billw55, on 2015-August-24, 08:11, said:
No. And this is not a test for citizenship. It is a test for residency.
So, if you want to be an alien resident in the Netherlands you have to pass the test before you enter the Netherlands. (Nationals of certain countries, like EU countries, etc., do not need to take the test. Refugees do not need to take the test either.)
This test is a result of the influence of xenophobic politicians in the Dutch government.
The reasoning goes like this:
- We need to help foreigners to integrate into Dutch society.
- We give them a course about the Netherlands and the Dutch language.
(So far, so good)
- We make the course mandatory. (It starts to get difficult.)
- You need to pass the test before you come to the Netherlands. After all, if you don't pass the test, you are not serious about integrating.
- You can take the test at selected locations abroad. You need to pay a large amount of money to take the test.
- The test is so difficult, and filled with useless trivia, that most Dutch citizens will not pass it and it has little to do with every day life in the Netherlands.
- The integration course is not available.
I find this sickening and it makes me ashamed that I am Dutch. (My brother is married to a woman from Madagascar. She will not be able to get any resident status in the Netherlands. She would probably need to travel to the Dutch Embassy in South-Africa if she wanted to take the test. They are living happily on Madagascar, but when they are visiting the Netherlands, their time here is limited by her visa.)
Compare this to what I got when I came to Sweden.
- After a few weeks, I got a booklet in the mailbox: "Welcome to Sweden! Sweden explained to foreigners". I think mine was in English, but it was available in 20 languages or so (Arabic, Chinese, Persian, Serbian, ...). I guess it was about 60 pages thick. It explained the whole Swedish system, from the parliamentary democracy to christian holidays, from banking to food and from the Swedish attitude and culture to their legal philosophy.
- One of the things it mentioned was that there was a course "Swedish for immigrants". If you would like to, you could take that course.
- I took the course, two mornings a week. The course was free. It was also adjusted to the student's level. (I was well educated and from the Netherlands, and Dutch and Swedish are fairly similar. There were also illiterate people from China. They needed to start with the alphabet. My course took half a year. Others take 7 years or more.)
- This course didn't just teach the Swedish language. It also taught the Swedish culture and attitude to things. (One of the most important words in the Swedish language is "lagom", which is impossible to translate, but it roughly means "sufficient" or "moderate". Swedes are happy with "lagom": enough is enough.)
- After the course, you do the test. You do need to take the course, or take the test, but it obviously is a nice addition to your resume when you are applying for jobs in Sweden.
- There are follow-up courses that you, again, could take for free.