The way of the bull

Eskişehir, Türkiye, Monday 20 June 2022

It is a long weekly journey for a tall man.

Above: Eskişehir Otobüs Terminali (bus station)

Six hours on a cramped bus each way between Eskişehir (where I live) and Denizli (where I teach every Friday) and, for the most part, it feels like an endurance test that must be tolerated.

Above: Bridge over Porsuk River in Eskişehir, Turkey

Above: Denizli – The rooster is the symbol of the city

Nonetheless, the journey does have one compensation:

Scenery.

My spirit longs to drag my body off the bus and compel it to hike the hills and climb the crests of surrounding mountains that encircle the highways.

The journey to Denizli usually finds me distracting myself with books as the trip is made in the morning and early afternoon with daylight my constant travel companion.

The journey from Denizli, made between 6 pm and midnight, is spent with eyes cast outside the windows as sunset paints a magical silhouette that mere photographs cannot sufficiently capture.

I am reminded of the lower Laurentians where I was raised in Canada.

I am reminded of Switzerland where I resided in the decade before I moved to Türkiye for work.

My eyes seek in the Turkish silhouette the one commonality that the Laurentians and the Alps share.

In the distance I see what I had sought.

Cows.

My spirit is at peace.

A smile returns to my face.

How easy it is to forget that cows are animals…..

To Reinhard Pfurtscheller, the land he farmed high in the Alps was always a slice of Paradise.

He would wake up in a cabin more than 300 years old, cows already wandering the flower-speckled meadows, snow-capped peaks all around.

There is nothing more beautiful.“, Pfurtscheller says.

Above: Reinhard Pfurtscheller

Until that warm July afternoon when he watched medics on his pasture zipping shut a body bag.

As the helicopter took off with the victim, Pfurtschneller learned that a 45-year-old hiker from Germany had been brutally assaulted, sustaining grevious injuries to her chest and heart.

The farmer was well acquainted with her killers:

Bea, Flower, Raven, and his other cows.

Across the Alps, such attacks once were a shocking rarity.

No longer.

Amid the sweeping economic changes jeopardizing farmers’ future, the creatures that for decades have defined the region’s landscape and culture – bovine stars of tourism campaigns – have become liabilities.

Another hiker was killed a year after the German woman died in 2014 and another in 2017.

Statistics are not kept by Austrian, Swiss, Italian or French authorities, but media reports of incidents have become increasingly common.

Nowadays, signs warning tourists in English, French, German and Italian are ubiquitous:

Cross pastures at your own risk.

Hotels display brochures on how to stay safe.

Olympic skiers and famous actors help to raise awareness in TV spots and online videos, often stressing:

The mountain pasture is no petting zoo.

Yet this summer, with many Europeans yearning for the outdoors after two years of living with coronavirus restrictions, there are worries that the hiking season will result in even more attacks.

Since June 2020, at least nine attacks have been reported.

Some might think this isn’t serious, but do you know how terrifying a herd of cows charging at you is, how fast and agile they are?“, said Andreas Freisinger, an optician living near Wien (Vienna).

It is a rheotrical question.

Freisinger (50) indeed knows.

An agitated herd came at him and his family while they were day-tripping on one of the highest mountains in the eastern Alps.

They escaped only because they let their dog off the leash and the cows pursued Junior as he fled into the forest.

When Freisinger went looking for the St. Bernard mix, he heard a rapid scuffing just before a lone cow knocked him to the ground.

I was fighting for my life.“, he recounted, describing how he aimed his kicks for the cow’s udders.

Even so, the animal cracked one of his shoulder blades, an orbital cavity, and several vertebrae and ribs, plus flattened his lungs and diaphragm with the weight of a grand piano.

Above: Andreas Freisinger

The scenery that annually draws 120 million tourists would not exist if not for cows grazing.

It has been cultivated over seven centuries of farmers driving their herds to mountainside meadows in the summer.

The animals’ hoofs firm the soil, their tongues gently groom the grasses and wildflowers.

In the process, they continuously sculpt verdant pastures.

All that seemed at stake when a court in the western state of Tyrol found Pfurtscheller solely responsible for the German woman’s death and ordered him to pay more than $210,000 in damages to her widower and son plus monthly restitution totalling $1,850.

Above: Flag of the Austrian state of Tyrol

The 2019 decision shocked farmers and not just in Neustift im Stubaital, a village of fewer than 5,000 inhabitants.

Above: Neustift im Stubaital, Tyrol, Österreich (Austria)

As foreclosure on Pfurtscheller’s home and farm loomed, some farmers contemplated banning hikers from their land, a move that would cut off access to the Alps.

Others threatened to stop taking their cows into the Alps altogether, a move that would allow nature to cut back in.

Forests would soon begin to take over.

This isn’t just about the farmers.

It is the wish of all Europeans to have the mountains open for hiking.”, warned Josef Lanzinger, head of the Alpine farming association in Tyrol.

This would mean the end of Alpine pastures.“, said Georg Strasser, president of Bauernbund, the national farmers association that is one of Austria’s most powerful lobbies.

Failing dairy and meat prices had already tightened the screws on farmers, Strasser told reporters after the Pfurtscheller ruling, and the spectre of lawsuits would prove too much to bear.

Governments quickly acted to keep cows on the pastures.

State governors, federal ministers, even the then-Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz spoke out in support of Pfurtscheller, a man of 62 who has been farming since he was ten.

Last year, federal law was changed to block similar litigation.

New insurance policies now cover every farmer whose animals go wild.

Above: Sebastian Kurz (Chancellor: 2017 – 2019 / 2020 – 2021)

In May 2020, the Austrian Supreme Court of Justice upheld a revised lower court verdict that held the hiker equally culpable for the tragedy, cut her survivors’ compensation to $92,400 and halved their monthly restitution payments.

The verdict was a real blow, said Markus Hirn, the lawyer for her family.

But given how much political support the farmer had, it still feels like a win.

Above: Palace of Justice, Wien (Vienna), Österreich (Austria)

Farmers feel otherwise because of the pressures they are facing.

The steep Alpine terrain limits the amount of feed that can be grown and the number of cows that can be held.

On average, a farmer in Tyrol owns 12 cows, but the more dramatic the landscape gets, the lower that figure goes.

Hikers with dogs, as well as bike riders, add to cows’ stress.

(The casualty on Pfurtscheller’s farm was accompanied by a terrier.)

To the cows, dogs are direct descendants of wolves.”, Pfurtscheller said.

If you thought your child is in danger, wouldn’t you defend it?

Pfurtscheller has posted new signs on his land warning hikers to keep dogs away from mother cows at all times.

He fences his pastures.

People want the pastures, they want cows, and farmers in Lederhosen.“, Pfurtscheller said.

But nobody sees how much effort it is.

Nature teaches beasts to know their friends.

William Shakespeare, Coriolanus, Act 2, Scene 1

Above: William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)

People watch with amazement a TV programme on the social lives of elephants – their family groupings, affections and mutual help, their sense of fun – without realizing that our own domestic cattle develop very similar lifestyles if given the opportunity.

Joanne Bower, The Farm and Food Society

Cows have far more awareness and know-how than they have ever been given credit for.

Watching cows and calves playing, grooming one another or being assertive, takes on a whole new dimension if you know that those taking part are siblings, cousins, friends or sworn enemies.

If you know animals as individuals you notice how often older brothers are kind to younger brothers, how sisters seek or avoid each other’s company, and which families always get together at night to sleep and which never do so.

Cows are as varied as people.

They can be highly intelligent or slow to understand.

Friendly, considerable, aggressive, docile, inventive, dull, proud or shy.

All these characteristics are present in a herd.

Cattle (Bos taurus) are large domesticated bovines.

They are most widespread species of the genus Bos.

Adult females are referred to as cows and adult males are referred to as bulls.

Cattle are commonly raised as livestock for meat (beef or veal), for milk, and for hides, which are used to make leather.

They are used as riding animals and draft animals (oxen or bullocks, which pull carts, plows and other implements).

Another product of cattle is their dung, which can be used to create manure or fuel.

Above: Cow dung – looks and smells: not pretty, but pretty useful

In some regions, such as parts of India, cattle have significant religious significance.

Cattle, mostly small breeds such as the Miniature Zebu, are also kept as pets.

Above: A Miniature Zebu cow

Different types of cattle are common to different geographic areas.

Taurine cattle are found primarily in Europe and temperate areas of Asia, the Americas and Australia. 

Zebus (also called indicine cattle) are found primarily in India and tropical areas of Asia, America, and Australia. 

Sanga cattle are found primarily in sub-Saharan Africa.

These types (which are sometimes classified as separate species or subspecies) are further divided into over 1,000 recognized breeds.

Around 10,500 years ago, taurine cattle were domesticated from as few as 80 wild aurochs progenitors in central Anatolia, the Levant and Western Iran.

A separate domestication event occurred in the Indian subcontinent, which gave rise to zebu.

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), there are approximately 1.5 billion cattle in the world as of 2018.

Cattle are the main source of greenhouse gas emissions from livestock, and are responsible for around 10% of global greenhouse gas emissions.

In 2009, cattle became one of the first livestock animals to have a fully mapped genome.

Above: Global bovine distribution

I am Cow, hear me moo
I weigh twice as much as you
And I look good on the barbecue
Yogurt, curd, cream cheese and butter’s
Made from liquid from my udders
I am Cow, I am Cow, Hear me moo (moo)

I am Cow, eating grass
Methane gas comes out my ass
And out my muzzle when I belch
Oh, the ozone layer is thinner
From the outcome of my dinner
I am Cow, I am Cow, I’ve got gas

I am Cow, here I stand
Far and wide upon this land
And I am living everywhere
From BC to Newfoundland
You can squeeze my teats by hand
I am Cow, I am Cow, I am Cow
I am Cow, I am Cow, I am Cow!

Aggression in cattle is usually a result of fear, learning and hormonal state, however, many other factors can contribute to aggressive behaviors in cattle.

Temperament traits are known to be traits in which explain the behaviour and actions of an animal and can be described in the traits responsible for how easily an animal can be approached, handled, milked or trained.

Temperament can also be defined as how an animal carries out maternal or other behaviours while subjected to routine management.

These traits have the ability to change as the animal ages or as the environment in which the animal lives changes over time, however, it is proven that regardless of age and environmental conditions, some individuals remain more aggressive than others. 

Aggression in cattle can arise from both genetic and environmental factors.

Aggression between cows is worse than that between bulls.

Bulls with horns will bunt (push or strike with the horns) in which can cause more damage overall.

Most aggressive behaviours of cows include kicking, crushing and/or blunting.

There are many types of aggression that are seen in animals, particularly cattle, including maternal, feed, comfort influencing, pain induced, and stress induced aggressiveness.

There are many components to maternal behavior that are seen in cattle, including behavior that allows proper bonding between mother and baby, nursing behavior, attentiveness and how mother responds to offspring.

This maternal behavior is often seen in cattle during lactation as a prey species, this triggers the maternal instinct to protect their young from any threat and may use violent aggressive behaviors as a defense mechanism.

During lactation in prey species, including cattle, a reduction in fear responsiveness to novel and potentially dangerous situations facilitates the expression of defensive aggression in protection of the young.

It has also been proven however that aggression is not only performed in the protection of the offspring, but it can be directed to the offspring, in which could be directly related to fear.

This is commonly seen in cattle due to high stocking densities which could potentially decrease the amount of space each cow has, as well as limit their ability to have access to feed, even impacting the ruminal environment. 

It has been proven that supplying feed and water to cattle that are housed together may be heavily associated with feed aggression and aggressive actions towards others cows and within loose-housed cattle, feeding places are noted to have the highest amount of aggressive behaviours.

These are aggressive behaviors associated with lack of comfort, inadequate lying space or time in which the physical environment fails to provide the animal.

Cow comfort plays an important role in the well being as well as maximizing production as an industry.

Within many intensive production systems, it is very common to see limited space for resting, which can be associated with negative behaviors as not providing the appropriate space for the animal reduces resting and lying behavior, increasing irritability and the potential to act in aggressive behaviours.

Although not all production systems provide limited space and time for lying, uncomfortable stalls are also known to be a major problem when it comes to lying behaviour in cattle.

Decreasing the quality of resting area for cows will decrease resting time, and increase the likelihood of stress, abnormal and aggressive behaviours as the deprivation of lying/resting behaviors is proven to affect responses within the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis which is associated with chronic stress in the animal.

Not only lying time and space act as important regulators of comfort induced aggression, but other environmental factors may play a role in the comfort of an animal. 

Temperature has been shown to be a factor that influences the behavioral interactions between cattle.

It has been found that, by providing cows with the proper cooling environment or as heat decreases aggressive interactions in cattle will also decrease.

Cattle with access to more shade are known to show reduced physiological and behavioural responses to heat.

There are behaviours caused by some sort of stressor that can lead to aggressive advances towards themselves or other individuals.

A stressor is an object or event that can cause a real or perceived threat internally or externally to an animal. 

Stressors are common in farm animals such as dairy cows as they live in a complex environment where there are many stressors including:

  • novel objects (new objects such as handlers, food, or group mates)
  • social stimuli (different environments, new individuals)
  • restraint (physical restraint, moved to cubicles, transported).

Dairy cows specifically have been known to be very sensitive to new, unfamiliar events or objects such as being around an unfamiliar person, or presented with a novel food item.

Stress has extreme negative impacts on growth and reproduction in cattle, as the pituitary-adrenal system is very sensitive to different environmental stressors such as:

  • inadequate space
  • feed
  • poor quality housing
  • new objects or individuals
  • new living/housing system.

Pain is defined as an effective state and can only be truly measured indirectly in both humans and animals, that may present some challenges in decision making regarding pain management.

Many things can result in pain including: 

  • dehorning

  • tail docking

  • handling

  • castrating

  • mastitis

Above: A cow suffering mastitis

  • lameness

  • confinement

  • transportation

Lameness is a common issue seen in cattle, and may occur in facilities with poor management and housing systems, and inadequate handling skills.

It is because of this issue that many cows find themselves spending a lot of time lying down, instead of engaging in both aggressive (head butting, vocalizing, pushing) and non aggressive behaviors (licking, walking) due to the pain.

Techniques such as low stress handling (LSH) can be used as it provides silence, adequate restraint methods can help minimize stress levels in the animals.

Flight zones should be considered when handling or moving cattle, as they have a blind spot and may get spooked easily if unaware if there is an individual around.

Providing environments for cows in which minimize any environmental stressor can not only improve the wellbeing and welfare of the animal, but can also reduce aggressive behaviours.

Regular examinations (physical and physiological) should be done to determine the condition of the cow, which could show signs of cuts, or lesions, as well as the secretion or hormones inside the body such as cortisol.

Cortisol can be measured through blood sampling, urine, saliva or heart rate to indicate stress level of animal.

Assessing for lameness, as well as giving proper treatment depending on severity / location can include antibiotics.

Using proper treatment / prevention for pain when lameness is examined, as well as procedures such as tail docking, dehorning, castrating, mastitis lameness, etc.

The primary treatment in lame cows is corrective hoof pairing, which provides draining of abscesses, fixing any structural issue with the hoof, and reducing weight baring problems, however if lesions are seen in cattle, antibiotics or other measures may have to be taken to reduce further infection/irritation.

Setting breeding goals can be a potential way to select for desired temperamental traits, further decreasing the risk of raising aggressive cattle.

Before this method of selection can be entirely accurate and safe, however, some tests should be done, such as behaviour and temperament tests.

It is perhaps easier to assume that animals have no feelings.

They can then be used as generators of profit without any regard being given to their actual needs, as satisfying those needs is allegedly not worth the cost.

Happy animals grow faster, stay healthier, cause fewer problems and provide more profit in the long run, when all factors, such as the effects on human health and the environment are taken into account.

W.H. Hudson said:

Bear in mind that animals are only unhappy when made so by man.

Above: William Henry Hudson (1841 – 1922)

Bovine needs are in many respects the same as human ones:

  • freedom from stress
  • adequate shelter
  • pure food and water
  • liberty to exercise, to wander about, to go for a walk, or just to stand and stare.

Every animal needs congenial company of its own species.

A cow needs to be allowed to enjoy its rights in its own way, in its own time, and not according to a human timetable.

The number of different ways a calf may be treated is no fewer than the number of ways a child may be treated.

Most people believe that children need a stable environment with warmth and comfort, good clothes and shoes, food and drink, interesting diversions, friends of their own age and adults to guide and, above all, to love them.

We do not expect a well-balanced adult to emerge from a neglected, ill-nourished, lonely, frightened child.

The same logic should apply to farm animals.

The quality of the food and the overall environment of any living creature will determine its potential in later life.

The behaviour and health of all animals is affected by the quality of food they receive and the stress to which they are subjected.

If animals feel totally relaxed and safe and know themselves to be in a familiar environment, surroundings by family and friends, they will often sleep lying flat out.

They flop in a variety of often amusing positions and look anything from idyllically comfortable to dead.

Sleep may sometimes last only a very short time, but it is important and that they should not be disturbed.

It might sound eccentric to suggest that the reason an animal is bad-tempered is because it is short of sleep, but as sleeping is vital, deprivation will obviously do harm.

Animals can make up for deficiencies in their diet by foraging and finding what they need.

It is up to us to provide conditions in which they can be comfortable and happy enough to sleep well.

Twenty things you ought to know about cows:

  1. Cows love each other…..at least some do.
  2. Cows babysit for each other.
  3. Cows nurse grudges.
  4. Cows invent games.
  5. Cows take umbrage.
  6. Cows can communicate with people.
  7. Cows can solve problems.
  8. Cows make friends for life.
  9. Cows have food preferences.
  10. Cows can be unpredictable.
  11. Cows can be good company.
  12. Cows can be boring.
  13. Cows can be intelligent.
  14. Cows love music.
  15. Cows can be gentle.
  16. Cows can be aggressive.
  17. Cows can be dependable.
  18. Cows can be forgiving.
  19. Cows can be obstinate.
  20. Cows can be wise.

Cows are individuals and possess feelings, just like humans.

Thus, they can be as unpredictable as humans.

Let us consider Switzerland.

More than anything, it is the magnificent ranges enclosing the country to the south that define it.

The main draw for visitors, they have also played a profound role in forming Switzerland’s national identity.

They are the favourite recreation grounds for summer hiking and winter skiing.

Within this rugged environment, community spirit is perhaps stronger than anywhere else in Europe.

Above: Flag of Switzerland

Switzerland is heaven for outdoor activities of all kinds.

You don’t have to be a mountaineer to enjoy an active holiday in the Alps.

Switzerland has some of Europe’s finest walking terrain with enough variety to suit every taste.

In the northwest the wooded Jura hills provide long views across the lowlands to Alpine giants.

Above: Jura Mountains

The Bernese Alps harbour a glacial heartland but also feature gentle valleys, pastoral ridges and charming hamlets with well-marked trails weaving through.

Above: Bernese Alps

On the south side of the Rhône Valley, the Pennine Alps are burdened with snow and glaciers, yet walkers’ paths lead along their moraines.

Above: Pennine Alps

In the mountains of Ticino, which are almost completely ice-free in summer, you will find trails galore linking modest, lake-jewelled peaks.

Above: Ticino mountains

In tourist areas walkers can use chairlifts, gondolas and cable cars in summer and autumn to reach high trails.

Paths are well-maintained and clearly marked with regular yellow signposts displaying the names of major landmark destinations, often with an estimate of the time it takes to walk to them. Most signposts also have a white plate giving the name and altitude of the spot you are standing on.

A Wanderweg / Chemin de randonnée pédestre / Sentiero escursionistico remains either in the valley or travels the hillsides at a modest attitude, is sometimes surfaced and will be graded at a relatively gentle angle.

Yellow diamonds or pointers show the continuation of the route.

No one should venture into the outdoors without consulting a good map.

In Switzerland, local shops and tourist offices usually stock a selection, including walkers’ maps with routes and times.

Always check the weather forecast before setting out.

Do not venture to high altitudes if bad weather is expected.

It is sensible to take a fleece and waterproof wherever you go.

On more ambitious outings it is essential with wind- and waterproof clothing and good footwear.

Frequent official avalanche bulletins are published online and publicized widely in mountain areas.

I have been caught outdoors overnight in the mountains.

Above: Logo of Swiss Air Rescue – (German: Schweizerische Rettungsflugwacht, French: Garde aérienne suisse de sauvetageRega)

It seems to me that I have heard of at least one major avalanche in the Alps for each year I lived in Switzerland.

I had heard of at least one fatality on the trails of Switzerland every year.

As a whole, Switzerland has 1.59 million cows, or one for every five people.

So there are victims of cattle aggression in Switzerland.

Two young hikers were airlifted to hospital with moderate injuries after being knocked to the ground by a cow in the canton of Nidwalden on Saturday, 24 August 2019 – the second such incident in the area in a month.

Above: Flag of Canton Nidwalden

The hikers suffered bruises and shock in the incident involving a herd of cattle and their calves on the Bannalp in the commune of Wolfenschiessen said in a statement.

Above: Wolfenschiessen, Nidenwalden, Switzerland

The walking track that the hikers was temporarily closed.

In addition, the herd of cows involved in the attack has been moved away from its high summer pasture and back down to the valley – a month earlier than planned.

The incident was the second attack by cows on the Bannalp track in two months.

In July 2019, a dog was trampled to death and the animal’s owner was injured.

Dogs were subsequently banned on the walking track for the duration of the summer.

Above: Bannalp

One local farmer told regional daily Luzerner Zeitung that the cause of the attacks lies in the difference between cattle and dairy cows.

Cattle behave differently to milk cows.

They are quicker to feel themselves under attack and to want to protect their calves, while they are also less used to humans because they are not milked.”, explained Wendel Odermatt.

He said it often only required an aggressive animal to incite an attack.

Herd instinct and the instinct to play also played a role, he added.

In the past, there had been less awareness of this problem because dairy cows dominated in pastures, he said.

Hikers are advised to take care with such herds.

Above: Wendel Odermatt

In the summer months hikers strolling through meadows in Switzerland often underestimate the danger posed by cows.

Far from being docile creatures, cows can be aggressive, especially if they are protecting their calves.

Fatal attacks are, thankfully, rare.

In 2015, a German tourist was killed by cattle when out walking in the Laax area of Graubünden, prompting the authorities to put up warning signs.

Above: Laax, Graubünden, Switzerland

To help avoid further injury, Blick newspaper compiled a list of helpful tips on crossing meadows safely.

The Swiss advisory service for agricultural accident prevention BUL recommends walkers avoid:

–       wearing very bright or garishly coloured clothing

–       making loud noises or high-pitched sounds

–       taking a dog with you, as dogs are seen as a threat

–       looking the cow in the eye and sustained eye contact.

The BUL also offers advice to hikers who find themselves at risk of attack:

–       Back away slowly but do not avert your gaze.

–       Use a walking stick (Alpenstock) to defend yourself if attacked.

–       If you have a dog, let it off the lead, so the cow will concentrate on the dog instead of you.

Above: Jacques Balmat (1762 – 1834) carrying an axe and an alpenstock

The advisory service says the main piece of advice is to always keep quiet when crossing meadows and to observe the behaviour of the herd.

You should also keep as far away from the animals as possible.

Consider Türkiye.

Above: Flag of Turkey

Trails in Türkiye beckon.

Head for the hills on a wonderful waymarked hiking trail, like the Lycian Way or St. Paul Trail.

The exhilarating Lycian Way long-distance trail weaves its way through the westernmost reaches of the Toros.

Inaugurated in 2000, the Lycian Way runs parallel to much of the Turquoise Coast,

In theory, it takes five weeks to complete the entire trail, but most walkers sample it in stages rather than tackling it all in one go.

Starting above Ölüdeniz and ending just shy of Antalya, the trail takes in choice mountain landscapes and seascapes en route, with many optional detours to Roman or Byzantine ruins not found in conventional guidebooks.

Some of the wildest sections lie between Kabak and Gavuragli, above the Yediburun coast, and between Kas and Üçagiz.

Elevation en route varies from sea level to 1,800 metres on the saddle of Tahtali Dağ.

The best walking seasons along most of the way are October (pleasantly warm) or April / May (when water is plentiful and the days long), except in the highest mountain stages.

Summer is out of the question.

Above: The Lycian Way

The route itself ranges from rough boulder-strewn trails to brief stretches of asphalt, by way of forested paths, cobbled or revetted Byzantine/Ottoman roads and tractor tracks.

While the entire distance is marked with the conventional red-and-white blazes used in Europe, plus occasional metal signs giving distances to the next key destination, waymarks can be absent when you need them most.

Continual bulldozing of existing footpath stretches into jeep tracks is such a major problem that the notional initial section between Hisarönü and Kirme has now ceased to exist, with most hikers starting at Faralya, while periodic maintenance (and where necessary rerouting) barely keeps pace with fast-growing scrub and rockfalls.

Above: Map of the Lycian Way

The more challenging St. Paul Trail crosses the range from south to north.

Opened in 2004, the rugged St. Paul Trail offers over 500 km of trekking in the spectacularly beautiful Toros Mountains.

Waymarked to international standards, with red and white flashes on rocks and trees, it allows relatively easy explorations of a remote, unspoiled area of Turkey.

Above: Saint Paul Trail

The twin starting points of the route are the ancient cities of Perge and Aspendos on the Mediterranean coastal plain.

It was from Perge that St. Paul set out in 46 CE, on his first proselytizing journey.

Above: Perge

His destination was the Roman colonial town of Antioch ad Pisidiam, where he first preached Christ’s message to non-Jews.

Above: Antiocheia in Psidia

En route from the Mediterranean to the Anatolian plateau, the Trail crosses tumbling mountain rivers, climbs passes between limestone peaks that soar to almost 3,000 metres, dips into deeply scored canyons.

It weaves beneath shady pine and cedar forest.

It even includes a boat ride across the glimmering expanse of Lake Egirdir.

Hikers interested in archaeology can discover remote, little-known Roman sites and walk along original sections of Roman road.

The irrevocably active can raft the Köprülü River, scale 2,635-metre Mount Davraz and 2799-metre Mount Barla.

Both trails are marked with red-and-white paint flashes and take in some stunning mountain and gorge scenery, remote ancient sites and timeless villages.

Other trails have also sprung up.

These include:

  • the Evliya Çelebi Way in northwest Turkey, a trail suitable for horse riders and walkers

Above: Map of the Evliya Çelebi Way

The Evliya Çelebi Way is a cultural trekking route celebrating the early stages of the journey made in 1671 to Mecca by the eponymous Ottoman Turkish gentleman-adventurer, Evliya Çelebi.

Evliya travelled the Ottoman Empire and beyond for some 40 years, leaving a ten-volume account of his journeys.

Above: Statue of Evliya Çelebi, Eger Castle, Hungary

The Evliya Çelebi Way is a 600+ km-long trail for horse riders, hikers and bikers.

It begins at Hersek (a village in Altinova district), on the south coast of the Izmit Gulf, and traces Evliya’s pilgrimage journey via Iznik, Yenisehir, Inegöl, Kütahya (his ancestral home), Afyonkarahisar, Usak, Eski Gediz and Simav.

(Heavy urbanisation prevents the Way entering either Istanbul, from where he set out in 1671, or Bursa.)

The Evliya Çelebi Way was inaugurated in autumn 2009 by a group of Turkish and British riders and academics.

A guidebook to the route, both English and Turkish, includes practical information for the modern traveller, day-by-day route descriptions, maps, photos, historical and architectural background, notes on the environment, and summaries of Evliya’s description of places he saw when he travelled in the region, paired with what the visitor may see today.

  • Abraham’s Path, linking Yuvacali village with Harran and the Syrian border

Above: Map of the Abraham Path

The small village of Yuvacali, set amid bleached fields of wheat, lentils and chickpeas, huddles at the foot of a prominent settlement mound as ancient as nearby Göbekli Tepe, not far from the market town of Hilvan.

Here you can stay in a Kurdish village home and try your hand at milking sheep and baking unleavened village bread.

You will also be introduced to Kurdish history and culture, taken on a one-hour 30-minute walk around the village and its ruins.

Perhaps walk a part of the waymarked Abraham Path, which starts here.

Above: Yuvacali

The Abraham Path is a cultural route believed to have been the path of the patriarch Abraham’s ancient journey across the Ancient Near East.

The path was established in 2007 as a pilgrims’ way to mimic the historical believed route of Abraham, between his birthplace of Ur of the Chaldees, believed by some to have been Urfa, Turkey, and his final destination of the desert of Negev.

Above: Sanliurfa, Turkey

Above: Ein Avdat, Negev Desert, Israel

Abraham/Ibrahim is believed to have lived in the Bronze Age.

He travelled with family and flocks throughout the Fertile Crescent, the Arabian peninsula, and the Nile Valley.

His story has inspired myriad communities, including Kurds, Muslims, Jews, Christians, Alevi, Bedouin, Fellahin, Samaritans, and countless across the world.

The Abraham Path Initiative aims to build on this narrative of shared connection with its rich tradition of walking and hospitality to strangers.

The main historical Abrahamic sites on the current path are: 

  • Urfa, the birthplace of Abraham according to some Muslim traditions 
  • Harran, according to the Hebrew Bible, a town Abraham lived in, and from which he received the call to start the main part of his journey 

Above: Harran, Türkiye

  • Jerusalem, the scene for the binding of Isaac upon the Foundation Stone, according to the Hebrew Bible

Above: Jerusalem, Israel

  • Hebron, the location of the tomb of Abraham and his wife Sarah, according to Jewish, Christian and Muslim traditions.

Above: Hebron, Israel

  • the Carian Way on the southwest Aegean coast

Above: Map of the Carian Trail

The Carian Trail (Karia Yolu) is an 820 km long-distance footpath exploring the southwestern corner of Turkey through the modern provinces of Mugla and Aydin.

The trail is officially opened in 2013 and winds through some of the lesser known regions of Turkey.

The trail is named after the Carian civilization, indigenous people of Asia Minor.

Above: Inscription in Carian script

It passes through an area with many ancient ruins.

Stone paved caravan roads and mule paths connect villages from the coast to a mountainous hinterland.

There are pine forest covered mountain slopes, olive terraces and almond groves which are an important part of the region’s economy.

The trail is signed and waymarked with red and white stripes (Grande Randonée convention) allowing both independent and group travellers from inside and outside of Turkey to hike and enjoy the scenic beauty and cultural treasures of Caria.

Above: Carian Trail, Muğla

The 820 km long trail has four main sections: 

  • Bozburun
  • Datça Peninsula
  • Gulf of Gökova
  • Carian Hinterland
  • with an additional section that encompass Mugla and surrounding regions. 

All of the trail has been divided into 46 stages.

It also includes a smaller 11 km long section called Dalyan, which is isolated from other sections. Some sections and stages can be cycled.

Above: Carian Trail signage

Bozburun Peninsula section is 141.2 km long and is the official starting point of the Trail. 

It starts from Içmeler and follows Turunç, Kumlubük, Bayır, Taşlıca, Söğüt, Bozburun, Selimiye, Orhaniye, and ends in Hisarönü.

Above: Bozburun

Datça Peninsula is 240.7 km of length.

The section starts from the old town of Datça, and follows Hızırşah, Domuzçukuru, Mesudiye, Palamutbükü, Knidos, Karaköy, Kızlan, Emecik, Balıkaşıran, Akçapınar, and ends in Akyaka.

The part from Balıkaşıran to Akyaka can also be biked.

Above: Datça

The Ceramic Gulf (Gulf of Gökova) is a section with 139.2 km of trail.

The section starts from Akyaka and heads west following Turnalı, Sarnıç, Akbük, Alatepe, Ören (Ceramos), Türkevleri, Bozalan, Mazı, Çiftlik, Kızılağaç and arrives in Bodrum (Halicarnassos) finishing in ancient city of Pedasa.

Above: Akyaka

Carian Hinterland section is 174.2 km long and starts from Bozalan heading north and follows Fesleğen, Karacahisar, Milas (Mylasa), Kargıcak, Labraunda, Sarıkaya, Çomakdağ, Kayabükü, Sakarkaya and arrives at the shores of Lake Bafa.

Heading up the Latmos (Mentese mountains) the Trail continues to the summit (1,350 m), Bağarcık, Kullar, Yahşiler, Tekeler, and finishes in Karpuzlu (Alinda) which is the official finish of the Carian Trail.

Above: Karpuzlu

Mugla Environs section consists of 108.5 km of trail.

Heading north to Akyaka, the section passes through Kuyucak, Karabaglar, Mugla, Degirmendere Kanyonu, Ekizce, Bayir, Belen Kahvesi and finishes in the ancient city of Stratonikeia.

It is possible to bike most of this section.

Above: Theatre, Stratonikeia

Dalyan is the smallest section of the trail with only 11 km of length.

The route starts from Dalyan and passes by Kaunos, a historically important sea port with a history that can be tracked back to the 10th century BCE.

The Trail ends in Ekincik Bay.

Above: Dalyan

  • the Phrygian Way

Above: Phrygian Trail map

The Phrygian Trekking Route is one of the longest hiking trails in Türkiye.

Planned with great care for the comfort and enjoyment of hikers, the route passes through the renowned Phrygian Valleys where hikers may visit the ruins of ancient civilisations and enjoy the natural beauty of the region.

The trekking route is 506 kilometres long, and is marked in accordance with international standards.

The route has three starting points and the trails meet at the Yazilikaya (Inscribed Rock), which was a focal point for the Phrygians.

Hikers may start the route at the following points:

1) Gordium (Polatli, Ankara)

Above: Gordion

2) Seydiler (Afyonkarahisar)

Above: Seyydis

3) Yenice Farm Ciftligi (Ahmetoglu Village, Kutahya).

Above: Ahmetoglu

The trail starts at Gordium, the political capital of the Phrygians, then follows the valley of the Porsuk (ancient Tembris) River, passes through Sivrihisar (ancient Spaleia), and arrives at Pessinous (Ballikaya), another important Phrygian settlement.

Above: Sivrihisar

Above: Pessinous

The Trail then enters the valley of the Sakarya (ancient Sangarius) River, where you enter a completely different world.

After the Sakarya Valley, the Trail enters the region known as Mountainous Phrygia.

The Trail then reaches the Yazilikaya, the site of the Midas monument which formed the cult centre of the Phrygians.

Above: Yazilikaya

Here the trail splits into two.

One branch leads to Findikli Village passing through the Asmainler, Zahran, and Inli Valleys, once home to Phrygian settlements.

Above: Findikli

This branch terminates at Yenice Farm on the highway between Kutahya and Eskişehir.

Above: Yenice Farm

The other branch passes through Saricaova, a picturesque Circassian village, and Döğer, town in Afyonkarahisar.

Above: Sancaova, Afyonkarahisar Province

Above: Döğer

The Trail then takes you through Ayazini Town before coming to an end at Seydiler, on the highway between Afyonkarahisar and Ankara.

Hikers who complete these trails will treasure the memory forever.

Above: Byzantine Church, Ayazini

The alpine Kaçkar Dağlari, paralleling the Black Sea, are the most rewarding mountains in Turkey for trekking.

Above: Kaçkar Daği

Also noteworthy are the limestone Toros (Taurus) ranges, especially the lofty Aladağlar mountains south of Cappadocia.

Above: Demirkazik Crest of Aladağ Mountain

Türkiye’s wild mountain ranges are a treat for experienced hikers prepared to carry their own tents and food and cope with few facilities.

The lack of decent maps maps makes mountain exploration a real adventure, but the unspoiled countryside, the hospitality of rural Turks, the fascination of yaylas (summer pastures), and the friendliness of other mountaineers more than compensate.

Above: The Black Sea’s mountain pastures – Türkiye’s very own Switzerland

Turkish trails pass through pastures.

Pastures provide fodder for flocks of sheep and herds of cattle.

The cattle number estimate for 2019 was 15.8 million head.

Chances are a hiker in Türkiye will encounter a cow.

Hopefully, without incident.

In the two nations wherein I am classified as a resident, there remain many trails I long to explore.

My attitude to nature, despite my not being a vegetarian, tends to be one of compassion and cooperation rather than confrontation and conflict.

I would rather be a Wordsworth than a wilderness warrior.

Above: William Wordsworth (1770 – 1850)

William Wordsworth is estimated to have walked a distance of over 175,000 English miles in the course of his life, a life of unclouded happiness.

Wordsworth made walking central to his life and art to a degree almost unparalleled before or since.

He went walking almost every day of his adult life.

Walking was both how he encountered the world and how he composed his poetry.

For Wordsworth, walking was not merely a mode of travelling, but of being.

A walk in the country is the equivalent of going to church, a tour through Westmoreland is as good as a pilgrimage to Jerusalem.

Aldous Huxley

Above: Aldous Huxley (1894 – 1963)

But not all men view the cow as one of God’s creatures.

Not all men avoid the potential aggression of cattle.

Some seek to provoke a beast to rage.

Above: Spanish bullfight underway in the Plaza de Toros Las Ventas in Madrid, 9 October 2005

Bullfighting is a physical contest that involves a bullfighter and animals attempting to subdue, immobilize, or kill a bull, usually according to a set of rules, guidelines, or cultural expectations.

There are several variations, including some forms which involve dancing around or leaping over a cow or bull or attempting to grasp an object tied to the animal’s horns.

The best-known form of bullfighting is Spanish-style bullfighting, practiced in Spain, Portugal, southern France, Mexico, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela and Peru.

The Spanish fighting bull is deliberately bred for its aggression and physique, and is raised free range with little human contact.

Above: Bullfight, Plaza de toros de La Malagueta, Málaga, Spain, 15 August 2018

The practice of bullfighting is controversial because of a range of concerns, including animal welfare, funding, and religion.

While some forms are considered a blood sport, in some countries, for example, Spain, it is defined as an art form or cultural event, and local regulations define it as a cultural event or heritage. 

Bullfighting is illegal in most countries, but remains legal in most areas of Spain and Portugal, as well as in some Hispanic American countries and some parts of southern France.

Above: Bullfight, Arles, France, 7 February 2005

Bullfighting traces its roots to prehistoric bull worship and sacrifice in Mesopotamia and the Mediterranean region.

The first recorded bullfight may be the Epic of Gilgamesh, which describes a scene in which Gilgamesh and Enkidu fought and killed the Bull of Heaven:

The Bull seemed indestructible, for hours they fought, till Gilgamesh dancing in front of the Bull, lured it with his tunic and bright weapons, and Enkidu thrust his sword, deep into the Bull’s neck, and killed it.”

Bull leaping was portrayed in Crete and myths related to bulls throughout Greece.

Above: Bull leaping fresco, Knossos, Crete

Bullfighting and the killing of the sacred bull was commonly practiced in ancient Iran and connected to the pre-Zoroastrian god Mithra.

Above: Relief of Mithra, Taq-e Bustan, Iran

The cosmic connotations of the ancient Iranian practice are reflected in Zoroaster’s Gathas and the Avesta.

Above: Depiction of Zoroaster

The killing of the sacred bull (tauroctony) is the essential central iconic act of Mithras, which was commemorated in the mithraeum (temple of Mithras) wherever Roman soldiers were stationed.

The oldest representation of what seems to be a man facing a bull is on the Celtiberian tombstone from Clunia (an ancient Roman city) and the cave painting El toro de hachos, both found in Spain.

Bullfighting is often linked to Rome, where many human-versus-animal events were held as competition and entertainment, the Venationes.

These hunting games spread to Africa, Asia and Europe during Roman times.

Above: Mithras killing a bull

There are also theories that it was introduced into Hispania by the Emperor Claudius as a substitute for gladiators, when he instituted a short-lived ban on gladiatorial combat.

Above: Bust of Claudius (10 BCE – 54 CE)

The latter theory was supported by Robert Graves.

Above: Robert Graves (1895 – 1985)

Spanish colonists took the practice of breeding cattle and bullfighting to the American colonies, the Pacific and Asia.

In the 19th century, areas of southern and southwestern France adopted bullfighting, developing their distinctive form.

Above: The Roman amphitheater at Arles being fitted for a corrida

Religious festivities and royal weddings were celebrated by fights in the local plaza, where noblemen would ride competing for royal favor, and the populace enjoyed the excitement.

In the Middle Ages across Europe, knights would joust in competitions on horseback.

Above: Jousting

In Spain, they began to fight bulls.

In medieval Spain bullfighting was considered a noble sport and reserved for the rich, who could afford to supply and train their animals.

The bull was released into a closed arena where a single fighter on horseback was armed with a lance.

Above: Bull monument, Ronda, Spain

This spectacle was said to be enjoyed by Charlemagne, Alfonso X “the Wise“, and the Almohad caliphs (1121 – 1269), among others.

Above: Bust of Charlemagne (747 – 814)





Above: Portrait of Alfonso X (1221 – 1284)

Above: Almohad Empire at its greatest extent

The greatest Spanish performer of this art is said to have been the knight El Cid (1043 – 1099).

Above: El Cid, Francisco de Goya, 1816

According to a chronicle of the time, in 1128:

When Alfonso VII of Léon and Castile married Berengaria of Barcelonadaughter of Ramon Berenguer III, Count of Barcelona at Saldana, among other celebrations, there were also bullfights.

Above: Portrait of Alfonso VII (1105 – 1157)

Above: Effigy of Berenguela (1116 – 1149), Cathedral, Santiago de Compostela, Spain

Above: Portrait of Ramon Berenguer IV (r. 1086 – 1131)

In the time of Emperor Charles V, Pedro Ponce de Leon was the most famous bullfighter in Spain and a renovator of the technique of killing the bull on a horse with blindfolded eyes. 

Above: Portrait of Charles V (1500 – 1558)

Juan de Quirós, the best Sevillian poet of that time, dedicated to him a poem in Latin, of which Benito Arias Montano transmits some verses.

Above: Portrait of Juan de Quirós (1487 – 1562)

Above: Benito Arias Montano (1527 – 1598)

Francisco Romero, from Ronda, Spain, is generally regarded as having been the first to introduce the practice of fighting bulls on foot around 1726, using the muleta (a stick with a red cloth sticking from it) in the last stage of the fight and an estoc (a long two-handed sword) to kill the bull.

This type of fighting drew more attention from the crowds.

Thus the modern corrida, or fight, began to take form, as riding noblemen were replaced by commoners on foot.

This new style prompted the construction of dedicated bullrings, initially square, like the Plaza de Armas (main square), and later round, to discourage the cornering of the action.

