

Tue 30 Sept
|The Dutch Centre
Slavery: Ten True Stories
Marking the start of Black History Month, we warmly invite you to visit the opening of a special exhibition and talk on Tuesday September 30, 2025, at the Dutch Centre. This exhibition is kindly supported by the Dutch Embassy in London and the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.
Time & Location
30 Sept 2025, 19:00 – 22:00
The Dutch Centre, 7 Austin Friars, London EC2N 2HA, UK
About The Event
We warmly invite you to visit the opening of a special exhibition and talk on Tuesday September 30, 2025, at the Dutch Centre. This exhibition is kindly supported by the Dutch Church, the Dutch Embassy in London and the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.
In November 2025 Suriname will celebrate 50 years of independence. We are honoured to present this exhibition in a special edition at our homebase in the Dutch Church, who this year celebrate their 475th anniversairy. While it won’t feature the physical objects from the original exhibition, this exhibition will contribute to public awareness of this crucial and complex topic. Eveline Sint Nicolaas, senior curator at the history department of the Rijksmuseum, was involved in this international travelling exhibition from the very beginning and will be giving an insightful talk.
An Indispensable Chapter in Dutch History
In 2021 the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam organized a groundbreaking exhibition on slavery. As the national museum for art and history, the Rijksmuseum aims to illuminate all aspects of Dutch history, of which slavery is an integral part. By delving deeper into the past and providing a more complete narrative, we learn to better understand today’s society.
This exhibition about slavery takes the form of personal and real-life stories rather than abstract concepts. There are stories from Brazil, Suriname, and the Caribbean, and from South Africa and Asia. For the very first time, the focus is on slavery in the Dutch colonial period. This era spanning 250 years is an integral part of the history of the Netherlands. It was a time when people were reduced to property, to objects, to items in the accounts. The exhibition tells ten true stories from people who were involved in slavery in one way or the other. Ten personal stories about people who were enslaved, and people who kept slaves; about people who resisted, and people who were brought in slavery to the Netherlands. What were their lives like? How did they relate to the system of slavery? Were they able to make their own choices? Each story is told through informative panels. By examining the role of individuals within the system, this exhibition strives for a deeper understanding of slavery and raises questions about injustice as a universal phenomenon and the role individuals play in protecting human rights.
Ten True Stories: A Deeper Dive
João: An enslaved man from West Africa, who became a victim of the Dutch transatlantic slave trade.
Wally: Worked his entire life on a Surinamese plantation and eventually fled, with tragic consequences.
Oopjen: An affluent Amsterdam woman whose life was influenced by slavery in various ways.
Paulus: A young man from Africa who worked as a servant in a Dutch household and became a timpanist.
Van Bengalen: A collective name for thousands of enslaved women, men, and children from the Bay of Bengal.
Surapati: A Balinese leader who rebelled against the VOC in Java in the 17th century and became a national hero.
Sapali: A woman who hid rice grains in her hair, enabling survival outside the plantation economy for Maroons in Suriname.
Tula: The inspirer of an uprising on Curaçao at the end of the 18th century, who fought for freedom, equality, and brotherhood.
Dirk: An abolitionist at the end of the 18th century who nevertheless continued to buy enslaved people.
Lohkay: A woman who fled a plantation on Sint Maarten and inspired many others to resist.
To acknowledge and reflect on the part the Dutch community in London played in the transatlantic slave trade, the Dutch Church will be adding several panels of its own to this exhibition.This exhibition will be on display during the entire month of October. Please contact us if you wish to visit outside our October events schedule.

Doors open at 6pm allowing sufficient time to view the exhibition ahead of the opening at 7.00pm
Tickets
General Admission
From £7.50 to £15.00
£15.00
£10.00
£7.50
Total
£0.00