Holland In Brazil! Dutch Colony "Holambra" | Teacher Paul Reacts Netherlands 🇳🇱

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  • Опубликовано: 10 июл 2024
  • HOLAMBRA SP: CIDADE DAS FLORES EM 1 DIA E MEIO | DICAS | 2019
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Комментарии • 44

  • @DACHBenelux
    @DACHBenelux  21 день назад +3

    Request a video or dedicate a song to your loved ones! Find out more here: buymeacoffee.com/teacherpaul

  • @parmentier7457
    @parmentier7457 19 дней назад +9

    Shortly after the Second World War, the Dutch government started migration plans to the 'new world'. The Dutch economy was bad and there was high unemployment. About half a million Dutch people, mainly farmers, left for the US, Canada, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand. In these countries they were given a piece of land for agriculture. The Dutch farmers were popular, because there was a shortage of experienced farmers in these countries. But I never knew that a handful of Dutch people moved to Brazil.

  • @pietergreveling
    @pietergreveling 18 дней назад +4

    Reading the subtitles is definitely NOT an inverted situation, because we're used to it and you're probably not! 😉
    We all grow up with subtitles, because in the Netherlands we don't dub foreign television shows, movies and series, that's also the reason why we are so proficient in English and for myself also German, because we learned it from watching and listening to the TV from a very early age! 😎
    That's the benefit of a small country! 😁✌🏼

    • @AP-hr3qm
      @AP-hr3qm 18 дней назад +1

      I see you know of this gem you have.
      Eeeverything is dubbed in Germany, mostly you can't even switch it off. No need to use and train any brain cells 😭
      It wasn't until I accidentally learned to understand and read Dutch (radio/TV in the border region) that I finally understood the English-language films on your TV, thanks to subtitles. My school English was pretty useless for that 😆
      And a friend of mine was very good at English class because of Dutch TV.
      But I'm slow in reading subtitles until today.
      So sad it's so difficult to watch Dutch TV now, so much is blocked.

  • @BabzV
    @BabzV 14 дней назад

    What a beautiful place you were born Paul, absolutely stunning.
    Love to you and your lovely wife from the Netherlands. 😊🌷

  • @Idk_Yara98
    @Idk_Yara98 19 дней назад +5

    Its so weird how there are so many Dutch ‘copy’ cities and (theme)parks around the world. In Michigan America, Brazil, Japan, Jeju island in South Korea, China.
    Ofcourse not counting Curaçao and other Caribbean islands, which are either still part of our kingdom, or ‘special municipalities’ of the Netherlands. Also not counting the remaining Dutch looking places in Indonesia, South Africa and Sri Lanka etc. because its obvious as to why 😐
    Edit: I and other Dutch ppl don’t find it ‘weird’ in a negative way. More like fascination lol

    • @jurgenvoogt1638
      @jurgenvoogt1638 18 дней назад

      Helemaal mee eens. Maar dit zag er wel uit als slechte kopie van Curaçao 👍

  • @EricvanDorp007
    @EricvanDorp007 18 дней назад +1

    In Brazil, you have two towns called WITMARSUM and I live in WITMARSUM the Netherlands. The story is as follows. In my village was born Menno Simons, (1498) and he is the founder of the Mennonites who later evolved into the AMISH 100 years later by a Swiss person who changed the rules a little. So Dutch settlers came to Brazil and called their first village WITMARSUM. But the ground was not fertile enough, so they changed location and called the second village WITMARSUM. They started a dairy factory which is now the biggest producer in Brazil with all kinds of milk products. The pace of the Netherlands HOLAMBRA you are talking about looks like 100% Dutch.

    • @AP-hr3qm
      @AP-hr3qm 18 дней назад

      Wow, that's interesting!
      Do you know any good videos about it?
      I had to look myself but there seem to be a lot of videos, (partly family videos) lots of them with European influence ... and if there are two cities called Witmarsum ... I got lost 😅

  • @daphneschuring5810
    @daphneschuring5810 19 дней назад

    The windmill in the beginning is mill from inside of a city it's extra high.

  • @pleegjepleegje
    @pleegjepleegje 19 дней назад +2

    I know a family that used to have a rose nursery in Brazil. They now live in the Netherlands.
    Süß und salzig sounds even more German😋
    It looks like a theme park just like some parts of the Netherlands, so in that sense, it is typically Dutch😊
    Nice video, beautiful language. Thanks!

