travel


I ask this question as one who has a foot in Europe and a foot in Australia – in terms of ancestry, personal life, religion, and writing. I spend a reasonable amount of time in both, and definitely know how to enjoy myself in either place. But what is it about Europe?

To begin with, I suggest it is the thinly veiled barbarism of Europe that I find so attractive, a backwardness camouflaged as civilisation. It shows up at all sorts of levels. If you pay attention to the way people carry their bodies, to the way they walk and stand, how they are in the world, then a distinct awkwardness begins to show. Clothes seem like a recent encumbrance, frequent washing is still an imposition. Think of the peasant who has unexpectedly fallen into some money.

Second, there’s a deep-seated tribalism that masquerades as cosmopolitanism. People from the same ethnic group, in the same countryside, unaccountably hold long antagonisms to each other. Norwegians and Danes, Dutch and Germans, Serbs and Croats, Macedonians and Bulgarians … the list is almost endless. This tribalism is appealing in a curious way, like visiting a relic from the past.

Both the backwardness and tribalism manifest themselves in that rather amusing European habit of international arrogance. One can only admire the sheer bravado of assuming the superiority of European culture, politics, medicine, technology, scholarship. But it makes sense when one realises how recent this empty superiority is. No wonder those of more ancient civilisations – such as China or Australia – smile knowingly and shake their heads when encountering such Euro-arrogance.

Perhaps the most appealing aspect is the way Europeans are so often completely thrown by places like Australia. Expectations and preconceptions are not met; codes of living are scrambled; judgements are made hastily; not a few respond defensively and become Australophobes. I think here of a professor from those soggy isles on the western fringe of Europe who loudly proclaims – in good colonialist fashion – that the place is an absolute shithole and that he has come here both to bring enlightenment and to get out as quickly as possible. Or of the immigrant who is afraid of the bush and has not been outside a city for more than twenty years. Or of the wife who is unable to settle and demands a return “home” after thirty years, or simply walks out because she is unable to adjust. Much earlier, I have encountered it in the “explorer” journals, as the colonists desperately tried to map and claim and make sense of the place – usually to no avail.

I discussed this last point with a European who has come to Australia more recently – Christina. It is not merely the easy point that Australia is home to the oldest continuous civilisation on earth, making Europe look like a recent upstart. More has to do with the extraordinarily subtle production and negotiation of space. This is geographical, mental, and psychic. Obviously, it shows up in big skies, fierce light, vast seas, subtle seasons, and so on. It appears in the fear that so many Europeans have felt and feel in Australia: no wonder the settlers hugged the shoreline; no wonder the animals and bush fill them with trepidation (of course, we like to tell tall tales of everyday dangers). But it also shows up in the way people’s bodies negotiate that space, giving each other plenty of room. Intellectually, as Christina points out, there’s an almost intangible sense of openness, room to develop thoughts that are not constrained by the worn-out and mind-numbing structures of Atlantic places.

So it is always thoroughly engaging to see how visitors and new arrivals manage that space. Europeans always seem to struggle, unless they have always craved that very different and complex production of space. My father was one of these. The litmus test here is New Zealand: if someone from Europe feels at home in those two islands across the Tasman, then it is because the smallness and manageability of the space resonates. If New Zealand is a let-down, then they have already begun to feel their way in Australia. But I have noticed (and one of my daughters verifies this), that people from eastern Asia somehow “get” Australia in a way that others don’t. For anyone who has spent time in Indonesia, the two places feel similar on the skin. And the many that come from China, for all sorts of reasons, seem to take to Australia in a way that I still find fascinating. I suspect the experience is mutual.

As for me, I look forward to my next dose of European barbarism and tribalism, and seeing how the next batch manages this place.

As clouds settle round the mountains, the crows fly back to roost.

The travellers on long journeys find inns for the night.

Journey to the West, vol.1. p. 224.

On a long ride today I passed through the Czech Republic and then back into Germany. As I neared the border, the Czechs shook their heads in bewilderment, as if to say, ‘why would you want to go there?’

I soon realised why. First, the award for Captain Obvious would have to go to this sign:

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Then, a clear statement of the German government’s policy regarding immigrants, visitors and any other country in Europe:

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Finally, the real reason the Czechs were shaking their heads:

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Rockin’ Accordions? Only in Germany.

I guess a white Easter is common if you live in the Antarctic or Arctic, or close by. But not in these parts. Here, in east Germany, it’s been snowing almost every day for a month.

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2013 March 165 (Herrnhut)a

The forests remain decked out in the white stuff:

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Cross-country skiers are still doing their thing:

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Cycling is still for the foolhardy:

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This is supposed to be the time for easter eggs to hang on bushes, celebrating the stirrings of spring:

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But then again, why not make the most of the opportunity and make …

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… a snow bunny.