Above: Portrait of Francisco Romero (1700 – 1763)

The modern style of Spanish bullfighting is credited to Juan Belmonte, generally considered the greatest matador of all time.

Belmonte introduced a daring and revolutionary style, in which he stayed within a few centimeters of the bull throughout the fight.

Although extremely dangerous – (Belmonte was gored on many occasions.) – his style is still seen by most matadors as the ideal to be emulated.

Above: Juan Belmonte (1892 – 1962), on the cover of Time, 5 January 1925

Spanish-style bullfighting is called corrida de toros (“coursing of bulls“) or la fiesta (“festival”).

In the traditional corrida, three matadores each fight two bulls, each of which is between four and six years old and weighs no less than 460 kg (1,014 lb).

Each matador has six assistants:

Two picadores (lancers mounted on horseback), three banderilleros  – who along with the matadors are collectively known as toreros (bullfighters) – and a mozo de espadas (sword page).

Collectively they comprise a cuadrilla (entourage).

Above: Bullfight, Barcelona, Spain, 1900

In Spanish the more general torero or diestro (‘right-hander’) is used for the lead fighter, and only when needed to distinguish a man is the full title matador de toros used.

In English, “matador” is generally used for the bullfighter.

Above: Enrique Simonet’s La suerte de varas (1899) depicts Spanish-style bullfighting in a bullring, Madrid, Spain

The modern corrida is highly ritualized, with three distinct stages or tercios (“thirds“) – the start of each being announced by a bugle sound.

The participants enter the arena in a parade, called the paseíllo, to salute the presiding dignitary, accompanied by band music.

Torero costumes are inspired by 17th-century Andalusian clothing, and matadores are easily distinguished by the gold of their traje de luces (“suit of lights“), as opposed to the lesser banderilleros, who are also known as toreros de plata (“bullfighters of silver“).

The bull is released into the ring, where he is tested for ferocity by the matador and banderilleros with the magenta and gold capote (“cape“).

This is the first stage, the tercio de varas (“the lancing third“).

The matador confronts the bull with the capote, performing a series of passes and observing the behavior and quirks of the bull.

Next, a picador enters the arena on horseback armed with a vara (lance).

To protect the horse from the bull’s horns, the animal wears a protective, padded covering called peto.

Prior to 1930, the horses did not wear any protection.

Often the bull would disembowel the horse during this stage.

Until the use of protection was instituted, the number of horses killed during a fiesta generally exceeded the number of bulls killed.

At this point, the picador stabs just behind the morrillo, a mound of muscle on the fighting bull’s neck, weakening the neck muscles and leading to the animal’s first loss of blood.

The manner in which the bull charges the horse provides important clues to the matador about the bull such as which horn the bull favours.

As a result of the injury and also the fatigue of striving to injure the armoured heavy horse, the bull holds its head and horns slightly lower during the following stages of the fight.

This ultimately enables the matador to perform the killing thrust later in the performance.

The encounter with the picador often fundamentally changes the behavior of a bull.

Distracted and unengaging bulls will become more focused and stay on a single target instead of charging at everything that moves, conserving their diminished energy reserves.

In the next stage, the tercio de banderillas (“the third of banderillas“), each of the three banderilleros attempts to plant two banderillas, sharp barbed sticks, into the bull’s shoulders.

These anger and agitate the bull reinvigorating him from the aplomado (‘leadened‘) state his attacks on the horse and injuries from the lance left him in.

Sometimes a matador will place his own banderillas.

If so, he usually embellishes this part of his performance and employs more varied maneuvers than the standard al cuarteo method commonly used by banderilleros.

In the final stage, the tercio de muerte (“the third of death“), the matador re-enters the ring alone with a smaller red cloth, or muleta, and a sword.

It is a common misconception that the colour red is supposed to anger the bull.

The animals are functionally colour blind in this respect:

The bull is incited to charge by the movement of the muleta. 

The muleta is thought to be red to mask the bull’s blood, although the colour is now a matter of tradition.

The matador uses his muleta to attract the bull in a series of passes, which serve the dual purpose of wearing the animal down for the kill and creating sculptural forms between man and animal that can fascinate or thrill the audience, and which when linked together in a rhythm create a dance of passes, or faena.

The matador will often try to enhance the drama of the dance by bringing the bull’s horns especially close to his body.

The faena refers to the entire performance with the muleta.

The faena is usually broken down into tandas, or “series“, of passes.

The faena ends with a final series of passes in which the matador, using the cape, tries to maneuver the bull into a position to stab it between the shoulder blades going over the horns and thus exposing his own body to the bull.

The sword is called estoque, and the act of thrusting the sword is called an estocada.

During the initial series, while the matador in part is performing for the crowd, he uses a fake sword (estoque simulado).

This is made of wood or aluminum, making it lighter and much easier to handle.

The estoque de verdad (real sword) is made out of steel.

At the end of the tercio de muerte, when the matador has finished his faena, he will change swords to take up the steel one.

He performs the estocada with the intent of piercing the heart or aorta, or severing other major blood vessels to induce a quick death if all goes according to plan.

Often this does not happen and repeated efforts must be made to bring the bull down, sometimes the matador changing to the ‘descabello‘, which resembles a sword, but is actually a heavy dagger blade at the end of a steel rod which is thrust between the cervical vertebrae to sever the spinal column and induce instant death.

Even if the descabello is not required and the bull falls quickly from the sword one of the banderilleros will perform this function with an actual dagger to ensure the bull is dead.

If the matador has performed particularly well, the crowd may petition the President by waving white handkerchiefs to award the matador an ear of the bull.

If his performance was exceptional, the President will award two ears.

In certain more rural rings, the practice includes an award of the bull’s tail.

Very rarely, if the public and the matador believe that the bull has fought extremely bravely – and the breeder of the bull agrees to have it return to the ranch – the event’s President may grant a pardon (indulto).

If the indulto is granted, the bull’s life is spared.

It leaves the ring alive and is returned to its home ranch for treatment and then to become a semental, or seed-bull, for the rest of its life.

Spanish-style bullfighting is normally fatal for the bull, but it is also dangerous for the matador.

The danger for the bullfighter is essential.

If there is no danger, it is not considered bullfighting in Spain.

Matadors are usually gored every season, with picadors and banderilleros being gored less often.

With the discovery of antibiotics and advances in surgical techniques, fatalities are now rare, although over the past three centuries 534 professional bullfighters have died in the ring or from injuries sustained there.

Above: Francisco de Goya, Death of the Picador, 1793

Most recently, Iván Fandiño died of injuries he sustained after being gored by a bull on 17 June 2017, in Aire-sur-l’Adour, France.

Above: Iván Fandiño (1980 – 2017)

Some matadors, notably Juan Belmonte, have been seriously gored many times:

According to Ernest Hemingway, Belmonte’s legs were marred by many ugly scars.

A special type of surgeon has developed, in Spain and elsewhere, to treat cornadas, or horn wounds.

Above: Juan Belmonte (1892 – 1962)

A digression about Hemingway:

Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899 – 1961) was an American novelist, short-story writer, and journalist.

His economical and understated style — which he termed the iceberg theory — had a strong influence on 20th-century fiction, while his adventurous lifestyle and public image brought him admiration from later generations.

Hemingway produced most of his work between the mid-1920s and the mid-1950s.

He was awarded the 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature.

He published seven novels, six short-story collections, and two nonfiction works.

Three of his novels, four short-story collections, and three nonfiction works were published posthumously.

Many of his works are considered classics of American literature.

Above: Ernest Hemingway (1899 – 1961)

A digression within a digression:

The iceberg theory (or theory of omission) is a writing technique coined by American writer Ernest Hemingway.

As a young journalist, Hemingway had to focus his newspaper reports on immediate events, with very little context or interpretation.

When he became a writer of short stories, he retained this minimalistic style, focusing on surface elements without explicitly discussing underlying themes.

Hemingway believed the deeper meaning of a story should not be evident on the surface, but should shine through implicitly.

In 1923, Hemingway conceived of the idea of a new theory of writing after finishing his short story “Out of Season“.

In A Moveable Feast (1964), his posthumously published memoirs about his years as a young writer in Paris, he explains:

I omitted the real end of “Out of Season” which was that the old man hanged himself.

This was omitted on my new theory that you could omit anything.

The omitted part would strengthen the story.” 

In chapter 16 of Death in the Afternoon he compares his theory about writing to an iceberg.

Hemingway’s biographer Carlos Baker believed that as a writer of short stories Hemingway learned:

How to get the most from the least, how to prune language and avoid waste motion, how to multiply intensities, and how to tell nothing but the truth in a way that allowed for telling more than the truth.

Baker also notes that the writing style of the “iceberg theory” suggests that a story’s narrative and nuanced complexities, complete with symbolism, operate under the surface of the story itself.

For example, Hemingway believed a writer could describe an action, such as Nick Adams fishing in “Big Two-Hearted River“, while conveying a different message about the action itself — Nick Adams concentrating on fishing to the extent that he does not have to think about the unpleasantness of his war experience. 

In his essay “The Art of the Short Story“, Hemingway is clear about his method:

A few things I have found to be true.

If you leave out important things or events that you know about, the story is strengthened.

If you leave or skip something because you do not know it, the story will be worthless.

The test of any story is how very good the stuff that you, not your editors, omit.” 

A writer explained how it brings a story gravitas:

Hemingway said that only the tip of the iceberg showed in fiction — your reader will see only what is above the water — but the knowledge that you have about your character that never makes it into the story acts as the bulk of the iceberg.

And that is what gives your story weight and gravitas.

Jenna Blum , The Author at Work

From reading Rudyard Kipling, Hemingway absorbed the practice of shortening prose as much as it could take.

Above: Rudyard Kipling (1865 – 1936)

Of the concept of omission, Hemingway wrote in “The Art of the Short Story“:

You could omit anything if you knew that you omitted and the omitted part would strengthen the story and make people feel something more than they understood.

By making invisible the structure of the story, he believed the author strengthened the piece of fiction and that the “quality of a piece could be judged by the quality of the material the author eliminated.

His style added to the aesthetic: using “declarative sentences and direct representations of the visible world” with simple and plain language, Hemingway became “the most influential prose stylist in the 20th century” according to biographer Meyers.

In her paper “Hemingway’s Camera Eye“, Zoe Trodd explains that Hemingway uses repetition in prose to build a collage of snapshots to create an entire picture.

Of his iceberg theory, she claims, it “is also a glacier waterfall, infused with movement by his multi-focal aesthetic“.

Furthermore, she believes that Hemingway’s iceberg theory “demanded that the reader feel the whole story” and that the reader is meant to “fill the gaps left by his omissions with their feelings“.

Above: Zoe Trodd

Hemingway scholar Jackson Benson believes Hemingway used autobiographical details to work as framing devices to write about life in general — not only about his life.

For example, Benson postulates that Hemingway used his experiences and drew them out further with “what if” scenarios:

What if I were wounded in such a way that I could not sleep at night?

What if I were wounded and made crazy, what would happen if I were sent back to the front?

By separating himself from the characters he created, Hemingway strengthens the drama.

The means of achieving a strong drama is to minimize, or omit, the feelings that produced the fiction he wrote.

Hemingway’s iceberg theory highlights the symbolic implications of art.

He makes use of physical action to provide an interpretation of the nature of man’s existence.

It can be convincingly proved that, “while representing human life through fictional forms, he has consistently set man against the background of his world and universe to examine the human situation from various points of view.”

We return to the larger digression:

Hemingway was raised in Oak Park, Illinois.

After high school, he was a reporter for a few months for the Kansas City Star before leaving for the Italian Front to enlist as an ambulance driver in World War I.

In 1918, he was seriously wounded and returned home.

His wartime experiences formed the basis for his novel A Farewell to Arms (1929).

In the 1920s Hemingway lived in Paris as a foreign correspondent for the Toronto Star.

Americans were drawn to Paris in the Roaring Twenties by the favourable exchange rate, with as many as 200,000 English-speaking expatriates living there.

The Paris Tribune reported in 1925 that Paris had an American hospital, an American library, and an American Chamber of Commerce. 

Many American writers were disenchanted with the US, where they found less artistic freedom than in Europe.

(For example, Hemingway was in Paris during the period when Ulysses, written by his friend James Joyce, was banned and burned in New York.)

Above: James Joyce (1882 – 1941)

Hemingway travelled to Smyrna to report on the Greco-Turkish War (1919 – 1922).

He wanted to use his journalism experience to write fiction, believing that a story could be based on real events when a writer distilled his own experiences in such a way that, according to biographer Jeffrey Meyers, “what he made up was truer than what he remembered“.

Above: The Great Fire of Smyrna, 13 – 22 September 1922

In 1921, he married Hadley Richardson (1891 – 1979), the first of four wives.

Above: Hadley and Ernest Hemingway in Chamby, Switzerland, 1922

With his wife Hadley, Hemingway first visited the Festival of San Fermin in Pamplona in 1923, where he was following his recent passion for bullfighting.

Above: Festival of San Fermin, Pamplona, Spain

The couple returned to Pamplona in 1924 — enjoying the trip immensely — this time accompanied by Chink Dorman-Smith, John Dos Passos, Donald Ogden Stewart and his wife.

Above: Major General Sir Eric “Chink” Dorman-Smith (1895 – 1969): Major General Dorman-Smith (left) talking with the Chief of the Imperial General Staff, General Sir Alan Brooke at El Alamein.

Above: John dos Passos (1896 – 1970)

Above: Donald Ogden Stewart (1894 – 1980)

The Hemingways returned a third time in June 1925 and stayed at the hotel of his friend Juanito Quintana.

Above: Juanito Quintana (1891 – 1974)

That year, they brought with them a different group of American and British expatriates: Hemingway’s Michigan boyhood friend Bill Smith, Stewart, recently divorced Duff, Lady Twysden, her lover Pat Guthrie, and Harold Loeb.

Above: Always exploring, Ernest Hemingway spent much of his youth exploring northern Michigan. Here he seen canoeing as a young man.

Above: Mary Duff Stirling Smurthwaite, Lady Twysden (1891 – 1938)

Above: Harold Loeb (1891 – 1974)

Hemingway’s memory spanning multiple trips might explain the inconsistent timeframe in the novel indicating both 1924 and 1925.

In Pamplona, the group quickly disintegrated.

Above: Hemingway (left), with Harold Loeb, Duff Twysden (in hat), Hadley Richardson, Donald Ogden Stewart (obscured), and Pat Guthrie (far right) at a café in Pamplona, Spain, July 1925

Hemingway, attracted to Duff, was jealous of Loeb, who had recently been on a romantic getaway with her.

By the end of the week the two men had a public fistfight.

Against this background was the influence of the young matador from Ronda, Cayetano Ordóñez, whose brilliance in the bullring affected the spectators.

Ordóñez honored Hemingway’s wife by presenting her, from the bullring, with the ear of a bull he killed.

Above: Statue of Cayetano Ordóñez (1904 – 1961), Ronda, Spain

Outside of Pamplona, the fishing trip to the Irati River (near Burgette in Navarre) was marred by polluted water.

Above: Irati River

Hemingway had intended to write a nonfiction book about bullfighting, but then decided that the week’s experiences had presented him with enough material for a novel.

A few days after the fiesta ended, on his birthday (21 July), he began writing what would eventually become The Sun Also Rises.

By 17 August, with 14 chapters written and a working title of Fiesta chosen, Hemingway returned to Paris.

He finished the draft on 21 September 1925, writing a foreword the following weekend and changing the title to The Lost Generation.

A few months later, in December 1925, Hemingway and his wife spent the winter in Schruns, Austria, where he began revising the manuscript extensively. 

Above: Schruns, Austria

Pauline Pfeiffer (1895 – 1951) joined them in January, and — against Hadley’s advice — urged him to sign a contract with Scribner’s.

Hemingway left Austria for a quick trip to New York to meet with the publishers, and on his return, during a stop in Paris, began an affair with Pauline.

Above: Ernest and Pauline Hemingway

He returned to Schruns to finish the revisions in March. 

In June, he was in Pamplona with both Richardson and Pfeiffer.

On their return to Paris, Richardson asked for a separation, and left for the south of France. 

In August, alone in Paris, Hemingway completed the proofs, dedicating the novel to his wife and son.

After the publication of the book in October, Hadley asked for a divorce.

Hemingway subsequently gave her the book’s royalties.

Hemingway’s debut novel, The Sun Also Rises, was published in 1926.

The Sun Also Rises is a 1926 novel by Hemingway, his first, that portrays American and British expatriates who travel from Paris to the Festival of San Fermin in Pamplona to watch the running of the bulls and the bullfights.

An early and enduring modernist novel, it received mixed reviews upon publication.

However, Hemingway biographer Jeffrey Meyers writes that it is now “recognized as Hemingway’s greatest work“, and Hemingway scholar Linda Wagner-Martin calls it his most important novel.

The novel is a roman à clef:

The characters are based on real people in Hemingway’s circle, and the action is based on real events, particularly Hemingway’s life in Paris in the 1920s and a trip to Spain in 1925 for the Pamplona festival and fishing in the Pyrenees.

Hemingway presents his notion that the “Lost Generation“— considered to have been decadent, dissolute, and irretrievably damaged by World War I — was in fact resilient and strong.

Hemingway investigates the themes of love and death, the revivifying power of nature, and the concept of masculinity.

His spare writing style, combined with his restrained use of description to convey characterizations and action, demonstrates his “iceberg theory” of writing.

On the surface, the novel is a love story between the protagonist Jake Barnes — a man whose war wound has made him unable to have sex — and the promiscuous divorcée Lady Brett Ashley.

The characters form a group, sharing similar norms, and each greatly affected by the war.

Hemingway captures the angst of the age and transcends the love story of Brett and Jake, although they are representative of the period:

Brett is starved for reassurance and love.

Jake is sexually maimed.

His wound symbolizes the disability of the age, the disillusion, and the frustrations felt by an entire generation.

Hemingway thought he lost touch with American values while living in Paris, but his biographer Michael Reynolds claims the opposite, seeing evidence of the author’s midwestern American values in the novel.

Hemingway admired hard work.

He portrayed the matadors and the prostitutes, who work for a living, in a positive manner, but Brett, who prostitutes herself, is emblematic of “the rotten crowd” living on inherited money.

It is Jake, the working journalist, who pays the bills again and again when those who can pay do not.

Hemingway shows, through Jake‘s actions, his disapproval of the people who did not pay up.

Reynolds says that Hemingway shows the tragedy, not so much of the decadence of the Montparnasse crowd, but of the decline in American values of the period.

As such, the author created an American hero who is impotent and powerless.

Jake becomes the moral center of the story.

He never considers himself part of the expatriate crowd because he is a working man.

To Jake a working man is genuine and authentic, and those who do not work for a living spend their lives posing.

Jake is an expatriate American journalist living in Paris, while Brett is a twice-divorced Englishwoman with bobbed hair and numerous love affairs, and embodies the new sexual freedom of the 1920s.

Brett‘s affair with Jake‘s college friend Robert Cohn causes Jake to be upset and break off his friendship with Robert.

Her seduction of the 19-year-old matador Romero causes Jake to lose his good reputation among the Spaniards in Pamplona.

Above: Plaza Castillo, Pamplona, Spain

Book One is set in the café society of young American expatriates in Paris.

In the opening scenes, Jake plays tennis with Robert, picks up a prostitute (Georgette), and runs into Brett and Count Mippipopolous in a nightclub.

Later, Brett tells Jake she loves him, but they both know that they have no chance at a stable relationship.

In Book Two, Jake is joined by Bill Gorton, recently arrived from New York, and Brett‘s fiancé Mike Campbell, who arrives from Scotland.

Jake and Bill travel south and meet Robert at Bayonne for a fishing trip in the hills northeast of Pamplona.

Above: Bayonne, France

Instead of fishing, Robert stays in Pamplona to wait for the overdue Brett and Mike.

Robert had an affair with Brett a few weeks earlier and still feels possessive of her despite her engagement to Mike.

After Jake and Bill enjoy five days of fishing the streams near Burguete, they rejoin the group in Pamplona.

Above: Burguete, Spain

All begin to drink heavily.

Robert is resented by the others, who taunt him with antisemitic remarks.

During the Fiesta the characters drink, eat, watch the running of the bulls, attend bullfights, and bicker with each other.

Above: Running of the Bulls, Pamplona

Jake introduces Brett to the 19-year-old matador Romero at the Hotel Montoya.

Above: The Hotel Montoya

She is smitten with him and seduces him.

The jealous tension among the men builds — Jake, Mike, Robert, and Romero each want Brett.

Robert, who had been a champion boxer in college, has a fistfight with Jake and Mike, and another with Romero, whom he beats up.

Despite his injuries, Romero continues to perform brilliantly in the bullring.

In The Sun Also Rises, Hemingway contrasts Paris with Pamplona, and the frenzy of the fiesta with the tranquillity of the Spanish countryside.

Spain was Hemingway’s favorite European country.

He considered it a healthy place, and the only country “that hasn’t been shot to pieces“.

Above: Flag of Spain

He was profoundly affected by the spectacle of bullfighting, writing:

It isn’t just brutal like they always told us.

It’s a great tragedy — and the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen and takes more guts and skill and guts again than anything possibly could.

It’s just like having a ringside seat at the war with nothing going to happen to you.

He demonstrated what he considered the purity in the culture of bullfighting — called afición — and presented it as an authentic way of life, contrasted against the inauthenticity of the Parisian bohemians.

To be accepted as an aficionado was rare for a non-Spaniard.

Jake goes through a difficult process to gain acceptance by the “fellowship of afición.

The Hemingway scholar Allen Josephs thinks the novel is centered on the corrida (the bullfighting), and how each character reacts to it.

Brett seduces the young matador.

Cohn fails to understand and expects to be bored.

Jake understands fully because only he moves between the world of the inauthentic expatriates and the authentic Spaniards.

The hotel keeper Montoya is the keeper of the faith.

Romero is the artist in the ring — innocent and perfect, the one who bravely faces death.

The corrida is presented as an idealized drama in which the matador faces death, creating a moment of existentialism or nada (nothingness), broken when he vanquishes death by killing the bull.

Hemingway presents matadors as heroic characters dancing in a bullring.

He considered the bullring as war with precise rules, in contrast to the messiness of the real war that he, and by extension Jake, experienced.

Critic Kenneth Kinnamon notes that young Romero is the novel’s only honourable character.

Hemingway named Romero after Pedro Romero, an 18th-century bullfighter who killed thousands of bulls in the most difficult manner:

Having the bull impale itself on his sword as he stood perfectly still.

Reynolds says Romero, who symbolizes the classically pure matador, is the “one idealized figure in the novel“.

Josephs says that when Hemingway changed Romero‘s name from Guerrita and imbued him with the characteristics of the historical Romero, he also changed the scene in which Romero kills a bull to one of recibiendo (receiving the bull) in homage to the historical namesake.

Book Three shows the characters in the aftermath of the Fiesta.

Sober again, they leave Pamplona.

Bill returns to Paris, Mike stays in Bayonne, and Jake goes to San Sebastián on the northern coast of Spain.

Above: Images of San Sebastián, Spain

As Jake is about to return to Paris, he receives a telegram from Brett asking for help.

She had gone to Madrid with Romero.

He finds her there in a cheap hotel, without money, and without Romero.

She announces she has decided to go back to Mike.

The novel ends with Jake and Brett in a taxi speaking of the things that might have been.

Above: Madrid, Spain

In Spain in mid-1929, Hemingway researched his next work, Death in the Afternoon.

He wanted to write a comprehensive treatise on bullfighting, explaining the toreros and corridas complete with glossaries and appendices, because he believed bullfighting was “of great tragic interest, being literally of life and death“.

Death in the Afternoon is a non-fiction book written by Hemingway about the ceremony and traditions of Spanish bullfighting.

The book provides a look at the history and the Spanish traditions of bullfighting.

It also contains a deeper contemplation on the nature of fear and courage.

While essentially a guide book, there are three main sections:

  • Hemingway’s work
  • pictures
  • a glossary of terms.

Hemingway became a bullfighting aficionado after seeing the Pamplona fiesta in the 1920s, which he wrote about in The Sun Also Rises

In Death in the Afternoon, Hemingway explores the metaphysics of bullfighting — the ritualized, almost religious practice — that he considered analogous to the writer’s search for meaning and the essence of life.

In bullfighting, he found the elemental nature of life and death. 

Marianne Wiggins has written of Death in the Afternoon:

Read it for the writing, for the way it’s told.

He’ll make you like bullfighting.

You read enough and long enough, he’ll make you love it, he’s relentless“.

Above: Marianne Wiggins

In his writings on Spain, Hemingway was influenced by the Spanish master Pio Baroja.

When Hemingway won the Nobel Prize, he traveled to see Baroja, then on his death bed, specifically to tell him he thought Baroja deserved the prize more than he.

Above: Pio Baroja (1872 – 1956)

Pauline and Ernest divorced after he returned from the Spanish Civil War (1936 – 1939), which he covered as a journalist and which was the basis for his novel For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940). 

Martha Gellhorn became his third wife in 1940.

Above: Martha Gellhorn (1908 – 1998)

He and Gellhorn separated after he met Mary Welsh in London during World War II.

Above: Mary Welsh (1908 – 1986)

Hemingway was present with Allied troops as a journalist at the Normandy landings and the liberation of Paris.

Above: Omaha Beach, Normandy, France, 6 June 1944

Above: The liberation of Paris, 26 August 1944

He maintained permanent residences in Key West, Florida (in the 1930s) and in Cuba (in the 1940s and 1950s).

Above: Ernest Hemingway House, Key West, Florida

He almost died in 1954 after two plane crashes on successive days, with injuries leaving him in pain and ill health for much of the rest of his life.

In 1959, he bought a house in Ketchum, Idaho, where, in mid-1961, he committed suicide.

Above: Ernest Hemingway House, Ketchum, Idaho

The Dangerous Summer is a nonfiction book by Ernest Hemingway published posthumously in 1985 and written in 1959 and 1960.

The book describes the rivalry between bullfighters Luis Miguel Dominguin and his brother-in-law, Antonio Ordóñez, during the “dangerous summer” of 1959.

Above: Luis Miguel Dominguin (1926 – 1996)

Above: Statue of Antonio Ordóñez (1932 – 1998), Plaza de Toros, Ronda

It has been cited as Hemingway’s last book.

The Dangerous Summer is an edited version of a 75,000-word manuscript Hemingway wrote between October 1959 and May 1960 as an assignment from Life magazine.

Hemingway summoned his close friend Will Lang Jr. to come to Spain to deliver the story to Life.

Popular author James Michener (Tales of the South PacificHawaiiCentennialThe SourcePoland) wrote the 33-page introduction which includes Michener’s personal knowledge of bullfights and famous matadors, a comprehensive glossary of terms related to each stage of a bullfight, and unvarnished personal anecdotes of Hemingway.

Above: James Michener (1907 – 1997)

The book charts the rise of Antonio Ordóñez (the son of Cayetano Ordóñez, the bullfighter whose technique and ring exploits Hemingway fictionalized in his novel, The Sun Also Rises) during a season of bullfights during 1959.

During a fight on 13 May 1959, in Aranjuez, Ordóñez is badly gored, but remains in the ring and kills the bull, a performance rewarded by trophies of both the bull’s ears, its tail, and a hoof.

Above: Aranjuez, Spain

By contrast, Luis Miguel Dominguín is already famous as a bullfighter and returns to the ring after several years of retirement.

Less naturally gifted than Ordóñez, his pride and self-confidence draw him into an intense rivalry with the newcomer, and the two meet in the ring several times during the season. 

Starting the season supremely confident, Dominguín is slowly humbled by this competition.

While Ordóñez displays breathtaking skill and artistry in his fights, performing highly dangerous, classical passés, Dominguín often resorts to what Hemingway describes as “tricks“, moves that look impressive to the crowd but that are actually much safer.

Nevertheless, Dominguín is gored badly at a fight in Valencia, and Ordóñez is gored shortly afterwards.

Above: Images of Valencia, Spain

Less than a month later, the two bullfighters meet in the ring again for what Hemingway described as “one of the greatest bullfights I have ever seen“, “an almost perfect bullfight unmarred by any tricks.” 

From the six bulls which they fight, the pair win ten ears, four tails and two hooves as trophies, an extraordinary feat.

Their final meeting takes place in Bilbao, with Dominguín receiving a near-fatal goring and Ordóñez demonstrating absolute mastery by performing the recibiendo kill, one of the oldest and most dangerous moves.

Above: Bilbao, Spain

Ordóñez’s recibiendo requires three attempts, displaying the fighter’s artistry and bravery that Hemingway likens to that of legendary bullfighter Pedro Romero.

Above: Pedro Romero (1754 – 1839)

Thus endeth the digressive distractions.

The bullring has a chapel where a matador can pray before the corrida, and where a priest can be found in case a sacrament is needed.

The most relevant sacrament, now called “the Anointing of the Sick“, was formerly known as “Extreme Unction” or the “Last Rites“.

Above: Chapel, Plaza de Toros de Las Ventas, Madrid

The media often reports the more horrific of bullfighting injuries, such as the September 2011 goring of matador Juan José Padilla’s head by a bull in Zaragoza, resulting in the loss of his left eye, use of his right ear, and facial paralysis.

He returned to bullfighting five months later with an eyepatch, multiple titanium plates in his skull, and the nickname ‘The Pirate‘.

Above: Juan José Padilla

Until the early 20th century, the horses were unprotected and were commonly gored and killed, or left close to death (intestines destroyed, for example).

The horses used were old and worn-out, with little value.

Starting in the 20th century horses were protected by thick blankets.

Wounds, though not unknown, were less common and less serious.

Despite its slow decrease in popularity among younger generations, bullfighting remains a widespread cultural activity throughout Spain.

A 2016 poll reported that 58% of Spaniards aged 16 to 65 opposed bullfighting against 19% who supported it.

The support was lower among the younger population, with only 7% of respondents aged 16 to 24 supporting bullfighting, vs. 29% support within 55 to 65 age group.

According to the same poll, 67% of respondents felt “little to not at all” proud to live in a country where bullfighting was a cultural tradition (84% among 16 to 24 age group).

Between 2007 and 2014, the number of corridas held in Spain decreased by 60%. 

In 2007 there were 3,651 bullfighting and bull-related events in Spain but by 2018, the number of bullfights had decreased to 1,521 – a historic low.

A September 2019 Spanish government report showed that only 8% of the population had attended a bull-related event in 2018.

Of this percentage, 5.9% attended a bullfight while the remainder attended other bull-related events, such as the running of the bulls.

When asked to gauge their interest in bullfighting on a scale of 0 through 10, only 5.9% responded with 9–10.

A majority of 65% of responded with 0–2.

Among those aged 15–19, this figure was 72.1%, and for those aged 20–24, it reached 76.4%.

With a fall in attendance, the bullfighting sector has come under financial stress, as many local authorities have reduced subsidies because of public criticism.

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit Spain and the country entered into lockdown in March 2020, all bullfighting events were cancelled indefinitely.

In mid-May 2020, after more than 26,000 Spaniards had died from the virus, the bullfighting industry demanded that the government compensate them for their losses, estimated at €700 million.

This prompted outrage, and more than 100,000 people signed a petition launched by Anima Naturalis urging the government not to rescue “spectacles based on the abuse and mistreatment of animals” with taxpayer money at a time when people were struggling to survive and public finances were already heavily strained.

A 29–31 May 2020 YouGov survey commissioned by HuffPost showed that 52% of the 1,001 Spaniards questioned wanted to ban bullfighting, 35% were opposed, 10% did not know and 2% refused to answer.

A strong majority of 78% answered that corridas should no longer be partially subsidised by the government, with 12% favoring subsidies and 10% undecided.

When asked whether bullfighting was culture or mistreatment, 40% replied that it is mistreatment alone, 18% replied that it is culture alone and 37% replied that it is both.

Of the respondents, 53% had never attended a corrida.

In the late 19th and early 20th century, some Spanish regeneracionista (a kind of political movement to make Spain great again) intellectuals protested against what they called the policy of pan y toros (“bread and bulls“), an analogue of Roman panem et circenses (bread and circuses).

Such belief was part of the wider current of thought known as anti-flamenquismo, a campaign against the popularity of both bullfighting and flamenco music, which were believed to be “oriental” elements of Spanish culture that were responsible for Spain’s perceived culture gap compared to the rest of Europe.

Above: Flamenco, Córdoba, Spain

In Francoist Spain (1939 – 1975), bullfights received great governmental support, as they were considered a demonstration of greatness of the Spanish nation and received the name of fiesta nacional.

Bullfighting was therefore highly associated with the regime.

After Spain’s transition to democracy, popular support for bullfighting declined.

Above: Francisco Franco (1892 – 1975)

Opposition to bullfighting from Spain’s political parties is typically highest among those on the left. 

PSOE (Partido Socialista Obrero Español / the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party), the main centre-left political party, has distanced itself from bullfighting but refuses to ban it.

While Spain’s largest left-wing political party Podemos (“we can“) has repeatedly called for referenda on the matter and has shown disapproval of the practise. 

PP (Partido Popular / People’s Party), the largest conservative party, strongly supports bullfighting and has requested large public subsidies for it.

The government of José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero was the first to oppose bullfighting, prohibiting children under 14 from attending events and imposing a six-year ban on live bullfights broadcast on state-run national television, although the latter measure was reversed after Zapatero’s party lost in the 2011 elections.

Above: José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero

Despite its long history in Barcelona, bullfighting was outlawed across the Catalonia region in 2010 following a campaign led by an animal-rights civic platform called “Prou!” (“Enough!” in Catalan).

Critics have argued that the ban was motivated by issues of Catalan separatism and identity politics. 

In October 2016, the Constitutional Court ruled that the regional Catalan Parliament did not have the authority to ban events that are legal in Spain.

Above: Flag of Catalonia

The Spanish Royal Family is divided on the issue.

Above: Coat of arms of the Spanish Monarchy

Former Queen Consort Sofía of Spain disapproves of bullfights.

Above: Queen Sofía of Spain

Former King Juan Carlos occasionally presided over bullfights from the royal box.

Above: King Juan Carlos I of Spain

Their daughter Princess Elena is well-known for her support of the practise and often attends bullfights.

Above: Princess Elena of Spain

Pro-bullfighting supporters include former Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and his PP party, as well as most leaders of the opposition PSOE party, including former Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez and the current Presidents of Andalusia (Juan Manuel Moreno), Extremadura (Guillermo Fernàndez Vara), and Castilla – La Mancha (Emiliano Garcia – Page).

Above: Mariano Rajoy

The question of public funding is particularly controversial in Spain, since widely disparaged claims have been made by supporters and opponents of bullfighting.

According to government figures, bullfighting in Spain generates €1.6 billion a year and 200,000 jobs, 57,000 of which are directly linked to the industry.

Furthermore, bullfighting is the cultural activity that generates the most tax revenue for the Spanish state (€45 million in VAT – value added taxes –  and over €12 million in social security).

According to a poll, 73% of Spaniards oppose public funding for bullfighting activities.

Above: Bullfighting in Spain by province

Critics often claim that bullfighting is financed with public money.

However, though bullfighting attracts 25 million spectators annually, it represents just 0.01% of state subsidies allocated to cultural activities, and less than 3% of the cultural budget of regional, provincial and local authorities.

The bulk of subsidies is paid by town halls in localities where there is a historical tradition and support for bullfighting and related events, which are often held free of charge to participants and spectators.

In 1991, the Canary Islands became the first Spanish Autonomous Community to ban bullfighting, when they legislated to ban spectacles that involve cruelty to animals, with the exception of cockfighting, which is traditional in some towns in the Islands. 

Bullfighting was never popular in the Canary Islands.

Some supporters of bullfighting and even Lorenzo Olarte Cullen, Canarian head of government at the time, have argued that the fighting bull is not a “domestic animal” and hence the law does not ban bullfighting.

The absence of spectacles since 1984 would be due to lack of demand.

In the rest of Spain, national laws against cruelty to animals have abolished most blood sports, but specifically exempt bullfighting.

Above: Flag of the Canary Islands

On 18 December 2009, the Parliament of Catalonia, one of Spain’s seventeen Autonomous Communities, approved by majority the preparation of a law to ban bullfighting in Catalonia, as a response to a popular initiative against bullfighting that gathered more than 180,000 signatures. 

On 28 July 2010, with the two main parties allowing their members a free vote, the ban was passed 68 to 55, with nine abstentions.

This meant Catalonia became the second Community of Spain (The first was the Canary Islands in 1991), and the first on the Mainland, to ban bullfighting.

The ban took effect on 1 January 2012, and affected only the one remaining functioning Catalan bullring, the Plaza de toros Monumental de Barcelona.

It did not affect the correbous, a traditional game of the Ebro area (south of Catalonia) where lighted flares are attached to a bull’s horns.

The correbous are seen mainly in the municipalities in the south of Tarragona, with the exceptions of a few other towns in other provinces of Catalonia.

A movement emerged to revoke the ban in the Spanish Congress, citing the value of bullfighting as “cultural heritage“.

The proposal was backed by the majority of parliamentarians in 2013.

In October 2016 the Spanish Constitutional Court ruled that the regional Catalan Parliament had no competence to ban any kind of spectacle that is legal in Spain.

The Spanish Parliament passed a law in 2013 stating that bullfighting is an ‘indisputable‘ part of Spain’s ‘cultural heritage‘.

This law was used by the Spanish Constitutional Court in 2016 to overturn the Catalan ban of 2012.

Above: Spanish Constitutional Court, Madrid, Spain

When the island of Mallorca adopted a law in 2017 that prohibited the killing of a bull during a fight, this law was also declared partially unconstitutional by the Spanish Constitutional Court in 2018, as the judges ruled that the death of the bull was part of the essence of a corrida.

Above: Flag of Mallorca

In Galicia, bullfighting has been banned in many cities by the local governments.

Bullfighting has never had an important following in the region.

Above: Flag of Galicia

The European Union does not subsidize bullfighting but it does subsidize cattle farming in general, which also benefits those who rear Spanish fighting bulls.

In 2015, 438 of 687 members of the European Parliament voted in favour of amending the 2016 EU budget to indicate that the:

Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) appropriations or any other appropriations from the budget should not be used for the financing of lethal bullfighting activities.

Above: Flag of the European Union

Most Portuguese bullfights are held in two phases:

The spectacle of the cavaleiro, and the pega.

In the cavaleiro, a horseman on a Portuguese Lusitano horse (specially trained for the fights) fights the bull from horseback.

The purpose of this fight is to stab three or four bandeiras (small javelins) into the back of the bull.

In the second stage, called the pega (“holding“), the forcados, a group of eight men, challenge the bull directly without any protection or weapon of defense.

The frontman provokes the bull into a charge to perform a pega de cara or pega de caras (face grab).

The frontman secures the animal’s head and is quickly aided by his fellows who surround and secure the animal until he is subdued. 

Forcados are dressed in a traditional costume of damask or velvet, with long knitted hats as worn by the campinos (bull headers) from Ribatejo.

The bull is not killed in the ring and, at the end of the corrida, leading oxen are let into the arena, and two campinos on foot herd the bull among them back to its pen.

The bull is usually killed out of sight of the audience by a professional butcher.

Some bulls, after an exceptional performance, are healed, released to pasture and used for breeding.

In the Portuguese Azores islands, there is a form of bullfighting called tourada à corda, in which a bull is led on a rope along a street, while players taunt and dodge the bull, who is not killed during or after the fight, but returned to pasture and used in later events.

Above: Flag of the Azores

Queen Maria II of Portugal prohibited bullfighting in 1836 with the argument that it was unbefitting for a civilised nation.

The ban was lifted in 1921, but in 1928 a law was passed that forbade the killing of the bull during a fight.

Above: Maria II of Portugal (1819 – 1853)

In practice, bulls still frequently die after a fight from their injuries or by being slaughtered by a butcher.

In 2001, matador Pedrito de Portugal controversially killed a bull at the end of a fight after spectators encouraged him to do so by chanting:

Kill the bull! Kill the bull!

The crowds gave Pedrito a standing ovation, hoisted him on their shoulders and paraded him through the streets.

Hours later the police arrested him and charged him with a fine, but they released him after crowds of angry fans surrounded the police station.

A long court case ensued, finally resulting in Pedrito’s conviction in 2007 with a fine of €100,000.

Above: Pedrito de Portugal

In 2002, the Portuguese government gave Barrancos, a village near the Spanish border where bullfighting fans stubbornly persisted in encouraging the killing of bulls during fights, a dispensation from the 1928 ban.

Above: Barrancos, Portugal

Various attempts have been made to ban bullfighting in Portugal, both nationally (in 2012 and 2018) and locally, but so far unsuccessfully.

In July 2018, animalist party PAN (Pessoas-Animais-Natureza) (People – Animals – Nature) presented a proposal at the Portuguese Parliament to abolish all types of bullfighting in the country.

Left-wing party Left Bloc voted in favour of the proposal, but criticized its lack of solutions to the foreseen consequences of the abolition.

The proposal was however categorically rejected by all other parties, that cited freedom of choice and respect for tradition as arguments against it.

Above: Bloco de Esquerda / Left Bloc ‘s logo

Since the 19th century, Spanish-style corridas have been increasingly popular in southern France where they enjoy legal protection in areas where there is an uninterrupted tradition of such bull fights, particularly during holidays such as Whitsun or Easter.

Among France’s most important venues for bullfighting are the ancient Roman arenas of Nîmes and Arles, although there are bull rings across the South from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic coasts.

Bullfights of this kind follow the Spanish tradition and even Spanish words are used for all bullfighting related terms.

Minor cosmetic differences exist such as music.

This is not to be confused with the bloodless bullfights referred to below which are indigenous to France.

A more indigenous genre of bullfighting is widely common in the Provence and Languedoc areas, and is known alternately as “course libre” or “course camarguaise“.

This is a bloodless spectacle (for the bulls) in which the objective is to snatch a rosette from the head of a young bull.

The participants, or raseteurs, begin training in their early teens against young bulls from the Camarque region of Provence before graduating to regular contests held principally in Arles and Nîmes but also in other Provençal and Languedoc towns and villages.

Before the course, an abrivado — a “running” of the bulls in the streets — takes place, in which young men compete to outrun the charging bulls.

The course itself takes place in a small (often portable) arena erected in a town square.

For a period of about 15–20 minutes, the raseteurs compete to snatch rosettes (cocarde) tied between the bulls’ horns.

