"When I served in the army of the Netherlands, I was brainwashed with the words 'the Russians are coming!'" Gerhard Reyndsen wrote in a letter to Putin, as cited by TASS.
"I said Russia will not come, because they saw a lot of grief and war, they want peace, and Americans are much more dangerous," said Reyndsen, adding that right after that he was dubbed "a communist" by his commander.
"I have always irritated my family, because I thought there was a lot of anti-Soviet propaganda [in Europe]," says the Russian fan.
Reyndsen says he's always taken an interest in Russian history. He knows a lot about the House of Romanov, the imperial dynasty which ruled until the 1917 October Revolution, and Peter the Great, the tsar who reigned at the turn of the 18th century.
Голландец Герхард Рейндсен, в знак солидарности с РФ, попросил у Путина российский паспорт
http://t.co/SRRo8EMp7S pic.twitter.com/M19Da9qUDx
— Марина_Саакова (@marina_saniram) May 7, 2015
Peter the Great studied shipbuilding in the Netherlands and learnt much about Western culture. He formed close ties with the West and is famous for "cutting a window to Europe."
The architect and former employee of an international courier company currently lives with his Russian wife in Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic, where she runs a hotel. He met her back in 2008 in Rotterdam and they married in 2010.
"My wife is from Ekaterinburg [a city in the Urals], her children are our children," he says.
Reyndsen follows the situation in Russia and around the world. He understands and speaks Russian a little, and his wife translates for him.
"I watch the internet and Russian TV about the situation in Russia and in the world. Then I read and watch European news and see that the latter don't write the truth, they don't report many things."
Reyndsen says the situation is not only "insulting and sad, but also outrageous."
"I was particularly outraged by the behavior of US authorities in connection with Ukraine," he noted.
Reyndsen says that though he is not Gerard Depardieu, [a famous French actor who was granted citizenship of Russia back in 2013], he "loves Russia and Russian people."
"I kindly ask you, Mr. Putin, to advise me if I could get a Russian passport? For me it would be a matter of pride," he wrote.
The Kremlin has so far made no comment about Dutch citizen Gerhard Reyndsen applying for Russian citizenship.
Comment: Recently a schoolgirl living in Donetsk, Nastia Koptyeva, wrote a heartfelt letter to the Russian President. More and more ordinary people are recognizing Vladimir Putin not only as a strong World leader, but also a 'man of conscience'. No wonder he has an approval rating (88%), that his international counterparts can only dream of, and that he was named the most influential person in the world by Time Magazine.
Is Putin incorruptible? U.S. insider's view of the Russian president's character and his country's transformation