Misplaced Pages

Jan Kooi

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Military officer from Ghana
Jan Kooi
Bornc.1840s
Elmina (presumably)
Diedafter 1884
Elmina (presumably)

Jan Kooi (c. 1840 – after 1884) was a Dutch KNIL (Royal Netherlands East Indies Army) military officer from Ghana.

Kooi was probably born somewhere near Elmina, where the KNIL recruited him. No records of his birth/death dates exist, and his (Dutch) name was probably given to him upon recruitment. He is best known today for his portrait painted by Johan Conrad Leich in 1882 when Kooi was back in the Netherlands. He is proudly wearing his four Dutch service medals, the most prominent being the leftmost one, Knight of the Fourth Class of the Military Order of William, which he received in 1878 for his service in the Second Aceh Expedition, part of the Aceh War. The portrait remained in the possession of Leich who bequeathed it to the Museum Bronbeek. Kooi's colleagues were also portrayed by other Dutch painters at the time, most notably Kees Pop (again, probably a Dutch name given him by the Elmina recruiters):

Portraits

Both portraits show the military honors of the Expedition Cross and the Aceh Medal, and they featured in the 2008 exhibition in the Amsterdam Nieuwe Kerk called "Black is beautiful, Rubens tot Dumas". The exhibition sparked a national conversation about the Aceh expedition survivors, and the journalist Griselda Molemans later wrote books, made documentaries, and founded a society to gather all the claims by survivors of the KNIL against the Dutch state. Apparently "recruitment" was a euphemism for the manner in which the men were conscripted to KNIL in Elmina. In addition, it is very strange that there was no compensation after the war for services rendered.

KNIL officers given special citizenship

Since the Elmina recruits were being sent to help suppress rebellion in the Dutch colony of Aceh, it was important to give them Dutch citizenship, but they were given a special status of "Zwarte Hollander" or Orang Belanda Hitam. Kooi and Pop probably returned to Elmina soon after their portraits were painted.

References

  1. Blog by exhibition curator Esther Schreuder, 10 years later
  2. Clip on Youtube of documentary by Griselda Molemans about searching for records of her own grandfather who served in KNIL
  3. Koloniaal verleden: zwarte Hollanders, blog about the Jan Kooi portrait
  • Black is beautiful: Rubens tot Dumas, exhibition & catalog in Nieuwe Kerk Amsterdam, 2008


Flag of NetherlandsSoldier icon

This biographical article related to the military of the Netherlands is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: