on a 1968 visit to Urk
Folktales A famous Urkish folktale is the story parents tell their children when they want to know where babies come from. The tale involves a large exposed rock which can be seen in the IJsselmeer about from the shore. This stone is known as the "
Ommelebommelestien". Urkers often tell their children that there are two kinds of people--
vreemden (strangers) and
Urkers (people from Urk). Strangers are usually born from a cabbage, or a stork brings them to their new parents, but Urkers come from a large stone which lies about from the shores of their former island. Nowadays, the stone is usually called "Ommelebommelestien" (Ommel-Bommel Stone), but in former times it was called "Ommelmoerstien":
moer means "mother's" in the Urkish dialect. In the tale, a
stork comes all the way from
Egypt to put babies in the stone. When the baby is about to be born, the baby's father is said to have to go to
Schokland to pick up the key that gives access to the stone. So when an Urkish man is asked if he has been to Schokland, he is actually being asked if he has children. In the older days, when both Urk and Schokland were still islands in the
Zuiderzee, the father had to take the
obstetrician in his boat and row from Urk to Schokland to get the key, and then from Schokland to the Ommelebommelestien to get the baby. Nowadays he would be able to go to Schokland by car, but according to the legend he still has to row. The door to the stone is somewhere below sea level, so it is difficult to find. Once the door was found, a small price had to be paid for the baby: traditionally one
Dutch guilder for a
girl but two for a
boy. The mother was said to be kept in bed with a nail through her right foot. There she would celebrate that she had just become a mother.
Arts The prolific Dutch writer
Albert Cornelis Baantjer was born here. Baantjer is mainly known for his large series of detective novels revolving around police inspector De Cock and his side-kick, sergeant Vledder. Writer
Jef Last lived on Urk for several years from 1932 onwards. He wrote several articles about Urk for one of the most progressive Dutch magazines, "De Groene Amsterdammer". While living here, he fell in love with a fisherman, and was inspired to write
Zuiderzee. This novel deals with the love between two fishermen living on Urk and was one of the first, if not the first novel in Dutch literature to openly deal with homosexuality. The Dutch writer, painter and resistance hero
Willem Arondeus spent some time on Urk from 1920. While residing on Urk, during 1922, he wrote 'Afzijdige Strofen', a collection of twenty homo-erotic poems which were posthumously published in 2001. ==Notable people==