They do not take the rosette with their bare hands, but with a claw-shaped metal instrument called a raset or crochet (hook) in their hands, hence their name.

Afterward, the bulls are herded back to their pen by gardians (Camarguais cowboys) in a bandido, amidst a great deal of ceremony.

The stars of these spectacles are the bulls.

Another type of French ‘bullfighting‘ is the “course landaise“, in which cows are used instead of bulls.

This is a competition between teams named cuadrillas, which belong to certain breeding estates.

A cuadrilla is made up of a teneur de corde, an entraîneur, a sauteur, and six écarteurs.

The cows are brought to the arena in crates and then taken out in order.

The teneur de corde controls the dangling rope attached to the cow’s horns and the entraîneur positions the cow to face and attack the player.

The écarteurs will try, at the last possible moment, to dodge around the cow and the sauteur will leap over it.

Each team aims to complete a set of at least one hundred dodges and eight leaps.

This is the main scheme of the “classic” form, the course landaise formelle.

However, different rules may be applied in some competitions.

For example, competitions for Coupe Jeannot Lafittau are arranged with cows without ropes.

At one point, it resulted in so many fatalities that the French government tried to ban it but had to back down in the face of local opposition.

The bulls themselves are generally fairly small, much less imposing than the adult bulls employed in the corrida.

Nonetheless, the bulls remain dangerous due to their mobility and vertically formed horns.

Participants and spectators share the risk.

It is not unknown for angry bulls to smash their way through barriers and charge the surrounding crowd of spectators.

The course landaise is not seen as a dangerous sport by many, but écarteur Jean-Pierre Rachou died in 2003 when a bull’s horn tore his femoral artery.

Above: Jean-Pierre Rachou (1958 – 2001)

A February 2018 study commissioned by the 30 millions d’amis foundation and conducted by the Institut français d’opinion publique (IFOP) found that 74% of the French wanted to prohibit bullfighting in France, with 26% opposed.

In September 2007, these percentages were still 50-50, with those favouring a ban growing to 66% in August 2010 and those opposed shrinking to 34%.

The survey found a correlation between age and opinion.

Younger survey participants were more likely to support a ban.

In 1951, bullfighting in France was legalised by §7 of Article 521-1 of the French Penal Code in areas where there was an ‘unbroken local tradition‘.

This exemption applies to Nîmes, Arles, Alès, Bayonne, Carcassonne and Fréjus, amongst others.

In 2011, the French Ministry of Culture added corrida to the list of ‘intangible heritage‘ of France, but after much controversy silently removed it from its website again.

Animal rights activists launched a lawsuit to make sure it was completely removed from the heritage list and thus not given extra legal protection.

The Administrative Appeals Court of Paris ruled in their favour in June 2015. 

In a separate case, the Constitutional Council ruled on 21 September 2012 that bullfighting did not violate the French Constitution.

Bullfighting had some popularity in the Philippines during Spanish rule (1565 – 1898), though foreign commentators derided the quality of local bulls and toreros.

Above: Flag of the Philippines

Bullfighting was noted in the Philippines as early as 1619, when it was among the festivities in celebration of Pope Urban III’s (r. 1185 – 1187) authorisation of the Feast of the Immaculate Conception.

Above: Depiction of Urban II

Following the Spanish–American War, the Americans suppressed the custom in the Philippines under the tenure of Governor General Leonard Wood (1860 – 1927).

Above: Leonard Wood (1860 – 1927)

It was replaced with a now-popular Filipino sport, basketball.

Chile banned bullfighting shortly after gaining independence in 1818, but the Chilean rodeo (which involves horse riders in an oval arena blocking a female cow against the wall without killing it) is still legal and has even been declared a national sport.

Above: Flag of Chile

Bullfighting was introduced in Argentina by Spain, but after Argentina’s independence, the event drastically diminished in popularity and was abolished in 1899 under Law #2786.

Above: Flag of Argentina

Bullfighting was also introduced in Uruguay in 1776 by Spain and abolished by Uruguayan law in February 1912.

Thus the Plaza de toros Real de San Carlos, built in 1910, only operated for two years.

Above: Flag of Uruguay

Ecuador staged bullfights to the death for over three centuries as a Spanish colony.

On 12 December 2010, Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa announced that in an upcoming referendum, the country would be asked whether to ban bullfighting.

In the referendum, held in May 2011, Ecuadorians agreed on banning the final killing of the bull that happens in a corrida.

This means the bull is no longer killed before the public, and is instead taken back inside the barn to be killed at the end of the event.

The other parts of the corrida are still performed the same way as before in the cities that celebrate it.

This part of the referendum is applied on a regional level, meaning that in regions where the population voted against the ban, which are the same regions where bullfighting is celebrated the most, killing the animal publicly in the bullfighting plaza is still performed.

The main bullfighting celebration of the country, the Fiesta Brava in Quito was still allowed to take place in December 2011 after the referendum under these new rules.

Above: Flag of Ecuador

In Bolivia, bulls are not killed nor injured with any sticks.

The goal of Bolivian toreros is to provoke the bull with taunts without getting harmed themselves.

Above: Flag of Bolivia

Bullfighting with killing bulls in the ring is legal in Colombia. 

In 2013, Gustavo Petro, then mayor of the Colombian capital city of Bogotá, had de facto prohibited bullfighting by refusing to lease out bullrings to bullfighting organisers.

But the Constitutional Court of Colombia ruled that this violated the right to expression of the bullfighters, and ordered the bullrings to be reopened.

The first bullfight in Bogotá in four years happened on 22 January 2017 amid clashes between anti-taurino protesters and police.

Above: Flag of Colombia

In El Seibo Province of the Dominican Republic bullfights are not about killing or harming the animal, but taunting and evading it until it is tired.

Above: Flag of the Dominican Republic

Bullfighting was present in Cuba during its colonial period (1514 – 1898), but was abolished by the US military under the pressure of civic associations in 1899, right after the Spanish-American War of 1898.

The prohibition was maintained after Cuba gained independence in 1902.

Above: Flag of Cuba

Law 308 on the Protection of Animals was approved by the National Assembly of Panama on 15 March 2012.

Article 7 of the law states:

‘Dog fights, animal races, bullfights – whether of the Spanish or Portuguese style – the breeding, entry, permanence and operation in the national territory of all kinds of circus or circus show that uses trained animals of any species, are prohibited.’

Horse racing and cockfighting were exempt from the ban.

Above: Flag of Panama

Nicaragua prohibited bullfighting under a new Animal Welfare Law in December 2010, with 74 votes in favour and 5 votes against in Parliament.

Above: Flag of Nicaragua

In Honduras, under Article 11 of ‘Decree #115-2015 ─ Animal Protection and Welfare Act‘ that went into effect in 2016, dog and cat fights and duck races are prohibited, while ‘bullfighting shows and cockfights are part of the National Folklore and as such allowed‘.

However, ‘in bullfighting shows, the use of spears, swords, fire or other objects that cause pain to the animal is prohibited.’

Above: Flag of Honduras

In Costa Rica the law prohibits the killing of bulls and other animals in public and private shows.

However, there are still bullfights, called “Toros a la Tica“, that are televised from Palmares and Zapote at the end and beginning of the year.

Volunteer amateur bullfighters (improvisados) confront a bull in a ring and try to provoke him into charging and then run away.

In a December 2016 survey, 46.4% of respondents wanted to outlaw bullfights while 50.1% thought they should continue.

The bullfights do not include spears or any other device to harm the bull and resemble the running of the bulls in Pamplona, the difference being that the Costa Rican event takes place in an arena rather than in the streets, as in Pamplona.

Above: Flag of Costa Rica

Bullfighting was also banned for a period in Mexico in 1890.

Consequently some Spanish bullfighters moved to the United States to transfer their skills to the American rodeos.

Bullfighting has been banned in four Mexican states: 

  • Sonora in 2013
  • Guerrero in 2014
  • Coahuila in 2015
  • Quintana Roo in 2019.

It was banned “indefinitely” in Mexico City in 2022.

Above: Flag of Mexico

In Canada, Portuguese-style bullfighting was introduced in 1989 by Portuguese immigrants in the town of Listowel in southern Ontario.

Despite objections and concerns from local authorities and a humane society, the practice was allowed as the bulls were not killed or injured in this version.

In the nearby city of Brampton, Portuguese immigrants from the Azores practice “tourada a corda” (bullfight by rope).

Above: Flag of Canada

Jallikattu is a traditional spectacle in Tamil Nadu, India, as a part of Pongul (harvest festival) celebrations on Mattu Pongul Day (3rd day of the four day festival).

A breed of bos indicus (humped) bulls, called “Jellicut” are used.

During a jallikattu, a bull is released into a group of people.

Participants attempt to grab the bull’s hump and hold onto it for a determined distance, length of time, or with the goal of taking a pack of money tied to the bull’s horns.

The goal of the activity is more similar to bull riding (staying on a bull).

The practice was banned in 2014 by India’s Supreme Court over concerns that bulls are sometimes mistreated prior to jallikattu events.

Animal welfare investigations into the practice revealed that some bulls are poked with sticks and scythes, some have their tails twisted, some are force-fed alcohol to disorient them, and in some cases chili powder and other irritants are applied to bulls’ eyes and genitals to agitate the animals. 

The 2014 ban was suspended and reinstated several times over the years.

In January 2017, the Supreme Court upheld their previous ban and various protests arose in response.

Due to these protests, on 21 January 2017, the Governor of Tamil Nadu issued a new ordinance that authorized the continuation of jallikattu events.

On 23 January 2017 the Tamil Nadu legislature passed a bi-partisan bill, with the accession of the Prime Minister, exempting jallikattu from the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act (1960).

As of January 2017, jallikattu is legal in Tamil Nadu, but another organization may challenge the mechanism by which it was legalized, as the Animal Welfare Board of India claims that the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly does not have the power to override Indian federal law, meaning that the state law could possibly once again be nullified and jallikattu banned.

Above: Emblem of Tamil Nadu

American freestyle bullfighting is a style of bullfighting developed in American rodeo.

The style was developed by the rodeo clowns who protect bull riders from being trampled or gored by a loose bull.

Freestyle bullfighting is a 70-second competition in which the bullfighter (rodeo clown) avoids the bull by means of dodging, jumping, and use of a barrel.

The bullfighter is then scored points based on his performance.

In Central Valley, California, the historically Portuguese community has developed a form of bullfight in which the bull is taunted by a matador, but the lances are tipped with fabric hook and loop (e.g. velcro) and they are aimed at hook-and-loop covered pads secured to the bull’s shoulder.

Fights occur from May through October around traditional Portuguese holidays.

While California outlawed bullfighting in 1957, this type of bloodless bullfighting is still allowed if carried out during religious festivals or celebrations.

Bullfighting was outlawed in California in 1957, but the law was amended in response to protests from the Portuguese community in Gustine.

Lawmakers determined that a form of “bloodless” bullfighting would be allowed to continue, in affiliation with certain Christian holidays.

Though the bull is not killed as with traditional bullfighting, it is still intentionally irritated and provoked and its horns are shaved down to prevent injury to people and other animals present in the ring, but serious injuries still can and do occur and spectators are also at risk.

Above: Flag of California

The Humane Society of the United States has expressed opposition to bullfighting in all its forms since at least 1981.

Puerto Rico banned bullfighting and the breeding of bulls for fights by Law #176 of 25 July 1998.

Above: Flag of Puerto Rico

In Tanzania, bullfighting was introduced by the Portuguese to Zanzibar and to Pemba Island, where it is known as mchezo wa ngombe.

Similar to the Portuguese Azorean tourada a corda, the bull is restrained by a rope, and generally neither bull nor player is harmed, and the bull is not killed at the end of the fight.

Above: Flag of Tanzania

Many supporters of bullfighting regard it as a deeply ingrained, integral part of their national cultures:

In Spain, bullfighting is nicknamed la fiesta nacional (“national fiesta“).

The aesthetic of bullfighting is based on the interaction of the man and the bull.

Rather than a competitive sport, the bullfight is more of a ritual of ancient origin, which is judged by aficionados based on artistic impression and command.

American author Ernest Hemingway wrote of it in his 1932 non-fiction book Death in the Afternoon:

Bullfighting is the only art in which the artist is in danger of death and in which the degree of brilliance in the performance is left to the fighter’s honour.”

Above: Ernest Hemingway

Bullfighting is seen by some as a symbol of Spanish national culture.

The bullfight is regarded as a demonstration of style, technique, and courage by its participants, and as a demonstration of cruelty and cowardice by its critics.

While there is usually no doubt about the outcome, the bull is not viewed by bullfighting supporters as a sacrificial victim — it is instead seen by the audience as a worthy adversary, deserving of respect in its own right.

Those who oppose bullfighting maintain that the practice is a sadistic tradition of torturing and killing a bull amidst pomp and pageantry.

Supporters of bullfights, called “aficionados“, claim to respect the bulls, that the bulls live better than other cattle, and that bullfighting is a grand tradition, a form of art important to their culture.

In Spain and Latin America, opposition to bullfighting is referred to as the antitaurino movement.

In a 2012 poll, 70% of Mexican respondents wanted bullfighting to be prohibited.

Above: A dying bull in a bullfight

Bullfighting is thought to have been practised since prehistoric times throughout the entire Mediterranean coast, but it survives only in Iberia and in part of France. 

During the Arab rule of Iberia (711 – 1492), the ruling class tried to ban bullfighting, considering it a pagan celebration and heresy.

Above: Umayyad Hispania at its greatest extent in 719

In the 16th century, Pope Pius V banned bullfighting for its ties to paganism and for the danger that it posed to the participants.

Anyone who would sponsor, watch or participate in a bullfight was to be excommunicated by the Church.

Above: Pius V (né Antonio Ghislieri) (1504 – 1572)

Spanish and Portuguese bullfighters kept the tradition alive covertly.

Pius’s successor Pope Gregory XIII relaxed the Church’s position.

However, Pope Gregory advised bullfighters to not use the sport as means of honoring Jesus Christ or the saints, as was typical in Spain and Portugal.

Above: Gregory XIII ( Ugo Boncompagni)(1502 – 1585)

Bullfighting has been intertwined with religion and religious folklore in Spain at a popular level, particularly in the areas in which it has been most popular.

Bullfighting events are celebrated during festivities celebrating local patron saints, along with other activities, games and sports.

The bullfighting world is also inextricably linked to iconography related to religious devotion in Spain, with bullfighters seeking the protection of Mary and often becoming members of religious brotherhoods.

Above: Spanish bullfighters enter a chapel before a bullfight

Bullfighting is now banned in many countries.

People taking part in such activity would be liable for terms of imprisonment for animal cruelty.

Bloodless” variations, though, are often permitted and have attracted a following in California, Texas and France.

While it is not very popular in Texas, bloodless forms of bullfighting occur at rodeos in small Texas towns.

Above: Flag of Texas

In southern France, however, the traditional form of the corrida still exists and it is protected by French law.

However, in June 2015 the Paris Court of Appeals removed bullfighting / “la corrida” from France’s cultural heritage list.

Above: Flag of France

Several cities around the world (especially in Catalonia) have symbolically declared themselves to be Anti-Bullfighting Cities, including Barcelona in 2006.

Above: World laws on bullfighting – Dark blue: Nationwide ban on bullfighting / Light blue:  Nationwide ban on bullfighting, but some designated local traditions exempted / Purple:  Some subnational bans on bullfighting / Yellow: Bullfighting without killing bulls in the ring legal (‘bloodless‘)  / Red: Bullfighting with killing bulls in the ring legal (Spanish style) / Grey:  No data

RSPCA (Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) assistant director for public affairs David Bowles said:

The RSPCA is strongly opposed to bullfighting. It is an inhumane and outdated practice that continues to lose support, including from those living in the countries where this takes place such as Spain, Portugal and France.”

The bullfighting guide The Bulletpoint Bullfight warns that bullfighting is “not for the squeamish“, advising spectators to “be prepared for blood“.

The guide details prolonged and profuse bleeding caused by horse-mounted lancers, the charging by the bull of a blindfolded, armored horse who is “sometimes doped up, and unaware of the proximity of the bull“, the placing of barbed darts by banderilleros and the matador’s fatal sword thrust.

The guide stresses that these procedures are a normal part of bullfighting and that death is rarely instantaneous.

The guide further warns those attending bullfights to:

Be prepared to witness various failed attempts at killing the animal before it lies down.

Alexander Fiske – Harrison, who trained as a bullfighter to research for his book on the topic (and trained in biological sciences and moral philosophy before that) has pointed out that the bull lives three times longer than do cattle reared exclusively for meat, and lives wild during that period in meadows and forests which are funded by the premium the bullfight’s box office adds on to the price of their meat, should be taken into account when weighing concerns about both animal welfare and the environment.

He also speculated that the adrenalizing nature of the 30-minute spectacle may reduce the bull’s suffering even below that of the stress and anxiety of queueing in the abattoir.

Above: Alexander Fiske – Harrison

However, zoologist and animal rights activist Jordi Casamitjana argues that the bulls do experience a high degree of suffering:

All aspects of any bullfight, from the transport to the death, are in themselves causes of suffering.”

Above: Jordi Casamitjana

I find myself thinking of Walt Disney’s 1938 stand-alone animated short film Ferdinand the Bull:

The scene starts with many bulls, romping together and butting their heads.

However, Ferdinand is different.

All he wants to do all day is go under a shady cork tree and smell the flowers.

One day, his mother notices that he is not playing with the other bulls and asks him why.

He responds:

All I want to do is to sit and smell the flowers!

His mother is very understanding.

Ferdinand grows over the years, eventually getting to be the largest and strongest of the group.

The other bulls grow up wanting to accomplish one goal in life:

To be in the bullfights in Madrid, Spain.

But not Ferdinand.

One day, five strange-looking men show up to see the bulls.

When the bulls notice them, they fight as rough as possible, hoping to get picked.

Ferdinand doesn’t engage and continues to smell the flowers.

When he goes to sit, he doesn’t realize there is a bumblebee right underneath him.

The pain of the bee’s sting makes him go on a crazy rampage, knock the other bulls out, and eventually tear down a tree.

The five men cheer as they take Ferdinand to Madrid.

There is a lot of excitement when the day of the bullfight comes.

On posters, they call him Ferdinand the Fierce.

The event starts and out into the ring comes banderilleros, picadors and the matador who is being cheered on.

As the matador bows, a woman in the audience throws him a bouquet of flowers which land in his hand.

Finally, the moment comes where Ferdinand comes out and he wonders what is he doing there.

The banderilleros and picadors are afraid and hide, but the matador gets scared stiff because Ferdinand is so big and strong.

Ferdinand looks and sees the bouquet of flowers, walking over and scaring the matador away, but just starts smelling them.

The matador becomes very angry at Ferdinand for not charging at him.

But Ferdinand is not interested in fighting.

He is only interested in smelling the beautiful flowers.

Eventually, he is led out of the arena and taken back home where he continues to sit under the cork tree and smell the flowers.

Rodeo, a less violent cousin of bullfighting, is a competitive equestrian sport that arose out of the working practices of cattle herding in Spain and Mexico, expanding throughout the Americas and to other nations.

Originally based on the skills required of the working yaqueros and later, cowboys, in what today is the western United States, western Canada, and northern Mexico.

Today, it is a sporting event that involves horses and other livestock, designed to test the skill and speed of the cowboys and cowgirls.

The largest state-of-the-art rodeos are professional, commercial athletic contests held in climate-controlled stadiums, with broadcasting by various television networks.

Above: Bucking horse, Calgary Stampede, Alberta, Canada, 2002

Outside of the rodeo world itself, there is disagreement about exactly what rodeo is.

Professional competitors, for example, view rodeo as a sport and call themselves professional athletes while also using the title of cowboy.

Fans view rodeo as a spectator sport with animals, having aspects of pageantry and theater unlike other professional sport.

Non-westerners view the spectacle as a quaint but exciting remnant of the Wild West.

Animal rights activists view rodeo as a cruel Roman circus spectacle or an Americanized bullfight.

Above: Barrel racing, Calgary Stampede, 2007

Anthropologists studying the sport of rodeo and the culture surrounding it have commented that it is “a blend of both performance and contest“, and that rodeo is far more expressive in blending both these aspects than attempting to stand alone on one or the other.

Rodeo’s performance level permits pageantry and ritual which serve to “revitalize the spirit of the Old West” while its contest level poses a man-animal opposition that articulates the transformation of nature and “dramatizes and perpetuates the conflict between the wild and the tame.”

On its deepest level, rodeo is essentially a ritual addressing itself to the dilemma of man’s place in nature.”

Above: Team roping – here, the steer has been roped by the header, and the heeler is now attempting a throw, Brawley Round-up

Rodeo is a popular topic in country-western music, such as the 1991 Garth Brooks hit single “Rodeo“.

Rodeo has also been featured in numerous movies, television programs and in literature. 

Above: Garth Brooks

Rodeo is a ballet score written by Aaron Copland in 1942.

Above: Aaron Copland (1900 – 1990)

Country singer Chris Ledoux competed in bareback riding and wrote many of his songs based on his experiences.

Above: Chris LeDoux (1948 – 2005)

Rodeo has also been featured in a significant number of films, and some focus specifically on the sport, including: 

  • 8 Seconds

  • Cowboy Up

  • The Longest Ride

  • The Rider

  • The Cowboy Way

American-style professional rodeos generally comprise the following events: 

  • tie-down roping
  • team roping
  • steer wrestling
  • saddle bronc riding  
  • bareback bronc riding  
  • bull riding
  • barrel racing

The events are divided into two basic categories:

  • the rough stock events
  • the timed events.

Depending on sanctioning organization and region, other events may also be a part of some rodeos, such as: 

  • breakaway roping
  • goat tying
  • pole bending.

Above: Saddle bronc riding, Cody Rodeo, Wyoming

According to Encyclopedia Britannica, the “world’s first public cowboy contest” was held on 4 July 1883, in Pecos, Texas, between cattle driver Trav Windham and roper Morg Livingston.

Above: Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show

American rodeo, particularly popular today within the Canadian province of Alberta and throughout the western United States, is the official state sport of Wyoming, South Dakota, and Texas.

The iconic silhouette image of a “bucking horse and rider” is a federal and state-registered trademark of the State of Wyoming.

Above: Flag of Wyoming

The Legislative Assembly of Alberta has considered making American rodeo the official sport of that province.

However, enabling legislation has yet to be passed.

Above: Flag of Alberta

The first rodeo in Canada was held in 1902 in Raymond, Alberta, when Raymond Knight funded and promoted a rodeo contest for bronc riders and steer ropers called the Raymond Stampede.

Knight also coined the rodeo term “stampede” and built rodeo’s first known shotgun-style bucking chute.

In 1903, Knight built Canada’s first rodeo arena and grandstand and became the first rodeo producer and rodeo stock contractor.

Above: Ray Knight (1872 – 1947)

In 1912, Guy Weadick and several investors put up $100,000 to create what today is the Calgary Stampede.

The Stampede also incorporated mythical and historical elements, including native Canadians in full regalia, chuckwagon races, the Mounted Police, and marching bands.

From its beginning, the event has been held the 2nd week in July.

Since 1938, attendees were urged to dress for the occasion in western hats to add to the event’s flavour.

By 2003, it was estimated that 65 professional rodeos involving 700 members of the Canadian Professional Rodeo Association (CPRA) took place in Western Canada, along with professionals from the United States.

Many Canadian contestants were part-timers who did not earn a significant living from rodeo.

Canadians made several significant contributions to the sport of rodeo.

In 1916, at the Bascom Ranch in Welling, Alberta, John W. Bascom and his sons Raymond, Mel, and Earl designed and built rodeo’s first side-delivery bucking chute for the ranch rodeos they were producing.

In 1919, Earl and John made rodeo’s first reverse-opening side-delivery bucking chute at the Bascom Ranch in Lethbridge, Alberta.

This Bascom-style bucking chute is now rodeo’s standard design. 

Earl Bascom also continued his innovative contributions to the sport of rodeo by designing and making rodeo’s first hornless bronc saddle in 1922, rodeo’s first one-hand bareback rigging in 1924, and the first high-cut rodeo chaps in 1928.

Earl and his brother Weldon also produced rodeo’s first night rodeo held outdoors under electric lights in 1935.

Above: Earl Bascom (1906 – 1995)

The Canadian Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame is located in Ponoka, Alberta.

In the US, professional rodeos are governed and sanctioned by the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) and the Women’s Professional Rodeo Association (WPRA), while other associations govern assorted children’s, high school, collegiate, and other amateur or semi-professional rodeos.

Associations also exist for Native Americans and other minority groups.

The traditional season for competitive rodeo runs from spring through fall, while the modern professional rodeo circuit runs longer, and concludes with the PRCA National Finals Rodeo (NFR) in Las Vegas, Nevada, currently held every December.

Above: Steer wrestling, National Finals Rodeo, Las Vegas, Nevada, 2004

Rodeo has provoked opposition from animal rights and some animal welfare advocates, who argue that various competitions constitute animal cruelty.

The American rodeo industry has made progress in improving the welfare of rodeo animals, with specific requirements for veterinary care and other regulations that protect rodeo animals.

However, some local and state governments in North America have banned or restricted rodeos, certain rodeo events, or types of equipment.

Internationally, rodeo is banned in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands, with other European nations placing restrictions on certain practices.

Protests were first raised regarding rodeo animal cruelty in the 1870s.

Beginning in the 1930s, some states enacted laws curtailing rodeo activities and other events involving animals.

In the 1950s, the then Rodeo Cowboys Association (RCA, later the PRCA) worked with the American Humane Association (AHA) to establish regulations protecting the welfare of rodeo animals that were acceptable to both organizations.

The PRCA realized that public education regarding rodeo and the welfare of animals was needed to keep the sport alive.

Over the years, conditions for animals in rodeo and many other sporting events improved.

Today, the PRCA and other rodeo sanctioning organizations have stringent regulations to ensure rodeo animals’ welfare.

For example, these rules require, among other things, provisions for injured animals, a veterinarian’s presence at all rodeos (a similar requirement exists for other equine events), padded flank straps, horn protection for steers, and spurs with dulled, free-spinning rowels.

Rodeo competitors in general value and provide excellent care to the animals with which they work.

Animals must also be protected with fleece-lined flank straps for bucking stock and horn wraps for roping steers.

Laws governing rodeo vary widely.

In the American west, some states incorporate the regulations of the PRCA into their statutes as a standard by which to evaluate if animal cruelty has occurred.

On the other hand, some events and practices are restricted or banned in other states, including California, Rhode Island, and Ohio. 

St. Petersburg, Florida is the only locality in the United States with a complete ban on rodeo. 

Above: St. Petersburg, Florida

Canadian humane societies are careful in criticizing Canadian rodeo as the event has become so indigenous to Western Canada that criticism may jeopardize support for the organization’s other humane goals.

The Calgary Humane Society itself is wary of criticizing the famous Calgary Stampede.

As aforementioned, internationally rodeo itself is banned in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands.

Other European nations have placed restrictions on certain practices.

Above: Flag of the United Kingdom

Above: Flag of the Netherlands

However, a number of humane and animal rights organizations have policy statements that oppose many rodeo practices and often the events themselves.

Some also claim that regulations vary from vague to ineffective and are frequently violated. 

Other groups assert that any regulation still allows rodeo animals to be subjected to gratuitous harm for the sake of entertainment, and therefore rodeos should be banned altogether.

In response to these concerns, a number of cities and states, mostly in the eastern half of the United States, have passed ordinances and laws governing rodeo. 

Above: Flag of the United States of America

Pittsburgh, for example, specifically prohibits electric prods or shocking devices, flank or bucking straps, wire tie-downs, and sharpened or fixed spurs or rowels.

Pittsburgh also requires humane officers be provided access to any and all areas where animals may go — specifically pens, chutes, and injury pens.

Above: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

The state of Rhode Island has banned tie-down roping and certain other practices.

Other locales have similar ordinances and laws.

Above: Flag of Rhode Island

There are three basic areas of concern to various groups.

The first set of concerns surround relatively common rodeo practices, such as the use of bucking straps, also known as flank straps, the use of metal or electric cattle prods, and tail-twisting.

The second set of concerns surround non-traditional rodeo events that operate outside the rules of sanctioning organizations.

These are usually amateur events such as: 

  • mutton busting
  • calf dressing 
  • wild cow milking
  • calf riding
  • chuck wagon races
  • other events designed primarily for publicity, half-time entertainment or crowd participation.

Finally, some groups consider some or all rodeo events themselves to be cruel.

Above: Mutton busting, Denver Rodeo, Colorado, 2007

Animal rights groups, such as PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), SHARK (Showing Animals Respect and Kindness) and the Humane Society of the United States, generally take a position of opposition to all rodeos and rodeo events.

A more general position is taken by the ASPCA (American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals), only opposing rodeo events that “involve cruel, painful, stressful and potentially harmful treatment of livestock, not only in performance but also in handling, transport and prodding to perform“.

The group singles out children’s rodeo events, such as goat tying, calf riding and sheep riding (“mutton busting”), “which do not promote humane care and respect for animals“.

The AHA (American Humane Association) does not appear to oppose rodeos per se, though they have a general position on events and contests involving animals, stating that “when animals are involved in entertainment, they must be treated humanely at all times“.

Above: Goat tying

Why must animals be entertaining?

Why can’t we simply let them live their lives being themselves?

Why must we insist that nature serve us?

 

The AHA also has strict requirements for the treatment of animals used for rodeo scenes in movies, starting with the rules of the PRCA and adding additional requirements consistent with the association’s other policies.

Unique among animal protection groups, the ASPCA specifically notes that practice sessions are often the location of more severe abuses than competitions.

However, many state animal cruelty laws provide specific exemptions for “training practices“.

The AHA is the only organization addressing the legislative issue, advocating the strengthening of animal cruelty laws in general, with no exceptions for “training practices“.

I am not disputing that man’s courage and skill and tradition as shown in bullfights and rodeos should be respected.

But what of the lives of the animals involved?

What of their dignity, their feelings, their well-being?

Man was appointed by God – if religious writ is to be believed – to have dominion over the beasts.

Everything a man does to an animal is either a lawful exercise or a sacrilegious abuse of an authority by divine right.

C.S. Lewis

Above: Clive Staples Lewis (1898 – 1963)

Humans have “dominion” over animals, but that “dominion” (radah in Hebrew) does not mean despotism.

Rather we are set over creation to care for what God has made and to treasure God’s own treasures.

Andrew Linzey

Above: Andrew Linzey

The more helpless the creature, the more that it is entitled to the protection of man.

Mahatma Gandhi

Above: Mahatma Gandhi ( Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi) (1869 – 1948)

I find myself thinking of three interconnected memories:

In a 12 May 1984 Peanuts comic strip, the dog Snoopy is seen strolling towards Charlie Brown and Sally.

Snoopy gives them both warm and sincere hugs.

Afterwards, Charlie Brown explains their dog’s actions to his puzzled sister:

You can always tell when he’s been listening to Leo Buscaglia tapes.”

Felice Leonardo Buscaglia (1924 – 1998), also known as “Dr. Love“, was an American author, motivational speaker, and a professor in the Department of Special Education at the University of Southern California.

Above: Leo Buscaglia

Buscaglia was born in Los Angeles into a family of Italian immigrants. 

He spent his early childhood in Aosta, Italy, before going back to the US for education.

He was a graduate of Theodore Roosevelt High School.

Buscaglia served in the US Navy during World War II.

He did not see combat, but he saw its aftermath in his duties in the dental section of the military hospital, helping to reconstruct shattered faces. 

Using GI Bill benefits, he entered the University of Southern California, where he earned three degrees (BA 1950, MA 1954, PhD 1963) before eventually joining the faculty.

While teaching at USC, Buscaglia was moved by a student’s suicide to contemplate human disconnectedness and the meaning of life, and began a noncredit class he called Love 1A

This became the basis for his first book, titled simply Love.

He was the first to state and promote the concept of humanity’s need for hugs: 5 to survive, 8 to maintain, and 12 to thrive.

His dynamic speaking style was discovered by PBS (Public Broadcasting Service), and his televised lectures earned great popularity in the 1980s.

At one point his talks, always shown during fundraising periods, were the top earners of all PBS programs.

This national exposure, coupled with the heartfelt storytelling style of his books, helped make all his titles national bestsellers.

Five were once on the New York Times bestsellers list simultaneously.

Buscaglia wrote a dozen books.

I have read only two: Love and The Way of the Bull.

The second aforementioned book reveals the truth of self Leo Buscaglia discovered on two trips to Asia, by travelling the “way of the bull“, as well as describing the people and physical locales of Southeast Asia prior to the Vietnam War.

The meaning of the title originated in the 12th century Zen book, 10 Bulls, by the Zen master Kaku-an Shi-en.

In Kaku-an’s book, the bull represents life, energy, truth and action.

The way” concerns the possible step one man might take to gain insight, find oneself and discover one’s true nature.

Buscaglia reminds us, however, that each person must find that path individually in order for it to have true meaning.

Consider the Ten Bulls:

  1. In search of the bull:

In the pasture of the world, I endlessly push aside the tall grasses in search of the Ox.
Following unnamed rivers, lost upon the interpenetrating paths of distant mountains, my strength failing and my vitality exhausted, I cannot find the Ox.

2. Discovery of the footprints

Along the riverbank under the trees, I discover footprints.
Even under the fragrant grass, I see his prints.
Deep in remote mountains they are found.
These traces can no more be hidden than one’s nose, looking heavenward.

3. Perceiving the bull

I hear the song of the nightingale.
The sun is warm, the wind is mild, willows are green along the shore –
Here no Ox can hide!
What artist can draw that massive head, those majestic horns?

4. Seizing the bull

I seize him with a terrific struggle.
His great will and power are inexhaustible.
He charges to the high plateau far above the cloud-mists,
Or in an impenetrable ravine he stands.

5. Taming the bull

The whip and rope are necessary,
Else he might stray off down some dusty road.
Being well-trained, he becomes naturally gentle.
Then, unfettered, he obeys his master.

6. Riding the bull home

Mounting the Ox, slowly I return homeward.
The voice of my flute intones through the evening.
Measuring with hand-beats the pulsating harmony, I direct the endless rhythm.
Whoever hears this melody will join me.

7. The bull transcended

Astride the Ox, I reach home.
I am serene.

The Ox too can rest.
The dawn has come.

In blissful repose, within my thatched dwelling, I have abandoned the whip and ropes.

8. Both bull and self transcended

Whip, rope, person, and Ox – all merge in No Thing.
This heaven is so vast, no message can stain it.
How may a snowflake exist in a raging fire?
Here are the footprints of the Ancestors.

9. Reaching the source

Too many steps have been taken, returning to the root and the source.
Better to have been blind and deaf from the beginning!
Dwelling in one’s true abode, unconcerned with and without –
The river flows tranquilly on and the flowers are red.

10. Return to society

Barefooted and naked of breast, I mingle with the people of the world.
My clothes are ragged and dust-laden, and I am ever blissful.
I use no magic to extend my life.
Now, before me, the dead trees become alive.

Without love – including love of one’s self – life is without meaning.

Each person must find that path individually in order for it to have true meaning.

In getting lost, in relinquishing the need to control, meaning may be found.

There is much we can learn from nature if we would cease trying to control it.

We fear nature, for we have given nature cause to fear us.

If we would approach all God’s creatures great and small in a spirit of compassion, aware that they too feel, that their lives possess meaning, that they too are deserving of respect and dignity, that they too must find their own path in their own ways, then maybe, just maybe, we might be worthy of life as well.

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Rough Guide to Switzerland / Rough Guide to Turkey / Arrogant Worms, “I Am Cow“, Dirt / Leo Buscaglia, Love / Leo Buscaglia, The Way of the Bull / Denise Hruby, “Cows bring danger for hikers in Alps“, Washington Post, 12 August 2020 / Charles Schulz, Peanuts, 12 May 1984 / Kaku-an Shi-en, The Ten Bulls / Rebecca Solnit, Wanderlust: A History of Walking / Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows

Canada Slim and the Lessons of the True Cross

Eskişehir, Türkiye, Thursday 16 June 2022

Steve Biddulph tells a story which resonates with me every time I think of it:

Two farmers stand in the dusty yard of a property.

One is a neighbour, come to say goodbye.

The other is watching as the last of his furniture is packed onto a truck.

The farm looks bare.

Stock gone, machinery sold.

Two teenagers stand by the car.

The wife sits inside it.

Eyes averted.

The two men have farmed alongside each other for 30 years, fought bushfires, driven through the night with injured children, eaten thousands of scones, drunk gallons of black tea, and cared for each other’s wives and kids as their own.

They have shared good times and bad.

Now, one is leaving.

Bankrupt.

He will go to live in the city, where his wife will support them by cleaning motels.

Well, I’ll be off then.“, says one.

Yeah. Thanks for coming over.“, says the other.

Look us up sometime.“, says the one.

Yeah, I reckon.“, says the other.

They climb into their vehicles and leave.

While their wives will correspond for years to come, these men will never exchange words again.

So much unspoken.

So much that would help the healing to take place from this terrible turn of events.

What pain would flow out if one was to say:

Listen, you have been the best friend a man could want.” and looked the other straight in the eye as he said it.

If they had spent a long evening together with their wives, full of “remember when” punctuated with tears and easing laughter.

If, instead of standing stiff-armed and choked, they could have had a long strong hug, from which to draw strength and assurance, as they faced the hardship their futures would bring.

The farmer leaving the land will not find the opportunity for any support, comfort or appreciation.

He twists up inside to suppress the emotions his body feels.

Self-censoring of any kind of warmth, creativity, affection or emotion.

No one feels free to be himself, to simply be.

A night out with the boys – the terrible trio (joined briefly by the lovely Miss S.) of “Luck of the Irish” Paul, “the Yank that Florida forgot” Ian, and Canada Slim (a legend in his own mind) your humble blogger.

Three expats from places few, if any, of our students have ever visited, on a Saturday night in a pseudo-Irish pub named the Dublin, a watering hole with as little connection to the Irish capital as an African has with Greenland.

In an ideal world men would see each other as brothers, with good things to give and to receive.

The Xervante people of Brazil divide manhood up into eight stages of growth.

These peer groups stay very close throughout life.

They are also helped by those in the group higher up in the sequence.

Each year the Xervante hold running races for each group in turn.

These races look like a contest but they are not.

When a runner falters or trips, the others pick him up and run with him.

The group always finishes together.

It is not a race at all, though everyone puts in a huge effort.

It is a celebration of manhood – an expression of vitality.

The Xervante is a culture that has survived thousands of years by cooperation.

They don’t have to prove they are men.

They celebrate that they are men.

I wonder:

Do women feel the need to prove that they are women?

Friends offer enormous comfort.

They help to structure your time.

They show you that you belong and can be cared about.

A man who lacks a network of friends is seriously impaired from living his life, from loving his life.

Friends alleviate the neurotic overdependence on a wife or a girlfriend for every emotional need.

If a man, going through a “rough patch“, gets help from his friends as well as his partner, then the burden is shared.

If his problems are with his partner (as they often are) then his friends can help him through, talk sense into him, stop him acting stupidly and help him to release his grief.

Male friends can do these things where women cannot.

Other men know how a man feels.

Men have issues which do not have a female equivalent.

Only other men can help a man learn about the ongoing process of being a man.

Millions of women complain about their male partner’s lack of feeling, his woodenness.

Men themselves often feel numb and confused about what they really want.

This is usually attributed to the irreconcilable split between men and women – the “battle of the sexes“.

But what if men’s inarticulateness simply comes from a lack of sharing opportunities (as opposed to bullshit sessions) with other men?

If men talked to each other more, perhaps they would understand themselves better.

Perhaps they would have more to say to their female partners.

Only in the company of other men can men begin to activate themselves.

As men’s voices have a different tone, so do their feelings.

We have more than enough feelings, but they are not the same as women’s.

But where women instinctively seem to have no trouble expressing themselves, many men are not as fortunate.

We have been set up.

We are asked to be more intimate and sensitive.

However, we are still coached in the possibility of being sent to war, still expected to be tough when needed.

Because toughness is needed in this life.

Toughness is expected from a man.

We and our women folk don’t actually want men who are weaker.

Just men who can shift gears when needed.

Not an easy task.

Controlling one’s feelings is a very valuable part of being male.

It has great survival value.

And all women, deep down, count on this.

But being able to also let go of these feelings, when the time is right, is another matter entirely.

For truth be told, reserve creates reserve, unspoken fears remain unexpressed.

But banter and warmth to counter the internal struggle of loss and shame teaches us respect for pain and endurance.

We live deep within.

We speak, we listen.

There is a pressure inside that builds up over a very long period of time.

We are tense, we are numb, because we have held ourselves back.

Women have their own pain and so cannot always provide what a man needs.

Failing to express the depth of what a man feels leads to a shutdown in the full spectrum of emotions – anger, fear, warmth and love.

Passion is gone.

Passion is needed.

Dearly beloved, we are gathered together to celebrate that thing called Life.

Men gather together to have fun.

Noisy, energetic, affectionate, ribald, accepting, cautious, but free from respectability or restraint.

We are harsh with one another.

We are zany.

We call out each other for the BS we all inherently have.

Character is built this way.

We are islands of seriousness in an ocean of fun.

Our lives are eased, stabilized and supported by these friendships.

We each have our own cross to bear, but it is comforting to know that others care burdens equal to our own.

That we are not alone in suffering and sorrow.

Of course, the question arises:

What are we doing with our lives?

We sip our drinks, and I am reminded of Ronald Gross’ The Independent Scholar’s Handbook:

Ronald, I have always made a respectable living, but I have not been willing to give up my life to getting the kind of money with which you can buy the best things in life.

I am stuck in business and routine and tedium.

I must live as I can.

But I give up only as much as I must.

For the rest, I have lived, and always will live, my life as it can be lived at its best, with art, music, poetry, literature, science, philosophy and thought.

I shall know the keener pleasures, as long as I can and as much as I can.

That is the real practical use of self-education and self-culture.

It converts a world which is only a good world for those who can win at its ruthless game into a world good for all of us.

Your education is the only thing that nothing can take from you in this life.

You can lose your money, your wife, your children, your friends, your pride, your honour and your life, but while you live you cannot lose your culture, such as it is.

Sometimes I think that ESL teachers are the plongeurs (the dishwashers) of language.

