Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Christmas Market Photos: Lille, Prague, Vienna, Bratislava, Budapest--December 2015



                            Lille, France  November 20, 2015


                                   Lille  November 20, 2015


Lille  November 20, 2015





                               Prague  November 28, 2015


Prague  November 28, 2015





     Bratislava, Slovakia  December 3, 2015


                                               
                                              Bratislava  December 3, 2015


 Bratisalva  December 3, 2015


                                    Budapest, Hungary  December 5, 2015


                               Budapest  December 15, 2015


                                Budapest  December 5, 2015


                                                Budapest  December 5, 2015


                          Vienna. Austria  December 7, 2015



                                 Vienna December 7, 2015


                                 Vienna December 7, 2015



Vienna December 7, 2015


                                  Vienna December 7, 2015


                                  Vienna December 7, 2015


                                   Vienna December 5, 2015

Sunday, December 20, 2015

In the End: Christmas Markets and Allied Cemeteries

Plattsburgh, NY
December 11, 2015
Latitude 46º 69' N

In the end, it was nice to travel off season. Still, December in Europe is busy because of, well, Christmas, but it's not like summer when hordes take to the road. There were seats on trains and hotels cost less. The weather was just fine—not warm and not super cold. I've learned a lesson—when you want to really see a place, come in the winter.

In the end I fulfilled a dream and saw Saint Nicholas come into Amsterdam's harbor. I also took in Christmas markets in five different places—Lille, France, Prague, Vienna, Bratislava and Budapest. What a dream come true. I know these aren't the last!

In the end, the Allied cemeteries of Flanders moved and stilled me. There go I, but by the grace of God...had I been a young man a hundred years ago.

In the end, I added one more country to my ongoing list of attaining 100! The Czech Republic was #92!

In the end, I reconnected with two old friends—Lomme and Ina in the Netherlands and Ruxandra in Vienna. How nice to see them again!

In the end, there was pitifully little sun. But I'd not travelled to Europe in December for the weather. What I got, instead, was a nighttime that dazzled with the lights and joy of Europe's Christmas markets.

In the end, the snow I'd hoped for never materialized.  There was, for a brief moment, a small snow fall in Southern Belgium and a snow squall I attempted to walk in, but the romantic idea I had of Vienna or Prague blanketed in a thin layer of snow never happened.  

In the end, I'd come full circle with Vienna and Budapest, constantly ran into the young man who spent wonderful time there in his 30's. But it's true that you really can't go home again, nor was I trying. Still, it was nice to re trace steps and relive in memory, another, more distant, time.


In the end, I learned once again that the world is athrill with beauty and excitement, but only if one chooses to see it. Despite terrorist attacks, despite the world's myriad problems, it truly is “a beautiful world.”

Friday, December 11, 2015

Budapest, Hungary, and the Summer of 1984

Budapest, Hungary
December 5, 2015
Latitude 47.49° N

During that special summer of 1984 I went to Budapest for a weekend. In those days there was an element of mystery about a trip like this, even it was close to Vienna. A sense of adventure followed us as a group of four classmates made plans.

Each of us had to make a trip to the Hungarian embassy, fill out multiple forms, hand over our passports then return on a designated date. Only then did we get the necessary visa to enter. This was pre-1989 Europe. The “Wall” was still up, and Hungary was Communist country!

And so on a Friday, after class, we made our way to Hauptbahnhoff, boarded a train and set off.

From the start we laughed. By that juncture in the program we'd been together about three weeks and the good chemistry that went on in the classroom and dorm was working its magic. I do not know what we laughed about, but we laughed all the time—from the time we left the dorm, the time on the train and our entire time in Budapest.

At the border, however, we were on our best behavior. We were slipping behind the Iron Curtain. All of us were NATO bloc citizens. Two of us were Americans.

The train stopped for a long time. Somber looking border officials and police came on board. They were well armed. Large scary dogs sniffed around us.

But we were good to go. We had all our paperwork in order—passports and visas and a round trip ticket back to Vienna. We were very polite to everyone and we barely said a word to each other.

