Boris van der Ham

Boris van der Ham
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
23 May 2002  19 September 2012
Personal details
Born Boris van der Ham
(1973-08-29) 29 August 1973
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Political party Democrats 66
Residence Amsterdam
Alma mater Maastricht Academy of Dramatic Arts (BA)
Occupation Politician, actor, writer, chairman Dutch Humanists
Website

(in Dutch) Boris van der Ham website (English)

Boris van der Ham (born 29 August 1973) is a Dutch writer, humanist, former politician and actor. On 23 May 2002, he became a member of the House of Representatives for the Democrats 66, a social liberal party. Since 24 November 2012, he has been the chairman of the Humanistisch Verbond.[1]

Member of Parliament

In May 2002, van der Ham was elected Member of Parliament. He was re-elected in 2003, 2006 and 2010 with preferential votes. Together with members of GroenLinks and the Labour Party he drafted the bill that led to the 2005 European Constitution referendum, the country's first referendum in two hundred years. He drafted several other successful bills, among others: the possibility to correct parliamentary bills by people-initiated referenda, an amendment to put equal rights for gays and handicapped in the Constitution, a bill to abolish the ban on blasphemy, a bill to reform a ban on shopping on Sundays and a proposal to make the formation process of a new government more transparent. In November 2006, he also became deputy parliamentary leader of his party. He focused on matters of education, drug policy, culture, mass media, economic affairs, environment and energy, social equality, democracy and freedom of speech. In 2007 he wrote a book Voortrekkers en Baanbrekers ("In the front row") about the role of the Netherlands in the European Union after the European Constitution referendum.[2] In 2012 he published a book "The Morality of Freedom" ("De Vrije Moraal") about the history and dilemmas of permissive societies.[3] In 2012 he decided not to run for a new term in Parliament, and said he wanted a political 'time-out'. He was MP until 19 September 2012.

Out of parliament

In his political afterlife he maintained a public figure. In 2014 he wrote the book De Koning Kun Je Niet Spelen.[4] ("You Can't Play The King"). In 2018 he formed, with other members of his political party D66, the movement Opfrissing ("Refreshment"), to correct some conservative-leaning policies that were introduced by the party.

Chairman of the Dutch Humanists

In November 2012 Van der Ham was elected chair of the Dutch Humanist Association. In this position he is focusing on issues of freedom of speech, education and solidarity with atheists and humanists in Muslim-majority countries. Since January 2010, he has maintained a weekly vlog on YouTube about freethinking, humanism and liberalism.[5] On 9/11 2009 he produced his first English spoken "Freethoughtvlog"[6] about the Ground 0 Mosque. He is also publishing English written blogs on his website.[7] In 2015 he featured in the documentary Among Nonbelievers about the hardships of ex-Muslims, and spoke at the Human Rights Council in Geneva on the topic of blasphemy laws.[8] In 2016, he featured in the follow-up documentary Non-believers: Freethinkers on the Run about the dismal situation of irreligious asylum seekers in Dutch refugee camps.[9] In 2018 he published the book 'Nieuwe Vrijdenkers' ('New Freethinkers').

Acting career

In 2016/2017, Van der Ham featured in the musical Ciske de Rat[10] He did the voice-over of the Dutch version of 'The Secret Life of 4 year olds'.[11] In 2018 he returned to the stage in the Dutch adaption of Kwame Kwei-Armah's play 'Beneatha's Place'.

Personal life

Van der Ham was raised a Remonstrant, but turned an agnostic later on. He is openly gay[12] and father of a son.[13]

Books

  • Voortrekkers en Baanbrekers (2007)
  • De Vrije Moraal (2012)
  • De Koning Kun Je Niet Spelen (2014)
  • Nieuwe Vrijdenkers (2018)

Decorations

References

  1. Archived 29 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. (in Dutch) Parlement.com biography
  3. http://www.liberales.be/boeken/boris
  4. http://www.dekoningkunjenietspelen.nl
  5. "Boris van der Ham". YouTube.
  6. "Free Thought Vlog - Free Thinking historic text, commented by Boris van der Ham/D66". www.freethoughtvlog.com.
  7. "Biography of Dutch liberal politician, humanist and entrepreneur Boris van Ham". borisvanderham.nl.
  8. "Ongelovig: vrijdenkers op de vlucht NPO 2, 22.55-23.50u". NRC Handelsblad. 12 December 2016. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  9. Marije van Beek (11 December 2016). "Ongelovige asielzoekers moeten zich bewijzen". Trouw. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  10. Entertainment, Stage. "Stage Entertainment". Stage Entertainment.
  11. "Televisietip: het geheime leven van 4-jarigen - MoodKids". 18 February 2017.
  12. "Roze plafond in het bedrijfsleven", COC.nl (in Dutch), 24 August 2006, retrieved 15 March 2012
  13. 'Boris van der Ham voor de eerste keer donor vader', Het Parool, 15 November 2011

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