Ours is a job that offers little prospects beyond more hours that may generate more trivial amounts of money spent in more frivolous ways.

Our lives are intensely exhausting, though we must pretend to possess an energy we do not really feel.

To be enthusiastic, we act enthusiastic.

But the more honest an ESL teacher is, the more he admits that this energy is merely a generated sham to encourage those who cannot learn that they should nevertheless try.

We try to bring hope to the hopeless and happiness to the hapless, even though we know that many of those in our charge possess hardly a whit (or wit) of skill or interest in our struggles to somehow educate them.

Ours is the sort of job a lazy man thinks enviable, only to soon realize that advancement (what little there might be) requires effort even in this endeavour.

This is the sort of job an alcoholic might consider doing in his brief moments of sobriety.

All that is required is to speak words that sound plausible for the monies of the gullible.

We avoid penury and injury by pretending wisdom and intelligence.

Happily, some of us need not pretend.

But low as we are and as far removed as we may be from the sacred groves of Academe, we possess a perverse pride that sustains us.

It is the pride of the drudge.

We are intellectual beasts of burden, oxen dragging ploughshares through the barren fields of blissful ignorance, seeking a harvest that can maintain us.

We will teach anyone anything if it is sought and taught in English.

Our capacity to continue is our only virtue.

Our brilliant ruse that we can teach the improbable to the impossible is our only vice.

Some of us when school shifts end stagger bone-weary to our bowers, turn on our laptops and continue to teach online for as long as there are students willing to learn in the remaining hours before midnight.

Few would ever demand our services past midnight or prior to dawn, but were there such denizens of the night, an ESL teacher would fight exhaustion and keep teaching till his last coherent thought fades into unconscious slumber.

Those with intimate companions seek solace and silence in the arms of amnesia.

Those without such comforts seek release in other ways.

Some to the quiet dullness of apartment hovels we laughingly call home.

Others when propriety allows to the taverns they hie.

Truth of character lies at the bottom of a glass, coaxed cleverly from the neck of a bottle, spoken loudly from the courage of uninhibited spirits.

We are not alcoholics, but not for lack of trying.

Men who teach are frustrated by women who share the profession, such obstinate virtue, minds of metal encased in bodies made for sin.

We speak about the unspeakable, professing love for the unlovable, draining hope’s last drop from transparent glasses.

We wish to quarrel but that requires effort.

So we shout and we joke and we drink and the smokers smoke and the non-smokers choke and we make love to the moment.

We stagger home aware of our deficiencies and return to anonymous apartments and invisible lives.

The expat ESL teacher knows that the natives make less and work more, but we grumble nonetheless ungratefully.

Oh, woe is the world of the wandering scholar!

Oh, weep for the women who wonder why we are driven so!

We seek to belong where we do not and flee from the places where we once did.

We tell ourselves we are happy.

Occasionally our lies convince even ourselves.

Morning comes and the bones ache and the eyes itch and the mouth is dry.

Another day is dawning.

I recall what words of wisdom remain from the haze of the evening.

We spoke of colleagues, both loved and loathed.

We spoke of students, the delightful and the despised.

We spoke of Eskişehir and sought to justify our presence here.

We spoke of what it isn’t to find feeling for what it is.

Above: Sazova Park, Eskişehir

It is neither Istanbul nor Ankara with their crowds and their cost and their cacophony of chaos and cars.

Above: Istanbul

Above: Ankara

Tourists rarely come here, for what might attract them is quickly seen and forgotten.

It is neither Kars nor Konya where conservatives demand lip service over the freedom of thought and expression that is every person’s due, for Eskişehir is a university town that leans liberally left.

Above: Kars

In Konya, women scurry.

Above: Konya

In Eskişehir, women strut.

Above: Bridge over Porsuk River in Eskişehir

Away from the dark thoughts of the drinkers of the Dublin.

Morning has broken and dawn recalls the places that once were familiar.

And for reasons not immediately clear I think of Kreuzlingen, Switzerland…..

Above: Kreuzlingen

Kreuzlingen, Switzerland, Thursday 30 December 2021

First, let me explain myself.

I believe that travel should bring people together.

We travel to have enlightening experiences, to meet inspirational people, to be stimulated, to learn, to grow.

Travel humbles you, enriches you, shapes your world view, and sometimes activates you into doing your part in making the world a better place for everyone.

We better ourselves by observing others.

We learn about ourselves by observing others and by challenging ourselves to see beyond our individual selves.

By learning from our travels and bringing these ideas home, we make our homes even stronger.

With thoughtful travel comes powerful lessons.

We need to travel purposefully, to learn with an open mind, to consider new solutions to old problems, to come home and look at ourselves more honestly, and help our society confront its challenges more wisely.

I have been back in Switzerland two days and I am already ready to leave, for I share the sentiments that Lord Byron once did:

Switzerland is a cursed, selfish, swinish country of brutes in the most romantic region of the world.

Above: Lord Byron (1788 – 1824)

And of the places in this land that reflect the character of the Swiss without the romance of their geography, Kreuzlingen is the epitome of what I dislike the most here.

Above: Kreuzlingen

Kreuzlingen is a municipality in the canton of Thurgau in northeastern Switzerland.

It is the second-largest city of the canton (after Frauenfeld, the cantonal capital) with a population of about 22,000.

Together with the adjoining city of Konstanz (Constance) just across the border in Germany, Kreuzlingen is part of the largest conurbation on the Bodensee (Lake Constance) with a population of almost 120,000.

And it is Kreuzlingen’s location that is both its attraction and detraction.

Above: Kreuzlingen, Switzerland and Konstanz, Germany, 1919

One never goes to Kreuzlingen.

One goes through Kreuzlingen.

Unless one has no other choice but to linger.

When I lived in Landschlacht, 15 km to the east, I would go through Kreuzlingen en route to Konstanz or Zürich.

Only sheer bloody necessity would compel me to go to Kreuzlingen.

Above: Landschlacht

I would come to Kreuzlingen to go to the gym, for a husband must remain silent about the changes in a spouse’s body as she ages, but a wife is forever vocal about her dissatisfaction to aging in her husband’s form.

I treat gyms as I do banks or government institutions.

I go through the motions but I never enjoy myself when I do.

Above: Activ Fitness, Kreuzlingen

I would come to Kreuzlingen when between jobs I sought money from social services.

Time expended was never the same as money extended.

The rudeness and aggravation associated with these monthly endurance trials darkened my foul feelings towards Kreuzlingen even further.

Above: Coat of arms of Kreuzlingen

Kreuzlingen came to be further associated with unpleasantness, for it was the closest urban centre where residents of Landschlacht could get PCR testing for the coronavirus without a hospital visit.

Folks coming into the country from abroad, such as I from Turkey, had to be PCR tested within days of their arrival on Swiss soil, regardless of whether you had been tested before you left the land you had been in.

There is the old joke about what is European heaven and what is European hell:

Heaven is where:

  • the police are British
  • the chefs Italian
  • the mechanics German
  • the lovers French
  • and everything is organized by the Swiss.

Hell is where:

  • the police are German
  • the chefs British
  • the mechanics French
  • the lovers Swiss
  • and everything is organized by the Italians.

But I don’t think a Heaven where everything is organized by the Swiss is such a divine idea, especially when the ideas of enforcement (i.e. law and order) in German-speaking Schweiz are Germanic in attitude and application.

Add to this the universal axiom that governments everywhere love to take but loathe to give.

I, in some fit of madness, married a law-abiding German woman with whom I had moved to Switzerland.

Above: Flag of Germany

She, in another type of insanity, married a cantankerous Canadian for whom rules rub him roughly.

Above: Flag of Canada

Truly, opposites attract.

So, like husbands who capitulate to their wives’ whims for the sake of peace (never found) at home, I found myself submitting, yet again, to children in medical attire thrusting a sharp pointy object up a nasal cavity until the deposited brain matter is collected and assessed for that ever fateful announcement that you too might have contracted the coronavirus.

(And Chandler Bing, of Friends fame, sarcastically remarks:

You need to stop the Q-tip when there’s resistance.“)

Above: Scene from Friends

If I have one failing (among many) in my character, it is that I always try to find something positive about everyone and every situation.

My first impressions of Kreuzlingen were negative and I have tried, truly tried, to find something, anything, positive to change my attitude towards the place.

Even now, as I grumble about it, this post is trying, still, to give a fair and balanced view of a place I find it difficult to like.

Above: Hauptstrasse, Kreuzlingen

Consider its history and you may begin to see reasons for my ever present attitude.

Konrad, Bishop of Konstanz (935 – 976) brought back from Jerusalem a fragment of the True Cross, which he presented to the hospital he had founded in the Konstanz suburb of Stadelhofen and from which it took the name of “Crucelin” which later became Crucelingen / Kreuzlingen.

Above: Gold-plated Konrad disk, Konstanz Cathedral

The name of the municipality stems from the Augustinian monastery Crucelin, later Kreuzlingen Abbey. 

It was founded in 1125 by the Bishop of Constance (Konstanz) Ulrich I.

Above: Parish church of St. Ulrich and St. Afra, once the church of the former Augustinian monastery in Kreuzlingen

In 1144 Pope Lucius II, and in 1145 Emperor Frederick Barbarossa took the monastery under their protection.

Above: Lucius II (né Gherardo Caccianemici dal Orso) (d. 1145)

Above: Stained glass image of Frederick I (Barbarossa) (1122 – 1190), Strasbourg Cathedral, France

The first monastery stood outside the city walls.

Above: Interior of St. Ulrich, Kreuzlingen

At the time of the Council of Constance (Konstanz) (1414 – 1418) the Abbot of Kreuzlingen gave shelter from 27 to 28 October 1414 to the later deposed Pope John XXIII.

Above: Council Hall, Konstanz

Baldassarre Cossa (1370 – 1419) was Pisan Antipope John XXIII (1410 – 1415) during the Western Schism (a split within the Catholic Church, lasting from 1378 to 1417, in which bishops residing in Rome and Avignon both claimed to be the true Pope, and were joined by a third line of claimants from Pisa in 1409.).

The Catholic Church regards Cossa as an Antipope, as he opposed Pope Gregory XII whom the Catholic Church now recognizes as the rightful successor of Saint Peter.

Cossa was also an opponent of Antipope Benedict XIII, who was recognized by the French bishop as legitimate Pontiff.

Cossa was born in the Kingdom of Naples.

He participated in the Council of Pisa in 1408, which sought to end the Western Schism with the election of a third alternative Pope.

In 1410, Cossa succeeded Antipope Alexander V, taking the name John XXIII.

At the instigation of Sigismund, King of the Romans, Pope John called the Council of Constance of 1413, which deposed John XXIII and Benedict XIII, accepted Gregory XII’s resignation, and elected Pope Martin V to replace them, thus ending the Schism.

John XXIII was tried for various crimes, though later accounts question the veracity of those accusations.

Towards the end of his life Cossa restored his relationship with the Church and was made Cardinal Bishop of Frascati by Pope Martin V.

Above: John XXIII

When asked by Emperor Frederick to also join the Swabian League, the Eidgenossen (Switzerland) flatly refused:

They saw no reason to join an alliance designed to further Habsburg interests, and they were wary of this new, relatively closely knit and powerful alliance that had arisen on their northern frontier.

Furthermore, they resented the strong aristocratic element in the Swabian League, so different from their own organization, which had grown over the last 200 years liberating themselves from precisely such an aristocratic rule.

Above: Flag of the Old Swiss Confederacy (1300 – 1798)

On the Swabian (southern Germany, present day Württemberg) side, similar concerns existed.

For the common people in Swabia, the independence and freedom of the Eidgenossen was a powerful and attractive role model.

Many a baron in southern Swabia feared that his own subjects might revolt and seek adherence to the Swiss Confederacy.

Above: Coat of arms of the Counts of Habsburg

These fears were not entirely without foundation:

The Swiss had begun to form alliances north of the Rhine River, concluding a first treaty with Schaffhausen in 1454 and then also treaties with cities as far away as Rottweil (Germany)(1463) and Mulhouse (France)(1466).

Above: Schaffhausen

Above: Rottweil

Above: Images of Mulhouse

The city of Konstanz and its Bishop were caught in the middle between these two blocks:

Above: Rheintorturm (Rhine Gate Tower), Konstanz

Above: Coat of arms of the Bishop of Konstanz (1155 – 1803)

They held possessions in Swabia, but the city also still exercised the high justice over Thurgau, where the Swiss had assumed the low justice since its annexation in 1460.

Above: Coat of arms of Baden – Württemberg, formerly of the Duchy of Swabia

Above: Flag of Canton Thurgau

The foundation of the Swabian League prompted the Swiss city states of Zürich and Bern to propose accepting Konstanz into the Swiss Confederacy.

Above: Zürich

Above: Bern

The negotiations failed, though, due to the opposition of the founding cantons of the Confederacy and Canton Uri in particular.

The split jurisdiction over Thurgau was the cause of many quarrels between the city and the Confederacy.

In 1495, one such disagreement was answered by a punitive expedition of soldiers of Uri.

Konstanz had to pay the sum of 3,000 guilders to make them retreat and cease their plundering.

(Thurgau was a territory of the Swiss Confederacy, and Uri was one of the cantons involved in its administration.)

Above: Flag of Canton Uri

Konstanz joined the Swabian League as a full member on 3 November 1498.

Although this did not yet definitively define the position of the city — during the Reformation, it would be allied again with Zürich and Bern, and only after the defeat of the Schmalkaldic League in 1548 its close connections to the Eidgenossenschaft would be finally severed — it was another factor contributing to the growing estrangement between the Swiss and the Swabians.

Above: Schmalkaldic League military treaty, 1536

The Schmalkaldic League was a military alliance of Lutheran princes within the Holy Roman Empire during the mid-16th century.

Although created for religious motives soon after the start of the Reformation, its members later came to have the intention that the League would replace the Holy Roman Empire as their focus of political allegiance.

While it was not the first alliance of its kind, unlike previous formations, the Schmalkaldic League had a substantial military to defend its political and religious interests.

It received its name from the town of Schmalkalden, Thuringia, Germany.

Above: Schmalkalden

The competition between Swiss (Reisläufer) and Swabian (Landsknechte) mercenaries, who both fought in armies throughout Europe, sometimes opposing each other on the battlefield, sometimes competing for contracts, intensified.

Above: Swiss mercenaries crossing the Alps

Above: Landsknechte, 1530

Contemporary chronicles agree in their reports that the Swiss, who were considered the best soldiers in Europe at the time after their victories in the Burgundian Wars (1474 – 1477), were subject to many taunts and abuses by the Landsknechte.

Above: Territories of the house of Valois-Burgundy during the reign of Charles the Bold (1433 – 1477) (r. 1467 – 1477)

They were called Kuhschweizer (Swiss cow herders) and ridiculed in other ways.

Such insults were neither given nor taken lightly, and frequently led to bloodshed.

Indeed, such incidents would contribute to prolong the Swabian War itself by triggering skirmishes and looting expeditions that the military commands of neither side had ever wanted or planned.

Above:  The first major battle of the Swabian War, Battle of Hard, Austria, 20 February 1499

A large attack of the Swabian League took place on 11 April 1499:

Swabian troops occupied and plundered some villages on the southern shore of the Bodensee, just south of Konstanz.

The expedition ended in a shameful defeat and open flight when the Swiss soldiers, who had their main camp just a few miles south at Schwaderloh, arrived and met the Swabians in the Battle of Schwaderloh.

The Swabians lost more than 1,000 soldiers – 130 from the city of Konstanz alone.

The Swiss captured their heavy equipment, including their artillery.

Above: Battle of Schwaderloh, 11 April 1499




The continued defeats of both Habsburg and Swabian armies made King Maximilian, who had hitherto been occupied in the Netherlands, travel to Konstanz and assume the leadership of the operations himself.

He declared an imperial ban over the Swiss Confederacy in an attempt to gain wider support for the operation amongst the German princes by declaring the conflict an “imperial war“.

However, this move had no success.

Above: Maximilian I (1459 – 1519)

The refusal of the military leaders of the Swabian League to withdraw troops from the northern front to send them to the Grisons as Maximilian had demanded made the King return to the Bodensee.

Above: Flag of Canton Grisons / Graubünden

The differences between the Swabians, who preferred to strike in the north, and the King, who still hoped to convince them to help him win the struggle in the Val Müstair, led to a pause in the hostilities.

Troops were assembled at Konstanz, but an attack did not occur.

Until July, nothing of significance happened along the whole front.

Above: Val Müstair

By mid-July, Maximilian and the Swabian leaders suddenly were under pressure from their own troops.

In the west, where there lay an army under the command of Count Heinrich von Fürstenberg, a large contingent of mercenaries from Flanders and many knights threatened to leave as they had not received their pay.

The foot soldiers of the Swabian troops also complained:

Most of them were peasants and preferred to go home and bring in the harvest.

Maximilian was forced to act.

An attack by sea across the Bodensee on Rheineck and Rorschach on 21 July 1499 was one of the few successful Swabian operations.

The small Swiss detachment was taken by surprise, the villages plundered and burnt.

Above: Rheineck, Canton St. Gallen, Switzerland

Above: Rorschach, Canton St. Gallen, Switzerland

A much larger attack of an army of about 16,000 soldiers in the west on Dornach, however, met a quickly assembled but strong Swiss army.

In the Battle of Dornach on 22 July 1499, the Swabian and mercenary troops suffered a heavy defeat after a long and hard battle.

Their general Heinrich von Fürstenberg fell early in the fight, about 3,000 Swabian and 500 Swiss soldiers died, and the Swabians lost all of their artillery. 

Again.

Above: Battle of Dornach, Switzerland

A major problem for the Swiss was the lack of any unified command.

The cantonal contingents only took orders from their own leaders.

Complaints of insubordination were common.

The Swiss Diet had to adopt this resolution on 11 March 1499:

Every canton shall impress upon its soldiers that when the Confederates are under arms together, each one of them, whatever his canton, shall obey the officers of the others.

Above: Flag of modern Switzerland

The Swabian and Habsburg armies had suffered far higher human losses than the Swiss, and were also short on artillery, after repeatedly having lost their equipment to the Swiss.

The Swiss also had no desire to prolong the war further.

Above: Theatre of the Swabian War

Finally, Maximilian and the Swiss signed the Peace of Basel on 22 September 1499.

After the Swabian War (1499), in the Peace of Basel, the Duke of Milan ceded the sovereignty of Thurgau to the Swiss.

Above: Negotiations for the Peace of Basel in 1499 at the end of the Swabian War

This so angered the inhabitants of Konstanz that they burned down the Abbey of Kreuzlingen.

The city was compelled to rebuild the Abbey.

Above: Aftermath of the 3rd Kreuzlingen Abbey fire, 20 July 1963

On 17 April 1509, Abbot Peter I von Babenberg (1498 – 1545) was able to rededicate the new church.

Above: Interior of St. Ulrich, Kreuzlingen

During the Thirty Years’ War (1618 – 1648), despite the neutrality of the Swiss, a Swedish army entered Thurgau via Stein am Rhein, advanced on Kreuzlingen and besieged Konstanz unsuccessfully, losing several thousand men.

Above: Flag of Sweden

Above: Stein am Rhein

When on 2 October 1633, the troops left Kreuzlingen, the people of Konstanz blamed the monks for having supported the enemy and destroyed the Abbey a second time.

It was now decided that the monastery should not be rebuilt right up against the walls of Konstanz, but should be removed from it by not less than the distance of a cannon shot.

Above: Interior of St. Ulrich, Kreuzlingen

During the Protestant Reformation (1516 – 1648) in Switzerland, both the Catholic and emerging Reformed parties sought to swing the subject territories, such as Canton Thurgau, to their side.

Above: Religious map of Switzerland, 1536

In 1524, in an incident that resonated across Switzerland, local peasants occupied the Cloister of Ittingen in Thurgau, driving out the monks, destroying documents, and devastating the wine cellar.

Above: Ittingen Charterhouse

Between 1526 and 1531, most of Thurgau’s population adopted the new Reformed faith spreading from Zürich.

Zürich’s defeat in the War of Kappel (1531) ended Reformed predominance.

Instead, the First Peace of Kappel protected both Catholic and Reformed worship, though the provisions of the treaty generally favored the Catholics, who also made up a majority among the seven ruling cantons.

Religious tensions over Thurgau were an important background to the First War of Villmergen (1656), during which Zürich briefly occupied Thurgau.

Above: Kappel am Albis, Canton Zürich, Switzerland

Above: Kreuzlingen Cloister, 1633

At the beginning of the 19th century, today’s centre of Kreuzlingen was largely arable land, meadowland and vineyards. 

Around the monastery stood 13 houses.

With the reorganization of Europe, Kreuzlingen became a border region. 

The first customs house was built in 1818. 

The first steamboats that operated on the Bodensee from 1824 and the construction of the railway lines to Romanshorn (1871) and Etzwilen (1875) attracted trade and industry.

Above: Kreuzlingen, 1840

Above: Kreuzlingen Bahnhof (train station)

Until the First World War (1914 – 1918) Kreuzlingen was a kind of suburb of Konstanz. 

Industry in Kreuzlingen was also almost exclusively in the hands of German entrepreneurs. 

It was only after the border was closed during the War that Kreuzlingen became more independent.

Above: German – Swiss border (1914 – 1918)

During World War I (1914 – 1918) and World War II (1939 – 1945) Switzerland maintained armed neutrality, and was not invaded by its neighbors, in part because of its topography, much of which is mountainous.

Consequently, it was of considerable interest to belligerent states as the scene for diplomacy, espionage, and commerce, as well as being a safe haven for refugees.

Above: Physical map of Switzerland (in German)

In The War in the Air – an apocalyptic prediction of the coming global conflict, published in 1903, eleven years before the actual outbreak of war – H.G. Wells assumed that Switzerland would join the coming war and fight on the side of Germany.

Above: Herbert George Wells (1866 – 1946)

Wells is known to have visited Switzerland in 1903, a visit which inspired his book A Modern Utopia, and his assessment of Swiss inclinations might have been inspired by what he heard from Swiss people in that visit.

Switzerland maintained a state of armed neutrality during the First World War.

Above: Images of World War 1 (1914 – 1918)

However, with two of the Central Powers (Germany and Austria-Hungary) and two of the Entente Powers (France and Italy) all sharing borders and populations with Switzerland, neutrality proved difficult.

Above: Europe, 1914

Under the Schlieffen Plan, the German General Staff had been open to the possibility of trying to outflank the French fortifications by marching through Switzerland in violation of its neutrality, although the plan’s eventual executor Helmuth von Moltke the Younger selected Belgium instead due to Switzerland’s mountainous topography and the disorganized state of the Belgian Armed Forces.

Above: Alfred von Schlieffen (1833 – 1913)

Above: Helmuth von Moltke the Younger (1848 – 1916)

Above: Flag of Belgium

From December 1914 until the spring of 1918, Swiss troops were deployed in the Jura along the French border over concern that the trench war might spill into Switzerland.

Of lesser concern was the Italian border, but troops were also stationed in the Unterengadin region of Graubünden.

Above: Swiss officers’ barracks, Umbrail Pass, Swiss Italian border

While the German-speaking majority in Switzerland generally favored the Central Powers, the French- and, later, Italian-speaking populations sided with the Entente Powers, which would cause internal conflict in 1918.

Above: Linguistic map of Switzerland, 2016 – German (62.8%) (pink) / French (22.9%) (purple) / Italian (8.2%) (blue) / Romansh (0.5%) (yellow)

However, the country managed to keep out of the War, although it was blockaded by the Allies and therefore suffered some difficulties.

Nevertheless, because Switzerland was centrally located, neutral, and generally undamaged, the War allowed the growth of the Swiss banking industry

Above: Mont Cervin Palace, Zermatt, Switzerland – A hub of tourism, many private banks service the city and maintain underground bunkers and storage facilities for gold at the foothills of the Swiss Alps.

For the same reasons, Switzerland became a haven for foreign refugees and revolutionaries.

There were a number of Swiss neutrality scandals during the war, when certain people within Switzerland were found to have been favouring one side or the other.

One of the worst was the “two colonels” affair.

In February 1916, two senior Swiss intelligence officers were found to have been passing copies of intelligence reports and other sensitive material to the German and Austrian military attaches in Switzerland for nearly a year.

This included signals sent between foreign embassies in Switzerland and their home governments, which the Swiss had intercepted.

The two officers defended themselves by saying that no secret information had been given away, and that information had been received from the Central Powers in return.

Although they were sacked, they received no other punishment.

Above: Colonel Carl Egli

Above: Colonel Maurice de Wattenwyl

Being neutral, Switzerland was also a place where exiles could go.

Czech and Lithuanian national councils were established in Switzerland during the War.

Above: Flag of the Czech Republic

Above: Flag of Lithuania

In 1914, both these countries were part of a larger empire (Austria-Hungary and Russia respectively) and these national councils sought independence.

Above: Coat of arms of Austria – Hungary (1867 – 1915)

Above: Coat of arms of Imperial Russia (1883 – 1917)

King Constantine of Greece went into exile in Switzerland in June 1917.  

Above: Constantine I (1868 – 1923)

After the Great War, the Austrian Imperial family fled to Switzerland. 

Following the organization of the army in 1907 and military expansion in 1911, the Swiss Army consisted of about 250,000 men with an additional 200,000 in supporting roles.

Both European alliance-systems took the size of the Swiss military into account in the years prior to 1914, especially in the Schlieffen Plan.

Following the declarations of war in late July 1914, on 1 August 1914, Switzerland mobilized its army.

By 7 August the newly appointed general Ulrich Wille had about 220,000 men under his command.

By 11 August Wille had deployed much of the army along the Jura border with France, with smaller units deployed along the eastern and southern borders.

Above: Ulrich Wille (1848 – 1925)

This remained unchanged until May 1915 when Italy entered the war on the Entente side, at which point troops were deployed to the Unterengadin valley, Val Müstair and along the southern border.

Once it became clear that the Allies and the Central Powers would respect Swiss neutrality, the number of troops deployed began to drop.

After September 1914, some soldiers were released to return to their farms and to vital industries.

By November 1916 the Swiss had only 38,000 men in the army.

This number increased during the winter of 1916 – 1917 to over 100,000 as a result of a proposed French attack that would have crossed Switzerland.

When this attack failed to occur the army began to shrink again.

Because of widespread workers’ strikes, at the end of the War the Swiss army had shrunk to only 12,500 men.

During the War “belligerents” crossed the Swiss borders about 1,000 times, with some of these incidents occurring around the Dreisprachen Piz (Three Languages Peak), near the Stevio Pass.

Switzerland had an outpost and a hotel (which was destroyed as it was used by the Austrians) on the peak.

During the War, fierce battles were fought in the ice and snow of the area, with gunfire coming on to Swiss territory.

The three nations made an agreement not to fire over Swiss territory, which jutted out between Austria (to the north) and Italy (to the south).

Instead they could fire down the pass, as Swiss territory was around the peak.

In one incident, a Swiss soldier was killed at his outpost on Dreisprachen Piz by Italian gunfire.

Above: Stelvio Pass

During the fighting, Switzerland became a haven for many politicians, artists, pacifists, and thinkers.

Bern, Zürich and Geneva became centres of debate and discussion.

Above: Geneva

In Zürich, two very different anti-war groups, the Bolsheviks and the Dadaists, would bring lasting changes to the world.

Above: Zürich during WW1

The Bolsheviks were a faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, centered around Vladimir Lenin.

Following the outbreak of the War, Lenin was stunned when the large Social Democratic parties of Europe (at that time predominantly Marxist in orientation) supported their various respective countries’ war efforts.

Lenin, believing that the peasants and workers of the proletariat were fighting for their class enemies, adopted the stance that what he described as an “imperialist war” ought to be turned into a civil war between the classes.

He left Austria for neutral Switzerland in 1914 following the outbreak of the War and remained active in Switzerland until 1917.

Following the 1917 February Revolution in Russia and the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II, he left Switzerland on a sealed train to Petrograd, where he would shortly lead the 1917 October Revolution in Russia.

Above: Vladimir Lenin (1870 – 1924)

Above: Nicholas II (1868 – 1918)

While the Dada art movement was also an anti-war organization, Dadaists used art to oppose all wars.

The founders of the movement had left Germany and Romania to escape the destruction of the War.

Above: Grand opening of the first Dada movement in Berlin, 5 June 1920

At the Cabaret Voltaire in Zürich they put on performances expressing their disgust with the War and with the interests that inspired it.

By some accounts Dada coalesced on 6 October 1916 at the Cabaret.

The artists used abstraction to fight against the social, political, and cultural ideas of that time that they believed had caused the War.

Dadaists viewed abstraction as the result of a lack of planning and of logical thought-processes.

When World War I ended in 1918, most of the Zürich Dadaists returned to their home countries, and some began Dada activities in other cities.

Above: Cabaret Voltaire, Zürich

In 1917, Switzerland’s neutrality came into question when the Grimm – Hoffmann Affair erupted. 

Robert Grimm, a Swiss socialist politician, travelled to Russia as an activist to negotiate a separate peace between Russia and Germany, in order to end the war on the Eastern Front in the interests of socialism and pacifism.

Misrepresenting himself as a diplomat and an actual representative of the Swiss government, he made progress but had to admit to fraud and return home when the Allies found out about the proposed peace deal.

Above: Robert Grimm (1881 – 1958)

The Allies were placated by the resignation of Arthur Hoffmann, the Swiss Federal Councillor who had supported Grimm but had not consulted his colleagues on the initiative.

Above: Arthur Hoffmann (1857 – 1927)

During the War, Switzerland accepted 68,000 British, French and German wounded prisoners of war (POWs) for recovery in mountain resorts.

To be transferred the wounded had to have a disability that would negate their further military service or have been interned over 18 months with deteriorating mental health.

The wounded were transferred from POW camps unable to cope with the number of wounded and sat out the war in Switzerland.

Above: German POWs arriving in Davos, Switzerland, 1916

The transfer was agreed between the warring powers and organised by the Red Cross.

Above: Logo of the Red Cross

In 1934, the Swiss Banking Act was passed.

Above: The federal law officially codified hundreds of years of banking secrecy in Switzerland. 
The law was announced in front of the Three Confederates statue to the Swiss public and international community in the Federal Palace of Switzerland during a 1934 special assembly.

This allowed for anonymous numbered bank accounts, in part to allow Germans (including Jews) to hide or protect their assets from seizure by the newly established Third Reich.

Above: Credit Suisse, Paradeplatz, Zürich – Many banks in Switzerland and other off-shore financial centres, offer the usage of numbered bank accounts for an extra degree of banking secrecy.

Above: Flag of the Third Reich / Nazi Germany (1935 – 1945)

In 1936, Wilhelm Gustloff was assassinated at Davos.

He was the head of the Nazi Party’s “Auslands-Organisation” in Switzerland.

Above: Wilhelm Gustloff (1895 – 1936)

The Swiss government refused to extradite the alleged assassin David Frankfurter to Germany.

Frankfurter was sentenced to 18 years in prison but was pardoned in 1946.

Above: (standing) David Frankfurter (1909 – 1982)

As European tension grew in the 1930s, the Swiss began to rethink their political and military situation.

The Social Democratic Party abandoned their revolutionary and anti-military stances, and soon the country began to rearm for war.

Above: Logo of the Social Democratic Party

Farmers, Traders and Citizens’ Party (BGB) Federal Councillor Rudolf Minger, predicting war would come in 1939, led the rebuilding of the Swiss Army.

Starting in 1936, he secured a larger defence budget and started a war bond system.

The army was restructured into smaller, better equipped divisions and boot camps for conscripts was extended to three months of instruction.

In 1937, a war economy cell was established.

Households were encouraged to keep a two-month supply of food and basic necessities.

Above: Rudolf Minger (1881 – 1955)

In 1938, Foreign Minister Giuseppe Motta withdrew Switzerland from the League of Nations, returning the country to its traditional form of neutrality.

Above: Giuseppe Motta (1871 – 1940)

Above: Flag of the League of Nations (1920 – 1946)

Actions were also taken to prove Switzerland’s independent national identity and unique culture from the surrounding Fascist powers.

This policy was known as Geistige Landesverteidigung (spiritual national defence).

Above: “On Guard” by Hans Brandenberger

In 1937, the government opened the Museum of Federal Charters.

Increased use of Swiss German coincided with a national referendum that made Romansh a national language in 1938, a move designed to counter Benito Mussolini’s attempts to incite Italian nationalism in the southern Grisons and Ticino cantons.

Above: Benito Mussolini (1883 – 1945)

In December of that year in a government address, Catholic Conservative Councillor Philipp Etter urged a defence of Swiss culture. 

Geistige Landesverteidigung subsequently exploded, being featured on stamps, in children’s books, and through official publications.

Above: Philip Etter (1891 – 1977)

At the outbreak of World War II in 1939, Switzerland immediately began to mobilize for a possible invasion.

The transition into wartime was smooth and caused less controversy than in 1914.

The country was fully mobilized in only three days.

Parliament quickly selected the 61-year-old career soldier Henri Guisan to be General.

By 3 September, 430,000 combat troops and 210,000 in support services, 10,000 of whom were women, had been mobilized, though most of these were sent home during the Phoney War.

At its highest point, 850,000 soldiers were mobilized.

Above: Henri Guisan

During the War, under the pan-Germanist and antidemocratic Neuordnung (New Order) doctrine, detailed invasion plans were drawn up by the German military command, such as Operation Tannenbaum (Christmas tree), but Switzerland was never attacked.

Switzerland was able to remain independent through a combination of military deterrence, economic concessions to Germany and good fortune as larger events during the War delayed an invasion.

Above: German plans to invade Switzerland

The New Order (Neuordnung) of Europe was the political order which Nazi Germany wanted to impose on the conquered areas under its dominion.

The establishment of the Neuordnung had already begun long before the start of World War II, but was publicly proclaimed by Adolf Hitler in 1941:

The year 1941 will be, I am convinced, the historical year of a great European New Order!

Above: Adolf Hitler (1889 – 1945)

Among other things, it entailed the creation of a pan-German racial state, structured according to Nazi ideology, to ensure the existence of a perceived Aryan – Nordic master race, consolidate a massive territorial expansion into Central and Eastern Europe through colonization by German settlers, achieve the physical annihilation of Jews, Slavs, (especially Poles and Russians), Roma (“gypsies“), and others considered to be “unworthy of life“, as well as the extermination, expulsion or enslavement of most of the Slavic peoples and others regarded as “racially inferior“.

Nazi Germany’s desire for aggressive territorial expansionism was one of the most important causes of World War II.

Historians are still divided as to its ultimate goals, some believing that it was to be limited to Nazi German domination of Europe, while others maintain that it was a springboard for eventual world conquest and the establishment of a world government under German control.

The Führer gave expression to his unshakable conviction that the Reich will be the master of all Europe.

We shall yet have to engage in many fights, but these will undoubtedly lead to most wonderful victories.

From there on the way to world domination is practically certain.

Whoever dominates Europe will thereby assume the leadership of the world.

—  Joseph Goebbels, Reich Minister of Propaganda, 8 May 1943

Above: Joseph Goebbels (1897 – 1945)

Attempts by the Swiss Nazi Party to effect a unification with Germany failed, largely as a result of Switzerland’s sense of national identity and tradition of democracy and civil liberties.

The Swiss press criticized the Third Reich, often infuriating its leadership.

In turn, Berlin denounced Switzerland as a medieval remnant and its people renegade Germans.

Swiss military strategy was changed from one of static defence at the borders to a strategy of attrition and withdrawal to strong, well-stockpiled positions high in the Alps known as the National Redoubt.

This controversial strategy was essentially one of deterrence.

The idea was to render the cost of invading too high.

During an invasion, the Swiss Army would cede control of the economic heartland and population centres but retain control of crucial rail links and passes in the National Redoubt.

Above: Plan of the defence lines of the National Redoubt

Switzerland was a base for espionage by both sides in the conflict and often mediated communications between the Axis and Allied powers by serving as a protecting power.

In 1942, the United States Office of Strategic Services (OSS) was established in Bern.

Through the efforts of Allen Dulles, the first US intelligence service in Western Europe was created.

Above: Allen Dulles (1893 – 1969)

During the allied invasion of Italy, the OSS in Switzerland guided tactical efforts for the takeover of Salerno and the islands of Corsica and Sardinia.

Above: Logo of the OSS (1942 – 1945)

Above: Allied troops, Salerno, Italy, 1943

Despite the public and political attitudes in Switzerland, some higher-ranking officers within the Swiss Army had pro-Nazi sympathies: notably Colonel Arthur Fonjallaz and Colonel Eugen Bircher, who led the Schweizerischer Vaterländischer Verband.

Above: Arthur Fonjallaz (1875 – 1944)

Above: Eugen Bircher (1882 – 1956)

In Letters to Suzanne (French: Lettres à Suzanne, Lausanne, Switzerland, 1949), the Swiss journalist Léon Savary retrospectively denounced in this sense “the occult influence of Hitlerism on the Swiss people during the Second World War, which they were not conscious of being under“.

Above: Léon Savary (1895 – 1968)

Nazi Germany repeatedly violated Swiss airspace.

During the Battle of France in 1940, German aircraft violated Swiss airspace at least 197 times. 

Above: Images of the Battle of France (10 May – 25 June 1940)

In several air incidents, the Swiss shot down 11 Luftwaffe aircraft between 10 May and 17 June 1940, while suffering the loss of three of their own aircraft.

Germany protested diplomatically on 5 June and with a second note on 19 June which contained explicit threats. 

Hitler was especially furious when he saw that German equipment was used to shoot down German pilots.

He said they would respond “in another manner“. 

On 20 June, the Swiss air force was ordered to stop intercepting planes violating Swiss airspace.

Swiss fighters began instead to force intruding aircraft to land at Swiss airfields. 

Anti-aircraft units still operated.

Above: Logo of the Luftwaffe

Later, Hitler and Hermann Göring sent saboteurs to destroy Swiss airfields, but they were captured by Swiss troops before they could cause any damage. 

Skirmishes between German and Swiss troops took place on the northern border of Switzerland throughout the war.

Above: Hermann Goering (1893 – 1946)

Allied aircraft intruded on Swiss airspace throughout World War II.

In total, 6,304 Allied aircraft violated Swiss airspace during the war.

Some damaged Allied bombers returning from raids over Italy and Germany would intentionally violate Swiss airspace, preferring internment by the Swiss to becoming POWs.

Over a hundred Allied aircraft and their crews were interned in this manner.

They were subsequently put up in various ski resorts that had been emptied from lack of tourists due to the war and held until hostilities ended.

At least 940 American airmen attempted to escape into France after the Allied invasion of Normandy in June 1944 but Swiss authorities intercepted 183 internees.

Above: Landing at Omaha Beach, Normandy, France, 6 June 1944

Over 160 of these airmen were incarcerated in a Swiss prison camp known as Wauwilermoos, which was located near Lucerne (Luzern) and commanded by André Béguin, a pro-Nazi Swiss officer.

Above: Aerial photograph of the Wauwilermoos camp area in mid-1944

Above: André Béguin

The American internees remained in Wauwilermoos until November 1944 when the US State Department lodged protests against the Swiss government and eventually secured their release. 

Above: Wauwilermoos camp in late 1944

The American military attaché in Bern warned Marcel Pilet – Golaz, Swiss foreign minister in 1944, that “the mistreatment inflicted on US aviators could lead to ‘navigation errors’ during bombing raids over Germany“.

Above: Marcel Pilet – Golaz (1889 – 1958)

Switzerland, surrounded by Axis-controlled territory, also suffered from Allied bombings during the War – most notably from the accidental bombing of Schaffhausen by American aircraft on 1 April 1944.

Above: Schaffhausen, inscription on the bay window:
Destroyed by airmen 1 April 1944, rebuilt 1944/1945

It was mistaken for Ludwigshafen am Rhein, a German town 284 kilometres (176 mi) away.

Above: Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Germany

Forty people were killed and over fifty buildings destroyed, among them a group of small factories producing anti-aircraft shells, ball bearings and Bf 109 parts for Germany.

The bombing limited much of the leniency the Swiss had shown toward Allied airspace violations.

Eventually, the problem became so bad that they declared a zero-tolerance policy for violation by either Axis or Allied aircraft and authorized attacks on American aircraft.

Victims of these mistaken bombings were not limited to Swiss civilians, but included the often confused American aircrews, shot down by the Swiss fighters as well as several Swiss fighters shot down by American airmen.

In February 1945, 18 civilians were killed by Allied bombs dropped over Stein am Rhein, Vals and Rafz.

Above: Bombing of Stein am Rhein, 22 February 1945

Above: Bombing of Rafz, 22 February 1945

Arguably the most notorious incident came on 4 March 1945, when Basel and Zürich were accidentally bombed by American aircraft.

The attack on Basel’s railway station led to the destruction of a passenger train, but no casualties were reported.

Above: Basel Railway Station, 1938

A B-24 Liberator dropped its bomb load over Zürich, destroying two buildings and killing five civilians.

Above: Oberstrass, Zürich, 4 March 1945

The crew believed that they were attacking Freiburg im Breisgau in Germany.

Above: Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany

As John Helmreich points out, the pilot and navigator, in choosing a target of opportunity, “missed the marshalling yard they were aiming for, missed the city they were aiming for, and even missed the country they were aiming for“.

The Swiss, although somewhat skeptical, reacted by treating these violations of their neutrality as “accidents“.

The United States was warned that single aircraft would be forced down and their crews would still be allowed to seek refuge, while bomber formations in violation of airspace would be intercepted.

While American politicians and diplomats tried to minimize the political damage caused by these incidents, others took a more hostile view.

Some senior commanders argued that as Switzerland was “full of German sympathizers“, it deserved to be bombed.

General Henry H. Arnold, Commanding General of the US Army Air Forces, even suggested that it was the Germans themselves who were flying captured Allied planes over Switzerland in an attempt to gain a propaganda victory.

Above: Henry H. Arnold (1886 – 1950)

From 1943 onwards Switzerland stopped American and British aircraft, mainly bombers, overflying Switzerland on nine occasions, six times by Swiss Air Force fighters and nine by flak. 

Thirty-six Allied airmen were killed.

On 1 October 1943 the first American bomber was shot down near Bad Ragaz, with only three men surviving.

Above: Main square, Bad Ragaz

The officers were interned in Davos and the airmen in Adelboden.