Suppressed for so long, spring should be an absolute riot.

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Apart from its seedier side and the delight of finding Lenin in Prague, the main reason to visit was to seek out the revolutionary prophets.  Prague is of course the town where Jan Hus first made his impact, kicking off the Bohemian Reformation in the fifteenth century, a good hundred years or more before Luther got things moving in Wittenberg. And the church where it happened, where Hus electrified people with his preaching, was the Bethlehem Chapel:

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That is, apparently, the original pulpit where it all happened. A frontal view:

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The view from below:

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The revolutionary firebrand, Thomas Müntzer, also preached from the same pulpit. And this is what it looks like when you peer through the pulpit door and into the church, the moment before stepping out and holding forth:

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However, the most intriguing aspect of all this is that the chapel was rebuilt early in the communist era of Czechoslovakia. Why? Like Müntzer in the DDR, Jan Hus became a hero of the communist government and they did much to resurrect knowledge and admiration for his work outside the movements inspired by him.

Are there other prophets in Prague? Perhaps …

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Or maybe here …

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But it does have some great trams that take you all over the city:

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Prague might be a seedy old town, especially if you hang out on the tourist strip on either side of and upon the Charles Bridge. But it also has some unexpected corners and surprises.

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 Refreshing to see the old man mixing it in with the pastel buildings:

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Appropriately, road workers were pulling and repairing tram tracks:

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So what’s in Prague 3? That would have to include the Prophets of Prague …

Prague, city of romance, capital of the old Bohemia, easily digestible ‘eastern’ European city (which is actually west of Vienna). The best way to get there is, of course, by train:

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Once there, in the zone called Prague 1, you have to run the gauntlet of places flogging off ‘authentic’ Czech food:

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This, I can tell you in all honesty, is nothing to salivate over:

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If anything, it will send you running to the extraordinary toalety:

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Now that we are on the slightly seedier side of Prague, let me share some street art:

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An ally full of syringes and prostitutes near our hotel:

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And the absolute highlight of the research trip: a visit to the Kolbenova markets – way out in an abandoned factory site in Prague 9.

Upon entry, a security guard checks you for weapons and you are greeted with this:

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It is a warning concerning some of the more colourful characters who like to hang out in these parts. Dutifully warned, at the first stall we met this friendly stallholder:

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And then this guy asked us for a smoke:

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A minute or so later, I spotted these two, engaged in elaborate handshakes and much shuffling of bags:

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What is this, a bad crime movie? In a shed, holding up koruny notes to the light to check if they were legitimate, was this man:

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And the smiling lady at the coffee stand was none other than:

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Every second person there seemed like they belonged on the list. There were stalls selling rifles, handguns, shiny knives, chocolates, computers, bras, beer (at 9am) … all legitimately acquired, of course. However, my favorite was this:

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Yes, they are used. For those who wish to see close up what such used items might, um, accumulate:

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Just I was taking this shot, I heard a yell, looked up and met this very friendly man …

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Ah, Prague, city of romance …

It must be the 60th anniversary of Joe Stalin’s death today that has brought up a somewhat strange conjunction. Only a few days ago I was enjoying the company of some of those involved in the Lenin research group in Nanjing:

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Here is to be found a person holding a position to which everyone should aspire: a Professorship of Scientific Socialism.

Needless to say, I gave a lecture while in Nanjing:

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 And then, hours later, I was trudging through the snow of eastern Germany:

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Climbing a hill called Langsamer Tod (Slow Death):

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All in order to get to the evening meal of the Zinzendorf Society:

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… as one does.

Finally processing some photos from Romania, especially of some of the people I met:

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2012 October 116 (Romania)a

 

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And yes, it seems as though Jesus does really live in Romania:

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What a homecoming: on the usually cooler east coast stretches the mercury was hitting over 40 degrees and catastrophic fire warnings were in force. Not many hours before I had been decked out in winter woolens (merino wool and possum fur); now it was shorts and a sweat. The day before I arrived, the national average pushed through to the highest point since recordings began more than a century ago: 40.33 degrees on Monday, before it really warmed up on Tuesday. That’s a national average, mind you. Individual places were regularly recording mid 40s to a little under 50. And that’s in the shade. Apparently, it’s been stinking hot for weeks, but the ‘dome of heat’ over the country hasn’t finished yet, cranking up temperatures day by day (with the occasional cool change providing temporary relief for a few hours).

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Once you hit the purple, you’re in the 50s. Perversely, I enjoy a good heatwave, since summer isn’t summer without one. Sleep is a sweaty experience, full of vivid dreams. Merely sitting quietly makes you sweat. But it’s never ever been this hot.

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