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For decades, the Netherlands was seen as the most tolerant country in Europe. It legalized same-sex marriage, soft drugs, and euthanasia before anyone else, and built a national identity around pluralism and openness. But beneath the surface, a silent fracture was growing. Starting in the 1960s, large waves of immigration from Turkey and Morocco reshaped Dutch cities. Guest workers stayed permanently, communities grew in isolation, and a model of “passive multiculturalism” encouraged separation rather than integration. By the 1980s, parallel societies had formed — neighborhoods where Dutch was barely spoken, mosques replaced churches, and values often clashed with the secular and liberal traditions of the Netherlands. While governments, media, and academics avoided confrontation, tensions mounted. Rising crime, unemployment, and cultural differences turned immigration into the country’s deepest fault line. Pim Fortuyn and Theo van Gogh paid with their lives for challenging the consensus. And then came Geert Wilders, who built an entire political movement on the frustration that no one else dared to address. In 2023, his Party for Freedom (PVV) became the most voted force in parliament. His rise was not an accident — it was the product of decades of silence, denial, and unresolved cultural conflict. This video explores how mass immigration transformed the Netherlands, fractured its identity, and gave rise to a new era of politics. At its core, it asks one question: can a society without a shared identity survive?