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 19 дней назад +5

    Van Gogh has two glutteral "G's" in in. North of the Rhine these are hard, south of the Rhine these are softer. Dutch has no official rules for pronounciation, (only for spelling and grammar), so both pronounciations are correct. Sorry to say you butchered it, haha. The special buildings (windmill and music tent) looked exactly copied, the rest, not at all. Maybe the old factory a bit. As for reading subtitles, that is not a problem for Dutch people. All foreign items on Dutch TV are subtitled, so we learn to watch with subtitles from the time we can read.

  • @BabzV
    @BabzV 14 дней назад

    Van Gogh, the way you pronounced the first G Paul is how you pronounce the last G as well.
    Like you're about to spit up a big one! 😂

  • @BabzV
    @BabzV 14 дней назад

    Pannenkoek literally translated = pan cake/cookie.
    Just flower, eggs, milk or water, touch of salt and any topping you like, savory or sweet. 😊👍

  • @claudiadoomen
    @claudiadoomen 19 дней назад +1

    What an interesting city. Never heard about it.

  • @user-rh4sq9cx1e
    @user-rh4sq9cx1e 19 дней назад +1

    Interesting video, nice to see how 3 countries work together for the well-being of Brazil. This is how it can be done instead of going to war with each other 💪, you should look it up, there is a video from Japan,There they have also recreated an entire city and the Dutch royal family in full size, beautiful to see

    • @augustofranca3446
      @augustofranca3446 19 дней назад +1

      3 country no, 2, América is the continent, its not because of the US, US is a contry in the North part of América, not América itself

  • @darnokie
    @darnokie 19 дней назад

    Hello, Brazilian here 🥰🇧🇷, if you haven't reacted yet, I recommend three more beautiful cities: Gramado & Canela - Rio Grande Do Sul, Campos do Jordão - São Paulo

  • @Lilygirl283
    @Lilygirl283 19 дней назад +2

    Wow! I had no idea! Learned something new, thank you!
    Amsterdam btw is not the Netherlands, yes it is the capital city, but it's full of tourist, try leiden, Utrecht, Delft, Nijmegen, and so much more..ps zoet en zout is dutch and it means sweet and salty..

    • @randolf84
      @randolf84 19 дней назад +2

      many people dont know that the Dutch have ruled a part of Brasil for 24years and it was called Nova Hollanda. many cities in the north east coast of Brasil started by the Dutch.

  • @marie-josebrabers6632
    @marie-josebrabers6632 18 дней назад +1

    En ook in Japan!

  • @AP-hr3qm
    @AP-hr3qm 19 дней назад

    That's funny, I came across Holambra videos myself right after the idea of comparing Brazil and the Netherlands came up - and also tried Google Maps 😄
    Based on the windmills, few people would guess it was outside the Netherlands.
    But the climate and the palm trees quickly give away that something is different 🤭
    And you can see, that the architecture probably didn't evolve, everything was created more or less simultaneously.
    And the architectural styles were imitated with the material that was available and adapted to local needs.
    European towns usually have a town center, often a market square, which has grown around old trading crossroads, for example. Don't know if that was recreated here.
    Apart from that, probably the same thing has happened here that generally happens when emigrants want to preserve their homeland and sense of home: A perfect mix between everything.
    Including the awareness of having something extraordinary and wanting to show it. A lot of things and traditions from the former homeland are then created and displayed extra clearly. For themselves to remember and honor and for tourists.
    Some things seem like a mixture between living in a museum and a bit kitschy exhibition as a result.
    But: I'm sure I'd do it exact the same way.
    I find it fascinating how this has developed.
    And it seems to be a very beautiful city.
    The development of the language should also be interesting.
    I know that from German emigrant communities (and I think it also happens to immigrants to Germany) that they don't develop in the same way as their home country. They hold on to what they knew when they left their homeland.
    In times of Radio, TV, phone and internet it's way more easy to keep up than before but it still can't cover everything.
    Most of the further development comes from the new country, to which people want and have to adapt.
    The language development of German emigrant communities usually shows a mix of German dialects with a lot of old, in Germany almost forgotten vocabulary - supplemented by newly invented words for previously unknown things and many linguistic modulations and additions including accent in the language of the new homeland. And the German language usually dies out slowly.
    I would actually be very interested in the Brazilian-Portuguese-influenced Dutch 😊
    And: How do old home cooking recipes change in a completely new environment?
    Interesting that they went from the Dutch tulips to all sorts of flowers.
    A lot of assumptions, please correct me if I'm wrong 😊

  • @daphneschuring5810
    @daphneschuring5810 19 дней назад +1

    Pannenkoeken means Pancakes and the showed a pannenkoek (pancake)

  • @Teun-flips
    @Teun-flips 18 дней назад +1

    Watch the video (glad ijs) it is 100% the most dutch video ever

  • @Adelaartje
    @Adelaartje 19 дней назад

    It would be nice to meet the people of this town.. When are you going? You can try out speaking Dutch with some of the first arrivals.