Above: Images of Davos

Above: Aerial view of Adelboden

The representative of the US military intelligence group based in Bern, Barnwell Legge (a US military attaché to Switzerland), instructed the soldiers not to flee, but most of them thought it to be a diplomatic joke and gave no regard to his request.

Above: Barnwell Legge (1891 – 1949)

As a neutral state bordering Germany, Switzerland was relatively easy to reach for refugees from the Nazis.

Switzerland’s refugee laws, especially with respect to Jews fleeing Germany, were strict and have caused controversy since the end of World War II.

From 1933 until 1944 asylum for refugees could only be granted to those who were under personal threat owing to their political activities only.

It did not include those who were under threat due to race, religion or ethnicity.

Above: The Star of David, a symbol of Judaism

On the basis of this definition, Switzerland granted asylum to only 644 people between 1933 and 1945.

Of these, 252 cases were admitted during the war.

All other refugees were admitted by the individual cantons and were granted different permits, including a “tolerance permit” that allowed them to live in the canton but not to work.

Over the course of the war, Switzerland interned 300,000 refugees.

Of these, 104,000 were foreign troops interned according to the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers outlined in the Hague Conventions.

Above: Images of The Hague, Netherlands

The rest were foreign civilians and were either interned or granted tolerance or residence permits by the cantonal authorities.

Refugees were not allowed to hold jobs.

Of the refugees, 60,000 were civilians escaping persecution by the Nazis.

Of these 60,000, 27,000 were Jews.

Between 10,000 and 24,000 Jewish civilian refugees were refused entry.

These refugees were refused entry on the asserted claim of dwindling supplies.

Of those refused entry, a Swiss government representative said:

Our little lifeboat is full.

At the beginning of the war, Switzerland had a Jewish population of between 18,000 and 28,000 and a total population of about 4 million.

By the end of the war, there were over 115,000 refuge-seeking people of all categories in Switzerland, representing the maximum number of refugees at any one time.

Above: Entry into the Swiss Jewish Museum, Basel

Switzerland’s treatment of Jewish refugees has been criticized by scholars of the Holocaust.

In 1999 an international panel of historians declared that Switzerland was “guilty of acting as an accomplice to the Holocaust when it refused to accept many thousands of fleeing Jews, and instead sent them back to almost certain annihilation at the hands of the Nazis“.

Above: Selection of Hungarian Jews on the ramp at Auschwitz II – Birkenau in German-occupied Poland, around May 1944.
Jews were sent either to work or to the gas chamber.

Switzerland also acted as a refuge for Allied POWs who escaped, including those from Colditz.

Above: Colditz Castle, Germany

In 1939, the Service of Intellectual Assistance to Prisoners of War (SIAP) was created by the International Bureau of Education (IBE), a Geneva-based international organization dedicated to educational matters.

In collaboration with the Swiss Federal Council, who initially funded the project, and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), the SIAP provided over half a million books to prisoners of war during World War II, and organized educational opportunities and study groups in prison camps.

Switzerland’s trade was blockaded by both the Allies and by the Axis.

Each side openly exerted pressure on Switzerland not to trade with the other.

Economic cooperation and extension of credit to the Third Reich varied according to the perceived likelihood of invasion, and the availability of other trading partners.

Above: Map of participants in World War 2:
Dark Green: Allies before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, including colonies and occupied countries 
Light Green: Allied countries that entered the war after the attack on Pearl Harbor
Blue: Axis powers, their colonies and allies 
Grey: Neutral countries during WW2
Dark green dots represent countries that initially were neutral but during the war were annexed by the USSR
Light green dots represent countries that later in the war changed from the Axis to the Allies Blue dots represent countries either being conquered by the Axis Powers, becoming puppets of those (Vichy France and several French colonies)

Concessions reached their zenith after a crucial rail link through Vichy France was severed in 1942, leaving Switzerland completely surrounded by the Axis.

Above: Emblem of Vichy France (1940 – 1944)

Switzerland relied on trade for half of its food and essentially all of its fuel.

However, the Swiss controlled vital trans-alpine rail tunnels between Germany and Italy and possessed considerable electrical generating capacity that was relatively safe from air attack.

Switzerland’s most important exports during the war were precision machine tools, watches, jewel bearings (used in bomb sights), electricity, and dairy products.

Until 1936, the Swiss franc was the only remaining major freely convertible currency in the world.

Both the Allies and the Germans sold large amounts of gold to the Swiss National Bank.

Between 1940 and 1945, the German Reichsbank sold 1.3 billion francs (approximately 18 billion francs adjusted for inflation to 2019) worth of gold to Swiss banks in exchange for Swiss francs and other foreign currency, which were used to buy strategically important raw materials like tungsten and oil from neutral countries.

Hundreds of millions of francs’ worth of this gold was monetary gold plundered from the central banks of occupied countries.

A total of 581,000 francs’ worth of “Melmer” gold taken from Holocaust victims in eastern Europe was sold to Swiss banks.

Above: Logo of the Reichsbank (1876 – 1945)

In the 1990s, a controversy over a class action lawsuit brought in Brooklyn, New York, over Jewish assets in Holocaust era bank accounts prompted the Swiss government to commission the most recent and authoritative study of Switzerland’s interaction with the Nazi regime.

The final report by this independent panel of international scholars, known as the Bergier Commission,was issued in 2002 and also documented Switzerland’s role as a major hub for the sale and transfer of Nazi-looted art during the Second World War.

Above: Jean François Bergier (1931 – 2009)

Under pressure from the Allies, in December 1943 quotas were imposed on the importation and exportation of certain goods and foodstuffs and in October 1944 sales of munitions were halted.

However, the transit of goods by railway between Germany, Italy and occupied France continued.

North–South transit trade across Switzerland increased from 2.5 million tons before the war to nearly 6 million tons per year.

No troops or “war goods” were supposed to be transshipped.

Switzerland was concerned that Germany would cease the supply of the coal it required if it blocked coal shipments to Italy while the Allies, despite some plans to do so, took no action as they wanted to maintain good relations with Switzerland.

Between 1939 and 1945 Germany exported 10,267,000 tons of coal to Switzerland.

In 1943 these imports supplied 41% of Swiss energy requirements.

In the same period Switzerland sold electric power to Germany equivalent to 6,077,000 tons of coal.

Above: Swiss exports of arms, ammunition, and fuses (thousands of CHF) (1940 – 1944)

Swiss neutrality is one of the main principles of Switzerland’s foreign policy which dictates that Switzerland is not to be involved in armed or political conflicts between other states.

This policy is self-imposed and designed to ensure external security and promote peace.

Above: Coat of arms of Switzerland

Switzerland has the oldest policy of military neutrality in the world. 

It has not participated in a foreign war since its neutrality was established by the Treaty of Paris in 1815.

Above: Paris, France

Although the European powers (Austria, France, the United Kingdom, Portugal, Prussia, Russia, Spain and Sweden) agreed at the Congress of Vienna (Wien) in May 1815 that Switzerland should be neutral, final ratification was delayed until after Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated so that some coalition forces Reformation could invade France via Swiss territory.

Above: Images of Wien (Vienna), Österreich (Austria)

Above: Napoleon Bonaparte (1769 – 1821)

The country has a history of armed neutrality going back to the Reformation.

It has not been in a state of war internationally since 1815 and did not join the United Nations until 2002. 

Above: Flag of the United Nations

It pursues an active foreign policy and is frequently involved in peace-building processes around the world.

Above: The Matterhorn, Zermatt, Switzerland

According to Swiss President Ignazio Cassis in 2022 during a World Economic Forum (WEF) speech, the laws of neutrality for Switzerland are based on the Hague agreement principles which include:

  • no participation in wars
  • international cooperation but no membership in any military alliance
  • no provision of troops or weapons to warring parties
  • no granting of transition rights 

Above: Ignazio Cassis

The beginnings of Swiss neutrality can be dated back to the defeat of the Old Swiss Confederacy at the Battle of Marignano in September 1515, or the peace treaty the Swiss Confederacy signed with France on 12 November 1516.

Prior to this, the Swiss Confederacy had an expansionist foreign policy.

Above: François I orders his troops to stop pursuing the Swiss, Marignano, Italy, 14 September 1515

The Peace of Westphalia in 1648 was another important step in the development of Switzerland’s neutrality.

Other countries were disallowed from passing through Swiss territory.

The Confederation became legally independent from the Holy Roman Empire, even though it had been independent from the Empire de facto since 1499.

Above: City Hall, Münster, Germany – site of the signing of the Treaty of Westphalia, 24 October 1648

The 1798 invasion of Switzerland by the French First Republic culminated in the creation of a satellite state called the Helvetic Republic.

While the 1798 Swiss constitution and the 1803 Act of Mediation stated that France would protect Swiss independence and neutrality, these promises were not kept. 

With the latter act, Switzerland signed a defensive alliance treaty with France.

Above: Flag of the Helvetic Republic (Switzerland) (1798 – 1803)

During the Restoration, the Swiss Confederation’s constitution and the Treaty of Paris’s Act on the Neutrality of Switzerland affirmed Swiss neutrality.

Above: Restoration Switzerland, 1815

The dating of neutrality to 1516 is disputed by modern historians.

Prior to 1895, no historian referenced the Battle of Marignano as the beginning of neutrality.

The later backdating has to be seen in light of threats by several major powers in 1889 to rescind the neutrality granted to Switzerland in 1815.

A publication by Paul Schweizer, titled Geschichte der schweizerischen Neutralität (History of Swiss Neutrality) attempted to show that Swiss neutrality wasn’t granted by other nations, but a decision they took themselves and thus couldn’t be rescinded by others.

The later publication of the same name by Edgar Bonjour, published between 1946 and 1975, expanded on this thesis.

Following World War II, Switzerland began taking a more active role in humanitarian activities.

It joined the United Nations after a March 2002 referendum.

Ten years after Switzerland joined the UN, in recorded votes in the UN General Assembly, Switzerland occupied a middle position, siding from time to time with member states like the United States and Israel, but at other times with countries like China.

In the UN Human Rights Council Switzerland sided much more with Western countries and against countries like China and Russia.

Above: Members of the United Nations

Switzerland participated in the development of the International Code of Conduct for Private Security Service Providers, intended as an oversight mechanism of private security providers.

In September 2015, a “Federal Act on Private Security Services provided Abroad” was introduced, in order to “preserve Swiss neutrality“, as stated in its first article. 

It requires Switzerland-based private security companies to declare all operations conducted abroad, and to adhere to the Code.

Moreover, it states that no physical or moral person falling under this law can participate directly — or indirectly through the offer of private security services — in any hostilities abroad. 

In 2016, the Section of Private Security Services (SPSS), an organ of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs in charge of the procedures defined by the new law, has received 300 approval requests.

Above: Logo of the International Code of Conduct Association

In 2011, Switzerland registered as a candidate for a seat on the UN Security Council in 2023 – 2024.

In a 2015 report requested by Parliament, the government stated that a Swiss seat on the Security Council would be “fully compatible with the principles of neutrality and with Switzerland’s neutrality policy“.

Opponents of the project, such as former ambassador Paul Widmer, consider that this seat would “put its [Switzerland] neutrality at risk“.

Above: UN Security Council Chamber, UN Headquarters, New York City, USA

A 2018 survey found that 95% of Swiss were in favor of maintaining neutrality.

In 2022, Switzerland imposed sanctions against Russia in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

While Switzerland follows defined rules to remain neutral, it imposed sanctions for this “serious violation of the most fundamental norms of international law within the scope of its political room for manoeuvre“.

Above: Russian invasion of Ukraine as of 15 June 2022

Above: Flag of Russia

Above: Flag of Ukraine

According to Federal Councilor Viola Amherd, Switzerland will not allow direct shipments of arms to the war zone from or through its territory.

Above: Viola Amherd

Irrespective of the actual laws governing a neutral country, many media outlets still labelled this as a break with 500 years of Swiss neutrality.

In February 2022, Switzerland further adopted the sanctioning of Russia by the European Union and froze many Russian bank accounts.

Above: Flag of the European Union

Analysts said the move would affect the Swiss economy.

Above: Zürich – the economic centre of Switzerland

In April 2022, the Federal Department of Economic Affairs vetoed Germany’s request to re-export Swiss ammunition to Ukraine on the basis of Swiss neutrality. 

Above: Federal Palace of Switzerland, Bern

The defence ministry of Switzerland, initiated a report in May 2022 analyzing various military options, including increased cooperation and joint military exercises with NATO.

A public opinion poll from March 2022 found that 27% of those surveyed supported Switzerland joining NATO, while 67% were opposed.

Another from May 2022 indicated 33% of Swiss supported NATO membership for Switzerland.

56% supported increased ties with NATO.

Above: Logo of NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)

Above: (in green) NATO members

Swiss neutrality has been questioned at times, notably regarding Switzerland’s role during the Second World War and the International Committee of the Red Cross, the looted Nazi gold (and later during Operation Gladio), its economic ties to the apartheid regime in South Africa, and more recently in the Crypto AG espionage case.

Above: Nazi gold

Above: Flag of South Africa

Operation Gladio is the codename for clandestine “stay behind” operations of armed resistance that were organized by the Western Union (WU)(1948 – 1954), and subsequently by NATO and the CIA, in collaboration with several European intelligence agencies.

Above: Flag of the Western Union (France, the UK, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands)

The operation was designed for a potential Warsaw Pact invasion and conquest of Europe.

Above: Logo of the Warsaw Pact (1955 – 1991)

Above: (in green) Members of the Warsaw Pact

Although Gladio specifically refers to the Italian branch of the NATO stay-behind organizations, “Operation Gladio” is used as an informal name for all of them.

Stay-behind operations were prepared in many NATO member countries, and some neutral countries.

Above: Flag of Italy

During the Cold War, some anti-Communist armed groups engaged in the harassment of left wing parties, torture, terrorist attacks, and massacres in countries such as Italy.

Above: The Cold War – (in blue) NATO versus (in red) Warsaw Pact – (1949 – 1990)

The role of the CIA and other intelligence organisations in Gladio — the extent of its activities during the Cold War era and any responsibility for terrorist attacks perpetrated in Italy during the “Years of Lead” (1968 – 1988) — is the subject of debate.

Above: Aftermath of the bombing at the Bologna railway station in August 1980 which killed 85 people, the deadliest event during the Years of Lead

In 1990, the European Parliament adopted a resolution alleging that military secret services in certain member states were involved in serious terrorism and crime, whether or not their superiors were aware.

The resolution also urged investigations by the judiciaries of the countries in which those armies operated, so that their modus operandi and actual extension would be revealed.

To date, only Italy, Switzerland and Belgium have had parliamentary inquiries into the matter.

The three inquiries reached differing conclusions as regarded different countries. 

Above: Logo of the European Parliament

Guido Salvini, a judge who worked in the Italian Massacres Commission, concluded that some right-wing terrorist organizations of the Years of Lead – La Fenice, National Vanguard and Ordine Nuovo – were the trench troops of a secret army, remotely controlled by exponents of the Italian state apparatus and linked to the CIA.

Salvini said that the CIA encouraged them to commit atrocities. 

Above: Guido Salvini

The Swiss inquiry found that British intelligence secretly cooperated with their army in an operation named P-26 and provided training in combat, communications, and sabotage.

It also discovered that P-26 not only would organize resistance in case of a Soviet invasion, but would also become active should the left succeed in achieving a parliamentary majority. 

Above: Carlo Schmid-Sutter, senator leading the Swiss inquiry

The Belgian inquiry could find no conclusive information on their army.

No links between them and terrorist attacks were found, and the inquiry noted that the Belgian secret services refused to provide the identity of agents, which could have eliminated all doubts. 

Above: Logo of the Belgian Secret Service

A 2000 Italian parliamentary report from the left wing coalition Gruppo Democratici di Sinistra l’Ulivo reported that terrorist massacres and bombings had been organised or promoted or supported by men inside Italian state institutions who were linked to American intelligence.

Above: Logo of the Olive Tree Coalition

The report also said the United States was guilty of promoting the strategy of terrorism. 

Above: Flag of the United States of America

Operation Gladio is also suspected to have been activated to counter existing left-wing parliamentary majorities in Europe.

The US State Department published a communiqué in January 2006 that stated claims the United States ordered, supported, or authorized terrorism by stay-behind units, and US-sponsored “false flag” operations are rehashed former Soviet disinformation based on documents that the Soviets forged.

Above: Flag of the Soviet Union (1922 – 1991)

The word gladio is the Italian form of gladius, a type of Roman short sword.

Above: Roman gladius

Crypto AG was a Swiss company specialising in communications and information security founded by Boris Hagelin in 1952.

The company was secretly purchased for US $5.75 million and jointly owned by the American CIA and West German Federal Intelligence Service (BND) from 1970 until about 1993, with the CIA continuing as sole owner until about 2018.

Above: Logo of the German Secret Service

The mission of breaking encrypted communication using a secretly owned company was known as “Operation Rubikon“.

Above: Operation Rubikon –
(dark green) Spying countries / (light green) Knowing countries / (red) Nations spied upon

With headquarters in Steinhausen, the company was a long-established manufacturer of encryption machines and a wide variety of cipher devices.

Above: Steinhausen, Canton Zug, Switzerland

The company had about 230 employees, had offices in Abidjan, Abu Dhabi, Buenos Aires, Kuala Lumpur, Muscat, Selsdon and Steinhausen, and did business throughout the world.

Above: Images of Abidjian, Ivory Coast

Above: Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

Above: Buenos Aires, Argentina

Above: Kuala Lumpar (KL), Malaysia

Above: Muscat, Oman

Above: Selsdon, London, England

The owners of Crypto AG were unknown, supposedly even to the managers of the firm.

They held their ownership through bearer shares.

The company has been criticized for selling backdoored products to benefit the American, British and German national signals intelligence agencies, the National Security Agency (NSA), the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) and the BND, respectively.

Above: British Intelligence

On 11 February 2020, the Washington Post, ZDF and SRF revealed that Crypto AG was secretly owned by the CIA in a highly classified partnership with West German intelligence, and the spy agencies could easily break the codes used to send encrypted messages.

Above: German TV broadcaster Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (2nd German Television)

Above: Logo of Swiss Radio and TV

The operation was known first by the code name “Thesaurus” and later “Rubicon“. 

According to a Swiss parliamentary investigation:

Swiss intelligence services were aware of and benefited from the Zug-based firm Crypto AG’s involvement in the US-led spying.”

Above: Swiss Defense Ministry, home of the Swiss Federal Intelligence Service, Bern

This is neutrality?

Honestly, my (albeit, amateur) opinion is that after the Swiss learned that waging war is more expensive than making wages from war, Swiss allegiance is as predictable as the direction of an airport’s wind sock – everything depends on which way the winds of change are blowing and what can generate the most profit.

Granted that war is truly something to be avoided, but there are times in the affairs of men that action is needed even if that action may mean that your side might lose.

I view the Switzerland of today no differently than the Switzerland of yesterday:

Mercantile, mercenary, Machiavellian in its machinations.

Above: Niccolò Machiavelli (1469 – 1527)

How the conduct and conscience of a nation connect with Thurgau’s second city is reflected in the weather vane direction switch that Kreuzlingen has showed over the decade when I was a resident of nearby Landschlacht.

It seemed almost on a weekly basis that either the Thurgauer Zeitung, the Kreuzlinger Nachrichten or the Kreuzlinger Zeitung would write editorials complaining vehemently how the region was being invaded and dominated by Germans and other foreigners buying lakeside property and dominating local business in much the same manner as occurred before World War 1.

Then the coronavirus struck and the border between Kreuzlingen and Konstanz was sealed.

Suddenly, Kreuzlingers were singing a different tune – how wonderful the Germans were, how beneficial the open border was for both nations, how eager everyone was for international trade and relations to resume.

Above: Swiss – German border closed during the coronavirus pandemic

Say what one will about the Germans, but at least they, rightly or wrongly, seem far more honest and steadfast and transparent than their Swiss counterparts.

Above: The border between Germany (north) and Switzerland (south)

The fact that Kreuzlingen Abbey was deliberately torched twice suggests that distrusting the Swiss was not unique to the times nor to the residents of Konstanz.

Above: Basilica of St. Ulrich and St. Afra, Kreuzlingen

Kreuzlingen invariably reminds me of Gatineau, Québec, across the Ottawa River from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada’s federal capital.

Gatineau definitely benefits from Ottawa as a major employer of its residents and yet often the Québec nationalist sentiments flow more strongly through Gatineau thought than the River that separates the two cities.

Above: Gatineau, Québec, Canada

Kreuzlingen has a population (as of December 2020) of 22,390.

As of 2008, 48.1% of the population are foreign nationals. 

Over the last 10 years (1997 – 2007) the population has changed at a rate of 2.2%.

Most of the population (as of 2000) speaks German (79.7%), Italian (5.2%) and Albanian (3.8%).

In all my visits to Kreuzlingen I have heard and spoken only German.

Above: Kreuzlingen

At first glance the casual observer might wonder why the Germans would move to Kreuzlingen when almost everything in Switzerland is far more expensive than is found in Germany.

But it seems for many professions working conditions are better in the Confederation than in the Republic.

This was the case for my wife’s profession.

The opposite was true for mine.

I reckon the next question should be whether Kreuzlingen is worth visiting at all.

Here is what Kreuzlingen has to offer the tourist:

  • Five churches:

Above: St. Peter’s, Kurzrickenbach, Kreuzlingen

Above: Holy Cross Chapel, Bernrain, Kreuzlingen

Above: St. Ulrich and St. Afra Church (includes a museum), Kreuzlingen

Above: Evangelical Church, Egelshofen, Kreuzlingen

Above: St. Stephen Roman Catholic Church, Kreuzlingen

  • Ten castles:

Above: Ebersberg Castle, Kreuzlingen

Above: Brunegg Castle, Kreuzlingen

Above: Girsberg Castle

Above: Römerburg Castle, Kreuzlingen

Above: Gaissberg Castle, Kreuzlingen

Above: Seeburg Castle, Kreuzlingen

Above: Bernegg Castle, Emmishofen, Kreuzlingen

Above: Irsee Castle, Kreuzlingen

Above: Felsenburg Castle, Kreuzlingen

Above: Felsenschlössli Castle, Kreuzlingen

Above: Rosenegg Castle and Museum, Kreuzlingen

  • Museums:

Above: Maritime Museum (Seemuseum), Kreuzlingen

Above: Border exhibit, Rosenegg Museum, Kreuzlingen

Above: Dolls, Puppenmuseum, Schloss Girsberg, Kreuzlingen

  • Two Stölpersteine (stumbling blocks) found on Schläferstrasse in memory of those who were persecuted by the Nationalist Socialist Party

At Schäflerstrasse 11:

Ernst Bärtschi (1903 – 1983) was born in Tuttlingen, Germany. 

He was a Swiss citizen, like his father, a shoemaker from Dulliken in canton Solothurn, who worked in Germany building the Black Forest Railway and married a woman from Tuttlingen.

Ernst Bärtschi and his German friends Karl Durst and Andreas Fleig smuggled political pamphlets and brochures from 1933 onwards. 

Later he helped countless emigrants to flee to Switzerland. 

In 1938, he and his comrades-in-arms fell into a Gestapo trap and were sentenced to 13 years in prison. 

Shortly before the end of the war he was liberated by the Americans.

Bärtschi died in Scherzingen in canton Thurgau.

At Schäflerstrasse 7:

Andreas Fleig (1884 – 1971) was born in Sulz an der Lahr, Germany. 

His parents were the carpenter Nikolaus Fleig and his wife Elisabeth. 

He had several siblings and also learned the carpenter’s trade. 

He moved to Konstanz, joined the German Woodworkers’ Association in 1904 and was a member of the SPD from 1910 to 1914. 

In 1912 he moved to the Thurgau community of Kreuzlingen and worked for Jonasch & Cie, which manufactured seating furniture. 

He married Wilhelmine Friedricke née Bleich and the couple had one son, Karl Andreas. 

During the First World War he served in the German army from 1915 to 1918, but did not return to the troops from a home leave in 1918 and stayed in Switzerland. 

In 1928, he bought a small house at Schäflerstrasse 7 in Kreuzlingen for around 15,000 francs. 

A local councilor described him as a:

Swabian of real buck and grain. 

Efficient at work and helpful in life.»

Fleig was a declared opponent of National Socialism and kept in touch with trade unionists and social democrats. 

As early as 1933 he was wanted by the Gestapo.

Together with his work colleagues and friends Josef Anselm and Karl Durst from Konstanz and his neighbor, the aluminum worker Hermann Ernst Bärtschi, he smuggled political brochures and magazines – such as Der Funke, afa Nachrichten or the Neue Vorwärts  – from Switzerland to Germany. 

He also worked with his friends as a courier for emigrant mail from Switzerland to Germany and also obtained border permits, which he used to steer persecuted officials of the German labour movement across the border. 

For example, he saved the SPD Reichstag deputy Hans Unterleitner, who was interned in the Dachau concentration camp from 1933 to 1935, and his family. 

When on 8 May 1938, together with Bärtschi and Durst, he tried to bring the persecuted trade union functionary Hans Lutz across the border, all three escape helpers were arrested. 

Under torture, Lutz had revealed all the names of the Funkentruppe

Also arrested were Josef Anselm, Paulina Gutjahr and Bruno W. Schlegel, the other members of the resistance group. 

On 12 October 1938, Fleig was sentenced to 15 years in prison by the People’s Court in Berlin.

On 7 November 1938, he was transferred to the Ludwigsburg penitentiary, where he remained imprisoned until 5 April 1945. 

As the Americans approached, he was transferred to the Landsberg / Lech penitentiary, where he was released on 28 May 1945. 

During his imprisonment, Fleig suffered permanent damage to his health, heart muscle weakness, neuralgic-rheumatic complaints and a painful ear condition.

In 1945 Fleig first went to Konstanz, then to his hometown of Sulz, and finally to Dübendorf near Zürich, where his son worked. 

He later moved to Esslingen am Neckar near Stuttgart and then back to his hometown of Sulz in the mid-1950s. 

His application for compensation was answered by the Baden Ministry of Finance on 28 July 1951 as follows:

The application has been rejected. 

This also eliminates recognition as a victim of National Socialism”. 

He was only able to enforce his claims with the help of a lawyer. 

Andreas Fleig died in Sulz an der Lahr. 

Every summer, an international dance festival, the Bodensee Salsa Festival, takes place in the Dreispitz sports and culture center with salsa, kizomba , bachata, hip-hop, tango and dance workshops.

Theatrical performances take place irregularly in the “Theater an der Grenz“, near the Seeburg and on the Girsberg.

Every year on the second weekend in August, together with the German city of Konstanz, the Fantastical / Seenachtfest, with fireworks, takes place, attracting 50,000 visitors from the region (and far beyond).

In 2002, Switzerland’s second planetarium went into operation with the Kreuzlingen Planetarium, built right next to the observatory that opened in 1976 above the city. 

Two planet paths, each six kilometers long, end at the Planetarium. 

The Planet Trail South comes from the Siegershausen train station, the Planet Trail North from the Bodensee Therme Konstanz.

FC Kreuzlingen, founded in 1905, has been playing in the 5th highest division in football, the 2nd interregional league, since 2013. 

The stadium on Konstanzerstrasse (“borderland stadium“), (1931 – 1959) was awarded the fan prize (football memory of the year) by the German Academy for Football Culture in 2017. 

Since 2019, AS Calcio Kreuzlingen has also played interregionally in the 2nd division, both Kreuzlingen clubs are in the same group. 

AS Calcio plays their home games at the Döbeli sports facility.

The local swimming club (founded 1926) offers swimming, swimming school and water polo. 

Ice hockey has been played by the EHC Kreuzlingen – Konstanz team since 1956. 

The EHC plays in the Bodensee Arena, which was the venue for the 2011 MLP Nations Cup.

Monday night in-line skating has been held in Kreuzlingen since 2005, weather permitting.

The ITF Kreuzlingen has hosted an international tennis tournament for women every year since 2013.

In 2006, the Dreispitz sports and cultural centre was opened northeast of Bärenplatz.

Now clearly there have been more fine individuals resident or native Kreuzlingers than the aforementioned Bärtschi and Flieg (and as well some scoundrels of notoriety):

Above: Coat of arms of Kreuzlingen

August Gremli (1833 – 1899), son of the district doctor Johannes Gremli, studied medicine in Berlin and München (Munich) and then completed an apprenticeship as a pharmacist in Karlsruhe. 

From 1876 he worked as curator in Émile Burnat’s herbarium in Nant near Vevey. 

From 1899 he lived again in Kreuzlingen.

He published several works on flora in Switzerland, his main work Exkursionsflora der Schweiz in 1867. 

With Burnat he published several essays on the flora of the Maritime Alps.

Together with the pharmacist Johannes Schalch, Gremli discovered the varied flora, the roses and the orchids of the Wangental near Schaffhausen.

I read of men like Gremli and I find myself wondering:

What must it be like to see nature in the manner that naturalists and botanists do?

Rarely am I envious of those I call “friend” but my Irish pal Hugh Morris, presently lecturing in Vienna (Wien), is one such individual who can see trees and plants in this way.

A mere stroll with Hugh is an education in itself.

Above: Hugh Morris, the man, the legend

Enrique Conrado Rébsamen ( Heinrich Konrad Rebsamen) (1857 – 1904) was a Swiss-Mexican educator whose reforms and ideas significantly influenced the educational system in Mexico.

Enrique Conrado Rébsamen was born in Kreuzlingen as the eldest child of the couple Johann Ulrich and Katharina Rebsamen (née Egloff). 

As a farmer’s son, his father attended the teacher training college in Küsnacht and, after studying theology and spending time abroad, worked from 1854 to 1897 as director of the teacher training college in Kreuzlingen. 

Above: Küsnacht, 1905

At the same time, Johann Ulrich served as secondary school inspector and educational councilor, between 1866 and 1874 as the editor of Bildung Schweiz (the Swiss teachers’ newspaper), and until 1894 as a member of the central committee of the Swiss Teachers’ Association. 

Throughout his life, Johann Ulrich implemented the ideas of Ignaz Thomas Scherr and his concept of scientific teacher training.

As a teacher myself, I cannot resist speaking of Ignaz Scherr…..

Above: Ignaz Thomas Scherr

Ignaz Thomas Scherr (1801 – 1870) was a Swiss pedagogue, pioneer of the Zürich elementary school system and author of numerous textbooks and pedagogical writings.

Thomas Scherr was the son of the teacher Franz Scherr and his wife Cäcilie, née Nüding. 

Thomas also became a teacher and after 1818 devoted himself particularly to the education of the deaf. 

After a short period as an elementary teacher, Scherr was employed in Gmünd in 1821 as a teacher for the deaf and blind. 

Above: Schwäbisch Gmund, Germany

In 1825 he was called to Zürich to take over the management of the institute for the blind there. 

Scherr founded an institution for the deaf and mute and connected it with the Institute for the Blind. 

Both institutions showed significant successes under his leadership. 

In addition to his work as director and teacher at both institutes, Scherr dealt with general pedagogical questions and with the reform of the Zürich elementary school system.

Textbooks and syllabuses, which he published in 1830, made his name more widely known. 

After converting to the Reformed faith and marrying a woman from Zürich, Scherr was naturalized in 1831. 

In the same year he was elected to the canton’s educational council, where he took part in elementary school reform. 

The drafting of a new elementary school law was entrusted to him.

Above: Coat of arms of Zürich

In 1832, the post of director of the newly founded teachers’ college in Küsnacht was advertised. 

The 31-year-old Scherr was elected for life by the Zürich government council by twelve votes to one. 

Scherr had not applied. 

He feared, unjustly, that he had messed things up with the Küsnachters because he had previously advocated Greifensee as the seat of the seminary. 

Scherr and his family moved into an apartment in the “zur Traube” building on Wiltisgasse. 

Space for teacher training was found in the Seehof building (today the CG Jung Institute) on the Zürichsee (Lake Zürich).

Two rooms were available on the ground floor and two on the first floor for teaching.

Above: Seehof, Küsnacht

The pedagogical movement quickly spread across the entire canton. 

Scherr developed an activity that can hardly be understood today. 

He taught most of the subjects himself, took care of the management business, offered further training courses for teachers, wrote pedagogical writings, visited village schools throughout the canton on foot and was also still a member of the cantonal education council.

Above: Scherr (45) –
The elementary school should educate the children of all classes according to the same principles as mentally active, civilly useful and morally religious people.

Scherr writes:

The life and hustle and bustle as it currently prevails in Küsnacht cannot be described. 

Not a day goes by without inquisitive guests arriving.

Every day that a village school is on vacation, the teacher rushes to the seminary to get instruction. 

I could give 6-10 hours of teaching during the day, then continue at night on organizational work and pedagogical writings until the next day’s time, and in the morning bright and happy begin the cycle again. 

Or I could hurry on foot to the meeting of the Education Council in Zurich late in the evening in stormy and rainy weather and, after a laborious journey home, correct the written essay. 

Those were the best days of my life. 

I felt the power and strength of embracing a creative idea.»

The Küsnacht seminar was considered the most exemplary and best conducted in all of Switzerland. 

In the spring of 1834, the seminary moved to the main building of the former commandery of the Johanniter (Order of St. John), which had become vacant the year before. 

Scherr was able to purchase the “Seehof” privately in 1837.

Above: Flag of the Order of St. John

In his position as seminar director, Scherr led and reformed almost completely and alone the elementary school system under his control. 

As much as he was successful and admired on the one hand, he was an enemy to the conservatives on the other.

The clergy, in particular, who had hitherto controlled the school, saw their authority threatened. 

They denounced him as:

A prophet endangering the true faith, whose liberal-tinged Christianity was being spread across the country by his disciples, and whose new teaching materials could herald the new unbelief“. 

The threats against Scherr are said to have become so severe that when he hurried home on foot late at night from the Education Council meeting in Zürich, he was accompanied by an escort of strong seminarians. 

Above: Küsnacht High School

Scherr also encountered resistance from manufacturer circles because of a planned ban on night work for children.

On his visits to the village schools he had seen how many children slept during class because they had to work six hours a night in the factory. 

In response to Scherr’s report, the governing council actually issued an ordinance against the abuse of children in factory work. 

Scherr represented his pedagogical views in the “Pedagogical Observer” that he published.

Above: Newsboys, New York City, 23 February 1908

After the victory of the reactionary circles in the Züriputsch (a reactionary coup by the government of Canton Zürich) on 6 September 1839, Scherr fell victim to the reshuffles in the most important authorities, in which conservatives took seats. 

Above: Fighting on the parade ground between government troops and rebellious peasants during the 
Zürich Putsch in 1839.

Although elected for life, he was suspended from office in the summer of 1839 and given a third of his salary. 

By 1 November 1839, he had to vacate his office.

On 1 May 1840, he was dismissed. 

In an appeal to the government council against his unlawful dismissal, he was defeated.

On his dismissal, Scherr wrote:

«What have I done wrong?

I wanted to raise the elementary school to a free, independent institution, but the hatred of many clergymen punished me for that.

I wanted an elementary school that would produce a noble, reasonable people, so the aristocrats hate me.

I wanted to give even the poorest child a way to school and a happy youth, which is why the selfishness of some factory owners and the rudeness of unscrupulous parents haunt me.»

On 17 August 1840, a second pompous opening ceremony took place in Küsnacht, at which Scherr’s merits were not mentioned at all. 

Instead, there were protestations to the conservatives and to the church.

Above: My observations, aspirations and destinies,1840

In 1842 Scherr sold his “Seehof” to the Canton, which enabled him to buy the “Obere Hochstrasse” estate in Emmishofen near Kreuzlingen in Canton Thurgau.

Above: Emmishofen

In 1843, together with his younger brother Johann, he opened a private institute for the deaf and mute on the “Sonnenberg” in Winterthur, which he had bought in 1840 and as a preparatory college for boys’ college studies. 

Since the conditions in the canton of Zürich had meanwhile changed in favour of a freer teaching system, Scherr was able to continue working on the realization of his pedagogical ideas there until his death. 

In Winterthur he gave lectures on German literature, taught revolutionary history in French and taught German to adults. 

There he also received a thank-you address signed by 4,763 canton citizens and a golden commemorative coin. 

Above: Old Town Winterthur

Scherr’s final years were shaped on the one hand by long journeys through Europe, numerous correspondence with friends and visits to schools and homes, on the other hand overshadowed by an ear problem that made him hard of hearing. 

Thomas Scherr died of a heart attack in 1870. 

A street in Küsnacht and a primary school in District 6 in Zürich are named after him.

Above: Thomas Scherr Strasse, Küsnacht

Katharina Rebsamen-Egloff was also highly educated and the daughter of a government councilor and colonel in the Swiss army.

Between 1874 and 1876, Enrique C. Rébsamen attended the teacher training college in Kreuzlingen. 

Above: Pädagogische Maturitätsschule Kreuzlingen

He then completed his studies in Lausanne and Zürich before serving as director of the grammar school in Lichtenfels until 1882.

During this time he made friends with various intellectuals. 

Above: Lichtenfels, the basket town

One of them, the explorer and writer Carl von Gagern, gave Rébsamen his essay Quetzalcoatl to read. 

According to tradition, Rébsamen was initially shocked to read it, but in 1883 he decided to get to know Mexico better.

In Mexico, Rébsamen initially took over the education of a merchant’s children. 

In Mexico City (Ciudad de México), Rébsamen befriended contemporary figures, such as author and politician Ignacio Manuel Altamirano.

Above: Images of Ciudad de México, Mexico

Ignacio Manuel Altamirano Basilio (1834 – 1893) was a Mexican radical liberal writer, journalist, teacher and politician.

He wrote Clemencia (1869), which is often considered to be the first modern Mexican novel.

A great defender of liberalism, he took part in the Ayutla Revolution in 1854 against Santanismo, later in the Reform War and fought against the French invasion in 1863.

After this period of military conflicts, Altamirano dedicated himself to teaching, working as a teacher at the National Preparatory School, at the Higher School of Commerce and Administration, and at the National School of Teachers.

He also worked in the press, where, together with Guillermo Prieto and Ignacio Ramirez, he founded the El Correo de México, and, with Gonzalo A. Esteva, the literary magazine El Renacimiento, in which writers of all literary, ideological and political tendencies collaborate, which had among its main objectives to provoke the resurgence of Mexican letters and promote the notion of national unity and identity.

He laid the foundations for free, secular and compulsory primary education. 

He founded the Liceo de Puebla and the Escuela Normal de Profesores de México and wrote several highly successful books in his time, in which he cultivated different styles and literary genres. 

Critical studies of him were published in literary magazines in Mexico. 

His speeches have also been published. 

Altamirano loved the legends, customs and descriptions of the landscapes of Mexico. 

In 1867, he began to stand out and oriented his literature towards the affirmation of national values, also serving as a literary historian and critic. 

On the centenary of his birth, his remains were deposited in the Rotunda of Illustrious Persons in Mexico City. 

The Ignacio Manuel Altamirano medal was created in order to reward 50 years of teaching work.

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Above: Ignàcio Manuel Altamirano

As a result, Mexican President Porfinio Díaz became aware of Rébsamen. 

Above: Porfirio Diaz (1830 – 1915)

He recommended him to the then governor of Veracruz, Juan de la Luz Enriquez, who was promoting educational projects in the state at the same time.

In 1886, Rébsamen founded the Escuela Normal, the teachers’ college in Xalapa, the capital of the state of Veracruz.

Above: Coat of arms of Veracruz

He followed the pattern of the school of the German Enrique Laubscher in Orizaba. 

Above: Enrique Laubscher

Rébsamen’s ideas and methods were published by Abraham Castellanos under the title Pedagogía Rébsamen (Rébsamen Pedagogy).

In 1889, Rébsamen founded the magazine called México Intelectual.

From 1891, at the request of President Diaz, the reorganization of public schools was extended to other places. 

Rébsamen personally worked in Oaxaca, Jalisco and Guanajuato. 

In seven other educational institutions, teachers trained by him passed on the new ideas. 

In 1900, 45 educational institutions were already working according to his methods. 

At the same time, Rébsamen published numerous writings, such as “Method of Writing and Reading” in 1899 , which was sold in four million copies by 1929.

Rébsamen died in Xalapa in April 1904 .

Above: Images of Xalapa, Mexico

The Mexican teacher training is still based in many parts on the work of Rébsamen. 

He founded the regulated teacher training in Mexico and promoted the local elementary school system. 

Rébsamen also drafted legal texts that defined primary education throughout the state in its new form. 

To this day, Rébsamen is recognized in numerous public places.

  • The teacher seminar he founded in Veracruz bears his name
  • Various streets in Mexico bear Rébsamen’s name, including one of the main streets in Xalapa and another in Mexico City’s Colonia Valle district
  • Numerous schools in Mexico are named after Rébsamen
  • In Switzerland, Rébsamen is commemorated with a commemorative plaque in the southern stairwell of the old building of the Kreuzlingen pedagogical middle school

Above: Escuela Rébsamen in Xalapa

Rébsamen is proof positive that someone, something, good can come out of Kreuzlingen.

Edgar Steiger (1858 – 1919) was a German-Swiss writer and journalist.

Edgar Steiger was born in Kreuzlingen as the 12th child of a renowned evangelical pastor. 

Under these conditions, his path in church service seemed already mapped out. 

After graduating from the Heinrich Suso Gymnasium (high school) in Konstanz in 1877, he began his theological studies at the University of Basel. 

Above: Suso Gymnasium, Konstanz, Germany

He soon switched to the philosophical faculty.

When the pressure of expectations from his strictly conservative, theologically oriented family became too great for the gifted man, he fled to Leipzig in 1879 without their knowledge. 

At the University of Leipzig, freer study awaited him. 

However, in 1883, Steiger finally broke off his studies.

From 1884 he tried his hand as a freelance writer and theater critic. 

He became an employee of critical literary magazines that dealt with the newly emerging literature of naturalism (the precise observation of society and nature and the depiction of current problems of the time). 

Steiger’s first writing on this was published in 1889 under the title The struggle for the new seal.

He had a combative nature and found a home in the young social democracy. 

Steiger became acquainted with leaders of the German Social Democratic Party. 

Above: Logo of the German Social Democratic Party

Through his one-year activity in 1893/1894 as assistant editor of the Vorwärts in Basel, he was also in contact with local Social Democrats. 

Back in Leipzig, Steiger became editor of the features section of the Leipziger Volkszeitung in 1895, where he wrote critical articles on political issues for many years under the pseudonym Cri-Cri.  

