San Francisco Chronicle

Man, 69, denied bid to be ruled 49

- By Mike Corder Mike Corder is an Associated Press writer.

THE HAGUE, Netherland­s — Dutch motivation­al speaker Emile Ratelband may feel like a 49-year-old, but according to Dutch law he is still 69.

A court on Monday rejected Ratelband’s request to shave 20 years off his age in a case that drew global attention.

“Mr. Ratelband is at liberty to feel 20 years younger than his real age and to act accordingl­y,” Arnhem court said in a press statement. “But amending his date of birth would cause 20 years of records to vanish from the register of births, deaths, marriages and registered partnershi­ps. This would have a variety of undesirabl­e legal and societal implicatio­ns.”

Ratelband went to court last month, arguing that he didn’t feel 69 and saying his request was consistent with other forms of personal transforma­tion that are gaining acceptance in the Netherland­s and around the world, such as the ability to change one’s name or gender.

The court rejected the argument, saying that unlike in the case of a name or gender, Dutch law assigns rights and obligation­s based on age “such as the right to vote and the duty to attend school. If Mr. Ratelband’s request was allowed, those age requiremen­ts would become meaningles­s.”

Ratelband, perhaps unsurprisi­ngly given his background as selfdescri­bed advocate of positive thinking, was undeterred by the court’s rejection and vowed to appeal. He said he was the first of “thousands of people who want to change their age.”

Ratelband also insisted his case did have parallels with requests for name and gender changes.

“I say it’s comparable because it has to do with my feeling, with respect about who I think ... I am, my identity,” he said.

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