Once that was over, once the scary dogs and officials were gone, and once we were moving again, we resumed our antics.

By the time we arrived in Budapest it was dark, and we were now a group of five. We'd met Elisabeth of Norway on the train and she joined our group. Someone must have met us at the train station and lured us to a student hostel—a school, I think--where we were packed into a classroom with bunk beds...and another traveler, Keith of New York. From the start he didn't like us. I think he'd been in that space alone until we showed up, and now he had to share it with this crazy group. Even after the lights went out we were like bunch of kids, cracking jokes, carrying on.

Saturday, we set out early. Jose and I alone to search out caffeine. At some point the five of us rendezvoused and Keith, the grumpy outsider, decided to join us. “Pretty Boy,” he'd call me. And you... referring to Anthony. We just laughed and laughed.

The six of us were all over Buda. We were all over Pest. We spent a few hours on Marsit Island, on the Danube, that separates the two Budapests. Sitting on those park benches in that park that day we'd make up stories about locals. “Slav whore draining,” Erika would say, about almost every woman sitting on a park bench. Slave whore draining.” How many times did he say that only to have us break into laughter once again.

That evening we were high in Buda. Just like the exchange between the dollar and the Shilling, the dollar against the Hungarian Forint was even better. We landed at five star restaurant, behaved ourselves, ate very well, drank far too much wine and hired roaming violinists to serenade us. Jose knew his music and would call out suggestions. We'd just ante up later.

After dinner we walked across the Chain Bridge and made our way back to Pest.. All of us were very drunk and even higher on hilarity. I can still see that small group happily enjoying each other's company, racing across the Bridge, laughing at just about everything. Maybe even Keith had succumbed by now.

The next day we did some more sightseeing and didn't leave Budapest until late Sunday night.

All that is a long time ago. I've since returned to Budapest twice—once in 1998 and again in December 2015. On this trip I was in search of Christmas markets. And thermal baths. But throughout my two day stay I could not help recall that wonderful, fun weekend of thirty-one summers ago.

Travel journals are wonderful things. Without re-reading the one I'd written in 1984 I'd not have remembered those special people who travelled together. Wherever you are Jose Fusco, I hope you're having a great life. Erika Brickman and Anthony Woolich...know that I remember you still and trust you have long ago finished your studies, are gloriously happy, and having phenomenal lives. If you read this, please leave a note.

My journal read that it was “difficult to capture in words the insane, riotous, crazy interaction amongst us. Perhaps never in my life had I had a more enjoyable, light-hearted, carefree weekend with group of people who got along so well.”

For awhile, Erika and I kept in touch. The following summer I rendezvoused with Jose in San Francisco, but the travel chemistry we had that special summer was gone. We never saw each other again, and that's OK. People come into our lives at different times for different reasons. I'm just grateful I have this beautiful memory of beautiful people on that beautiful weekend thirty-one years ago.

Most people are never this fortunate.

Vienna, Austria: December of 2015

Vienna, Austria
December 6, 2015
Latitude 48º 13' N

It's true you can't go home again. You can go back to what you once had, but it will never be the same. Once you leave a place, you leaeits imprint on yoiui

But all that was a long time ago, when I was a much younger man. It had been seventeen years since I'd last been to Vienna and thirty one years since I'd spent that wonderful summer is this glorious, imperial city.

Half a life time ago!

I felt like Rip Van Winkle this time around. Some weird time-travel teseracting was going on. I was here then; I'm here now. But how did all the people I knew here get so old? It seems like a few summers ago that I navigated this city. The Vienna that was imprinted in my heart was still the same Vienna, albeit in the winter. I kept bumping into myself: there I was in Rathaus Park studying. There I was again playing football in the park near where I lived with guys who truly knew how to play the game. I could see myself sitting in Votifkirche and in the Volksgarten. That was me in one of the amazing galleries of the Kunsthistoriches Museum. I was everywhere, yet it was just an illusion of myself—some phantom image that no longer exists. Time doubling back on itself.

