that Dutch children of color experienced increased discrimination during St. Nicholas Day celebrations. Such arguments led to some changes in the Dutch tradition. In 2015 Dutch primary schools banned blackface portrayals of Zwarte Piet; in 2017 the city of Rotterdam similarly banned the blackface costumes during its annual parade. Other Dutch cities continued to allow blackface in St. Nicholas Day celebrations.

Are you a student?
Get a special academic rate on Britannica Premium.

Some recast (or defended) the character as simply Piet, or Chimney Piet, a white servant of St. Nicholas dirtied from his work. “He crawls in chimneys to get to the shoes and fill them with presents,” a Rotterdam representative told NL Times. “That’s why he’s dirty.” Such costumes thus depict the character with soot smudges rather than full blackface, though many retain the curly hair, exaggerated lips, and earrings. Other Piet interpretations, particularly in Amsterdam, have also replaced his Moorish clothing with that of Spanish nobility in an attempt to further distance the character from its problematic history. In yet another version, blackface is replaced with brightly colored face paint in pinks, purples, greens, or blues, and the character’s hair is sometimes similarly fantastical.

Many Dutch people, however, have defended Zwarte Piet as part of their national tradition, deeming the character a “reservoir of nostalgia.” Among these defenders are far-right political groups who mount counterprotests against the tradition’s critics. In 2018 right-wing groups, including white supremacists and neo-Nazis, harassed anti-Zwarte Piet demonstrators at parades across the Netherlands, resulting in about 40 arrests. “There were bananas thrown at us. There were eggs thrown at us.…We were threatened by these people, very aggressively,” Zwarte Piet Is Racisme cofounder Jerry Afriyie told Al Jazeera about his interactions with the far-right counterprotesters. “It was like a weekend of Dutch racism in full display.”

Protests against Zwarte Piet intensified in 2020, when anti-racist demonstrations surged worldwide following George Floyd’s murder by police in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Polls showed that Dutch support for the character was in decline. Zwarte Piet’s parade appearances dwindled, replaced by his white Piet counterpart, and some wondered if the character would become a bygone of mainstream Dutch culture. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who had previously defended Zwarte Piet and himself dressed in blackface, announced that his stance on the tradition had changed, saying: “I expect in a few years there will be no more Black Petes.”

Meg Matthias