  • @yamamoto9772
    @yamamoto9772 19 дней назад +1

    Fun fact did you know a part of Brazil was Dutch. Between 1630 and 1654 the Dutch took over a big part of the Portugeese colonie in Brazil. We named it. New Holland (Nova Hollanda).Recife and Olinda ( and more) used to be Dutch. U can still find the Dutch influence there (forts). Maybe a topic for a new video. Nice vid again. Greetz from the Netherlands.ruclips.net/video/1T-Njwkqn4Y/видео.html

    • @AP-hr3qm
      @AP-hr3qm 19 дней назад +1

      Actually, where in this world have you _not_ been? 😮
      I only found out about 5 years ago that even New York used to be called New Amsterdam ... now Brazil!

    • @yamamoto9772
      @yamamoto9772 19 дней назад +1

      @@AP-hr3qm Its hard to believe the Netherlands is a smal country. But its heavy populated almost 18 mil now. And in the 17th century we where the most powerfull sea nation in the world. Later the English took over. If u look at population in Europe now. How big is for example Sweden. Only 10.5 ppl live there. The Dutch did go everywere over the world to trade( not to change religion) So also Japan Allowed us to trade there. Only the Dutch were allowed to Trade there . We had your own island there. You can find Dutch influence All over the world.

    • @AP-hr3qm
      @AP-hr3qm 19 дней назад

      @@yamamoto9772 I knew about around the Indian Ocean, South Africa, Suriname and then the New York area ... but Brazil is totally new to me.
      And Japan 🤯

    • @AP-hr3qm
      @AP-hr3qm 19 дней назад

      @@yamamoto9772 Okay, I learned a lot today 😮

    • @yamamoto9772
      @yamamoto9772 19 дней назад +1

      @@AP-hr3qm Lol there is many more New zealand is named after Zeeland. Tasmania is discovered By Abel tasman and named after him. Australia we had our parts.Korea the first European there was A Dutchman he shipwrecked there. We had tradingpost around the world, All around the coast of Africa . Indonesia was Dutch.We had influence in India, Sri lanka China Taiwan. We still have Islands in the caribean. I can tell you much more.

  • @riannedebeen-jansen3533
    @riannedebeen-jansen3533 19 дней назад +2

    Zoet is sweet zout is salt not German Dutch

  • @mariannebreukelaar5160
    @mariannebreukelaar5160 19 дней назад +1

    Pannenkoeken= pancakes

  • @riannedebeen-jansen3533
    @riannedebeen-jansen3533 19 дней назад +2

    Pannenkoeken are pancakes

    • @marcovtjev
      @marcovtjev 19 дней назад +1

      koek(en) is the root of the American English word Cookie. Pan as in frying pan.

  • @natasjavanderhoek6966
    @natasjavanderhoek6966 19 дней назад +2

    Pannenkoeken is pancakes

    • @DACHBenelux
      @DACHBenelux  19 дней назад +2

      Oh, lol, simple as that 😂

    • @natasjavanderhoek6966
      @natasjavanderhoek6966 19 дней назад +1

      @@DACHBenelux sometime it is.😀

    • @natasjavanderhoek6966
      @natasjavanderhoek6966 18 дней назад +1

      @@DACHBenelux the Dutch have adopted words from French, English, German.
      Maybe you cane watch some video's of VOC. It was the biggest Dutch company of the old days. 😀👍🏼

  • @classesanytime
    @classesanytime 19 дней назад

    Hol = Holanda (Netherlands)
    Am = Estados Unidos (USA)
    Bra = Brasil (Brazil)

    • @AP-hr3qm
      @AP-hr3qm 19 дней назад

      I thought Am = (South) Am(erica) ?

  • @estherbos6820
    @estherbos6820 14 дней назад

    I think it is terrible😂....totally fake