In 2015 I am plagued with arthritis, a belly, gray hair. I'd already had one joint replacement and exploring this city tells me the other knee is going to have to be done much sooner than later. Aging.

In 1984 Vienna was far east, way off the normal European circuit. There were tourists here, to be certain, but not the hordes one sees today. For the most part, it was a touristically quiet city. Today I felt as if I were pushing my way through tourists. Kärtner Strasse was packed with people and it was Italian I was hearing most. The Japanese were everywhere and having their photos taken in every possible location. Do these people even take a look at where they are? Votifkirche, always quiet in 1984, was chock-a-block with people and both the City Hopper and Hop On/Hop Off Bus were parked in front. Global tourism in the first quarter of the 21st Century.

But today was all that counted. I'd come to enjoy every Christmas market this city would offer and I knew I'd not be disappointed. My goal was as many of the nine Christmas markets as possible. I was everywhere—Schönbrun, the Belvedere, in Rathaus Park, Maria-Theresien-Platz. I took a day trip to Bratislava and an overnight to Budapest and was delightfully happy with all the markets. I certainly wasn't let down, but by trip's end I'd had enough—at least for this year.

On my last day in Vienna, in a flurry of nostalgia, I retraced my steps. I tracked down the Albert Schweitzer House where I lived, had a Diet Coke and pastry at the Ankor bakery nearby, slipped into the building where classes were held. I meditated in Votifkirche and sat for a bit in Rathaus Park. The park was the setting for one of Vienna's largest Christmas markets and was almost overly decorated. Unlike 1984, there was no weekly Strauss Concert, but there were marvelous choirs and horn combos entertaining Christmas revelers with beautiful Christmas music. Somehow though, a five piece jazz rendition of Bing Crosby's Mele Kalikimaka just seemed out of place in elegant Vienna.

Here we know that Christmas will be green and bright
The sun to shine by day and all the stars at night
Mele Kalikimaka is Hawaii's way
To say Merry Christmas to you

Mele Kalikimaka is the thing to say
On a bright Hawaiian Christmas day
That's the island greeting that we send to you
From the land where palm trees sway

I wanted to grab a bathing suit, some sun screen, find a lounge chair and spend the day pool side. Instead, I listened then bundled myself against the snow and moved on.

Still, it was good to return to Vienna. I accomplished my goal: eight out of the nine Christmas markets, a retracing of my former life and a visit with an old friend. All of that was very good. The city was still as lovely as I remembered it, and even lovelier at Christmas time.

The only thing I didn't do was eat an ice cream.

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Vienna, Austria...Schonbrun and the Second Sunday in Advent 2015

Vienna: the second Sunday in Advent 2015—the season of hope and longing.

The sky from my apartment is a pallid gray. A weak winter sun hangs low in the northern sky. Pale winter sunlight silhouettes the long allay of trees in the park across the street.

I bundle forth into the silver chill of this early December afternoon. The air smells of snow and in my flurry of Christmas nostalgia I'm wishing for wild wind and swirling flake.

I take the metro to Hietzing and enter Schönbrun through the back door. I want to take my time walking through these magnificent gardens. I've lingered elsewhere this early Sunday afternoon and don't arrive until 3:30. Already night is beginning to fall, helped along by a light fog that blankets the palace grounds.

Large clumps of mistletoe nestle in the high branches of trees. Except for the quiet cacophony of ravens and the distant hum of people talking, there is a holy hush this afternoon as I sit on a bench and observe. It's cold enough to see my breath. I'm grateful for wool hat and gloves.

All around me are the geometrically manicured grounds of Schönbrun—skeletons of what they are in the summer. Everything is gray on gray on black and I find great beauty in that coloration.

