Rachel Hazes wants to maintain the argument with her daughter Roxeanne Hazes. She says she was hurt too much to ever repair the relationship. “Never again at the table!”
Things have been going on between Rachel and Roxeanne Hazes for years now. The chance that things will ever work out between the two is nil. Not only because Roxeanne has already closed the door – she even calls her mother ‘Mrs Van Galen’ these days – but also because Rachel doesn’t want to anymore. She would like to maintain the argument with her daughter.
‘Doesn’t turn out well’
Rachel is done with her child for good. “I’m very honest: things don’t even have to work out between us anymore. She will always be my child. If she calls me tomorrow with a problem, I will undoubtedly solve it for her. But she doesn’t absolutely have to sit at the table with me anymore.”
She continues in the Party: “That may sound harsh, but I am so hurt by her. I thought what she said earlier at Beste Zangers, that I would not have been there for her after the death of her father, went very far. How many more blows do I have to take?”
‘Your child stays’
Doesn’t Rachel feel like she’s neglecting her motherly role? “I understand that people say: she remains your child. But you can also turn it around: I’m still her mother. And I’ve never been nasty about her in the media. Look, it is still my right that I have certain questions about the way money is handled in my company.”
What affects her most? “I understand that when you are angry, you talk with extra emotion. But even if your emotions are high, you don’t have to say hurtful things in court. Rox said that I was actually the cause of her miscarriage. I find that very intense. I don’t think you can just say something like that.”
Nudists
Roxeanne should keep her mouth shut, Rachel thinks. She adds in Story: “A slip of the tongue is possible, but it was just too much.”
She concludes: “If you say in Best Singers that you had to miss your mother for nine months after your father’s death, that André and I placed her with nudists during his concerts, and that you listened to your father’s repertoire while crying for ten years. have sung… No, that’s not possible. I suffered too much damage from it.”