Sinterklaas
Sinterklaas is a folkloric figure in Dutch and Flemish culture, representing Saint Nicholas, the 4th-century Bishop of Myra renowned for secret acts of charity toward children and the needy.[1][2] The annual celebration centers on his arrival by steamboat from Spain in mid-November, followed by parades where he rides a white horse through towns, accompanied by Zwarte Piet, his traditional helper depicted as a Moorish page who distributes pepernoten (small ginger biscuits) and assists in assessing children's behavior.[2] On the evening of December 5—known as Sinterklaasavond—families exchange creatively disguised gifts often paired with humorous or satirical poems, while children place shoes by the hearth to receive treats like chocolate letters shaped from the recipient's initial or a roede (bundle of switches) for the naughty.[2] The tradition, which predates the Protestant Reformation's suppression of saint veneration but persisted through customs like filling shoes with sweets, emphasizes moral judgment and reward, with Sinterklaas embodying benevolence and Zwarte Piet—first illustrated as a black-skinned Moor in an 1850 children's book by Jan Schenkman—handling discipline and deliveries via chimney.[1][3] Though rooted in medieval European veneration of Saint Nicholas as patron of children, the modern Sinterklaas rite evolved distinctly in the Low Countries, influencing but differing from the American Santa Claus by maintaining a slimmer, bishop-like figure without reindeer.[1] In recent decades, the blackface elements of Zwarte Piet have provoked debate, with critics labeling them racially insensitive and prompting shifts to soot-smeared variants like Roetveegpiet in public events, though defenders cite historical Moorish depictions unrelated to sub-Saharan stereotypes or chimney grime as a later rationalization.[3][4]