A think gray blanket of light fog has settled in as I approach the back of the palace. I turn and face the Glorietta which appears to float in the distance—spectral gray and lovely. Some would call this bleak, but the day bespeaks of the coming of Christmas—short days, long nights, the closing down of light.
I round the palace and come into a sea of Christmas! There is still lingering light and the sky has a tinge of daylight to it. It's that blue liquid time between night and day. The Christmas tree in front of the palace's butter yellow facade glows with thousands of lights. A choir sings Adeste Fideles in front of the tree. The universality of Christmas music in a place far from home. In a wide arc around the tree are scores of small markets. They sell everything: delicious treats, glass ornaments, and flat laser-cut wooden ornaments. Vendors sell wurst and punch. I resist all food except some German pfeffernuss. I get the feeling that the food aspect draws locals here. As I've seen in other parts of Vienna these Christmas markets are a gathering point.


Two hours later, in the dazzling darkness of early evening, there are thousands of people. Locals, tourists. Waves of Japanese. Americans. Italians. The market is a polyglot of languages, but what I hear most are German and Italian. I drink all this in, live very much in the moments of this wonderful experience. A new choir is singing Silent Night, but in German.

Stille Nacht! Heil'ge Nacht! 
Alles schläft; einsam wacht 
Nur das traute hoch heilige Paar. 
Holder Knab' im lockigen Haar, 
Schlafe in himmlischer Ruh!

It is all glorious, and I do not want it to end. A light breeze has come up and the night is getting cold, but the snow I've longed for does not come. In this sacred, holy night I leave the palace grounds, but steal one long glance back—at the palace, as the Christmas tree, at the sea of Christmas market kiosks. I give silent thanks to my creator God for allowing me this privilege.

Longing and desire. Fully met this shining second Sunday in Advent.

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Vienna, Austria and the Summer of 1984

Vienna, Austria
December 6, 2015
Latitude 48º 13' N

I was 35 in the summer of 1984 and my traveling shoes had been active for more than ten years. When others just stayed him for the summer holidays, I'd be off someplace different. Some summers it would be the United States, but usually it was Europe or the Middle East.

The 1983-1984 school had been the worst year I'd taught since I'd begun teaching. I'd also just completed a Master's degree and the combination of the two had put me on an anti-depressant for six months. I needed a break and Vienna was going to be the place.

In the early winter of 1984 I'd read a small advertisement in the New York Times Education section. “Study German at the University of Vienna. Summer programs for Foreigners. For a free brochure...”

It was January, the time of year when I'd begin planning my summer-get away. I sent off a letter and month or so later the University of Vienna sent me a snazzy, and very tempting, brochure. Four weeks studying German, combined with living in a private room in one of the University's dorms would cost less that $400.00 US. $338.34 to be exact. That was less than one graduate course I'd been paying for for several years. I really had no interest learning German, but the what an opportunity: a chance to live in Vienna for a month!

So I grabbed the opportunity, and because my travels were never done in a straight line, I booked a flight to Rome, spent two week in Italy, and only moved on to Vienna a day before classes would be begin.

I knew pitifully little German. I'd had a tutor once a week since late winter and could count to a hundred, conjugate a regular verb in the present tense and could identify a few pronouns. That was it. I was pitifully unprepared for life on the street. On my first day, a Sunday, when the city had retreated into itself, I walked the main shopping street, Kärtner Strasse. I'd not eaten much because anything on a menu made about as much sense as this: *&^%$# #@%)_ )*&$##. I was delighted to see Burger King. Ahh...something familiar! I walked in and nothing looked familiar. Anything anyone said to this confused foreigner made no sense. I walked out and noticed, on close attention, that I walked into Burg Kino. A movie theater! I still laugh at that.

Once classes started, there was a pattern to my days. I'd rise just in time to shower, grab a Diet Coke and sweet bread at the nearby Ankor bakery, and get to class before 9:00 am. Three hours later I'd have lunch with some of the other students at the school cafeteria near our classroom. Afternoons I spend sitting in Rathaus Park reviewing the day's lesson, reading a novel and then moving on to do something “touristy.”

Other dorm and classmates became my “friends.” Classmates included an equal mix of refugees who'd been put in the class my the Austrian government and the rest of us—students from the USA, Australia, others parts of Europe. There was a mother-daughter from Melbourne; Nino, a fun young man from Italy, a group of zany college students from the UK. The other group included folks who'd come from the Philippines and a large group of people from Communist countries who'd been granted asylum. One young woman, Jewish, had just left Iran and was on her way to California to live with her grandparents. It was the first time in my life I'd known a refugee.

