Tuesday, January 08, 2019

Het Loo

Image result for Which was the bridge too far?

We’d just passed the bridge at Nijmegen where, 600 yards to the west, hundreds of GIs paddled flimsy Brit boats with their rifle butts in order to cross a river flowing with current fast enough to knock you off your feet. What’s worse, all kinds of Nazi armaments were fixed and firing on them—and what’s even worse, it was daytime.

Somehow, some made it to the other side—about half with the first contingent. The other half perished. Somehow, they established a beachhead, then went on to take the bridge, if you can believe it, only to be joined by Brit tanks. But those tanks shut down. They were ordered not to go on.

The story goes that the commander of this miniature D-Day near-suicide mission was so incensed at their failure to move—he’d lost tons of his men because he knew Allied troops up river at Arnhem were pinned down and needed help badly—the man was so incensed that what he said to the Brits, having tea, really can’t be repeated.

And that’s the story I was thinking about—the whole story of Operation Market Garden—when we rolled up to Het Loo, the summer palace of the Dutch Royal Family, a monumental national treasure hidden neatly in the woods.


I will never understand royalty. I am too much an American. I have few links to the patriots who signed the Declaration of Independence, and I don’t really share their deep hatred for royalty either. I just don’t understand the whole concept—I’m too much a yankee, for better or for worse.

So I wasn’t impressed by Het Loo. Which is not to say it was hard to be impressed; after all, the place is stunning. There are so many Golden Age paintings on those walls that some visitors—I’m sure not all—get a headache. You could spend all day in any one of that mansion’s rooms and not see everything. Riches galore are on each wall, each ceiling, each floor.

Okay, I was impressed, but not enchanted. Opulence, after all, is by definition elitist. If you don’t mind asserting that some people are simply created more equal than others, then what you see in the royal palace is just wonderful. Okay.

But I got tired, fast. And I got to thinking that if I was the first lieutenant who’d just lost half his men in crossing the river and taking Nijmegen bridge, and if I just happened to stumble into Het Loo, just down the road, my uniform still stinking of river water, my hands still shaking from picking up the bodies of my men out of the river—if I just walked into all that opulence after all that death, I’d sit down and cry. I wouldn’t even swear. I’d just cry.

Maybe the two, juxtaposed the way they were today, were just too dissonant: the horrors of war and stench of riches. I wish I hadn’t been thinking about a hundred dead men.

Het Loo rules say no pix, but I just wanted one and I got it. This one. Contraband. Ten seconds later, a youthful guide reminded me that no cameras were permitted. I felt like asking him if he had any idea how much American blood was forever sewn in his country’s soil.


This is a bedroom, a tiny one. Multiple the opulence here by about twenty or so--well, how about fifty, and you have Het Loo. The place was impressive, but I was not enchanted because I have no history with endearing royal families. I’ve never sworn allegiance to a king or queen, and I don’t know what it’s like to live with a Queen Mother. I don’t get it. To me, a king or queen is just something other, just something other.

And then I came on a room upstairs where, in the corner, quite unobtrusively, a table stood, stacked with books, books about the Dutch Resistance in the Second World War. In addition, a couple of photographs stood there, one of them a group of six Dutch men, members of the underground, the other a woman who was herself deeply immersed in resistance work.

Two delft plates inscribed with Dutch words stood on that table—Al ware doot op de lippen daerommie moet men geen couragie verliegen, one of them said: “Even when death is very near there is no reason to lose courage.”

There was nothing gaudy about that table, no antiquities traceable to Holland’s Golden Age. It was little more than a black table holding aging books and a couple of framed mementos.

The Queen put it there, a note said. The Queen insisted that table be there, amid all the paunchy Rubens women, the darkened portraits of rich noblemen and their plump little high-collared children, amid enough tapestry to cover the walls of the Corn Palace three times over.

But that table was enough to alter my perceptions a bit, to understand why women I know who were in Holland in 1940, who suffered through an awful five-day war and the incineration of Rotterdam--why those women were heartbroken when Wilhelmina left the Netherlands for Britian, why those women felt abandoned, or so they told me, why they had real trouble not being furious.

They loved their queen, which is something I have always had trouble understanding.
But that ordinary table, amid all the splendor, the antiquities, the riches—that table, put there on the insistence of Queen Wilhelmina, that table told me that this wasn’t just any queen either, but someone who was, without a doubt, blessed with a heart for her people.

That table and those pictures and that single sentence helped this ugly American appreciate Het Loo.


4 comments:

  1. at Arnhem

    The grandfather of a friend from Mora Mn lost his life to shrapnel at Arnhem . The 29 year old para-trooper left behind 2 young daughters. The unit has reunions in the Netherlands and one of these orphaned daughters has been deeply touched by Dutch hospitality at the these reunions.

    I joined the American Legion because they seemed to have time for the families of those who can not speak for themselves. That window dressing seems to have been sent down the Orwellian memory hole the last few years.

    https://ifamericaknew.org/us_ints/legion.html

    I had the chance to meet Alison Weir when she got disinvited from Augustana University a while back.
    I am still trying find intercepts of Jap radio traffic about Amelia Earhart.

    thanks,
    Jerry

    ReplyDelete
  2. I lived in Wageningen, just downriver from Oosterbeek and Arnhem, for 6 months ten years ago. We were there for Brevijdingsdag -- Liberation Day -- May 5. Wageningen is the location where the Allies officially gave the country back to the queen. The parade was 3 hours of marching veterans and jeeps, many of them carrying US and Canadian flags. Thousands of people lined the streets. I have never, ever, seen people cheer so enthusiastically for the US flag.

    As you know, the Dutch are rule followers, at least more than we Americans are. There is a right way to do everything. They may conveniently look the other way sometimes, but for the most part, they are quick to tell you when you are not doing things the proper way. However, I bet that guy at Het Loo would have let you take another one, if you had connected your need for a picture with the American lives who saved it.

    Thanks for writing,
    Mike VandeHaar

    ReplyDelete
  3. Apparently the New Dealers thought more of the Queen's government than they did of our boys at Pearl Harbour.

    Toland interviewed Ranneft before his death and recovered in Holland the admiral's official diary, in which he noted that U.S. naval intelligence officers showed him the map location of the Japanese fleet on Dec. 2 and again on Dec. 6, the eve of the attack when the ships were reported to be 300 miles northwest of Hawaii.

    Read more: https://www.upi.com/Archives/1982/03/04/Dutch-admiral-recalled-being-shown-location-of-Japanese-fleet-before-it-attacked-Pearl-Harbor/5562384066000/#ixzz5cqoLWLMt

    thanks,
    Jerry

    ReplyDelete
  4. Mike VandeHaar, that's a great thought! thanks. . .jim

    ReplyDelete