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Sinterklaas tops Dutch tradition listTuesday 04 November 2008 The Sinterklaas celebrations on December 5, when St Nicholas visits children accompanied by his Moorish servant Zwarte Piet, is the most important Dutch tradition, according to a poll for the Dutch folk culture centre NCV. Second on the list is dressing a Christmas tree and third is the Queen's Day market on April 30. 'Some traditions you adopt, others you try to ignore. Everyone has their own collection of traditions,' the NCV's chairwoman Ineke Strouken said in Monday's Parool. 'Traditions create social cohesion and a feeling of belonging,' Tilburg University professor Arnoud-Jan Bijsterveld told the paper. 'Despite growing individuality, we still want to belong. But traditions are not static, they are dynamic. And that is a paradox – the old which is being constantly updated.' Hans Bennis, director of the Meertens Institute pointed out how the Sinterklaas traditions have been adapted. 'The switch and the sack [to take naughty children away to Spain] have almost disappeared,' he tells the Parool. The top 20 traditions, according to the NCV are: © DutchNews.nl
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