One of the students was a woman, a bit young than I, from Romania. Ruxandra was highly educated, spoke English, French, Italian and was not diving into German. She'd left Bucharest two months earlier because the nature of her job was going to require her to join the party. She was a well-trained engineer but had left all her documents behind. She also left behind her mother and her grandfather. “I'll make beds in a hotel room if I have to,” she told me. She just wanted out. I greatly admired her courage.

We became fast friends, and even though we were 180 degrees apart politically, we enjoyed each other's company. Almost every day we'd do something together, but it was usually at dinner that we'd meet.

After class and after lunch, I'd head first to Rathaus Park where I'd review the day's lesson, transfer vocabulary to a note book, smoke one cigarette after another, read and people watch. Part of that “sit” time included indulging in an ice cream cone. Austrian ice cream, eis, is still some of the best ice creams I've had in the world. I got to know the woman behind the counter and learned all the names of every flavor. I let her knew I was studying German and she became the first person I “spoke” to.

As part of tuition to the University, students were give a free pass to the Kunsthistorisches Museum. Every day, and I mean every day, I'd walk to the museum and explore one room. One room only. I have never been able to sustain hours in a museum, so this was perfect. It was the most pleasant museum experience I've ever had. From there I'd explore some site within the Ring.

I also took Viennese Waltz lessons, but could only dance to the right—the only time I've ever shifted in that direction.

I loved living in a dorm again. I had my own quiet room, maid service once a week, and the pleasant camaraderie of other students. One of the guys I got to know there was another American, XXXX, a year or two younger than I. We go out periodically to bars and come home late and drunk. It was like I was back in college again.

Once a week I'd walk down to and slip into the American Express office. I'd cash a few travelers' checks and get my mail. In those pre-Internet days this was one of the few ways to have an address in another country. What a sweet surprise to get a letter from home. I still have them, tucked away in the back of the journal I wrote that summer.

Each night either Ruxandra would meet me for dinner or I'd eat at a local schnitzel house. The exchange rate against the Austrian shilling allowed me to eat every meal in a restaurant, something I rarely do today when I travel.

Twice a group of us took off for the weekend. First to Salzburg and Munich and the following weekend to Budapest, a trip I still hold dear to my heart.

Early in the program I realized I didn't care a rat's ass about German. What I did like was going to school, interacting with the students, staying in a dorm and having the privilege of living right of the
“Ring.” I'd go to class, do my homework, study, put the German to work on the streets, but I refused to take tests. I'd just finished that Master's degree and was plum-tired of real academic work. I did not endear myself with Hannelore, our tireless, and very good, teacher.

Every Tuesday I'd attend a free all-Strauss concert in the garden in front of the Rathaus, a ten minute walk from where I lived. It was mostly a local crowd, but I'd see the occasional tourist every now and then. In 1984 Vienna was far off the European tourist circuit and far enough east that it didn't get heaps of tourists, and only a few of them would be at this concert. The same people seemed to be there each week—old ladies, mostly, who'd tap their feet to the upbeat waltzes this father and son team composed a hundred years earlier. It was one of the highlights of my week.

By summer's end I could navigate a small neighborhood of German. I got the hang of putting the second verb at the end of the sentence. I could have very minimal conversations with people. I could identify every type of ice cream in the Eis Salons.

And sometime that summer I'd jettisoned the anti-depressant I'd been on since winter. That horrible school year and the mad-dash completion of the Master's degree was fully behind me.

On the last night I was in Vienna before returning to Rome, a local friend asked me what I wanted to do. “Eis,” I told him. “I want one more amazing Austrian ice cream.”

His name was Wilhelm Böhm and he told me he'd take me to Vienna's most popular place for ice cream. How could this not be great!

The line was long and when I chose my flavors—quite adeptly in German—imagine my surprise when I bit into American ice cream. Well, I was disappointed. Who wouldn't' be.

