The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

KIRK’S OLD DUTCH LINK

Michael Alexander speaks to Rev John Russell about the history of the Scots Kirk in Rotterdam. The Clerk to the Presbytery of Dunkeld and Meigle spent nine years as minister there from 1963-72

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H e is the globe-trotting kirk minister who recently celebrated 60 years since his ordination with a service in Perthshire.

But having been brought up in India and having worked in Germany, Scotland, Canada and Holland, the Rev John Russell will always have a special affinity with the Scots Internatio­nal Church in Rotterdam where he was minister for nine years.

The memories came flooding back for Mr Russell when he read a recent Courier feature about Newport-based broadcaste­r Billy Kay’s exploratio­n of Scotland’s centuries-old relationsh­ips with the Low Countries of Europe.

Mr Russell, who has been the Presbytery Clerk of Dunkeld and Meigle since 2001, was first ordained by the United Church of Canada in Ontario in May 1959.

Having learned Hindustani while living in Mumbai as a child, he went on to be the minister of the Scots Kirk in Rotterdam from 1963 to 1972.

“My wife Sheila and I went there when we were married and our two sons were born there,” says Mr Russell, “It was that awful winter of 1963. With my background, being in an internatio­nal church in Rotterdam, it was great because you were meeting people from all over the world – you felt quite at home with people from all over the world. It was a great time to be!”

The church, which first opened in 1643 for the many Scottish merchants, sailors and soldiers who lived in the city, has strong links to Perthshire as its first minister Alexander Petrie was recruited from Rhynd.

The kirk’s congregati­on even carried on after it was destroyed by Nazi bombs during the Second World War – latter being rebuilt.

However, its history is firmly rooted in the wider history, religion, politics and economics of Europe during the 16th and 17th centuries.

Mr Russell explained how in the 15th and 16th centuries, travel to the continent from Scotland was easier than travel to England.

Quoting from the Hilton Holland Magazine of August 1965, Mr Russell explained how the Scots Church congregati­on was originally formed, in 1643, for the convenienc­e of the

numerous Scots merchants and seamen who lived and traded among the Dutch in Rotterdam during the 17th century.

Founded during the civil war between Charles I and Oliver Cromwell in a country where the Reformatio­n was secure, the congregati­on had only been in existence a short time when the British monarchy was restored in 1660.

For 28 years, until the accession of William of Orange to the British throne in 1689, the monarchy attempted to bring the Church of Scotland under state control.

Many Presbyteri­ans were forced to flee Scotland and they took refuge with the Rotterdam congregati­on.

The church was originally a house in the Wijnstraat and four silver communion cups were provided by the magistrate­s. Later the congregati­on moved to the St Sebastian’s Chapel, the chapel of the Society of Crossbowme­n.

The fugitives, called Covenanter­s because they were “covenanted” to maintain Presbyteri­anism in Scotland, came crowding in to Rotterdam in such vast numbers that a gallery had to be built in the chapel for the overflow and a second minister called.

Some of the banished Scots returned home in 1689, but many stayed in Holland with their families.

In addition the congregati­on had been augmented over the years by members of the “Scottish Brigade” serving in Holland, and was to continue to be added to until the time of the American Revolution when it was disbanded.

The Brigade was sent to the Netherland­s by Elizabeth I in 1572 (along with English soldiers, later withdrawn) to help the Dutch fight the Spanish, England’s and Holland’s ancient enemy.

Stationed in the southern part of the country, the troops naturally were drawn to the church, a centre of Scottish influence, and even supported the “Scotch poorhouse” maintained for invalids and the needy.

By 1697 the exiles, merchants, sailors, soldiers and their families numbered about 1,000 persons, and it was decided to build a permanent Scots Church.

This building was erected on the Vasteland with foundation stones brought across from the Forth area of Scotland. It was in existence until 1940, when it, along with much of downtown Rotterdam, was destroyed by German bombs.

The present building, at 119 Schiedamse Vest near the Central Station, dates from 1952 and was built with funds collected both in Rotterdam and in Scotland from individual­s and organisati­ons interested in the welfare of the church.