In 1896 he became editor of the Neue Welt, the culturally oriented Sunday supplement for the social democratic newspaper. 

Shortly afterwards he had to deal with the public prosecutor’s office, because of a novella published in the Neue Welt, charged with blasphemy.

Above: Banner of Die Neue Welt (1876 – 1919)

Steiger was accused in 1896 as the responsible editor in the “Nazarene Trial” and sentenced in March 1897 to four and a half months in prison in Zwickau. 

Above: Zwickau, Germany

Steiger used this time to write his extensive, highly acclaimed work on the dramatic literature of naturalism: 

The Becoming of the New Drama.

Steiger left Leipzig in March 1898 to settle in München (Munich), the city that promised writers at the time freer creativity compared to other major cities. 

Above: München (Munich), Bayern (Bavaria), Deutschland (Germany)

There he became a busy contributor, particularly to the renowned journals Jugend and Simplicissimus

Above: Copy of Jugend (Youth) (1896 – 1940)

By the time he died, he had written more than 400 texts for the latter magazine, as one of their four “house poets“.

Above: First edition of Simplicissimus (1896 – 1944)

As a theatre reviewer, he worked for the daily newspapers Münchner Neueste NachrichtenHamburger Fremdenblatt, Berlin’s Der Tag, and others, as well as for the cultural magazines Münchner SalonblattFreistattDas literarische Echo, and many more.

Through his work in Munich’s cultural life, he was in close contact with the literary and theatre world.

Above: Coat of arms of Munich

During the First World War, Steiger’s collection of poems, Weltwirbel, was published. 

During this time he increasingly turned to social democratic newspapers, such as the daily newspapers Münchener Post and the Frankfurter Zeitung, as well as the magazines Die Glocke and, after the end of the war, Die Neue Zeit.

The situation for journalists deteriorated to such an extent – also due to the shortage of paper – that Steiger, who had been a member of the “Protection Association of German Writers” (SDS) since 1913, was only able to achieve a slight improvement in the situation with his fight for higher line fees. 

War, impoverishment and hunger exhausted Edgar Steiger’s vitality. 

He died of acute pneumonia in 1919.

Ludwig Binswanger (1881 – 1966) was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst.

He is probably the best-known offspring of the widespread Swiss psychiatrist family Binswanger. 

He was one of the leading intellectual personalities in his country early on and is considered the founder of Daseinsanalyse, a combination of psychoanalysis and existential philosophy, which represented an important depth psychological doctrine, especially after the Second World War.

As a result, Ludwig Binswanger found a permanent place in the history of psychiatry in the 20th century.

For 45 years he ran the Bellevue Sanatorium in Kreuzlingen, founded by his namesake grandfather in 1857, through which he became internationally known.

Above: Ludwig Binswanger

Ludwig Binswanger was the first son of Robert Binswanger, under whose direction the sanatorium had already gained a reputation throughout Europe. 

In line with family tradition, he grew up in close contact with the patients at the clinic, while the family itself had a keen interest in philosophy, history, literature, art and music that went far beyond that .

Personally, he was guided by his father’s principle of not being attached to any scientific “school” or dogma, in order to remain open and free from ideological and scientific ties. 

The Binswangers also took a liberal view early on in the treatment of the mentally ill, while on the other hand they showed great respect and deep understanding for the individuality of the sick. 

In Bellevue, Binswanger was interested in advances in psychiatry, particularly in Freud’s psychoanalysis, but critically examining them while preserving his own thinking and judgment.

Above: Sanatorium Bellevue, Kreuzlingen

At Brunegg Castle, Ludwig Binswanger received private lessons from the age of four, then he came to the seminar training school. 

He spent the first years of high school at the canton school in Schaffhausen, later he switched to the high school in Konstanz – it was an excellent school that gave him the intellectual and especially the scientific foundations of his education.

Above: Brunegg Castle, Emmishofen, Kreuzlingen

His medical training began in 1900. 

He studied three semesters in Lausanne, four semesters in Zürich, then two semesters in Heidelberg, and then another five semesters in Zürich.

In 1906, he passed his medical state examination in Zürich. 

Above: Logo of the University of Zürich

After completing his doctorate, he spent a year as an assistant at the Burgholzli University Clinic in Zürich, which was headed by Eugen Bleuler. 

Above: Eugen Bleuler (1857 – 1939)

The senior physician was Carl Gustav Jung, with whom Binswanger wrote his doctoral thesis The psychogalvanic reflex phenomenon in the association experiment

Jung drew Ludwig Binswanger’s attention to psychoanalysis. 

At that time, Bleuler and Jung were trying to incorporate psychoanalysis into psychiatry.

Above: Carl Jung (1875 – 1961)

Ludwig Binswanger dealt intensively with the psychoanalysis of Sigmund Freud at the Burgholzli. 

He owed his earliest contact with Freud to Jung. 

They worked on an analysis of the connection between ideas and effects. 

Above: Klinik Burghölzli, Zürich

In 1907, Binswanger and Jung travelled to see Freud in Vienna to discuss their findings with him.

A lifelong friendship with growing intimacy developed between Freud, who was 25 years his senior, and Binswanger. 

Their correspondence from 1908 to 1938 shows a fascinating discussion of different scientific views. 

Freud admired Binswanger’s erudition, the breadth of his intellectual horizon, his modesty and tact.

Various trips to Vienna and a return visit by Freud to Kreuzlingen at Pentecost in 1912 established a friendship between the two that lasted until Freud’s death in 1939, although they had fundamentally different views on theory.

Freud hoped that Binswanger would soon play a dual role as a mediator between psychoanalysis and the “Zürichers” (the analysts around Bleuler and Jung) on ​​the one hand and clinical psychiatry on the other.

However, a single dissenting vote by Binswanger in 1914 could not prevent the “Zürcher” from leaving the Psychoanalytic Association. 

For his part, Binswanger demonstratively joined the Vienna group and wrote to Freud:

I prefer this group because by joining it I think I can best document my adoration and admiration for you and my attachment.

Above: Sigmund Freud (1856 – 1939)

Another year followed in 1907/1908 as an assistant doctor with his uncle Otto Binswanger at the psychiatric clinic in Jena. 

Above: Otto Binswanger (1852 – 1929)

Above: Modern Jena, Germany

After an educational trip to Paris, England and Scotland, Binswanger joined his father Robert in Bellevue as an assistant doctor in 1908.

Above: Robert Binswanger (1850 – 1910)

That same year he married Hertha Buchenberger, whom he had met in Jena. 

She was the daughter of the Baden Minister of Finance. 

Having broken out of the narrow prejudices of her time, she had taken up the nursing profession, which was then despised and frowned upon in the upper circles. 

It was a lucky choice that Binswanger had made: 

A cultivated, sparkling, noble and noble woman entered his world, who understood him deeply, served the sick in a selfless way and accompanied him as the most loyal, understanding companion on his often not easy journey. 

Binswanger had a total of six children with his wife.

Above: Bellevue Sanatorium, Kreuzlingen

As early as 1911, the barely 30-year-old Ludwig took over the management of the Bellevue after the sudden death of his father. 

His brother Otto was responsible for the commercial and economic division of the company.

Above: Bellevue Sanatorium, Kreuzlingen

A day as director of the Bellevue:

  • the medical conference began at eight in the morning
  • the medical rounds lasted from nine to noon 
  • the doctors, their wives and the patients were brought together at lunchtime
  • at three o’clock in the afternoon the psychotherapeutic work followed
  • in the evening after seven o’clock the doctors and patients gathered for dinner together
  • after which one sat together with them and could then devote oneself to scientific reading

On Friday afternoon, Binswanger retired to Brunegg to rest thoroughly from this strict “being-there-for-the-others” attitude; 

Saturday and Sunday permitted one’s own scientific work. 

The family had to be neglected in this service, but his grandfather had already introduced the motto:

First come the sick.

Above: Brunegg Castle, Emmishofen, Kreuzlingen

In 1920 he gave a paper at the Hague International Congress of Psychoanalysis entitled “Psychoanalysis and Clinical Psychiatry“. 

Two years later, Binswanger’s main work from the early phase, Introduction to the problems of general psychology, appeared.

In the interwar period, Binswanger was busy giving lectures. 

In 1922, for example, he gave a lecture on “On Phenomenology” in Burgholzli, in which he dealt with the importance of Husserl’s phenomenology for psychopathology. 

Phenomenology is a philosophical trend whose representatives see the origin of knowledge gain in immediately given appearances, the phenomena.

In the 1920s, philosophers, writers and artists often met at Bellevue.

Thanks to Ludwig’s diverse contacts, the Bellevue became a center of European intellectual life. 

Binswanger’s extensive correspondence and the Kreuzlingen guest book, which lists artists and scientists of European standing, bear witness to this:

  • Sigmund Freud
  • Edmund Husserl 
  • Max Scheler
  • Martin Heidegger
  • Karl Löwith
  • Leopold Ziegler
  • Martin Buber
  • Werner Bergengruen
  • Leonhard Frank
  • Rudolf Alexander Schröder
  • Edwin Fischer
  • Henry van de Velde
  • Aby Warburg
  • Julius Schaxel
  • Kurt Goldstein
  • Wilhelm Furtwängler
  • Emil Staiger

Other personalities visited Binswanger in Kreuzlingen.

Illustrious names were also among the patients at Bellevue: 

  • Alice von Battenberg (mother of Prince Philip, Prince Consort of Queen Elizabeth II)
  • Russian dancer Vaslav Nijinsky
  • actor Gustaf Gründgens
  • art historian Aby Warburg
  • psychologist Karl Duncker
  • artist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

Above: Portrait of Dr. Ludwig Binswanger, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

After ten years of work, Binswanger published his work Introduction to the Problems of General Psychology in 1922, which he dedicated to Bleuler and Freud.

Above: Introduction to the Problems of General Psychology

From 1925 to 1928 Ludwig Binswanger was President of the Swiss Association for Psychiatry.

In 1936, on the occasion of Freud’s 80th birthday, Ludwig Binswanger held one of the celebratory lectures in Vienna entitled “Freud’s conception of man in the light of anthropology“, in which he subjected Freud’s conception of man to a well-founded criticism. 

The University of Basel awarded him an honorary doctorate in 1941.

Just one year later, in 1942, Binswanger’s main work, Basic Forms and Knowledge of Human Being, was published. 

In it, Binswanger founded his own anthropology, which became known under the name “Daseinsanalyse“.

In 1947, the first of two anthologies of lectures and essays was published, the second appeared in 1955.

Binswanger resigned from his position in 1956 and handed over the management of the clinic to his son Wolfgang.

Above: Inside Bellevue

Binswanger continued his research and writing for a long time after he left Bellevue. 

He did not see his works as something finished, accomplished:

Everything is always in the process of becoming. 

Now that he was old, he could devote himself to writing at leisure. 

At that time it had to be wrested from the few weeks of vacation in Braunwald, on Bödele in Vorarlberg, at Wolfsberg Castle, and the meager weekend hours. 

Because the days belonged to the sick.

Above: Braunwald, Canton Glaurus, Switzerland

Above: Bödele Lake, Vorarlberg, Austria

Above: Wolfsberg Castle, Carinthia, Austria

Ludwig Binswanger wrote Three Forms of Failed Existence: Extravagance, eccentricity, mannerisms in 1956.

This work related psychiatric-depth-psychological thinking to an art-historical perspective. 

According to this, neurotic and schizophrenic experiences have many parallels in cultural and intellectual history:

The mentally ill person does not “invent” their illness themselves, but absorbs a great deal from the culture surrounding them.

In 1957, his schizophrenia studies were published in the book Schizophrenie, as was the anthology Der Mensch in der Psychiatrie

One of the rare awards for outstanding scientific achievements, the Kraepelin Medal, was presented to Binswanger in 1957.

Two years later he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Freiburg im Breisgau.

In 1960, the book Melancholie und Manie was published. 

In it, Binswanger turned to transcendental phenomenological thinking. 

Binswanger became an honorary senator of the Swiss Academy of Medical Sciences in Basel in 1961. 

In the book Wahn, which appeared in 1965, he dealt with the problem of delusion from a phenomenological and Daseinsanalytic point of view.

Above: Delusional

Ludwig Binswanger’s estate is in the Binswanger Archive of the University of Tübingen.

Ludwig Binswanger was primarily a scientist, more researcher than therapist, while he could rely on the cooperation of excellent resident physicians for his work in the clinic. 

This offered Binswanger the opportunity for extensive personal and academic contacts with many of the most renowned thinkers of his time.

Ludwig Binswanger rejected the possibility of an academic career. 

As a doctor, he always remained in close contact with psychiatric empiricism. 

The top priority for him was to methodically do justice to the vivid reality of sick people. 

For him, the philosophical and scientific currents of his time were primarily instruments for refining medical empiricism.

Binswanger rejected any formation of dogma. 

His reception of psychoanalysis was critical.

Above: Sanatorium Bellevue, Kreuzlingen

In search of a better understanding of the puzzling nature of psychosis and neurosis, Binswanger came across phenomenology. 

This doctrine says that a phenomenon is to be equated with the meaning and content of the experience of the respective person. 

Acts that give meaning and are filled with meaning and their subject matter make people human. 

The perceived phenomena remain both the starting point and the end point of scientific observation.

This is where Binswanger’s view differs in principle from Freud’s, psychoanalysis explores the unconscious behind the “façade” in depth psychology. 

In the end, phenomenology proved too narrow for Binswanger.

Ludwig Binswanger began to understand man in terms of his worldliness.

The new way of thinking about people and things revolutionized philosophy at the time.

Binswanger tried to clarify the relationship between science and philosophy in order to avoid confusion and mutual crossing of borders.

Ludwig Binswanger was enthusiastic about psychoanalysis. 

However, because of his psychopathological and psychiatric-clinical knowledge, conclusions and decisions, he was not satisfied with the limitations that psychoanalysis has. 

The general conditions of his clinic, which is far away from the university science operations, allowed him to gain his own knowledge in the context of the respective application of concretely required experiences and skills. 

Although the psychoanalytic method of treatment remained an indispensable tool for him, he distanced himself from the theoretical conclusions.

In an interlocking way of working, Ludwig Binswanger tried to combine knowledge from two different sources, psychoanalytical and philosophical, into a new theory. 

For him, theory is not, as in the natural sciences, a construction for the purpose of explaining an event. 

For him, theory becomes a methodological guide for the scientific understanding of these experiences, taken from the meaning and content of certain types of experience.

Ludwig Binswanger first named his field of research “phenomenological anthropology“. 

It was not until 1941 that he called it Daseinsanalyse.

It should not displace psychoanalysis, since they are two completely different ways of thinking. 

The basic psychoanalytic concern was even significantly promoted by the analysis of existence and has gained an important proximity to the reality of life.

Step by step, the founder of Daseinsanalyse demonstrated where and how the scientific way of thinking in the area of ​​human behavior falls short and misses what is specifically human in human existence. 

In doing so, he relied to a large extent on Heidegger’s deconstruction of Descartes’ basic idea- I think, therefore I am. – which had led to the subject-object split in the world, which Binswanger called the “cancer evil” of science.

Above: René Descartes (1596 – 1650)

Programmatically for the Daseinsanalyse, Ludwig Binswanger used Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel’s sentence:

Individuality is what its world as its own is“. 

Binswanger did not found a school, but integrated phenomenological, psychoanalytic and psychiatric points of view into an anthropology.

Above: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770 – 1831)

The existence analysis is a systematically practiced method in which doctor and patient are on the same level. 

It is the level of the dialogue about the structure of the entire world of the person concerned, in which the symptom becomes a structural element of his existence.

The patient should be allowed to speak, and he himself, it is not about the words about him. 

The mode of expression is the actual guide. 

It is about taking the verbal expression seriously, because this is the only way the doctor can gain greater clarity about what is to be perceived in the patient. 

This special communication between doctor and patient shows what is real and what should therefore become the basis of medical action. 

Through this form of relationship, Daseinsanalyse’s therapeutic effectiveness fell into its lap, so to speak.

Above: Ludwig Binswanger

The founder of Daseinsanalyse started from the necessity of a destiny bond with regard to the purely interpersonal relationship in the sense of genuine togetherness. 

The doctor has to consider a modification of the constitution of existence, this order of existence of the individual human being in his individual character. 

He can only do that if he gives up the medically learned objective observation standpoint in order to be able to participate in the existence of the other with a very special openness. 

In understanding and co-experiencing, he learns the essentials from the patient. 

He succeeds in finding out the “inner life story” of the patient.

The aim of the analysis of existence will always be to help the structure of the respective existence to its richest development.

The Sanatorium of Bellevue (1857 – 1980), which occupied part of the old monastery, played an important role in the history of Kreuzlingen.

In 1842, Ignaz Vanotti from Konstanz bought a large tract of land and built a residential and commercial building in 1843 to house the emigrant press of Bellevue, which had previously been located in Römerburg.

In 1857, Ludwig Binswanger, a psychiatrist from Münsterlingen, the grandfather of the aforementioned Ludwig Binswanger, acquired the property and opened a private sanatorium.

The clinic was very modern and remained in the control of the Binswanger family for nearly 120 years.

Important psychiatric advances, particularly under the founder’s grandson, also called Ludwig Binswanger, especially in the development of existential psychotherapy, were made at the sanatorium.

However, few of its buildings remain.

What remains of Bellevue can be seen from the Kreuzlingen Hauptbahnhof (main train station).

It is a reminder of that eternally elusive question:

Why am I here?

A person never goes to Kreuzlingen.

A person goes through Kreuzlingen en route to somewhere else.

But perhaps this is a mistake.

For life’s purpose should not be its final destination, but rather its moments on the journey.

We may not always enjoy where we are.

We may not always trust those we encounter there.

But life is either a blessing or a lesson.

Perhaps there is something Kreuzlingen has to teach.

Perhaps something positive can come from Kreuzlingen or Konya, Landschlacht or Lachute, Edmonton or Eskişehir, Rotterdam or Rome, or anywhere.

Places simply are.

It is us that give these places meaning.

Consider the court jester of the Middle Ages.

While considered merely to be a comedian, the jester was in a unique position to tell truth to power without being punished.

Back then, kings were absolute rulers – detached from the lives of their subjects (much like company CEOs can be clueless about the experience of their employees).

The jester’s job would be to play with the populace.

Then, having felt the pulse of the people, he would come back to court and tell the King the truth:

Your Highness, the people are peeved with the price of produce.

They are offended by the Queen’s coterie.

The Pope possesses more power than you.

Everyone is reading heretical literature.

Your stutter is the butt of many jokes and your butt is the topic over tea.

The King did not kill the jester.

In order to rule more wisely, the King needed the jester’s insights.

Today’s elected leaders have no better connection with real people (especially outside their borders) than those “divinely ordained” kings did centuries ago.

And this is where the traveller (as opposed to the tourist) plays the fool.

Our perspective differs from that of the locals, sometimes rightly, sometimes wrongly, but nevertheless the distinctiveness is important in offering a wider observation of common communities.

We see in a way the locals cannot.

That being said they see their world from their own viewpoint.

What is important is that everyone, everywhere has something to teach everyone else.

I think of my friends back at the Dublin.

I think of past friends who disappointed me by possessing the fatal flaw of being human and thus prone to error.

The danger has never been from the strange or the stranger, but rather from the familiar and beloved.

For it is those we love that expose our vulnerability, that can harm us in ways no mere stranger could imagine.

Those we trust can hurt us the most.

We have only today, only this moment.

The future may be something to be feared, but now is a gift.

That is why it is called the present.

There is a Kreuzlingen all around us.

It is the cross we all must carry.

How we choose to see it, what good can come from the experience, is what makes the difference in our existence.

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Steve Biddulph, Manhood / Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People / Ralph Waldo Emerson, Self-Reliance / Susan Griffith, Teaching English Abroad / Ronald Gross, The Independent Scholar’s Handbook / George Orwell, Down and Out in Paris and London / Rick Steeves, Travel as a Political Act

Canada Slim and the Pharmacy of the Soul

Eskişehir, Turkey, Monday 18 April 2022 AD (18 Nisan 5782 AM) (18 Ramadan 1443 AH) (18 Pasar 2022 CE)

Despite this being Easter Monday (Christian calendar), the 18th day of Nisan (Jewish Passover) and the 18th day of Ramadan, religion is not a divisive issue in this city.

Generally, some fast and others feast.

Some pray and others pass the time going about their lives as if this month is merely just one of twelve in the year.

Above: Praying hands, Albrecht Dürer

To know a person’s religion we need not listen to his profession of faith but must find his brand of tolerance.

Eric Hoffer (1902 – 1993)

It is easy to be dismissive of religion, the pomp and pagentry, the ceremony and sanctimony, the folks that violate the tenets of faith in the name of that faith.

It is easy to dismiss the possibility of God whose only true proof of existence is our inability to disprove His existence.

And yet despite the faithless, despite the hypocrisy of some, despite the death, deceit and destruction committed in His Name by those unrecognizable as believers despite the masks they wear, I cannot but acknowledge the true purpose of faith, the real reason for religion, which is encapsulated in one single solitary word:

Hope.

We hope that our lives have meaning.

We hope that the pain and sorrow and suffering may lead to dignity.

We hope that we are not alone in this valley of the shadow of death.

We hope that death has meaning beyond ourselves, in spite of ourselves.

We hope that those who harm and hurt and harass others will be meted that which they dealt.

We hope that the love we shared with others will sustain us, perhaps even beyond this mortal coil.

Of the three Abrahamic religions, Judaism offers an eternal Promised Land, Islam suggests that a good person leaves behind a legacy of continuing charity and an inheritance of knowledge and a testament of righteous offspring worthy of the name, and Christianity suggests that there is a promise of an afterlife and that resurrection beyond longevity is possible.

We hope our lives have meaning.

We hope our deaths can be faced with dignity and daring.

We hope that who we are was not for naught.

And for all its flaws, for all its phonies, for all its unclarity and uncertainty and a myriad of interpretations, religion, faith, in ourselves, in desperate quest of destinies too wonderful for dreams, faith gives us all the only thing that matters:

Hope.

When you’ve fallen on the highway
And you’re lying in the rain,
And they ask you how you’re doing
Of course you’ll say you can’t complain
If you’re squeezed for information,
That’s when you’ve got to play it dumb
You just say you’re out there waiting
For the miracle, for the miracle to come

Waiting for the Miracle“, Leonard Cohen (1934 – 2016)

I never want to be a man who steals hope.

That being said, how can anyone, such as I, sitting on the outside, possibly understand the deeper meaning of the reality of a religion if they have not personally lived it?

The answer, I have been assured by believers I have known, is personal.

Their moment of realization is beyond words.

Faith, by its very nature, is elusive.

Talk to me about the truth of religion and I will listen gladly.

Talk to me about the duty of religion and I will listen submissively.

But don’t come talking to me about the consolations of religion or I shall suspect that you don’t understand.

C. S. Lewis

Above: Clive Staples Lewis (1898 – 1963)

Here in Eskişehir, Turkey is celebrating Ramadan, a month of fasting, prayer, reflection and community.

In a religious life where faith, politics and culture are arguably more inextricably linked in any other religion, there are bound to be differences of opinion and controversial beliefs.

Essential truths can be either vaguely known, interpreted variously or just plain misunderstood.

Above: Halisi Cami (mosque), Eskişehir, Turkey

There is no reason to bring religion into it.

I think we ought to have as great a regard for religion as we can, so as to keep it out of as many things as possible.

Sean O’Casey

Above: Sean O’Casey (1880 – 1964)

The closest I have come to understanding faith in 2022 has been visits to St. Gallen, where today “half-assed Christians” (a term coined by a Catholic priest I once knew) will, for the first of only two annual visits to church – the other occasion being Christmas – will commemorate events two millennia past of a man who claimed to be the Son of God, preached and did all manner of miracles, was crucified as an enemy of the state, was resurrected and ascended to Heaven and will one day return to save the chosen few.

It is a nice story, difficult to prove, difficult to disprove.

It is a question of faith.

What do you choose to believe?

Above: Latin cross, a symbol of Christianity

It is in St. Gallen (among other places) where my faith – such as it is – finds its foundation, a harmony to my heart.

But this post is less a glorification of God as it is a monument to man, for much of the past decade found me working in St. Gallen and it is the people I have known there (and elsewhere) that have given me faith in humanity.

Perhaps the time has come to finally express my gratitude and to sing praises.

Above: Aerial view of St. Gallen, Switzerland

Sometimes I wonder if the manner in which Christianity was introduced to Switzerland is the reason why some Swiss view other faiths as so threatening to the fabric of Swiss life.

St. Gallen’s past may be a prime example of why the Swiss fear other religions following the examples of history.

Above: Flag of Switzerland

Religion to me has always been the wound, not the bandage.”

Dennis Potter

Above: Dennis Potter (1935 – 1994)

The main urban centre of eastern Switzerland, St. Gallen has been described as “a relaxed provincial city set amid rolling countryside between the Appenzell hills and the Lake of Constance (Bodensee), with a beautiful old quarter“.

I agree with this description save for one word:

Relaxed.

Above: Klosterviertel (cloister quarter), Altstadt (old city), St. Gallen, Switzerland

I lived in Switzerland for a decade and much of that period was spent working in St. Gallen either as a teacher or as a barista.

Neither position was relaxing.

Above: Panoramic view of St. Gallen

As the wife and I lived in Landschlacht, a mere 15 km from the German border, we were more likely to spend our free time in Konstanz due to its closer proximity and lower costs.

Above: Landschlacht, Switzerland

St. Gallen has meant, for the most part, work, work and more work.

This is not to say that I did not make any friends during my employment there nor would I say that there weren’t some moments when I, alone or accompanied by the wife, would travel to St. Gallen for leisure activities, such as theatres, restaurants and museums.

It is nonetheless a mistake to label St. Gallen as relaxed, for it is a Swiss city, and relaxing is not something at which the Swiss generally excel.

Above: St. Gallen

The centrepiece of St. Gallen is its extraordinarily lavish Baroque abbey, declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Above: Abbey Cathedral, St. Gallen

All the sweetness of religion is conveyed to the world by the hands of storytellers and image makers.

Without their fictions the truths of religion would for the multitude be neither intelligible nor even apprehensible.

Prophets would prophesy and the teachers teach in vain.

George Bernard Shaw

Above: George Bernard Shaw (1856 – 1950)

This has always struck me as an odd notion.

If God exists and is the Creator of all that is, why in Heaven’s name would He need to be celebrated in a lavish enclosure?

Nothing man can construct can ever compare with the majesty of nature.

If God exists then He cannot nor should not be contained with the confines of a cathedral or a Camii. (Turkish: mosque)

I have often said that within the confines of a city it is difficult to believe in God.

In the expanse of nature it is difficult to doubt that God doesn’t exist.

I think that lavish religious structures are never about glorifying God as much as they are for showing off the wealth of the community.

Do we build these magnificent temples for God’s glory?

Or for ours?

Above: Interior of the Abbey Cathedral

The Cathedral is impressive enough and serves as an ever present reminder that the city owes its name to the religious community that remains at its core.

This giant Baroque building is unmissable, its twin towers visible from most points.

Above: Kloster St. Gallen, 1769

Designed by Peter Thumb from Bregenz (Austria), it was completed in 1797 after just 12 years’ work.

Above: Peter Thumb (1681 – 1767)

Access is through the west door, although it is worth making your way around the church and looking at the outside from the enclosed Klosterhof (cloister yard), at the heart of the complex, where you can gaze up at the soaring east facade.

The interior is vast, a broad, brightly lit basilica with a triple-aisled nave and central cupola.

Although not especially high, the Cathedral has a sense of huge depth and breadth.

From the sandstone of the floor and the wood of the pews, fancy light-green stuccowork – characteristic of churches in the Konstanz region – draws your eye up the massive double-width pillars to the array of frescoes on the ceiling, which are almost entirely the work of one artist, Josef Wannenmacher.

The central cupola shows Paradise with the Holy Trinity, apostles and saints.

Above: Rotunda, Abbey Cathedral, St. Gallen

(“And the three men I admire the most

The Father, Son and the Holy Ghost

They took the last train for the coast

The day the music died“)

Don McLean

Details throughout the rest of the Cathedral are splendid:

  • the ornate choir screen
  • the richly-carved walnut-wood confessionals
  • the intricate choir stalls
  • at the back at the choir, the high altar flanked by black marble columns with gold trim

The south altar features a bell brought by Gall(us) on his 7th-century journey from Ireland.

Above: Inside the Abbey Cathedral, St. Gallen

Gall’s origin is a matter of dispute.

It is all a matter of what you choose to believe.

According to his 9th-century biographers in Reichenau, he was from Ireland and entered Europe as a companion of Columbanus (Columba).

Above: St. Peter and St. Paul Church, Reichenau Island, Germany

The Irish origin of the historical Gall was called into question by Gerrold Hilty (2001), who proposed it as more likely that he was from the Vosges or Alsace region.

Max Schär (2010) proposed that Gall may have been of Irish descent but born and raised in the Alsace.

Above: (in red) Location of the Alsace region, France

According to the 9th-century hagiographies, Gall as a young man went to study at Bangor Abbey.

The monastery at Bangor had become renowned throughout Europe as a great centre of Christian learning.

Above: Bangor Abbey, Northern Ireland

Studying in Bangor at the same time as Gall was Columbanus, who with 12 companions, set out about the year 589.

Gall and his companions established themselves with Columbanus at first at Luxeuil in Gaul.

Above: Bobbio Abbey (Italy) stained glass image of Columbanus (543 – 615)

Above: Cloister area, Luxeuil Abbey, France

In 610, Columbanus was exiled by leaders opposed to Christianity and fled with Gall to Alemannia. 

Due to dynastic conflicts between Theuderic II (587 – 613) and his brother Theudebert II (585 – 612), Columbanus lost support in the Frankish Empire and had to leave Luxeuil. 

The further missionary journey led the community around Columban from Metz up the Rhine and via Zürich and Tuggen finally via Arbon to Bregenz. 

Above: Metz, France

Above: Altstadt Zürich, Switzerland

Above: Tuggen, Canton Schwyz, Switzerland

In Bregenz, as in Arbon, they met a Christian community that had partially returned to paganism. 

Gall preached in the Alemannic language, in contrast to Columbanus, who did not speak it. 

Here, and before that in Tuggen, the religious people destroyed the statues of the local deities and threw them into the lake. 

As a result, these messengers of the faith antagonized some of the inhabitants, who complained to their Duke Gunzo. 

Two monks were killed after being ambushed.

(They were chasing a missing cow into the forest.)

The founding of a monastery in Bregenz failed and Columbanus traveled on to Bobbio in Italy in 612 to found a monastery at the invitation of the Lombard prince.

Above: Alemannia (orange) and Upper Burgundy (green), circa 1000 CE

Above: Bobbio, Italy

When Columbanus, Gall and their companions left Ireland for mainland Europe, they took with them learning and the written word.

Their effect on the historical record was significant as the books were painstakingly reproduced on vellum by monks across Europe.

Many of the Irish texts destroyed in Ireland during Viking raids were preserved in abbeys across the Channel.

Gall accompanied Columbanus on his voyage up the Rhine River to Bregenz, but when in 612 Columbanus travelled on to Italy from Bregenz, Gall had to remain behind due to illness and was nursed at Arbon.

Above: Columbanus and Gall on Lake Constance (Bodensee)

Above: Course of the Rhine River

Above: A view of modern Bregenz, Austria

Above: A view of modern Arbon, Switzerland

Gall remained in Alemannia, where, with several companions, he led the life of a hermit in the forests southwest of Lake Constance, near the source of the River Steinach.

Above: Steinach River, Mühlegg Gorge, St. Gallen

Cells were soon added for twelve monks whom Gall carefully instructed.

Gall was soon known in Switzerland as a powerful preacher.

When the See of Constance became vacant, the clergy who assembled to elect a new Bishop were unanimously in favour of Gall.

He, however, refused, pleading that the election of a stranger would be contrary to Church law.

Some time later, in the year 625, on the death of Eustasius, Abbott of Luxeuil, a monastery founded by Columbanus, members of that community were sent by the monks to request Gall to undertake the government of the monastery.

He refused to quit his life of solitude, and undertake any office of rank which might involve him in the cares of the world.

He was then an old man.

He died at the age of 95, circa 650, in Arbon.

His grave became a site of pilgrimage.

The supposed day of his death, 16 October, is still commemorated as Gallus Day.

Above: Gall, Tuggen coat of arms

From as early as the 9th century the fantastically embroidered Life of Saint Gallus was circulated.

Prominent was the story in which Gall delivered Fridiburga from a demon by which she was possessed.

Fridiburga was the betrothed of Sigibert III, King of the Franks, who had granted an estate at Arbon (which belonged to the royal treasury) to Gall so that he might found a monastery there.

Fridiburga was the daughter of the Alemannic Duke Gunzo. 

She was engaged to the Merovingian King Sigibert III (638 – 656), but she fell seriously ill shortly before the wedding. 

According to the Life of St. Gallus, Sigibert sent two bishops with rich gifts to Fridiburga to free her from the demon of illness, but in vain. 

Shortly afterwards, when Gall came to Überlingen, site of the Duke’s court, he healed Fridiburga. 

Above: Überlingen, Germany

She was then taken to Metz, where she was taken from the royal palace to the church of St. Stephen. 

On the advice of the bishops, Sigibert renounced his marriage to Fridiburga and then married Chimnechild in 646. 

Fridiburga lived as a nun in the Metz monastery of St. Peter, where she would became its abbess.

Above: Church of Saint Pierre aux Nonnains, Metz, France

Circa 612, Gall was, according to the lore, travelling south from the Bodensee into the forest.

Legend has it that Gall either fell over, or stumbled into, a briar patch.

After a long stay in Arbon, Gall decided in 612, together with the deacon Hiltibod of Arbon, to follow the Steinach River, which flows into Lake Constance

They moved along the stream into the Arbon forest – the whole area from Lake Constance to Appenzellerland was primeval forest at the time – and came to the waterfall at the Mühleggschlucht (mill slope canyon) gorge. 

Here Gall stumbled and fell into a thorn bush. 

He interpreted this as a divine sign to stay here. 

Above: Beginning of Mühleggschlucht Gorge near St. Georgen, Switzerland

Many depictions of Gall are therefore subtitled with the Latin Vulgate Bible verse:

Haec requies mea in saeculum saeculi.

Hic habitabo quoniam elegi eam.

(This is my resting place forever. 

I want to live here because I like it.)

Psalm 132: 14

Above: 8th century Vulgate Bible

Above: St. Gall and the founding of the monastery

Gall was sitting one evening warming his hands at a fire.

A bear emerged from the woods and charged.

The holy man rebuked the bear, so awed by his presence it stopped its attack and slunk off to the trees.

There it gathered firewood before returning to share the heat of the fire with Gall.

The legend says that for the rest of his days Gall was followed around by his companion the bear.

Images of Gall typically represent him standing with a bear.

Above: St. Gall with a bear

So either clumsiness or a trained bear led Gall to feel that he had received a sign from God – It’s nice that God has someone to communicate with. – and so chose the site to build his hermitage.

I guess nothing says security and sanctity more than accidental briar patches and firewood-fetching bears.

Above: Lyrics from “One of Us“, Joan Osborne

Afterwards, the people venerated Gall as a saint and prayed at his tomb for his intercession in times of danger.

After his death, a small church was erected, which developed into the Abbey of St. Gall, the nucleus of the Canton of St. Gallen.

The city of St. Gallen originated as an adjoining settlement of the Abbey.

Above: Plaque in honour of Gall, St. Gallen

Following Gall’s death, Charles Martel (688 – 741) had Othmar (689 – 759) appointed as custodian of St Gall’s relics.

Above: Charles Martel (688 – 741)

Othmar was of Alemannic descent, received his education in Rhaetia (Chur), was ordained priest, and for a time presided over a church in Rhaetia (Chur).

Above: Chur Cathedral

In 720 Waltram of Thurgau appointed Othmar superior over the cell of St. Gall and custodian of St Gall’s relics.

Othmar united into a monastery the monks that lived about the cell of St. Gall, according to the Rule of St. Columban, and became their first abbot.

Above: Collegiate Church of St. Gall and St. Othmar

He added a hospital and a school, which became the foundation upon which the famous Stiftsbibliothek (Monastery library) was built.

Above: The northwest wing of the monastery district from the outside – the Abbey Library is on the first and second floor

In 747, as a part of the reform movement of Church institutions in Alamannia, he introduced the Benedictine Rule, which was to remain in effect until the secularization and closure of the monastery in 1805.

Above: The oldest copy of the Rule of Saint Benedict, from the 8th century, Bodleian Library, Oxford, England

Othmar also provided for the needs of the surrounding community, building an almshouse as well as the first leprosarium (hospice for lepers) in Switzerland.

Above: Spinalonga, Crete, one of the last leper colonies in Europe, closed in 1957

When Carloman (713 – 754) renounced his throne in 747, he visited Othmar at St. Gall and gave him a letter to his brother Pepin (714 – 768), recommending Othmar and his monastery to the King’s liberality.

Othmar personally brought the letter to Pepin, and was kindly received.

Above: Charles Martel divides the realm between Pepin and Carloman

In 759, Counts Warin and Ruodhart tried to gain possession of some property belonging to St. Gall, Othmar fearlessly resisted their demands.

Hereupon they captured him while he was on a journey to Konstanz, and held him prisoner, first at the castle of Bodmann, then on the island of Werd in the Rhine River.

Above: Werd Island

At the latter place he died, after an imprisonment of six months, and was buried.

Above: Martyrdom of St. Othmar

Othmar’s cult began to spread soon after his death.

He is one of the most popular saints in Switzerland.

In 769 his body was transferred to the Monastery of St. Gall.

As the weather was very hot, when the men rowed his body across Lake Constance (Bodensee), they became extremely thirsty.

Legends say that the only barrel of wine they had left did not become empty, regardless of how much they drank.

Therefore, the wine barrel became one of Othmar’s attributes.

His cult was officially recognized in 864 by Bishop of Konstanz Solomon I (d. 871).

Above: Othmar of St. Gallen

Interesting side note connected with Solomon I:

In 847, his diocese was the first to be disturbed by the preachings of a false prophetess named Thiota.

Above: Cathedral of Konstanz, Germany

Thiota was a heretical Christian prophetess originally from Alemannia.

In 847 she began prophesying that the world would end that year.

Her story is known from the Annales Fuldenses which records that she disturbed the diocese of Solomon before arriving in Mainz.

A large number of men and women were persuaded by her “presumption” as well as even some clerics.

In fear, many gave her gifts and sought prayers.

Finally, the bishops of Gallica Belgica ordered her to attend a synod in St Alban’s Church in Mainz.

She was eventually forced to confess that she had only made up her predictions at the urging of a priest and for lucrative gain.

She was publicly flogged and stripped of her ministry, which the Fuldensian annalist says she had taken up “unreasonably against the customs of the Church.”

Shamed, she ceased to prophesy thereafter.

Above: 11th century Carolina copy Annales Fuldenses, Humanist Library, Schlettstadt, Alsace, France
The report is open for the year 855 with the earthquake in Mainz.

In 867 Othmar was solemnly entombed in the new church of St. Othmar at St. Gall.

He is represented in art as a Benedictine abbot, generally holding a little barrel in his hand, an allusion to the alleged miracle, that a barrel of Othmar never became empty, no matter how much he took from it to give to the poor.

Above: Statue of St. Othmar

Two monks of the Abbey of St Gall, Magnus von Füssen and Theodor, founded the monasteries in Füssen and Kempten in the Allgäu region.

Above: Statue of Magnus of Füssen

Above: St. Lawrence Church, Kempten Abbey, Allgäu, Bavaria, Germany

With the increase in the number of monks the Abbey grew stronger also economically.

Much land in Thurgau, Zürichgau, and in the rest of Alemannia as far as the Neckar River was transferred to the Abbey.

Above: St. Gallen Abbey

Under Abbot Waldo of Reichenau (740 – 814) copying of manuscripts was undertaken and a famous library was gathered.

Numerous Anglo-Saxon and Irish monks came to copy manuscripts here.

Above: Abbot Waldo of Reichenau meets Charlemagne

At Charlemagne’s (747 – 814) request, Pope Adrian I (700 – 795) sent distinguished chanters from Rome, who propagated the use of the Gregorian chant.

Above: 15th century miniature depicting Pope Adrian I greeting Charlemagne

In 744, the Alemannic nobleman Beata sold several properties to the Abbey in order to finance his journey to Rome.

Above: St. Peter’s Cathedral, Vatican City

In the 830s, under Abbot Gozbert (d. 850), Saint Gall became a cultural centre, as many still existing documents from his time affirm.

He paid special attention to the Abbey Library and had close ties to one of the main scribes there, Wolfcoz.

Above: Abbey Library

Wolfcoz I was a medieval scribe and painter of illuminated manuscripts, working in the scriptorium of the Abbey of Saint Gall.

He entered the monastery some time before 813.

Fourteen known documents by Wolfcoz’s hand were created between 816 and 822, including parts of the Wolfcoz Psalter and the Zürich Psalter.

In Wolfcoz’ time, the scriptorium of the Abbey entered a golden age, producing manuscripts of high quality and establishing the Abbey Library of Saint Gall as a centre of Alemannic German culture.

The Abbey Library still has three manuscripts penned by Wolfcoz. 

He developed the Allemanic minuscule and also the decoration of initials.

Above: Scribe in a scriptorium, Miracles de Notre Dame

Gozbert was the recipient (and employer?) of the Plan of Saint Gall, which was made around 820 in Reichenau.

How closely his monastery actually resembled this ideal plan is unknown. 

Above: The Carolingian monastery plan of St. Gallen is the oldest surviving architectural drawing in the West

The monastery was eventually freed from its dependence upon the Bishopric of Konstanz.

Above: Coat of arms of the Diocese of Konstanz

King Louis the Pious confirmed in 833 the immunity of the Abbey and allowed the monks the free choice of their abbot.

Above: King Louis / Ludwig the Pious (778 – 840)

In 854, finally, the Abbey of St Gall reached its full autonomy by King Louis the German (806 – 876) releasing the Abbey from the obligation to pay tithes to the Bishop of Konstanz.

Above: Louis the German (bottom) genuflecting at Christ on the cross

From this time until the 10th century, the Abbey flourished.