Later that night I boarded an overnight train to Rome and few days later touched down in New York city where Steve was waiting for me. For a few weeks I'd say entschuldigung when I bumped into someone, but that didn't last long. I found a tutor to continue my studies, but that lasted for about a month. Where was a going to use German? Pretty soon any German I did learn was soon forgotten.

But not Vienna nor the summer I spent there. It became a benchmark for other summers, one to be compared to, one I'd hope would happen again. Other summers were equally great; others not so. In my travel nostalgia I'd often daydream of Vienna, sit in one its lovely parks, eat eis, listen to Strauss waltzes in Rathaus Park.

A summer later would be a stay-in-the-USA summer, and I made arrangements to meet one of the American classmates in San Francisco, his home town. The visit was stiff and uncomfortable. Whatever friendship we'd had was one of those temporary on-the-road things the young forge amongst themselves. We never saw each other again.

Over the years I would return to Vienna several times. More than anything, I wanted to share this beloved city with Steve, and I did—two years later. Each time I'd reconnect with Ruxandra. In 1998 her mother had retired and was living with her in an apartment in the city where I was invited to stay. It would take 17 more years before I saw Ruxandra again—this time in Spitz in the home she shared with her new husband of five months.

I loved being able to say “I lived in Vienna” and when asked what I thought was the most beautiful city in the world I'd always give credit to this spectacular, elegant, imperial city.

I miss those glory days, though, when Vienna was far east of the European circuit, before the days when cheap air travel ferried people back forth within Europe for mere dollars.

And I miss ice cream. It just doesn't seem to be as prevalent today as it was then.


I have never lost my affection for this city and probably never will. 

Saint Nicholas--For Lomme

Vienna, Austria
December 5, 2015

My poor friend Lomme.  When he was a student at SUNY Plattsburgh in the early 1980's, he always hosted a Saint Nicholas party the first weekend in December.  Those invited, of course, had no idea about St. Nicholas traditions.  "Write a poem," he tell us.  Instead, we'd show up at his apartment with gifts.


Oh, Lomme, Friend
Sung to the tune of O Christmas Tree

Oh, Lomme, friend.
It was so great
Our foray into
Flanders land.

Where poppies grow
And there is snow
Upon the graves
Of Allied troops.

Oh, Lomme, friend,
Thank you so much
For all of this
That made it grand.

From casa small
to 'seums large
And Bruges and Ghent
and Franco land.

Oh, Lomme, friend,
I can't forget
Saint Nicholas
On the Ringwaart--

The boats so fun
And Pete's galore
In Hillegom 
and Amsterdam.

It was my dream
To see Saint Nick
Arrive by boat
On his big day.

Oh, Lomme, friend,
And Ina, dear
Stephen, Marlyn
I can't forget.

Sweet memories of
The Netherlands,
Belgium, France
And Ypres, too.

I wish you all
A good feast day
Of Sinterklaas
And Christmas Day.

Oh, Lomme, friend,
Grateful I am
For friendship
That's endured the years

I have no doubt
It will endure
In Europe
or the USA.

So there...my first poem to you, Lomme.  It's only taken 33 years!  I just hope it's right!





Friday, November 27, 2015

Thanksgiving 2015 in Prague

Prague, Czech Republic
November 26, 2015
Latitude 50º 4' N

Thanksgiving morning from my fabulous apartment in the Žižkov district of Prague was grey and foggy. Another typical November day in Central Europe, I thought. I'd arrived the day before from Amsterdam, spent that day in, and still didn't want to leave the apartment on day two. I'd landed a delicious place to stay—a sixth floor, totally modernized, two story apartment with wood floors, fabulous kitchen and even a jacuzzi. Some pre-Christmas homing instinct made me want to run out, buy a tree, shop for ornaments and spend the long weekend decorating the place. I'd satisfy this urge later on with the purchase of 4” $3.00 poinsettia.

But I finally separated myself from the apartment, bundled up against the cold and tackled the metro. My first stop was Prague Castle, where I spent the better part of the day until about 3:00 pm. The views from some of the towers was astonishing—a city of spires, gables and turrets. The city lay out below me. It had taken a long time to get to this fabled city, undamaged during World War II.

