Yes, I was reading this http://www.know-britain.com/general/great_britain.html as a source of info about these denominations. Interestingly rnough, it is said that Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom, not of Great Britain! Haha!
Well, in Belgium, our great statesmen invented a federal Kingdom based on
- three "Regions" ie topographical: Flanders, Brussels, Wallonie.
- three "Communities" ie linguistic: Flemish, French and German
each entity having its own Parliament, Ministers, etc...
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Positive was that all politicians were sure to find somewhere a job,
Negative that all problems were postponed.
Positive again, the separation lines were not religious like in Irak (although being a Kurd is not a religion..) or between catholics (south of the border) and protestants (north of the border).
For instance, I am french speaking, from Brussels, living in Wallonie, half my family as of my wife coming from Tienen and Hasselt (Kempen, not quite Flanders). Aaarrgh
, nowadays I am more like a "Sunnite"? Kurds are also often Sunnite?
But indeed the (d)evolution in Belgium is such that mixed families tend to disappear (as do also families...) and history is being rewritten by journalists or self-called historians. Belgium not being so special, I just read a paper describing the (supposed) linguistic origins in America (of natives), as seen in XVIth and XVIIth centuries. It would be hilarious, if there were not so many deaths, so much greed.
For people who read French,
here (http://www.ulb.ac.be/philo/spf/linguis/esplingam.htm) it is.
Personally, I dont like the "European" bureaucracy, but you know, the "motto (?)" of Belgium is "Eendracht maakt macht - L'union fait la force", so I agree with Paddy, but I think that some countries would have to abandon ship.
Regards,
Luc