It was home to several famous scholars, including Notker of Liège (940 – 1008), Notker the Stammerer (840 – 912), Notker Labeo (950 – 1022), Tuotilo (850 – 915) and Hartker (who developed the antiphonal liturgical books (choir books) for the Abbey).

Above: Notker of Liège

Above: Notker the Stammerer

Above: Notker Labeo

Above: Copy of Tuotilo’s Cod. Sang. 53, Abbey Library, St. Gallen

Above: Printed antiphonary (ca. 1700), open to Vespers of Easter Sunday, Musée de l’Assistance Publique, Hôpitaux de Paris

During the 9th century a new, larger Church was built and the Library was expanded.

Manuscripts on a wide variety of topics were purchased by the Abbey and copies were made.

Over 400 manuscripts from this time have survived and are still in the Library today.

Above: Abbey Library

Emperor Louis the Pious (778 – 840) made the monastery an imperial institution.

Above: St. Gallen Abbey

In 926 the Magyars threatened the Abbey and the books had to be removed to Reichenau for safety.

Above: Hungarian invasions, 9th and 10th centuries CE

Not all the books were returned.

Above: Aerial view of Reichenau Island

Hungarian troops entered Swabia, as allies of the new Italian King, Hugh the Great (880 – 947), besieged Augsburg, and then occupied the Abbey of Saint Gallen, where they spared the life of the monk Heribald, whose accounts give a detailed description about their traditions and way of life. 

Above: Hugh the Great

Above: Town Hall Palace, Augsburg, Germany

The “Golden Age” of St. Gallen ended abruptly on 1 May 926, after travellers reported in the spring that the Hungarians were already advancing on their campaigns as far as Lake Constance. 

Since the dukes could not build up a joint defense in the divided East Frankish kingdom, they had nothing to oppose the plundering and pillaging gangs.

Above: Division of the Frankish Empire, 843

Abbot Engilbert decided to bring the students, the elderly and the sick to safety in the moated castle near Lindau, which belonged to the monastery.

Above: Lindau Island, Germany

Many of the writings were hidden in the friendly monastery of Reichenau.

The monks took themselves and the valuable cult objects to a refuge of safety in the Sitterswald. 

Above: Catholic Church, Sitterswald, Switzerland

At her express request, the hermit Wiborada was the only one left behind in the walled-up church of St. Mangen in the deserted town.

Above: St. Mangen Church, St. Gallen

From the Abbey the Magyars sent minor units to reconnoitre and plunder the surroundings.

When the Hungarians raided the city, they found nothing of value. 

They damaged buildings and altars and burned down the town’s wooden houses. 

The attackers also found Wiborada, but no entrance to their walled-up hermitage. 

Fire couldn’t harm her or the church, so the Hungarians uncovered the roof and killed her. 

The Hungarians did not dare to attack the monks’ refuge because of its inaccessible location. 

They were even attacked by the retreating monks. 

After the Hungarians left, the monks returned with the residents and rebuilt the damaged and burnt down houses. 

One of their units killed Wiborada who lived as an anchoress (female hermit) in a wood nearby.

Above: Church of St. Mangen

Wiborada was born to a wealthy noble family in Swabia.

When they invited the sick and poor into their home, Wiborada proved a capable nurse.

Her brother Hatto became a priest.

A pilgrimage to Rome influenced Hatto to decide to become a monk at the Abbey of Saint Gall, a decision which Wiborada supported.

After the death of their parents, Wiborada joined Hatto and became a Benedictine at the Abbey of Saint Gall.

Above: Portrayal of the young Ulrich with Wiborada

Wiborada became settled at the monastery and Hatto taught her Latin so that she could chant the Liturgy of the Hours.

There, she occupied herself by making Hatto’s clothes and helping to bind many of the books in the monastery library.

At this time, it appears that Wiborada was charged with some type of serious infraction or wrongdoing, and was subjected to the medieval practice of ordeal by fire to prove her innocence.

(Ordeal by fire was one form of torture.

The ordeal of fire typically required that the accused walk a certain distance, usually 9 feet (2.7 metres) or a certain number of paces, usually three, over red-hot ploughshares or holding a red-hot iron.

Innocence was sometimes established by a complete lack of injury, but it was more common for the wound to be bandaged and re-examined three days later by a priest, who would pronounce that God had intervened to heal it, or that it was merely festering — in which case the suspect would be exiled ot put to death.)

Above: After being accused of adultery Cunigunde of Luxembourg (975 – 104) proved her innocence by walking over red-hot ploughshares.

Although she was exonerated, the embarrassment probably influenced her next decision: withdrawing from the world and becoming an ascetic.

When she petitioned to become an anchoress, Solomon III, Bishop of Konstanz (r. 890 – 919), arranged for her to stay in a cell next to the Church of Saint George near the monastery, where she remained for four years before relocating to a cell adjoining the church of Magnus of Füssen in 891.

She became renowned for her austerity, and was said to have a gift of prophecy, both of which drew admirers and hopeful students.

Above: Wiborada with Solomon III, Bishop of Konstanz

One of these, a woman named Rachildis, whom Wiborada had cured of a disease, joined her as an anchoress.

Above: Healing of a sick person with the comb relic of Wiborada

A young student at St. Gall, Ulrich (890 – 973), is said to have visited Wiborada often.

Wiborda supposedly prophesied his elevation to the Episcopate of Augsburg.

(Ulrich was the first saint to be canonized not by a local authority but by the Pope.)

Above: Statue of Ulrich von Augsburg (890 – 973), St. Agatha Chapel, Disentis, Graubünden, Switzerland

In 925, Wiborada predicted a Hungarian invasion of her region.

Her warning allowed the priests and religious of St. Gall and St. Magnus to hide their books and wine and escape into caves in nearby hills. 

The most precious manuscripts were transferred to the monastery at Reichenau Island.

However, the main refuge castle for the monks and the Abbot was the Waldburg in the Sitterwood.

Abbot Engilbert urged Wiborada to escape to safety, but she refused to leave her cell.

On 8 May 926 the Magyar marauders reached St. Gall.

They burned down St. Magnus and broke into the roof of Wiborada’s cell.

Upon finding her kneeling in prayer, they clove her skull with a fokos (shepherd’s axe).

Above: Earliest representation of Wiborada

Her companion Rachildis was not killed, and lived another 21 years, during which her disease returned.

She spent the rest of her life learning patience through suffering.

Wiborada’s refusal to leave her cell and the part she played in saving the lives of the priests and religious of her convent have merited her the title of martyr.

Above: The martyrdom of Wiborada

On 26 April 937, a fire broke out and destroyed much of the Abbey and the adjoining settlement, though the library was undamaged.

About 954 they started to protect the monastery and buildings by a surrounding wall.

Circa 974 Abbot Notker (r. 971 – 975) (about whom almost nothing is known, except that he was the nephew of Notker Physicus (d. 975) – “the physician“) finalized the walling.

The adjoining settlements started to become the town of St Gall. 

Above: Abbey and surroundings, St. Gallen

The Abbey was the northernmost place where a sighting of the 1006 supernova was recorded, likely the brightest observed stellar event in recorded history.

Above: Remnant of Supernova 1006

In 1207, Abbot Ulrich von Sax was made a Prince of the Holy Roman Empire by King Philip of Germany (1177 – 1208).

Above: Coat of arms of the von Sax dynasty

The Abbey thus became a Princely Abbey (Reichsabtei).

As the Abbey became more involved in politics, it entered a period of decline.

Above: Philip of Swabia (1177 – 1208)

The city of St. Gallen proper progressively freed itself from the rule of the Abbot, acquiring imperial immediacy, and by the late 15th century was recognized as a Free Imperial City.

By 1353 the guilds, headed by the cloth weavers guild, gained control of the civic government.

In 1415 the City bought its liberty from German King Sigismund (1368 – 1437).

During the 14th century Humanists were allowed to carry off some of the rare texts from the Abbey Library.

Above: Sigismund of Luxembourg (1368 – 1437)

In the late 14th and early 15th centuries, the farmers of the Abbot’s personal estates (known as Appenzell, from the Latin abbatis cella meaning “cell (i.e. estate) of the Abbot“) began seeking independence.

In 1401, the first of the Appenzell Wars (1401 – 1429) broke out, and following the Appenzell victory at Stoss in 1405 they became allies of the Swiss Confederation in 1411.

Above: Battle of Vögelinsegg

Above: Battle of Stoss Pass (1405) Memorial

During the Appenzell Wars, the town of St. Gallen often sided with Appenzell against the Abbey.

So when Appenzell allied with the Confederation, the town of St. Gallen followed just a few months later.

The Abbey became an ally of several members of the Swiss Confederation (Zürich, Luzern, Schwyz and Glarus) in 1451, while Appenzell and St. Gallen became full members of the Swiss Confederation in 1454.

In 1457 the town of St. Gallen became officially free from the Abbey.

Above: Coat of arms of the City of St. Gallen

In 1468 Abbot Ulrich Rösch bought the County of Toggenburg from the representative of its counts, after the family died out in 1436.

In 1487 Rösch founded a monastery at Rorschach on Lake Constance, to which he planned to move.

Above: Rorschach, Switzerland

However, he encountered stiff resistance from the St. Gallen citizenry, other clerics, and the Appenzell nobility in the Rhine Valley who were concerned about their holdings.

Above: Abbot Ulrich Rösch (1463 – 1491)

The town of St. Gallen wanted to restrict the increase of power of the Abbey and simultaneously increase the power of the town.

The Mayor of St. Gallen, Ulrich Varnbüler, established contact with farmers and Appenzell residents (led by the fanatical Hermann Schwendiner) who were seeking an opportunity to weaken the Abbot.

Initially, Varnbüler protested to the Abbot and the representatives of the four sponsoring Confederate cantons (Zürich, Lucerne, Schwyz, and Glarus) against the construction of the new Abbey in Rorschach.

Then on 28 July 1489 he had armed troops from St. Gallen and Appenzell destroy the buildings already under construction.

Above: Portrait of Ulrich Varnbüler (1432 – 1496), Albrecht Dürer

When the Abbot complained to the Confederates about the damages and demanded full compensation, Varnbüler responded with a counter suit and in cooperation with Schwendiner rejected the arbitration efforts of the non-partisan Confederates.

He motivated the clerics from Wil to Rorschach to discard their loyalty to the Abbey and spoke against the Abbey at a town meeting in Waldkirch, where the popular league was formed.

He was confident that the four sponsoring cantons would not intervene with force, due to the prevailing tensions between the Confederation and the Swabian League.

He was strengthened in his resolve by the fact that the people of St. Gallen elected him again to the highest magistrate in 1490.

Above: The Abbot’s coat of arms

However, in early 1490 the four cantons decided to carry out their duty to the Abbey and to invade the St. Gallen canton with an armed force.

The people of Appenzell and the local clerics submitted to this force without noteworthy resistance, while the city of St. Gallen braced for a fight to the finish.

However, when they learned that their compatriots had given up the fight, they lost confidence.

The end result was that they concluded a peace pact that greatly restricted the city’s powers and burdened the city with serious penalties and reparations payments.

Above: Old houses of St. Gallen

Varnbüler and Schwendiner fled to the court of King Maximilian (1459 – 1519) and lost all their property in St. Gallen and Appenzell.

However, the Abbot’s reliance on the Swiss to support him reduced his position almost to that of a “subject district“.

Above: Maxmilian I, Holy Roman Emperor

The town adopted the Reformation in 1524, while the Abbey remained Catholic, which damaged relations between the town and Abbey.

Both the Abbot and a representative of the town were admitted to the Swiss Tagsatzung (parliament) as the closest associates of the Confederation.

In the 16th century the Abbey was raided by Calvinist groups, who scattered many of the old books. 

Above: Tadsatzung, Baden, 1531

In 1530, Abbot Diethelm began a restoration that stopped the decline and led to an expansion of the schools and library.

Under Abbot Pius Reher (r. 1630 – 1654) a printing press was started.

Above: Pius Reher (1597 – 1654)

In 1712 during the Toggenburg War (also called the Second War of Villmergen), the Abbey of St. Gall was pillaged by the Confederation.

They took most of the books and manuscripts to Zürich and Bern.

For security, the Abbey was forced to request the protection of the townspeople of St. Gallen.

Until 1457 the townspeople had been serfs of the Abbey, but they had grown in power until they were protecting the Abbey.

Above: Toggenburg War map – Protestant (green) / Catholic (yellow) / Neutral (grey)

Following the disturbances, the Abbey was still the largest religious city-state in Switzerland, with over 77,000 inhabitants.

A final attempt to expand the abbey resulted in the demolition of most of the medieval monastery.

The new structures, including the Cathedral by architect Peter Thumb (1681–1766), were designed in the late Baroque style and constructed between 1755 and 1768.

Above: St. Gallen Abbey

The large and ornate new Abbey did not remain a monastery for very long.

In 1798 the Prince-Abbot’s secular power was suppressed and the Abbey was secularized.

The monks were driven out and moved into other abbeys.

The Abbey became a separate See (a bishop’s ecclesiastical jurisdiction) in 1846, with the Abbey church as its Cathedral and a portion of the monastic buildings reserved for the Bishop.

Above: Abbey

The Abbey of St. Gall, the monastery and especially its celebrated scriptorium played an illustrious part in Catholic and intellectual history until it was secularised in 1798.

The former Abbey church became a Cathedral in 1848.

Since 1983 the abbey precinct has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site, as “a perfect example of a great Carolingian monastery”.

Above: Abbey

St. Gall is the name of a wheel shaped hard cheese made from the milk of Friesian cows, which won a Gold Medal at the World Cheese Awards held in Dublin 2008.

Canadian writer Robertson Davies, in his book, The Manticore, interprets the legend in Swiss psychologist Carl Jung (1875 – 1961) terms.

In the final scene of the novel where David Staunton is celebrating Christmas with Lizelloti Fitziputli, Magnus Eisengrim, and Dunstan Ramsay, he is given a gingerbread bear.

Ramsay explains that Gall made a pact of peace with a bear who was terrorizing the citizens of the nearby village.

They would feed the bear gingerbread and the bear would refrain from eating them.

The parable is presented as a Jungian exhortation to make peace with one’s dark side.

This Jungian interpretation is however incompatible with Catholic Orthodoxy which Gall promoted.

It is all a matter of what you choose to believe.

Even today, the Abbey Library is celebrated as Switzerland’s finest secular Rococo interior and one of the oldest libraries in Europe with its huge collection of rare medieval books and manuscripts.

The visitor enters beneath a sign that reads YUCHS IATREION (Greek for “Pharmacy of the Soul).

By the entrance are dozens of oversized felt grey slippers.

Slip your shoe-clad feet into a pair, to protect the inlaid wooden floor.

The 28m X 10m room is dynamic.

Designed by the same Peter Thumb who worked on the Cathedral, the Library’s orthodox Baroque architecture is overlaid with opulent Rococo decoration.

The four ceiling frescoes by Josef Wannenmacher depict with bold trompe l’oeil perspectives the early Christian theological Councils of Nicaea (modern Iznik, Turkey), Constantinople (modern Istanbul), Ephesus (modern Selçuk, Turkey), and Chalcedon (Kadiköy district, Istanbul).

Above: The Council of Nicaea, with Arius depicted as defeated by the council, lying under the feet of Emperor Constantine

Above: Miniature of the Council of Constantinople (AD 381). Emperor Theodosius I and a crowd of bishops seated on a semicircular bench, on either side of an enthroned Gospel Book. An heretic, Macedonius, occupies the lower left corner of the miniature.

Above: Council of Ephesus (431)

Above: Council of Chalcedon (451)

Among the wealth of smaller frescoes set among the ceiling stucco, in the corner directly above the entrance door, you will spot the Venerable Bede, a 7th century English monk from Northumbria who wrote one of the first histories of England.

Above: The Venerable Bede (672 – 735), The Last Chapter, J. Boyle Penrose

Above: Statue of the Venerable Bede, St. Gallen Abbey

The books are ranged on floor-to-ceiling shelves all around.

Its list of cultural treasures among its over 160,000 volumes is extraordinary.

There are more Irish manuscripts in St. Gallen than there are in Dublin, with 15 handwritten examples including a Latin manuscript of the Gospels dating from 750.

Other works include:

  • an astronomical textbook written in 300 BCE
  • copies made in the 5th century of works by Virgil, Horace and other classical authors
  • texts written by the Venerable Bede in his original Northumbrian language
  • the oldest book to have survived in German, dating from the 8th century

Above: Abbey Library

One of the more interesting documents in the Stiftsbibliothek is a copy of Priscian’s (circa 500) Institutiones grammaticae, (the standard textbook for the study of Latin during the Middle Ages), which contains the poem Is acher in gaith in-nocht, written in Old Irish.

Above: Institutiones Grammaticae, 1290, Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Firenze (Florence), Italy

The Library also preserves a unique 9th century document, known as the Plan of St. Gall, the only surviving major architectural drawing from the roughly 700-year period between the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the 13th century.

The Plan drawn was never actually built, and was so named because it was kept at the famous medieval monastery library, where it remains to this day.

The Plan was an ideal of what a well-designed and well-supplied monastery should have, as envisioned by one of the synods held at Aachen (814 – 817) for the reform of monasticism in the Frankish Empire during the early years of Emperor Louis the Pious.

Above: Plan of Saint Gall (simplified)

A late 9th century drawing of St. Paul lecturing an agitated crowd of Jews and Gentiles, part of a copy of a Pauline epistles produced at and still held by the Monastery, was included in a medieval drawing show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City in the summer of 2009.

A reviewer noted that the artist had “a special talent for depicting hair, with the saint’s beard ending in curling droplets of ink“.

Above: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

St. Gall is noted for its early use of the neume, the basic element of Western and Eastern systems of musical notation prior to the invention of five-line staff notation.

The earliest extant manuscripts are from the 9th or 10th century.

A few treasures of the Library are displayed in glass cases, with exhibits changed regularly.

Incongruously (as in “What the Hell is this doing here?“), there is an Egyptian mummy dating from 700 BCE, a gift to the mayor of St. Gallen in the early 19th century.

Unsure of what to do with it, he plonked it in this corner of the Library, where it has since remained.

Above: Abbey Library

Diagonally opposite stands a beautifully intricate 2.3m-high globe depicting both celestial and earthly maps.

It is, in fact, a replica.

The original, dating from 1570, was stolen by Zürich troops in 1712 and stands in the National Museum.

To resolve the dispute, Canton Zürich agreed to produce this copy, which was completed in 2009.

Above: Abbey Library

I find myself thinking of the reverence that is given to copies.

A globe is replicated and its replication is mentioned in the smallest print possible with the least fanfare required.

Those who do not question its authenticity need not know it isn’t the original.

This leads to me to ponder:

How far from the origins of our religions have we strayed?

We are told that Christ existed but the proof lies solely in the Gospels which promote His Name.

We are told that Muhammad existed but it is blasphemy to even sketch a likeness of how the Prophet may have looked.

We choose to believe in that which we can neither prove nor disprove.

Much like love, faith is manifested not in what is professed but rather by how it is manifested in the lives of its true believers.

By deeds we decide our dedication.

By actions we activate our ardour.

Above: Prevailing world religions map

All of which leaves me thinking of the Chris Nolan film The Dark Knight….

It’s not about what I want, it’s about what’s FAIR!

You thought we could be decent men in an indecent time.

But you were wrong.

The world is cruel and the only morality in a cruel world is chance.

Unbiased, unprejudiced, fair.

Above: Aaron Eckhart as Harvey Dent/Two Face, The Dark Knight

Because sometimes…

The truth isn’t good enough.

Sometimes people deserve more.

Sometimes people deserve to have their faith rewarded.

Above: Christian Bale as Batman / Bruce Wayne, The Dark Knight

Perhaps this is why we build cathedrals and mosques and temples?

To show how our faith has rewarded us?

Above: Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, Vatican City

Nothing left to do
When you know that you’ve been taken
Nothing left to do
When you’re begging for a crumb
Nothing left to do
When you’ve got to go on waiting
Waiting for the miracle to come

Waiting for the Miracle“, Leonard Cohen

Above: Leonard Cohen (1934 – 2016)

According to the 2000 census, 31,978 or 44.0% were Roman Catholic, while 19,578 or 27.0% belonged to the Swiss Reformed Church.

Of the rest of the population, there were 112 individuals (or about 0.15% of the population) who belong to the Christian Catholic faith, there were 3,253 individuals (or about 4.48% of the population) who belong to the Orthodox Church, and there were 1,502 individuals (or about 2.07% of the population) who belong to another Christian church.

There were 133 individuals (or about 0.18% of the population) who were Jewish, and 4,856 (or about 6.69% of the population) who were Muslim.

There were 837 individuals (or about 1.15% of the population) who belonged to another church (not listed on the census), 7,221 (or about 9.94% of the population) belonged to no church, were agnostic or atheist, and 3,156 individuals (or about 4.35% of the population) did not answer the question.

There are 28 sites in St. Gallen that are listed as Swiss Heritage Sites of National Significance, including four religious buildings:

  • the Abbey of St. Gallen

Above: St. Gallen Abbey

  • the former Dominican Abbey of St. Katharina

The St. Gallen Monastery of St. Catherine has had a turbulent history since it was founded in 1228.

The founding document dates dates back to 30 June 1228.

It is a late Gothic splendour – beautiful and one of the oldest buildings in the city.

The history of the order goes back to the 13th and 14th centuries.

The monastery was named after the martyr Catherine of Alexandria.

Until 1266 St. Catherine was a monastery of the Augustinians, until in 1368 the resident nuns adopted the Dominican rule.

The great fire of 20 April 1418 greatly affected the monastery.

The last woman entering the monastery, Katharina von Watt, was a sister of the longtime Mayor and patron of the Reformation, Joachim von Watt (Vadian).

In 1527 the monastery became a victim of the Reformation:

Council servants commissioned by the authorities entered into the monastery church and destroyed the cult objects.

In 1555 the last sisters left the St. Gallen Monastery of St. Catherine.

Today only the cloister and the church have survived from the monastery complex.

You can walk through the cloister and there is a library which can be visited.

There is also a old church (of course) but the opening times are said to be very special…

Above: The Monastery of St. Catherine, St. Gallen

  • the Reformed Church of St. Lawrence

The St. Laurenzen Church is the Evangelical Reformed parish church of the city of St. Gallen. 

The construction of the first church is estimated to be in the middle of the 12th century. 

The church was the political, religious and social center of the city republic of St. Gallen for almost 300 years and has had a lasting influence on the history of the city.

Today it is still a meeting room for the town’s local citizens. 

The church takes its name from the martyr Lawrence of Rome to whom it was dedicated. It is classified as a building worthy of national protection (highest of the three protection levels) and as a monument of national importance it is therefore under federal monument protection.

Above: Church of St. Lawrence, St. Gallen

  • the Roman Catholic parish church of St. Maria Neudorf

Above: St. Maria Neudorf, St. Gallen

One of the most important organs in Switzerland is located in the church of St. Maria Neudorf in the east of the city of St. Gallen. 

Their history and construction are not commonplace. 

It is a monumental organ that was built in 1927 by organ builder Willisau according to the principles of the Alsatian organ reform. 

It is the largest organ in the city of St. Gallen and, with its remote control, is one of the largest surviving organs from this period.

Above: Organ, St. Maria Neudorf

Also worth viewing are:

  • Greek Orthodox Church of St. Constantine and St. Helena with its Athonite icons and a stained glass window of the Last Judgment

Above: Greek Orthodox Church of St. Constantine and St. Helena, St. Gallen

Above: St. Constantine and St. Helena

Above: Details of the Last Judgment

  • Protestant Church of Linsebühl, an impressive new Renaissance building dating from 1897

The striking Linsebühl Church, built in 1895-1897 in neo-Renaissance style, is a little off the beaten track of traffic but still central. 

The richly decorated interior was extensively restored in 1992 and offers a festive and, at the same time, a somewhat playful atmosphere with excellent acoustics for music and singing.

The organ by the Goll company from Luzern, built in 1897 and restored in 1992, with pneumatic action, three manuals, a pedal and 38 registers, is one of the few surviving purely romantic organs and is known far beyond the city and canton borders.


In addition to the usually well-attended church services, some concerts take place in the Linsebühl church.

With its large forecourt and neighboring parish hall, it is also very suitable for weddings and other festive occasions.


With its galleries, the Church offers space for 810 people (The nave alone can hold ​​512 people).

Above: Linsebühl Reformed Church, St. Gallen

  • Catholic church of St. Martin in the Bruggen district, this concrete church built in 1936 was at that time glaringly modern

This third Catholic Church of St. Martin Bruggen was completed in 1936 next to its predecessor church. 

The first chapel was consecrated in 1600 and converted into a proper church in 1639. 

The second church was completed on the site of the first in 1785 and received a new tower in 1808. 

After the new building and the consecration of today’s church, the southwestern old church was demolished.

Above: St. Martin Church, Bruggen, St. Gallen

The church is named after Saint Martin of Tours. 

A life-size equestrian statue of him stands in front of the church, together with a beggar.

Above: St. Martin Bruggen Reformed Church, St. Gallen

(While Martin was a soldier in the Roman army and stationed in Gaul (modern-day France), he experienced a vision, which became the most-repeated story about his life.

One winter’s day, at the gates of Amiens, Martin met a poor, unclothed man. 

Martin was carrying nothing but his guns and military coat. 

In a merciful act, he divided his cloak with the sword and gave half to the poor man. 

The following night Christ appeared to Martin in a dream, dressed in half the cloak that he had given the beggar. 

I was naked and you clothed me….

What you did to one of these least of these my brothers, you did to me.” (Matthew 25: 35 – 40) )

Above: Martin and the beggar, El Greco

  • Synagogue St. Gallen, built by architects Chiodera and Tschudy, it is the only synagogue in the Lake Constance region that has been preserved in its original state.

Above: St. Gallen Synagogue

The first document mentioning Jews in St. Gall is dated in 1268.

In 1292 two houses in the town were inhabited by Jews.

On 23 February 1349, during the Black Death, Jewish inhabitants were burned or driven out.

Jews were not allowed to settle in St. Gall again until the 19th century.

The Jews, who then lived in a special quarter, the “Hinterlauben” or “Brotlauben” were accused of having poisoned the wells.

St. Gallen followed the example of other towns near the Lake of Constance, imprisoning the Jews, burning them alive, or at best expelling them and confiscating their property.

For a long time after this event no Jews lived in St. Gall.

In modern times the right of settlement was granted only very exceptionally to a few Jews, who had to pay heavily for the concession.

Even after the wars of independence the St. Gallen “Jews’ Law” of 15 May 1818, though not strictly enforced by the government, placed the Jews under severe restrictions.

These laws remained on the statute books until the emancipation of the Jews of Switzerland in February 1863.

On 8 April 1864, the present Jewish community was constituted, the members having moved to St. Gall from the nearby town of Hohenems (Austria).

On 21 September 1881, the present synagogue was consecrated.

Religious services were organized, Hebrew and religious classes founded.

Soon afterward the cemetery was laid out.

The dead had previously been conveyed to one of the neighboring communities.

Above: Jewish cemetery, St. Gallen

Jews played a prominent role in the St. Gall textile industry until 1912, especially in the famous embroidery branch.

In 1919 refugees from Eastern Europe settled in St. Gallen, forming a separate community.

German and Austrian Jewish refugees began crossing the border into the Canton in 1938, and a refugee care organization was set up there.

Above: Judaica – candlesticks, etrog box, shofar, Torah pointer, Tanach, natla

From 1939 to 1944 the town was the centre for preparing Jewish refugee children for Youth Aliyah to Palestine.

Above: Youth Aliyah commemorative stamp

In 1944, 1,350 Jews (mostly Hungarian) from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp were brought to St. Gallen.

Above: A British Army bulldozer pushes dead bodies into a mass grave at Belsen, Germany, 19 April 1945

A year later 1,200 Jews from Theresienstadt concentration camp arrived.

Above: Memorial to Jewish Victims, Terezin (formerly Theresienstadt), Czech Republic

Above: Three Jewish children rescued from Theresienstadt recuperate in St. Gallen, 11 February 1945

Police officer Paul Grüninger, later designated as “Righteous among the Gentiles“, helped Jewish refugees after 1938.

Above: Righteous Among the Nations medal

He was ousted from office, lost his pension, and died in misery.

Years after his death, citizens fought successfully for his posthumous rehabilitation.

A square in St. Gallen is named after him.

Above: Paul Grüninger (1891 – 1972)

Above: Grüningerplatz, St. Gallen

Above: Paul Brüninger Bridge between Diepoldsau, Germany and Hohenems, Austria

The Jewish inhabitants of St. Gallen increased numerically over the course of time through frequent migrations from the communities of Endingen and Lengnau, Gailingen (Baden), Laupheim (Württemberg), and from other places.

The Jews of St. Gallen exceed 500 in a total population of over 33,000.

Above: Entry to the Jewish Museum of Switzerland, Basel

The El Hidaje Mosque is an unassuming building that received public attention when a man was shot dead during a Friday prayer on 22 August 2014.

Police arrested an individual with a handgun when they were called after reports of gunfire.

A man was found dead in the mosque’s prayer room, a police spokesman said.

Around 300 people were reportedly in the mosque for Friday prayers at the time of the shooting.

It was not immediately clear what the motive may have been.

Witnesses believe the killing may have been linked to a family dispute dating back a number of years, Swiss newspaper 20 Minutes reported.

The El-Hidaje mosque is used by St Gallen’s Albanian Muslim community.

Fehim Dragusha, a former Imam at the mosque, told Switzerland’s Radio FM1:

Albanians and Muslims should not bring problems from their home country into Switzerland.

Above: El-Hidaje Mosque, St. Gallen

There are at least 50 places of worship across St. Gallen where people can gather to publicly proclaim their devotion to God.

And in none of them do I get a sense of the presence of God (presuming His existence) within.

This is not to say that others are not inspired by their visits to these sanctuaries of faith, but I am not one of them.

I defend a person’s right to believe (or not believe) what they will providing this practice does no harm to others

For myself what religious feeling I may have experienced has always been in the midst of walking.

An activity of late that has gone sadly neglected since my return to Eskişehir last month, though walking is an activity that requires few expenses to do.

We live in a time where the lines of conflict have been drawn between secrecy and openness, between the consolidation and the dispersal of power, between privatization and public ownership, between power and life.

Walking has always been on the side of the latter.

Walking itself has not changed the world – though it does seem that so many religious leaders have found their particular testaments during such activity – but walking has been a rite, a tool, a reinforcement of a civil society that stands up to violence, to fear, and to repression.

Indeed, it is hard to imagine a viable civil society without the free association and the knowledge of the terrain that comes with walking.

A sequestered or passive population is not quite a citizenry.

Insidious forces are marshalled against the time, space and will to walk and against the version of humanity that act embodies.

One force is the filling-up of “the time in-between“, the time between places.

This time has been deplored as a waste, so it is filled with earphones and mobile phone screens.

The ability to appreciate this uncluttered time, the uses of the useless, has evaporated, as does appreciation of being outside – including outside the familiar.

Our mobile phones serve as a buffer against solitude, silence and thought.

We have become immobile and inactive.

We have forgotten that our bodies are built to be used, that our bodies were not meant to be passive, that our bodies are inherent sources of power.

While walking, the body and the mind can work together, so that thinking becomes a physical, rhythmic act.

Spirituality enters in as we move through urban and rural planes of existence.

Past and present combine as we relive events in our personal histories.

Each walk moves through space like a thread through fabric, sewing it together into a continuous experience – unlike the way other modes of travel chop up time and space.

It starts with a step and then another and then another, adding up like taps on a drum to a rhythm, the rhythm of walking.

Walking is an investigation, a ritual, a meditation.

We invest a universal act with particular meanings, from the erotic to the spiritual, from the revolutionary to the artistic.

A desk is no place to think on a large scale.

An absolutely new prospect is a great happiness and I can still get this any afternoon.

Two or three hours’ walking will carry me to as strange a country as I expect ever to see.

A single farmhouse which I had not seen before is sometimes as good as the dominions of the King of Dahomey.

There is in fact a sort of harmony discoverable between the capabilities of the landscape and the threescore and ten years of human life.

It will never become quite familiar to you.

Henry David Thoreau

Above: Henry David Thoreau (1817 – 1862)

It is the unpredictable incidents between official events that add up to a life, the incalculable that gives it value.

Walking is about being outside, in public space, but public space is being abandoned and eroded, eclipsed by technologies and services that don’t require leaving home.

Outside has been shadowed by fear, for strange places are always more frightening than familiar ones, so the less one wanders the more alarming it seems, and so the fewer the wanderers the more lonely and dangerous it really becomes.

Above: Rebecca Solnit’s Wanderlust (Dutch edition)

The newer the place, the less public space.

Malls have replaced Main Street, the streets have no sidewalks, buildings are entered through the garage, City Hall has no plaza, and everywhere everything has walls and bars and gates.

Fear has created the landscape where to be a pedestrian is to be under suspicion.

Too many have forgotten that it is the random, the unscreened, that allows you to find what you didn’t know you were looking for.

And you don’t know a place until it surprises you.

Above: Rebecca Solnit’s Wanderlust (Spanish edition)

But we have come to a place in society where the road ends, where there is no public space and we have paved Paradise to put up a parking lot, a world where leisure is shrinking and being crushed under the anxiety to produce, where bodies are not in the world but indoors in transport and buildings.

We have gained speed and lost purpose.

When you give yourself to places, they give you yourself back.

The more you come to know a place, the more you seed it with an invisible crop of memories and associations that will be waiting for your return, while new places offer up new thoughts and new possibilities.

Walking came from Africa, from evolution, and from necessity.

It went everywhere, usually looking for something.

And this is the essence of walking, the search for something intangible.

Above: (in green) Africa

This is the essence of the pilgrimage, a literal means of spiritual journey, wherein the journey is more significant than the destination itself, for it is the journey that develops us spiritually.

Walking lets us be in that non-believer’s Paradise, that Heaven on Earth, nature.

To consider Earth holy is to connect the lowest and most material to the most high and ethereal, to close the breach between matter and spirit.

The world is holy and the sacred is underfoot rather than above.

The journey of the outside is also a journey within.

And there have been people in St. Gallen that remind me of the holy underfoot and the surprising compassion of those not out to earn their own “salvation” but who only seek to help others to find theirs.

Each time we are reunited, Augustin and I stroll through town.

He does not point out the attractions, but somehow I feel that I am seeing St. Gallen through his eyes and not my own.

His manner of expression lends majesty to the path upon which we walk.

Above: My friend Augustin

I have known Augustin for a decade when we were both employed at the Starbucks Bahnhof St. Gallen.

He is truly a remarkable man.

Augustin – a wonderful mix of French and African…

As welcoming to Switzerland as rain in the desert….

When I broke both my arms in 2018 and needed to be rehabilitated in Mammern – 26 miles / 42 km northwest of St. Gallen – he was my sole visitor (save my wife) who came out to visit me.

Everyone has busy lives and yet he found the time – made the time – to visit someone who should have given him, should still give him, more of his time and attention.

Above: Augustin and your humble blogger, Mammern, Switzerland, 2 June 2018

On 22 January 2022, after very little contact or communication between us, he invited me to his new apartment he shares with his lady love Laura and he cooked us a delicious dinner and continuously gave and gave to me whatever I might desire.

I left his apartment feeling humbled and honoured by the hospitality and love shown to me.

May I always be worthy.

Above: Laura and Augustin

Augustin is one of the hardest workers I have ever had the honour of working with.

He truly gives the adage “It is not the job that brings dignity to the man. It is the man who brings dignity to the job.” meaning.

He is one of those rare individuals who may not have always been blessed with the wealth that others take for granted, but he remains generous to a fault.

He came to Switzerland in dire straits.

He spoke truth to power and his homeland’s government desired to imprison him for his sacrilege.

He remains an exile from his home, from his loved ones there, until the politics therein, perhaps, one day, changes.

He has since become a Swiss citizen and, as such, acts responsibly, deserving of that privilege.

He has built a life for himself, has found a lady love and has achieved a happiness he so richly deserves, for he has gotten from the universe what he has given to it and fortune has rewarded him accordingly.

His is one of those friendships, like so many friendships this rolling stone has been miraculously been blessed with, that needs no reciprocation and yet rewards those who treat him with dignity and respect.

Above: Coat of arms of Switzerland

Augustin is my mirror.

I cannot even begin to guess the mind of another person, but perhaps the dignity and respect I have shown him compels him to show me the same.

Despite this, I get the feeling that he does not give in order to get.

He is not good (at least, to me) out of any expectation.

Nor do I get a sense of his feeling entitled to reciprocation.

(Unlike some I have known…..)

Augustin, the Augustin I know, is a man fit to be any other man’s role model of what a good person is, of what a good person can be.

I am blessed by his friendship.

Above: Augustin

Perhaps I should not be so surprised and touched when people are nice to me.

And yet I am, almost every time, when an act of human kindness touches my life.

I am even surprised when my own wife is kind to me, for we have had our differences over the years.

(My sojourn in Turkey has not helped the relationship.)

Like most men, I am probably undeserving of a good woman’s (or perhaps even a bad woman’s) love.

Above: The Wedding, Edmund Blair Leighton

I think of my last visit to Switzerland and the friends I encountered when I was there:

  • Volkan, assistant Starbucks store manager and talented singer, is a man of surprising depth at times.
  • Nesha, of Belgrade and Herisau, has always been a friend with whom I can share moments of laughter.
  • Naomi, Canadian from Vancouver and Starbucks barista, a woman torn between ambition and affection, is a woman who leads with her heart despite the misgivings of her head.
  • Alanna, Canadian from Nova Scotia, Starbucks shift manager and independent store operator, is one of the strongest women I know, whose will is as powerful as her beauty.
  • Katja is a woman whose wanderlust and passion for life matches my own.
  • Sinan is a young man whose maturity belies the youthfulness of his features, a good father, a good husband, a good friend.
  • Michael is a young man who reminds me of myself in my younger days, so confident in what he knows, still unaware that the passage of time will confirm that there will always be more we don’t understand, that the knowledge we do have is merely a beginning, that it is never the completion of all we need to know, he is a young man who in discovering the world discovers himself.
  • Sonja, former Starbucks store manager, now an independent vendor in the Luzern region, is always compassionate to me whenever we see one another.
  • Ricardo, former Starbucks store manager, is another friend who is easy to misjudge, but, at least with me, he has proven ready to assist me should I ask him.
  • Pedro, Starbucks store manager, started at Starbucks shortly after I did, but unlike me was determined to rise within its ranks, is a person I am proud to know, for despite his success he has always respected that I walk a different path than he does.
  • Ute, my wife, my life, is as part of my being as breathing, a woman who deserves far better than myself, but Karma is a tricky thing!

These are the few I was fortunate enough to see during my last visit.

There remain others that time and circumstance prevented our reunion.

I have been blessed by these and other friends (and family) in other places (Canada, Britain, Australia, New Zealand, America, Germany, Austria, Paraguay, Turkey).

Do others see these friends different than I see them?

Most assuredly.

Some of my friends may not even like other friends of mine.

What may be said of their lives outside of my experience of them I can neither confirm nor deny.

I only judge them by their actions towards me.

And it is by their actions that I know them.

It is their actions towards me that restores my faith in humanity and in life itself.

They are my religion, my sustenance, the very breath I take, the reason I live, the courage to love.

Friends offer enormous comfort.

They help to structure your time.

They show you that you belong and can be cared about.

A man who lacks a network of friends is seriously impaired from living his life, from having a life worth living.

A man’s friends alleviate the neurotic overdependence on a wife or a girlfriend for every emotional need.

If a man, going through a “rough patch”, gets help from his friends as well as his partner, then his burden is shared.

If his problems are with his partner (as they often are) then his friends can help him through, talk sense into him, stop him acting stupidly and help him to release his grief.

I do not believe that men are as inarticulate as women claim.

We are simply inexperienced.

Our inarticulateness (a trait not shared by all men) simply comes from a history with a lack of sharing opportunities.

Millions of women complain about their male partner’s lack of feeling, their woodenness.

Men themselves (and I include myself in this) often feel numb and confused about what they really want.

But if men talked to each other more, perhaps they would understand themselves better.

Then perhaps we would then have more to say to our wives or girlfriends.

Sometimes only a man can understand what another man is feeling.

The same can be said for the empathy between women.

Men’s voices have a different tone than women’s.

Our feelings have a different tone as well.

We have more than enough feelings, but we lack the experience or opportunity to express them.

What does not help is that men are put into a double bind by society at large.

We are asked to simultaneously be more intimate and sensitive and yet be tough when needed.

As if feelings within a man need be as flexible as shifting gears in a car.

A considerable skill not innately part of ourselves.

We are reserved in expression, for expression requires trust in those who may listen.

Can we express hurt?

Can we express frustration?

Without fear of censure?

Without others minimizing these feelings?

Without advice given?

Without competition?

Men feel, but fear of showing weakness prevents expression.

Men can be noisy and wild and still be safe.

What annoys me about society is the demand that men must prove that they are men.

Men have nothing to prove.

Let men judge themselves by their own standards.

A man should not be judged for the manner in which he conveniently accommodates women.

Women have their own struggles.

Men have theirs.

Equality between the genders is only possible if there is negotiation and fairness, non-threatening behaviour (from both genders), mutual respect, mutual trust and support, honesty and accountability (from both genders), shared responsibility and economic partnership.

They are “my North, my South, my East and West,
My working week and my Sunday rest,
My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song.

W.H. Auden

Above: Wystan Hugh Auden (1907 – 1973)

Time and distance often separates us, but while I think of them they remain ever close to my heart and are embedded in my soul.

If there is a God – and sometimes I think there just might be – then He manifests Himself in the manner in which He blesses our lives with our fellow human beings.

Everyone I meet has proven to be either a blessing or a lesson in my life.

I am humbled.

I am grateful.

Another friend once described me in the following way:

You are a walking/living contradiction.

Shy and timid on one extreme, courageous and adventurous on the other, extremely intelligent and yet naive at the same time…”

(I have been called worse!)

Do I contradict myself?
Very well then I contradict myself,
(I am large, I contain multitudes.)

Walt Whitman

Above: Walt Whitman (1819 – 1892)

I find myself remembering an old Facebook post I wrote during the days I travelled by train between Landschlacht and St. Gallen:

Above: Swiss Federal Railways network map

Normally I am unaffected by graffiti and undecided as to whether it should be viewed as an art form or as an act of vandalism.