I wandered off the castle grounds, meandered through the Mala Strana neighborhood, through the twisty streets below and ultimately to the Charles Bridge, which I'd heard about and for good reason. It was packed with tourists—mostly Japanese—and it made me wonder what this city was like in season. By the time I'd gotten to the other side I was in a lot of pain. I saw that an organ concert was going to be held at the St. Salvator Church in the Klementinum district so I paid my 500 Crowns, took a seat and just sat for an hour.

The church was cold and even my leather jacket and wool mittens weren't enough to keep me warm. But the music was wonderful—a series of Baroque classics for almost an hour. At the very end a mezzo-soprano sang Ave Maria. I was momentarily overwhelmed. It was my mother's favorite hymn, sung at her wedding and again at her funeral.

I was alone this Thanksgiving. And it was the first holiday when I was truly alone My parents were dead and my estranged brother had been dead for six months. I was the sole survivor ofmy immediate family. Except for an aunt and uncle, and a bunch of cousins, there's no other immediate blood family. When I heard Schubert's music I could feel the ghosts of Thanksgivings past surround me—my family, my aunts and uncles and cousins who came for dinner, Elaine Cranston, her daughter Diane and Elaine's mother, Mrs. Dumas. What was a holiday growing up without those dear people?

I wrapped around me all the adult years of my parents and Steve, of putting the lights on the outdoor Blue Spruce on the afternoon of Thanksgiving Day, of snow storms and blizzards that blew in on that day.

I wrapped around me more recent years when it was just Mom, then Ed and Rita, and how Thanksgiving moved from one home to another.

I wrapped around me all the traditions that emerged over the years--gathering of the greens on Thanksgiving morning, a walk at Point au Roche, illuminating outdoor trees, decorating the house the day after the holiday and always, the first day of skiing that weekend.

It wasn't a sad reminiscence, just a healthy remembering of those people I loved who are no longer with me and events that are just on hold this year.

When the concert finished I walked out into the early dark of late November's night in Prague. The temperature had dropped and a very light snow was falling--flurries, really, but snow nonetheless. Nothing could have been more perfect. I walked across the Charles Bridge, this time in the dark. heading to the metro. The lights of Prague illuminated the Vltava River. Tourist boats plied the waters and Japanese tourists were in abundance. I felt as I were in night setting of a Moravian fairy tale, but it was the real thing.

But my evening wasn't quite over. Half way back to the train, I heard the strains of Dixie Land. New Orleans jazz on Thanksgiving night on the left bank of the river. Well...what with the snow and the music, it was the perfect cap to the day!

I finally did wander home, overcooked some chicken, Skyped with home, with my family of choice, fielded thoughtful emails and texts from home and collapsed into bed about midnight.

My Czech Thanksgiving. While it wasn't a day set aside here in Prague, it was in my heart.

And that is all that counted.


Wednesday, November 18, 2015

In Flanders Field: Ieper/Ypres and World War 1 Cemeteries

Ieper, Belgium
November 17, 2015
Latitude 52º 49' N

Ieper, or Ypres, six days after the 98th observance of the Armistice that ended World War 1. The timing was perfect for a visit to this area that saw far too much activity between 1915 and 1918.

We arrived Monday after a six hour drive from Hillegon, The Netherlands. By 4:30, after driving in a steady rain, we arrived at our destination, 55A Kriekstraat, Ieper, Belgium. It would be Lomme and me for three days before Ina and Steven would join us later.

It was a moving and somber day as we visited a string of allied cemeteries in the area known simply as Ypres Salient or, as it is better known, Flanders Field.

There was a solid uniformity about the stones—simple white marble tablets each bearing the name of the soldier, his death date, his age and, often, a representation of his regiment's insignia. In death, all these soldiers were equal. The day was intermittently sunny and wonderfully quiet. Few people were out and about on this mid November day which allowed us to wander amongst the perfectly manicured cemeteries.

