When sport and pride meet
When sport and pride meet
When sport and pride meet
This summer, Amsterdam hosts WorldPride for the first time; a two-week celebration drawing visitors from across the globe. When we talk about pride and LGBTQIA+ rights, we often refer directly to human rights, equality, and acceptance. Yet this is also a fitting moment to look at how sport and pride have quietly grown together in the Netherlands, and what that says about the kind of country we are trying to be.
The Netherlands has a notable history when it comes to LGBTQIA+ rights. The COC Netherlands, one of the world's oldest gay rights organisations, has been active since 1946. Amsterdam hosted its first Gay Pride Day already in 1977. And in 2001, the Netherlands became the first country in the world to legalise same-sex marriage.
Sport has been slower to follow. For a long time, the two worlds existed in parallel. Pride marching through the streets while locker rooms remained largely silent on the subject. That started to change thanks in part to people willing to speak up.
John Blankenstein was one of them. A Dutch football referee, who came out publicly in the 1980s: a rare thing in professional football anywhere in the world at the time. He faced significant hostility, but never stopped advocating for acceptance. In 2003, he received the Bob Angelo Medal from COC Netherlands for his contribution to LGBTQIA+ emancipation. After his passing, his sister Karin co-founded the John Blankenstein Foundation to carry that work forward, running workshops for athletes, coaches and sports organisations, and continuing the conversation he started.
My message is above all: be yourself
Jeffrey Wammes
Former gymnast Jeffrey Wammes became another visible figure at this intersection. A four-time Dutch all-around champion and World Cup medallist, he came out publicly in 2010, during his active career, one of the first Dutch top athletes to do so. He later became an ambassador for Pride Amsterdam, a role he told us he continues to hold proudly.
When asked about the silence he experienced from his own federation after coming out, he was candid: "From the federation I received no response. It remained deafeningly quiet. A listening ear would have meant a lot to me." He added: "I was successful and strong enough, but no matter how you look at it, a little support goes a long way."
He is equally direct about why more visibility in sport matters. "There are few athletes who come out and that's a shame. I think it's because they fear bullying and discrimination. When I came out I only received positive reactions." And he has a clear sense of the ripple effect a high-profile coming-out can have: "The more you achieve, the easier such a coming-out becomes."
His message as a World Pride ambassador has stayed consistent: "I will everywhere stress how important it is to be yourself."
Sport Pride: where the fields meet the canal
Since 2015, Sport Pride has been an official part of Pride Amsterdam, a platform that connects sports organisations, federations and individual athletes around the work of making sport more inclusive. What started as a bridge between two communities has grown into a year-round initiative with a conference, workshops and partnerships across Dutch sport.
This year, as WorldPride comes to Amsterdam, sport is woven into the programme throughout. The Amsterdam Pride Run kicks things off on 19 July, drawing participants across 5 km, 10 km and 15 km routes. In Vondelpark, the Sport Pride Festival invites visitors to try everything from boxing to yoga to chess, making sport not a spectacle but a space to participate, connect and belong.
The logic behind linking sport and Pride is straightforward: sport is one of the most powerful social spaces there is. Changing the culture, steadily, practically, person by person, has an outsized effect.
Not finished, but further along
None of this is to say the work is done. Research consistently shows that many LGBTIQ+ athletes still don't feel fully safe or welcome in sport, particularly in team settings. Visibility at the top doesn't automatically change the atmosphere in local clubs and school gyms. That's why grassroots work, like workshops, ambassador programmes, inclusive policies, all matter as much as symbolic gestures.
What the Netherlands has learned is that the most lasting change happens when sport organisations don't just make statements, but build inclusion into how they train coaches, run clubs and talk about their athletes. The John Blankenstein Foundation's work with teams is one example of that quieter, longer effort.
WorldPride Amsterdam 2026 marks 25 years since the Netherlands legalised same-sex marriage. Sport is one of the places where the values behind that milestone are still being made real. One team, one club, one conversation at a time.
Read more on LGBTQIA+
Read more on LGBTQIA+
When spider silk meets human skin
When spider silk meets human skin
When spider silk meets human skin
A pioneer of Dutch bio-design, where art, science, and biotechnology meet.
From bulletproof skin to clothing made from manure, Jalila Essaïdi transforms scientific breakthroughs into poetic statements about the future of humanity and nature. Her work is visionary, experimental, circular, and collaborative.
Essaïdi first gained worldwide attention with her project 2.6g 329m/s, also known as ‘Bulletproof skin’. Working with scientists at her own BioArt Laboratory in Eindhoven, she integrated spider silk, one of the strongest natural fibres on Earth, into human skin cells. The result: a hybrid material strong enough to stop a bullet fired at reduced speed. What began as an art experiment soon became a catalyst for global conversation about how which forms of safety would benefit society.
Essaïdi explores the social, political, ethical, and cultural questions that arise in a world shaped by new biotechnologies. Project 2.6g 329m/s received international attention and even drew interest from the U.S. military. Rather than selling her patent to the highest bidder, Essaïdi turned her invention toward healing. The same silk-based material is now being developed as a regenerative dressing for burn victims and chronic wounds, turning protection into restoration - a natural, biodegradable skin that helps the body heal itself.
Isolated dermis, used to extract fibroblasts from.
A bullet wrapped in a piece of in vitro skin attached to a block ballistic gell.
Her curiosity didn’t stop there. Through her biotech company Inspidere, Essaïdi created Mestic®, an innovation that transforms cow manure into textiles, paper, and bioplastics. The project challenges our instinctive aversion to waste. Because in nature, nothing is truly waste. By revealing the hidden value of what we discard, Mestic® shows that even the most unpleasant materials can hold beauty and potential. By turning waste into value, she redefines what circular design can look like.
Essaïdi is the CEO of Inspidere B.V., a biotech company based in the Brainport region of Eindhoven. She continues to mentor the next generation of bio-designers at her BioArt Laboratories, developing nature-based solutions for global challenges such as CO₂ capture and sustainable materials. It fosters collaboration between life sciences and the creative industries. Jalila Essaïdi embodies New Dutch, where innovation grows from curiosity, collaboration, and the belief that nature and technology belong on the same team.
Learn more about Jalila Essaïdi
Learn more about Jalila Essaïdi
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Discover more New Dutch stories
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Plastic bicycle paths
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Building back better for a blue and green future
Flying-V changes the shape of sustainable flying
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The smartest part of the North Sea
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Hamburgers made from … crickets?!
Global demand for food is set to outpace the available food production capacity, while destroying the climate goals. It is important to provide enough food and upgrade the capacity, while keeping an eye on sustainability. Dutch company De Krekerij thinks that using insects as a sustainable meat substitute can contribute to food security and while creating a circular planet together.