Buruma provides detailed insight for each character and allows the reader to think about the motivation behind each character's behavior. Bulma explained that the assassination of Theo Van Gogh was "everywhere in the Netherlands", but he quickly pointed out what is known in his provocative statement, not his own movie. Van Gogh's family consists of Calvinists, socialists, and humanists, all of which have in some way affected Van Gogh. Bulma emphasizes the desire that Van Gogh shouts "shock and ignite." This is a movie that became an adult young, it is a movie known for its shocking value.
Muslims in the Netherlands - Morocco, resented by Van Gogh's "submission" are angry with the repression of Islam women. A few weeks later, New Yorker's Ian Bromma analyzed the shocking assassination. He reported with great interest. Films, sentences, speech, Van Gogh are strongly insisting that forgiveness requires intolerance. Therefore, in the summary of Bulum's idea, "Respecting Islam without mentioning Islamic women and homosexual suppression is a bad hypocrisy." At the time, one-tenth of the Dutch population was made up of immigrants, many of them Muslims. It is proven to be the practice of balancing the circle to accept existence and beliefs while keeping the ideal of equally respecting all ideas and lifestyles.
Ian Bulma's various education (Riton's Chinese literature and Japan's Japanese film) has expanded to an eclectic bibliography. His book is a Dutch literary scholar of Japanese culture and Chinese history and covers various topics ranging from European English scholars to Japanese tattoos and Theo Van Gogh's murder. On their promised land, Bulma returned to his hometown - or, rather, returned to his grandparents' house: British Berkshire, Bernard and Winschleinger (movie director John's parents, Bloomers) "Child's idle" uncle spent most of their marriage life. The couple assimilated the German Jews who kept their background side, but some were still "Jewish" for their taste. The family history of Bulma's book, his grandparent's love letter is the vision of a faded civilization.
As a boy in the late 1950s, Ian Bromy was confused when he heard that his grandparents used 45 words. Even now, he is confused about its origin. It has nothing to do with P45s, or Colt 45s, or rule 45 (separation of child offenders in prison), or 45 rpm vinyl singles or the end of the war, 1945. This is Jewish codename. "He is 45 years old?" His grandparents will ask whenever someone in the family encounters a new person, Bernard and Winnie Schlesinger are Jewish people who are children of stockbrokers. They grew up in an equally rich Hampstead environment and gathered in their teens for love for classical music. It is German (although their grandfather is a classmate of Frankfurt) they are all passionate about England. It is not Israel's "the land they promised"
The places of their promises: Ian Bromma's war review with my dear grandparents - an enchanting assimilation story