We stopped as several memorials, but held off until the end to visit Tyne Cot, where over 10,000 men were buried. These were, of course, men, but as we traveled among the stones, their ages were disconcerting... 19, 21, 23... These were just children—older children, but children none the less. And they were children far from home.

Private
J. Black
8th Bn. Canadian Inf.
10th November 1917 Age 19

Corporal
A. K. Pearce
Bn. Australian Inf.
21st September 1917 Age 22

Private
J. Condon
Royal Irish Regiment
24th May 1915 Age 14

Private J. A. Bull
Royal Warwickshire Regt.
27th August 1917 Age 19

But most stones listed no name. The vast majority of bodies buried in these cemeteries were never identified. Imagine sending a son/brother/grandson/friend/husband/nephew off and never knowing what happened to them? For the unnamed bodies that were found, there was no one at home to contact to offer a sentiment to be added at the bottom of the tombstone.

                                                              A New Zealand Soldier
of the Great War
Known Unto God

And reading the stones made me think of the subtitle to Kurt Vonnegut's book Slaughterhouse Five: the Children's Crusade. The “men” buried here were boys, at least from the point of view of my 66 years. Boys far from home—the UK, Canada, New Zealand and Australia—dominated these plots. Because this was 100 years ago, and because it didn't affect me in any way, directly or indirectly, there was an emotional disconnect. Unlike the Vietnam Memorial in Washington where the names of my peers are listed, this was from a different time and place.

Still, it was difficult not to be affected.

It were the inscriptions that moved me the most. Simple one and two line sentences that families far away were permitted to put on the stone:

Rest Well Brave Heart

A devoted son and brother
Thy will be done

We shall meet
to part no more
Mother

He died
amidst the short and shell
our son, brave and true

In loving memory
of my only son
by his sorrowing mother

Sleep on beloved
until the day breaks
and shadows flee away

My dear friend Lomme and I spent a wonderful day sharing this moving experience. It was a lovely day and the bucolic Belgian countryside spread out before us. Small villages with brick homes and terra-cotta colored slate roofs, were punctuated by a single Catholic church. Cows and sheep filled fields and crops were still being harvested—sugar beets, cabbages, carrots, brussels sprout and dried brown rows of corn. Every now and then we'd pass a muddy field and tried to imagine the hundreds of thousands of men who had to endure mud, rain, snow, cold, life in trenches and the constant threat of death.

 A hundred years ago, however, this was a landscape of utter desolation where thousands upon thousands of allied and German soldiers died. Everything had been destroyed.  Everything we were looking at was "new."  Even now, bodies surface each spring. On this soft mid-November day, it was hard to imagine the horror the men who lived through this experienced each day.

At day's end we attended “the Last Post” at the Menin Gate in Ieper. It was hard not to have an emotional reaction to this ceremony. Even I, fortunate to have lived my entire life in peace,  was moved by the simplicity of the bugles and the simplicity of every day people laying poppy wreaths in this great memorial to the 54,9976 Commonwealth soldiers engraved on the walls who had no know grave in this area.

This could have been me had I been born in another place time, and the expression “There go I but by the grace of God,” crossed my mind more than once. Those young men were no different than I. They had dreams, and hopes for the future. They were loved and loved in return.

When the last bugle had blown, and after we toured the memorial and pondered the thousands of names, we slipped back to our comfortable home we'd rented for the week. We would sleep warm and secure.

A hundred years ago it was a very different story.

But the story didn't end there. A week later, as we were returning to The Netherlands, we stopped in Middleburg for lunch. By chance we landed in a restaurant operated by a hotel management school. The dining room was filled with young people. I couldn't avoid looking at them and thinking that these boys were no different from the names on the tombstones in Flanders. I could not imagine a world so demonic that 11,000,000 military would die. It was a sobering lunch.

I gave silent thanks—for them and for me—that we lived in a time of relative peace. American Thankgiving was coming later in the week. I had a lot to be thankful for.


In Flanders Field
John Mc Crae

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow
Loved and were loved
In Flanders Field.

Take up our quarrel with foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be your to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow

In Flanders fields.