The popular image of Sinterklaas, in very much the same way,
came from a book published in the late 19th century. Thanks to the
legacy of generosity by the original St. Nicholas, they both are believed to bring
gifts to good little boys and girls, and they both are privy to the latest Intel
regarding who’s naughty and who’s nice. (More on that in a minute.)
Sint does his gig in late November and early December. He
lives far, far away (in Spain) then arrives
| pieten |
| Sinterklaas gifts left for the neighbors |
How Santa became affiliated with December 25, the Christian
recognition of the day Christ was born is probably enough to fill several
blogs. By virtue of a melding of European traditions, especially that of
Sinterklaas brought to the new world by Dutch settlers in present day New York,
Santa Claus has become an unprecedented philanthropist who happens to do his
deal on the same day the world was saved.
When I was a boy, I was led to believe that bad kids got
switches and coal in their Christmas stockings. I thought of it as a Christmas
report card of sorts. You never really knew how you were doing until Christmas
morning, and what a true relief it was to see anything peeking out the top of
my stocking besides a bundle of sticks!
Sinterklaas has his own unique deterrent to bad behavior. He
doesn’t just deny rotten kids the good stuff the rest of us got, no, oh no.
Legend has it that Sint and his pieten put naughty children in burlap bags and cart
them off to Spain.
Not too long ago I asked a Dutch colleague of mine if she
was told such things when she was a child. She said, “Yes! Absolutely! I was
petrified that every year he would carry me away!” So I asked her if she tells
her own son the same thing. She answered, “He is three. I don’t want to scare
him.”
Scare him? Seriously, scare him? I think being scared would
be the least traumatic outcome possible. Then again, I asked my colleague if
she behaved as a result of the threat of being taken away. “You’re darn right I
did,” she said. “I really didn’t want to end up in Spain!”


I thought you might be a candidate to end up in Spain. The photo is proof.
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