Integration with minor differences
In July, I wondered around cemetery Bovens in Maastricht, a city in the south of the Netherlands. The Bovens cemetery is situated in the neighborhood Heer,a former municipality and village, incorporated into Maastricht in 1970. Even though it is now part of the main city, the former village still has its own large network of services, including schools, sports centres, and a shopping mall.
The neighborhood also has a rather large cemetery and funerary center, named after the family Bovens. For over 100 years, this family has provided funerary services to the inhabitants of Heer.
In addition, Heer is home to many Molucan inhabitants, who were assigned this specific quarter in the early 1960s. During this decade, many Dutch cities promised specific quarters to Molucan ex-soldiers of the Royal Dutch Indian Army and their families.
As I wandered through the cemetery of Bovens, I found many graves of these Molucans and other Indonesians. Their graves stood out because of the different language used, and the use of photographs. Apart from that, however, the graves looked well integrated into the rest of the cemetery. Hopefully in the nearby future will I be able to find out whether this "integration with minor differences" was intended or not.