It was dedicated by the then-moderator, the Rt Rev Johnstone Jeffrey in 1952.

It attracted people of all nationalit­ies including Dutch people who preferred the simplicity of the service.

Though the congregati­on changed, Mr Russell recalls how the fundamenta­l Scottish character of the church was retained.

A service at the Scots Church in 1970 marked 350 years since the Pilgrim Fathers’ departure from the Netherland­s and Rev John

Russell was in the pulpit. Mr Russell recalls how, as a young minister in 1965, he found the special problems of his peculiarly constitute­d congregati­on challengin­g, and welcomed the opportunit­y to minister to the US government console temporaril­y assigned to Rotterdam.

He was assisting the American-netherland­s Club of Rotterdam by providing a room on the church premises for their thrift shop and had encouraged activities of the local British Women’s Club.

In his then 2.5 years in Rotterdam, he had thoroughly familiaris­ed himself with the church’s history and traditions by studying in its extensive archives.

These documents, which date back to the first Minutes of the Consistory in 1643, along with the original silver communion cups and baptismal basin, were rescued from the strong-room of the bombed church in 1940.

Parishione­rs, determined to save at least some of the church’s relics, got to the site right after the raid and found there was nothing left of the church except the precious relics and ancient records which were intact in an undergroun­d vault.

The nose cone of a bomb was also discovered, and it was mounted on a pedestal to double as a collection box, and a reminder of that period during World War Two when it was impossible to meet for worship.

The silver communion cups were also a strong link with the past. Presented by the City Council of Rotterdam in the 17 th Century, they recalled the period during which the Dutch States General and Rotterdam City Magistrate­s guaranteed the salaries of the Scots Church ministers, even while war was being waged between Great Britain and Holland.

Andrew Munro, a descendant of a member of the Scottish Brigade, presented the baptismal basin to the church in the early 19th century.

Munro, who had been appointed official architect for the City of Rotterdam, was typical of the long line of Scots-descended Dutchmen who had contribute­d to the growth of the Netherland­s.

“I was inducted as the 30th Minister of the Scots Church Rotterdam – appointed by the Church of Scotland and then inducted by the Dutch Reformed Church,” says Mr Russell.

“Permission was granted by the Dutch Queen Juliana to be Minister. In my time the congregati­on had over 200 members – all nationalit­ies – Dutch married to Scots or English, Americans, Commonweal­th, Swiss, an Irish KLM pilot from Dublin.

“By the 1960’s many of the Dutch members were in senior positions. I had the Commander in Chief of the Dutch Navy as a member. One time, a naval chaplain was ordered to take my Sunday service so that I could have a holiday!

“The congregati­on became truly multinatio­nal, a tradition that has continued throughout successive ministries.

“During the Second World War the Dutch Navy submarines were based in Scottish ports and many Dutch sailors married Scots, and the congregati­on had a good Dutch membership as these Scots women brought their Dutch husbands into the Scots Church.

“Another interestin­g link is this. Alexander Petrie, the first Minister, came from the Parish of Rhynd in the Presbytery of Perth and a former minister, the Reverend Derek Lawson, was clerk to the Presbytery of Perth and I am clerk to the Presbytery of Dunkeld and Meigle also in Perthshire.

“A tale of friendship across the North Sea if ever there was one!”

THE PRESENT BUILDING NEAR THE CENTRAL STATION DATES FROM 1952 AND ATTRACTS PEOPLE FROM ALL NATIONS

 ??  ?? LEGACY: The Scots Kirk in Rotterdam first opened in 1643 to cater for merchants, sailors and soldiers.
LEGACY: The Scots Kirk in Rotterdam first opened in 1643 to cater for merchants, sailors and soldiers.
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 ??  ?? PERTHSHIRE CONNECTION: John Russell, pictured in the centre of the photo below left, followed in the footsteps of the Scots Internatio­nal Church in Rotterdam’s first minister Alexander Petrie, below right.
PERTHSHIRE CONNECTION: John Russell, pictured in the centre of the photo below left, followed in the footsteps of the Scots Internatio­nal Church in Rotterdam’s first minister Alexander Petrie, below right.

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