But there is a graffiti scrawling on the wall of a factory (apple processing plant?) facing the railroad station of Neukirch-Egnach (between Romanshorn and St. Gallen) that always makes me smile for its powerful simplicity.

You are artwork.

Each and every one of us is a miracle, an artistic masterpiece.

Such a wise graffiti scrawl...

Heed the writing on the wall.

Above: Neukirch-Egnach Station, Switzerland

What a piece of work is man,

How noble in reason, how infinite in faculty,

In form and moving how express and admirable,

In action how like an angel,

In apprehension how like a god,

The beauty of the world,

The paragon of animals. 

Hamlet, Act 2, Scene ii, William Shakespeare

Above: Presumed portrait of William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)

It is Easter Sunday, it is Passover, it is Ramadan.

I am merely a man.

Thank God.

Above: Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni’s The Creation of Adam, Sistine Chapel, Vatican City

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Facebook / Rough Guide to Switzerland / Steve Biddulph, Manhood / Rebecca Solnit, Wanderlust: A History of Walking / Reuters, “One dead in shooting at mosque in Switzerland“, 23 August 2014

Canada Slim and the Gates of Heaven

Eskişehir, Turkey, Saturday 9 April 2022 (Curmartesi 9 Nisan 2022 CE)(Ramadan 9, 1443 Anno Hegirae)

Strange days for me recently.

Turkey has entered into the 9th month of the Islamic calendar, Ramadan, with Turks all prepared to observe the month-long fast.

Mornings begin with drumming men marching down main streets before sunset.

The fasting, started in the early hours of Saturday 2 April, begins with a predawn meal named sahur and ends with iftar, the meal consumed after sunset.

Green lights appear on the local camii (mosque) to signal that iftar may begin.

On the first day of Ramadan, the eastern provinces of Iğdir and Hakkari had the earliest iftar at 1835 hours, while the northwestern provinces of Çanakkale and Edirne were the last to have iftar at 1946 hours.

Above: Ağri Mountain from Iğdir plain, Turkey

Above: Hakkari City, Turkey

Above: Waterfront, Çanakkale, Turkey

Above: Selimiye Mosque and the statue of architect Mimar Koca Sinan, Edirne, Turkey

Northern Sinop is the city that witnesses the longest time through Ramadan.

Believers in Sinop fasted for 14 hours 27 minutes on Saturday and will fast for 15 hours and 56 minutes on the last day of Ramadan.

Above: Sinop, Turkey

The southern province of Hatay has the shortest fasting time with 14 hours and 12 minutes on Saturday and will fast for 15 hours and 22 minutes on the last day of Ramadan.

Above: Bazaar, Antakya, Hatay Province, Turkey

The month of Ramadan will end on 30 April, following which Eid al-Fitr celebrations will start.

With the start of Ramadan, many nutritionists in Turkey have come to the forefront of public attention to give “safur and iftar tips” to fasting believers.

Above: Flag of Turkey

People should eat a protein-rich meal at sahur, mostly dairy products should be preferred.“, nutritionist Baran Mert told Demirören News Agency.

According to Mert, one should drink a minimum of two to two and a half litres of water between iftar and sahur.

When asked what to avoid at the start of iftar after hours of fasting, Mert said:

Believers should not eat continuously and rapidly after that.

I was recently asked by a friend whether or not I had a copy of the Qu’ran so he could begin to understand the religion that surrounds him, though his family back home is more interested in the Jewish and Christian sites of Asia Minor.

(I did.

I gave one to him.

Mosques that are tourist attractions often give away copies of the Qu’ran in various languages.

I have always believed that it is ignorant to criticize a religion if one is ignorant of that religion.

Kudos to my friend in seeking to understand the faith that surrounds him in his neighbourhood.)

He also asked if he need worry if he does not fast while Muslims around him do during Ramadan.

Ramadan is the 9th month of the Islamic calendar, observed by Muslims worldwide as a month of fasting (sawm), prayer, reflection and community.

A commemoration of Muhammad’s first revelation, the annual observance of Ramadan is regarded as one of the Five Pillars of Islam and lasts 29 to 30 days, from one sighting of the crescent moon to the next.

Above: “Muhammad, the Messenger of God” inscribed on the gates of the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina, Saudi Arabia

Fasting from dawn to sunset is fard (obligatory) for all adult Muslims who are not acutely or chronically ill, travelling, elderly, breastfeeding, diabetic or menstruating.

The predawn meal is referred to as suhur and the nightly feast that breaks the fast is called iftar.

Although fatwas have been issued declaring that Muslims who live in regions with a midnight sun or polar night should follow the timetable of Mecca, it is common practice to follow the timetable of the closest country in which night can be distinguished from day.

Above: Midnight sun, North Cape, Mageroya Island, Norway

The spiritual rewards (thawab) of fasting are believed to be multiplied during Ramadan.

Accordingly, Muslims refrain not only from food and drink, but also tobacco products, sexual relations and sinful behaviour, devoting themselves instead to salat (prayer) and recitation of the Qu’ran.

(As long as a man is not arrogant about feasting in the presence of those who fast, it is not expected for a non-Muslim to act like a Muslim – at least in this liberal city of Eskişehir – for the significance of the act of fasting can only appreciated by the practitioner of a religion that requires its faithful to fast.

If at this time a restaurant is open to serve customers, then guilt should not be felt if one acts like a customer.

If there is truly concern over what Muslims think, then do your feasting at home.)

Above: Neysen Tevfik Sokak, Eskişehir, Turkey

(It is odd that while other religions fast, during holy celebrations Christians feast.)

Above: Christmas dinner setting

From Magsie Hamilton Little’s The Thing about Islam: Exposing the Myths, Facts and Controversies:

The acts of prayer and pilgrimage help Muslims to focus on their spirituality, as well as binding them together by allowing them to join in a shared religious experience.

Likewise, fasting performs an equally fundamental role.

It is so important to Islam that the early Muslim theologian al-Ghazzali (1058 – 1111) described it as “one quarter of the Muslim faith“.

As such, the act of fasting is known as the 4th pillar of Islam.

It is not simply a matter of giving up food during the daytime.

It is a symbolic act, enabling Muslims to rid their systems of impurities on all levels and so become closer to God.

Above: Tomb of Imam Al-Ghazzali, Tus, Iran

God’s message to Muhammad was that fasting helps us to learn self-restraint.

It is an example set by the Prophet himself who, according to a famous hadith by Bukhari (810 – 870) that describes the frugality of Muhammad, would break his fast with a sip of water and a date.

To this day, many Muslims do the same.

Through the physical act of fasting, Muslims experience the deprivation that the poor bear throughout the year, thus hopefully becoming more sensitive and responsive to their suffering as a result.

This makes crash-dieting in the West, aimed at dropping a dress size in a few weeks, seem rather shameful.

Above: al-Bukhari Mausoleum, Samarkand, Uzbekistan

Ramadan, the month of the fast, whose name comes from the Arabic root r-m-d, “the great heat“, from the soaring heat in the deserts of Arabia, in the 9th month of the Muslim calendar.

Above: Arabian Desert

It is special for Muslims as it was during the month that Muhammad received the call to be a prophet.

God Himself instructed that it should be the official month of fasting, in a revelation received after the establishment of the community in Medina.

Although no one knows the exact date of this, in the early days of Islam fasting took place on the 10th day of Muharram.

This is still one of a number of days of voluntary fasting, but today Muhammad’s call to be a prophet is celebrated on 27th Ramadan.

This is a particularly significant night.

Many people stay at their local mosque until long into the night, reading the Qu’ran and praying.

It is thought by some that prayer at this time is particularly powerful, awarding more blessings than prayers at other times.

Above: Hira Cave, Jabal al-Nour Mountain, Saudi Arabia, where, according to Muslim belief, Muhammad received his first revelation

Ramadan is about remembering to take nothing for granted.

It is about removing daily distractions so the mind is better able to focus on closeness with Allah.

On a practical level, this means no eating, drinking, smoking or sex from dawn to sunset for the entire month.

In the wider scheme, while fasting it is especially encouraged that the believer avoids sin, such as lying, violence, greed, lust, slander, anger and evil thoughts.

The fact is about self-discipline.

A Muslim is called to make an extra effort to cultivate a more spiritual outlook.

The observance of Ramadan is regarded a source of blessing and not a time of trial.

Muslims generally look forward to this time of bodily and spiritual cleansing.

They do not view it as being arduous or a chore.

They hold it as a special period that brings them back in touch with the values at the heart of their faith.

They see it as a healthy time, during which rich foods are avoided and their digestive systems can be rested and cleansed.

At Ramadan, Muslims are given the opportunity to master all their natural appetites, mental, spiritual and physical.

It also allows them an opportunity to get together with friends and family, to share their food after the hour of sunset.

According to Islamic tradition, during this time the gates of Heaven are opened, the gates of Hell are closed and Satan is put into chains.

Hence fasting during Ramadan is considered 30 times better than at any other time, although many Muslims do fast at other times, some even on a weekly basis.

Ramadan observances do vary slightly from culture to culture, but most Muslims begin the fast, according to the Qu’ran‘s instruction, at the moment when dawn makes it possible to distinguish “a white thread from a black thread“.

They then break the fast as soon as possible at sunset, eating a light meal later in the evening, with perhaps a final light meal in the early pre-dawn hours before the next morning’s fast begins – but all this depends on local custom and personal preference.

The evening is a time of relaxation, of visiting, prayer and Qu’ran recitation.

Printed Qu’rans divide the text into 30 sections to facilitate reading the whole book during Ramadan.

Most Muslims accomplish this.

Sounds of recitation often punctuate the evening air.

Most individuals perform a voluntary salat (prayer) of 20 rak’as, called taraweeh, sometime after the 5th prescribed prayer of the day.

Most go to the mosque during the evening, especially during the last ten days of the month.

Muslims say that Ramadan demands a certain spiritual attitude towards the body.

The hunger, supplemented by the prohibition on perfume and makeup, brings a Muslim back every year to what is regarded as a more natural state.

Whether it be experiencing the hunger of the less fortunate, expiating one’s sins, forgiving others theirs, renewing contact with one’s nearest and dearest, or simply taming one’s passions, a time of fasting is about reflection and contemplation, a return to the core values of Islam and a reassessment of what it means to be a Muslim.

Since fasting can make people feel weary and weak, great care is taken over the type of food eaten during Ramadan.

The consumption of special dishes at this time dates back to the earliest Islamic days, varying according to culture and region.

In medical Islamic recipes harira is sometimes mentioned and described as being made out of milk, flour and fat, rather than being a broth.

Above: Ramadan Harira

Early Muslim scholars, such as Bukhari and ibn Hanbal, talk of harira made of flour with cooked milk and a broth generally made with bran and meat cut into small pieces and boiled in water.

Above: The Musnad of Imam Ahmad is one of the most famous and extensive hadith books.

(Ḥadīth in Islam refers to what the majority of Muslims believe to be a record of the words, actions, and the silent approval of the Prophet Muhammad as transmitted through chains of narrators.

In other words, the ḥadīth are transmitted reports about what Muhammad said and did.)

Above: Imam Nawawi’s 4th Hadith being taught, Sultan Hassan Mosque Madrassa, Cairo, Egypt

In the Muslim East, al-Baghdadi’s Kitab at-Tabikh, written in the 13th century, gives recipes for meat and flour dishes.

Above: Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi (1162 – 1231)

In the Muslim West, Ibn Razi gives nine recipes for soups and eight for harira, based on bread reduced to fine crumbs or on moistened flour slowly poured and turned into a broth of plain water and salt with oil, egg or chicken, and flavouring ingredients, such as coriander, ginger, cinnamon, onions and garlic.

Above: Statue of Abu Bakr al-Razi, Persian Scholars Pavilion, United Nations Office, Vienna, Austria

Nowadays, other sweet fruits, such as dried figs and halwa, supplement the dates.

Above: Dried figs

Snacks are sometimes eaten between night-time meals, especially biscuits and tea or coffee.

A sign of the approach of Ramadan in the streets of North Africa is the transformation of doughnut merchants’ shops into delicious halwa stores, through home preparation of halwa is still very common.

Halwa consists of wheat flour, eggs, ground sesame, saffron, olive oil, butter, orange-flower water, vinegar, yeast and a pinch of salt.

These ingredients are mixed, energetically kneaded, allowed to rise, shaped, fried in oil and then soaked in honey before being drained and dusted with sesame seeds.

The resulting halwa is served with soup or with dry cakes and tea or coffee, as a snack.

Above: Halwa

In some cultures, such as in Morocco, special foods are prepared, including those of the s’hur, at which different kinds of pancakes are eaten.

Above: Flag of Morocco

Those of the ftur, harira or soups are used to break the fast.

On the eve of Ramadan, people prepare a honey cake to accompany the soup, known as halwa, sellou or zammita – sweet cereals and other dry cakes eaten as after-dinner snacks.

Similarly, in Afghanistan special sweets and pastries are prepared, such as halwa-e swanak, sheer payna and goash-e fil.

Stocks of these sweet foods are replenished during the 3rd or 4th week of the month.

S’hur marks the start of the fast, whereas Iftar ends it.

Above: Flag of Afghanistan

If Muslims follow Muhammad’s example during Ramadan, one would imagine their body weight to show evidence of it during Ramadan, one would imagine their body weight to show evidence of it by the end of the month.

However, the opposite is often the case.

Some Muslims actually put on weight, owing to the increased consumption of sugar in the dates and all the flour.

Forty years ago, the Iftar consisted of a bowl of soup preceded by “a sweet fruit, a small amount of honey or even just a mouthful of water“.

It was thought that that alone gave the strength of a light meal.

Ben Talha, writing in 1950, spoke of Muslims breaking their fast with toast with butter, or bread soaked in beaten eggs and cooked in butter, something like French toast.

Now, in some circles, Ramadan is an excuse to host lavish parties every night and taste exotic foods not sampled since the last Ramadan.

Whatever cultural variances exist between customs at Ramadan, overall the month is seen by Muslims as a very special time.

There is a feeling of camaraderie.

The fast is a great leveller and brings out the best in everyone, whether rich or poor.

I can say, from my extremely limited point-of-view and experience, that Eskişehir is fairly liberal in its observance of Ramadan.

Folks will or will not fast at this time, depending on the depth of their faith.

Those who feast during this time are not condemned.

Those who fast during this time are not ridiculed.

As a non-Muslim, I maintain the same dietary and non-observance of religious rites as I did before Ramadan arrived.

I respect those that do.

No one shows disrespect towards those who do not.

Above: Kanatli shopping centre, Kızılcıklı Sokak, Eskişehir

I was asked by a Turkish student whether or not I had a copy of the Holy Bible as he wished to understand the religion that so many Americans – our school is called Wall Street English after all – profess to practice.

Above: The Malmesbury Bible

(I did not.

My copies remain back in Switzerland.

Above: Flag of Switzerland

Christian copy in Christian countries, Muslim material in Muslim countries.

Not such an intellectual exercise for a man who does not profess to follow any faith, though he respects the rights of those who do.)

Above: Auguste Rodin’s The Thinker, Paris, France

From Andrew Finkel’s Turkey: What Everyone Needs to Know:

Turkey is both a Muslim majority country and an avowed secular state.

Reconciling these two identities has proven complicated.

While Turkey lays claim to serving as a cultural ambassador between faiths in a post 9/11 world, its own domestic political agenda sometimes reflects the emotionally charged debate about the compatibility of Islam with democratic governance.

There is a divide between those who believe Islam is being manipulated by political forces to derail the Western orientation of the Turkish state and those who counter that this Islamic peril is a spectre raised by elements trying to cling to a very undemocratic influence and privilege.

Article 24 of the 1982 Constitution guarantees freedom of religion and conscience, but with the proviso that these freedoms do not threaten the integrity and secular character of the state.

At the same time, the Constitution implicitly recognizes faith as one of the bonds of citizenship by making religious and ethical instruction mandatory during primary and secondary education.

Islam in Turkey remains influenced by the Hanafi School, or what had been Ottoman orthodoxy – the oldest and arguably the most liberal of the four schools of Sunni jurisprudence.

Schools teach the practice rather than comparative religion.

Above: Suleymaniye Mosque, Istanbul, Turkey

Turkey’s secularism is not so much a separation of mosque (Camii) and state as it is the state’s right to assert its primacy over religion.

The government still funds a huge religious establishment, the Presidency of Religious Affairs (DIB), which licences after-school Qu’ran courses, administers Turkey’s allotted pilgrimage quota for the Hadj, publishes books, and makes moral pronouncements.

While it does not build or maintain mosques, it does provide stipends for the nation’s clerics, who, in turn, are expected to preach a prepared message from the Friday pulpit.

Above: Selimiye Mosque, Edirne, Turkey

The DIB is, by its own admission, a much-modified version of the Ottoman religious authority, the Sheikh-ul-Islam.

Yet the Ottoman Empire was far from being a cleric-run theocracy.

Above: The Ottoman Empire at its greatest extent

Clerics were regarded as functionaries rather than divinely inspired.

A state bureaucracy worked to codify laws involving taxation, commerce, the military, agriculture and minority affairs – matters beyond the purview of religious law.

Religious or customary law has no status in the Republic of Turkey, having been replaced by a Swiss-inspired civil code.

However, the DIB can still set itself the ambitious project to codify the hadith, the orally transmitted tradition of the Prophet’s teachings, a project largely intended to confirm Islam’s compatibility with democratic values and universal rights.

Above: Şakirin Mosque, Istanbul, Turkey

Osama bin Laden was among those who put his finger on the resulting anomalies.

In one of his infamous post 9/11 video appearances, he explained that he was out to avenge “eight decades of pain, humiliation and shame“.

Above: Osama bin Laden (1957 – 2011)

The reference, Turks grasped at once, was to the creation of the Republic in 1923 and to the decision of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk to plow salt into the notion of a religiously empowered state.

Above: Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (1881 – 1938)

In Eskişehir and Istanbul, like many who had grown up during the early years of the Republic, there are many people who neither pray or keep a fast.

It is not that they are disrespectful of religion.

They are just indifferent to it.

Like many of their friends and acquaintances they explain their lack of interest for their love for Atatürk and their faith in the secular Republic.

Above: Ulus Monument, representing Mustafa Kemal Atatürk on top, Eskişehir

The 1924 abolition of the Caliphate – the leader of the world Islamic community and a role enjoyed by the Ottoman sultan – was a renunciation of an authority that could transcend the borders of the nation-state.

Moves like the outlawing of the self-governing religious orders were intended to prevent religious institutions and what today would be called “networks” from challenging the new regime.

Above: The last Caliph, Abdulmecid II (1868 – 1944)

The formal adoption of the Gregorian calendar, of Western-style timekeeping in place of “mosque time“, and indeed the whole tenor of Republican reforms were all premised on the view of Islam as an impediment to Turkey’s attempts to catch up with the West.

They were attempts to deconsecrate or secularize the totems of religious life.

Above: Pope Gregory XIII (1502 – 1585)

In 1930, a short-lived uprising led by a cleric in the Western town of Menemen (during which the local military commander’s head was cut off and paraded on a pole) was not a threat to the new regime so much as a challenge to its confidence that the population at large had signed onto its modernization project.

The Menemen Incident, or Kubilay Incident (Turkish: Kubilay Olayı or Menemen Olayı), refers to a chain of events which occurred in Menemen, a small town north of Izmir, on 23 December 1930.

Islamists rebelled against the secularization of Turkey by Atatürk and beheaded Mustafa Fehmi Kubilay, a teacher who was doing his military service and two other watchmen.

Above: Mustafa Fehmi Kubilay (1906 – 1930)

Following the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923, the Republican People’s Party of Turkey pursued a somewhat liberal policy towards Islam, promoting secularism while not taking a hard line against Islamic institutions and practices, believing that the secularism of their ideology was already taking root.

Above: Borders of Bulgaria, Greece and Turkey set by the Treaty of Lausanne

Above: Palais de Rumine, Lausanne, Switzerland, where the Treaty was settled

This confidence was shaken on 23 December 1930, when Dervish Mehmet Efendi (Cretan Mehmet), a member of the Naqshbandi (Turkish: Nakşibendi) order, created a protest by rallying an armed crowd against the policies of the secular government and calling for the restoration of sharia and the Caliphate.

On the morning of 23 December 1930, six people, four of whom were armed, came to Menemen from Manisa, planted the green banner they had taken from a mosque in the district square after the morning prayer and tried to gather people around them at gunpoint.

With the participation of the public, the rebel group soon grew. 

The activists said that they came to protect religion. 

Mehmet boasted that behind them was the army of the Caliph, 70,000 strong.

Those who did not gather under the banner of sharia before noon would be put to the sword. 

A squad of soldiers from the local garrison was sent to quell the demonstration.

When the incidents were heard by the military unit in the district, the regimental commander sent reserve officer Kubilay to the scene with a squad of soldiers. 

Kublai left the soldiers and met the activists alone and tried to persuade them to surrender. 

One of the armed activists shot and injured Kubilay. Derviş Mehmet, one of the ringleaders, said, “There is no bullet in me.” He tried to convince the people that he had a sacred duty.

Seeing this one of the soldiers fired (using wooden bullets that had no lethal effect) upon the demonstrators and a riot ensued.

Mehmet said:

There is no bullet in me.” 

He tried to convince the people that he had a sacred duty.

Mehmet shouted:

Those who wear hats are kaffirs.

We will return to sharia soon.

Above: Dervish Mehmet Efendi (d. 1931)

Wounded, Kubilay took refuge in the courtyard of the mosque, but Mehmet and his friends followed him. 

Mehmet opened his bag, took out a saw-edged vineyard knife and separated Kubilay’s head from his body, then his severed head was placed on a pole with a green flag and paraded through town.

Above: Martyr Kubilay Memorial in Menemen, İzmir –
The monument of the Menemen Incident features a tall sculpture by Ratip Asir Acudogu which was erected in 1932.
The Kubilay Memorial is a part of Kubilay Barracks, but is open to the public.
The area is landscaped and illuminated at night.
A military honor guard stands continuous watch at the memorial site, which contains the graves of several Turkish soldiers who were killed in the line of duty.
In the aftermath 28 people were hanged by the neck.
It is written on the monument: 
They believed, they fought, they died.
We are the guardians of the trust they left.

Two municipal watchmen, Bekçi Hasan and Bekçi Şevki, were also killed by the demonstrators.

Several rioters were also killed.

Upon hearing Kubilay’s murder by Islamists, Atatürk proclaimed:

Thousands from Menemen didn’t prevent this, instead joined with tekbirs.

Where were these traitors during Greek occupation?”.

The Turkish government expressed their shock over the people of Menemen not reacting to things like the Meneman massacre as harsh as they did to secularization.

The perpetrators of the rebellion including Cretan Mehmet, Cretan Ibrahim, Mehmet of Damascus, Sütçü Mehmet Emin, Nalıncı Hasan and Little Hasan were killed or otherwise punished.

Above: Menemen

The new republican government of Turkey was shocked by the demonstration of religious fervor and by how readily it was embraced by some Turks, as it was completely antithetical to secularism.

A state of emergency was declared and courts-martial were established which meted out sentences ranging from death at the gallows or life imprisonment to one year’s confinement.

There were also several acquittals. 

Sufi members were arrested around the country.

Furthermore, it demonstrated that secularism was taking hold neither as quickly nor as deeply as the government would have liked.

This spurred the government to action.

They began more aggressive secularization reforms in response to the Menemen Incident.

The government carried out this policy by attempting to nationalise Islam through performing the Adhan (Turkish: Ezan)(“call to prayer“), in Turkish rather than Arabic.

The government furthered secularization in schools by having the Quran translated from Arabic into Turkish and read to the people on the radio and in the mosques in Turkish.

These attempts reflected a comprehensive effort by the government to remove Islamic influences and entrench nationality over religion in Turkish culture.

These efforts also showed a larger attempt on the part of the government to consolidate Turkish traditions and promote a Turkish identity to replace a dominantly Muslim one, as in the Ottoman Empire people were identified by the millet system according to their religion rather than ethnicity.

These were done to replace the last vestiges of nostalgia for the abolished Caliphate and the broken-up Ottoman Empire in the aftermath of World War I (1914 – 1918).

Above: Coat of arms of the Ottoman Empire

The Incident helped confirm in the Republican imagination that religion was counter-revolutionary and needed to be monitored and contained.

The 2nd President of Turkey İsmet İnönü said:

Kublai is an example of idealist patriotism that does not calculate power alone for the sake of the revolution, for the sake of patriotism and unity. 

Kubilay is an exceptional monument of the traditional Turkish nature, who is ready to sacrifice his life for the nation at any moment.

Above: İsmet İnönü (1884 – 1973)

7th President Kenan Evren wrote:

The Kublai Incident had a great impact on me and my classmates.

Because the brutal martyrdom of a young officer would of course affect us.

I was under the influence of this for a long time.

They said that the perpetrators of this massacre were caught and they were waiting for the train at the station.

We went to the station.

I saw the traitors who martyred him and Kubilay there.

It left such a deep impression on me that I started painting with a pencil at that time.

I made my first painting with Kubilay’s painting.

I remember it and it was a beautiful painting.

I wish I had kept it.

If only he had stayed with me as a memory.

Above: Kenan Evren (1917 – 2015)

Above: Republic Square, Menemen, Izmir Province, Turkey

Even so, the anticlericalism of the nation’s founders began to soften in the postwar multiparty era as Atatürk’s top-down modernization was replaced with top-down democratization.

In the 1950s there was greater tolerance for Islam – including the reopening of mosques and schools of divinity – and the government allowed mosques to resume the practice of summoning the faithful to prayer in Arabic rather than in Turkish.

Although the core Republic guard saw this as pandering to populist sentiment, later it was the military itself – during the period of martial law (1980 – 1983) – which viewed religion as a force of social cohesion and made religious instruction compulsory.

The rationale for the coup had been the violent street warfare between gangs of left-wing and nationalist youths.

Religious radicalism was regarded as something of a spent force and the military hoped to co-opt Sunni Islam into propping up old-fashioned nationalism.

The result was a worldview known as the “Turkish-Islamic synthesis“.

Above: Kocatepe Mosque, Ankara, Turkey

The success of the overtly Islamist Welfare Party (1983 – 1998) in the 1994 local elections and in general elections the following year obliged the military to doubt the wisdom of their benign view of religion.

Above: Welfare Party logo

This was the election that launched the career of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who was to prove the military’s most able foe and who was able to maneuver his AK Party into the political mainstream.

The AK Party repackaged its commitment to Islam as a question of private conscience and democratic choice.

Above: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

Is Turkey in danger of becoming a fundamentalist state?

The question is one often posed by those who fear that Islam is the main obstacle to Turkey’s fuller integration into the West or that it prevents the country from achieving its goal of full democracy.

The more alienating force is a crude nationalism that in the past has served as a cover for government corruption and political/economic isolationism.

Yet many nonetheless fear that Turkish society is becoming a Kulturkampf (cultural battle) between rival secular and Islamic-oriented elites.

Above: Ahmet Hamdi Akseki Mosque, Ankara, Turkey

The most obvious antidote to polarization is the ability of a population to accommodate and thrive from diversity.

Some women wear headscarves, some have piercings, some have both.

In 2012, around 65% of Turks were teetotalers.

Those who indulge can choose from an increasing array of wines from boutique vineyards that have become the passion and playthings of a Western-oriented elite.

Above: Wine-producing regions in Turkey

For example, the residents of the conservative Central Anatolian city of Kayseri joke about those who attend Friday prayers but leave for a weekend at the nearby tourist hotspots of Cappadocia, much in the way the burghers of Philadelphia once made for Atlantic City on a Saturday night to evade the ban of selling alcohol in the early hours of Sunday.

Above: Kayseri beneath Mount Erciyes, Turkey

Above: İbrahimpaşa panorama, Cappadocia, Turkey

Above: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

Above: Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA

Turkey still regards itself as a home of the world’s revealed religions and actively promotes “faith tourism“, hoping to attract millions of visitors to religious monuments and sites.

Above: Regions in Turkey for religious tourism

The Archbishop of Constantinople (the Ecumenical Patriarch) is the first among equals of the 300 million adherents of the Orthodox faith worldwide.

The title dates back to the 6th century.

The present incumbent still celebrates liturgy in the Church of St. George by the shores of the Golden Horn.

Above: His All Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I

Above: Church of St. George, Istanbul, Turkey

Castles and churches of the medieval Armenian kingdoms are scattered through eastern Turkey and the seat of the Armenian Patriarchate has, since 1461, been in Istanbul.

Above: Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople, Istanbul, Turkey

The Roman city of Sardis near the Aegean contains the restored remains of a 3rd century synagogue.

Above: Sardis Synagogue

The Arhida Synagogue in Istanbul remains active more than 500 years after it was first built.

Above: Ahrida Synagogue, Istanbul, Turkey

Guidebook in hand, one can visit the basilicas of the Eastern churches, including Chaldean Catholic churches and Assyrian monasteries where the liturgical language is ancient Aramaic.

Above: Mar Petyun Chaldean Catholic Church, Diyarbakir, Turkey

Above: Assyrian Patriarchal Church of Mar Shalita, Qudshanis, Hakkâri Province, Turkey

Though still functioning, these monuments to Anatolia’s multi-confessional past are at best vestigial.

The communities they serve have barely survived a 20th century legacy of nationalist upheavals and subsequent exodus.

Turkish-born non-Muslims now account for less than 1% of the current population.

Above: Hagia Sophia, Istanbul, Turkey

There is a gap between the rhetoric of tolerance and the actual practice.

Opinion surveys commonly report individuals’ reluctance to live next to people of faiths different than their own.

However, there are not that many non-Muslims to put this abstract prejudice to the test.

One might expect, to take a nonreligious example, that there would be much greater tension between Kurdish and non-Kurdish communities, particularly during periods when the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) has been on a violent campaign.

Above: Flag of the PKK

While it would be foolish to deny prejudice exists, dire prophecies of intercommunal tensions between Turk and Kurd simply have not materialized.

Perhaps a common faith remains a unifying force.

To inject a personal note, one of the most attractive features of living in Turkey as a foreigner is the quality of respect and civility that invests the exchanges of everyday life.

It would, therefore, be unwise to see discrimination against non-Muslims as a function of an increasing Islamization of Turkish society or of an ascendancy of the AK Party rather than as a part of the nationalist legacy.

Above: Justice and Development Party (AK) logo

The Greek Orthodox community has also been the victim of tit-for-tat retaliation over the treatment of Turkish communities in Eastern Greece or in Cyprus.

Above: Flag of the Greek Orthodox Church

If anything, religious minorities have benefitted from the greater openness that the AK Party requests on behalf of its own mainstream constituents.

The unease that Turkey feels about allowing full expression of other faiths stems in part from its own insecurities about Islam.

Above: Kocatepe Camii (mosque), Ankara, Turkey

An interesting case is the Orthodox seminary on Heybeli Island off the coast of Istanbul, which served as a private and therefore illegal institution of higher education.

It closed in 1971.

This is of great concern to the Patriarchate, which relies on the institution to train future clergy.

Since then, the door has been opened to private universities albeit under the supervision of the Board of Higher Education – a solution that the Orthodox Church cannot accept.

This has led to an impasse that, in turn, has become a diplomatic embarrassment.

The fate of Halki is often on the agenda when Turkish statesmen travel abroad.

Above: Halki Theological School, Hill of Hope, Heybeli Island, Turkey

It has been the subject of resolutions from both houses of the US Congress.

The real problem is not that the government wants the school to remain shut, but rather that if it allowed priests to be trained to institutions outside its control, it would come under pressure to extend that same right to “unlicensed” courses in Islam.

Above: Emblem of Turkey

Not all Islam in Turkey is mainstream.

Above: Sabanci Merkez Camii, Adana, Turkey

There is a sizeable Alevi community.

Above: Alevis Islam in Turkey

Alevi is a form of Shi’ite Islam, but unlike in Iran, where Shi’ism has reinforced a theocratic orthodoxy, Alevis have been part of a culture of dissent in Turkey.

Above: Flag of Iran

Their faith incorporates elements of mysticism and folk religion and exhibits an indifference to many of the practices associated with mainstream Islam – including obligatory fasting during the month of Ramadan or even the pilgrimage to Mecca.

Above: Hadj pilgrims around the Kaaba, Mecca, Saudi Arabia

Alevis are sometimes regarded as the front line in the defence of Turkish secularism inasmuch as they are treated with condescension or at best are overlooked by the religious establishment.

Many Alevis resent seeing their taxes going to support that establishment or a school system that teaches a variant of a faith very different from what they practice at home.

Indeed, one could argue that they have long been the victim of the intolerance which Turkish secularists fear may one day rebound on themselves.

Above: Haci Bektas Veli (1248 – 1337) was a mystic, humanist and a philosopher who lived in Anatolia (Central-Turkey). His teachings had great impact on the Anatolian cultures. He is known for his humanistic teachings and mystic personality.

At the same time, it would be wrong to gloss over the mutual suspicion between those adopting a pious lifestyle and those who adhere to a more latitudinarian one.

Both have reason to fear the other’s intolerance.

Commentators speak of the informal “neighbourhood pressure” and of an ascendancy forcing people to conform to mores they might not choose themselves.

Turkish secularists wonder whether they will be made to wait on the wrong side of the barriers they themselves erected.

Historically it is the pious who have been excluded from public life.

Above: Sultan Ahmed Mosque, Istanbul, Turkey

The answer to those who worry that the AK Party is a fundamentalist party in liberal clothing is that it has been in office since 2002 and has had ample time to show its hand.

There is evidence that it believes it has the mandate to legislate on issues of private morality and enforce more strictly those laws and ordinances that already exist.

However, it seems unlikely that any Turkish government would make a sudden move that would excite opinion both at home and abroad.

Above: Parliament of Turkey

In 2004, President Erdoğan did propose making adultery a felony.

He backtracked precisely when the ensuing uproar began to affect Turkey’s attempt to get a seat at the EU negotiating table.

Above: Seal of the President of Turkey

In fact, adultery had been illegal in Turkey, but the law governing it was declared unconstitutional in 1996 because it applied a far stricter standard for women (mere infidelity) than for men (taking a mistress).

The never-enacted law apparently was intended not to tame philandering modernists, but to discipline pious men who thought themselves entitled to take on additional partners, sanctioned by Islamic law but not by civil code.

Legislation came into effect in 2011 that has made it more difficult to serve alcohol at some types of events or for alcohol firms to sponsor sporting events.

These restrictions, as well as higher taxes on alcohol, were justified on grounds of public health and not morality.

The AK government is equally anti-smoking.

However, its general disapproval of alcohol is seen by secularists as the not-so-thin edge of the wedge.

The pious may be against the consumption of alcohol, but they show no sign of being against consumption per se.

Turkish sociologists talk about a newly empowered Islamic bourgeoisie.

Islamic (i.e. “non-interest” or “participation“) banking in 2010 accounted for a mere (and static) 4% of total banking assets.

There is scant public discussion concerning the morality of credit cards or bank interest.

One reason to doubt that there will be a sudden “majoritarian” imposition of an Islamic regime is that there is no groundswell of people who see a major incompatibility of their faith and the life they are already living.

(Islamic bankingIslamic finance or Sharia-compliant finance is banking or financing activity that complies with Sharia (Islamic law) and its practical application through the development of Islamic economics.

Some of the modes of Islamic banking/finance include: 

  • Mudarabah (profit-sharing and loss-bearing)
  • Wadiah (safekeeping)
  • Musharaka (joint ventures)
  • Murabahah (profit markup)
  • Ljara (leasing)

Above: Housing Bank, Amman, Jordan

Sharia prohibits riba (usury), interest paid on all loans of money.

Investment in businesses that provide goods or services considered contrary to Islamic principles (e.g. pork or alcohol) is also haram (“sinful and prohibited“).

These prohibitions have been applied historically in varying degrees in Muslim countries/communities to prevent un-Islamic practices.

In the late 20th century, as part of the revival of Islamic identity, a number of Islamic banks formed to apply these principles to private or semi-private commercial institutions within the Muslim community.

Their number and size has grown, so that by 2009, there were over 300 banks and 250 mutual funds around the world complying with Islamic principles, and around $2 trillion was Sharia-compliant by 2014

Sharia-compliant financial institutions represented approximately 1% of total world assets, concentrated in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, Pakistan, Iran and Malaysia. 

Above: Islamic Banking and Finance Institute, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Although Islamic banking still makes up only a fraction of the banking assets of Muslims, since its inception it has been growing faster than banking assets as a whole, and is projected to continue to do so.

The industry has been lauded for returning to the path of “divine guidance” in rejecting the “political and economic dominance” of the West, and noted as the “most visible mark” of Islamic revivalism, its most enthusiastic advocates promise “no inflation, no unemployment, no exploitation and no poverty” once it is fully implemented.

However, it has also been criticized for failing to develop profit and loss sharing or more ethical modes of investment promised by early promoters, and instead selling banking products that “comply with the formal requirements of Islamic law“, but use “ruses and subterfuges to conceal interest“, and entail “higher costs, bigger risks” than conventional (ribawi) banks.)

Above: Saba Islamic Bank, Djibouti City, Djibouti

On the whole, it would be absurd to see mosques as providing an underground network of dissent.

Some women do complain that their religious headscarf subjects them to discrimination.

However, their principal demand – akin to that of the American civil rights movement – is to be accepted into the mainstream rather than to overthrow the existing order.

Women who wear headscarves are often reluctant to see their own fight in the context of a larger battle for human rights – for example, the right to be educated in Kurdish – presumably because this would recast their demands in a far more radical light.

Indeed one could make a convincing argument that religion, far from presenting a threat to the Republic, has proved to be a safety valve and a force of social integration during an intense period of urbanization.

Above: Atatürk and an old woman in chador

This is reflected in the proliferation of mosques, though their construction is not state-funded.

In 1990, well before commentators suspected Turkey of lurching to the religious right, 1,500 mosques were being built every year – at a far brisker rate than new schools.

For the most part these buildings are replicas of 16th century classical architecture, with slender minarets and cascading domes.

In this sense, they parallel the Gothic style churches that were a feature of the post-Industrial Revolution neighbourhoods of Victorian Britain, evoking the sacrament of history to celebrate not just God but the foundation of community.

Above: Wells Cathedral, England

This has particular resonance in Turkey, where communities were often built in defiance of planning procedure and through the quasi-legal occupation of public land.

Mosques were buildings that authorities would think twice about before tearing down.

It is not just the tenacity of religion that has taken secularists by surprise, but its ability to adapt to modernity and itself become a vehicle of change.

Not so far away from Eskişehir, deep in the Western Taurus Mountains of Turkey’s Mediterranean coast, along ancient Roman roads and shepherds’ tracks, live the ghosts of Christianity’s St. Paul and his followers.

Above: Demirkazik Crest, Aladağ Mountains, Niğde Province, Turkey

Between Perge / Aspendos and Antioch lies a wealth of undiscovered, beautiful countryside, with canyons, waterfalls, cedar forests, limestone peaks soaring to almost 3,000 metres, and the exquisitely blue waters of Lake Eğirdir, Turkey’s 4th largest and most beautiful lake.

Above: Eğirdir Lake

Turkey’s tourist image couldn’t be further away from the setting of the St. Paul Walk with its lakes, mountains and canyons.

Above: St. Paul’s Walk

Most holidaymakers coming to Turkey aim for the Aegean and Mediterranean coastlines or for Istanbul.

Above: The “Turkish Riviera” by the Aegean Sea

Above: Istanbul tram

I am a walker who has always been intrigued by the notion of pilgrimages – where the object is not rest and recreation or to get away from it all – that set out to throw down a challenge to everyday life where nothing matters but the adventure.

Where the journey is far more important than the destination.

Where one follows the advice of Confucius to:

  • Practice the arts of attention and listening
  • Practice renewing yourself every day
  • Practice meandering toward the centre of every place
  • Practice the ritual of reading sacred texts
  • Practice gratitude and the singing of praise

Above: The teaching Confucius (551 – 479 BCE)

pilgrimage is a journey, often into an unknown or foreign place, where a person goes in search of new or expanded meaning about their self, others, nature, or a higher good, through the experience.

It can lead to a personal transformation, after which the pilgrim returns to their daily life.

Above: Flemish pilgrim, David Teniers the Younger (1610 – 1690)

God willing and time and money permitting I would love to walk St. Paul’s Trail or follow St. James’ Way to Santiago de Compostela in Spain or hike the Via Francigena all the way to Rome, or visit the Holy Land.

Above: St. James Way

Above: Santiago de Compostela Cathedral, Spain

Above: Pilgrims to Rome, Fidenza Cathedral, Italy

Above: Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Jerusalem, Israel – The purported site of Christ’s resurrection

Above: Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem – Islam’s first direction of prayer before Mecca

Above: Al-Aqsa Mosque, Jerusalem – Purported site of Muhammad’s ascension to Heaven

Above: Temple Mount, Jerusalem – Purported site of Solomon’s Temple

Above: The Wailing (or Western) Wall, Jerusalem – Purported remains of the Holy Temple of Judaism

Though I am remote from ever being labelled one of Christ’s followers or Jehovah’s Chosen People.

Being a non-Muslim I cannot enter the city of Mecca, but I avidly search for accounts of those who have retraced the steps of Muhammed, who have gone on a Hadj.

And pilgrimages are not limited to Abrahamic religions.

Above: Portrait of the Patriarch Abraham, from whom Judaism, Christianity and Islam originate

Sikhs go to Amritsar, Taoists make the Mazu pilgrimage across Taiwan, Zoroastrians visit the fire temples in Iran, Hindus bathe in holy rivers, and Buddhists travel from Buddha’s birthplace in Nepal to his final resting place in India.

Above: Sikh pilgrim at the Golden Temple, Amritsar, India

Above: Mazu Pilgrim Path, Taiwan

Above: Yazd Atash Behram, Iran (Zoroastrian fire temple)

Above: Hindu pilgrims along the Ganges River, India

Above: World Peace Pagoda, Lumbini, Nepal

We grant a divine meaning to this ordinary Earth and seek the meaning of life beyond our understanding.

I would be content as a heathen to understand how faith fuels the fervor of so many around the globe.

Islam is the largest religion in Turkey according to the state, with 99% of the population being initially registered by the state as Muslim, for anyone whose parents are not of any other officially recognised religion and the remaining 0.1% are Christians or adherents of other officially recognised religions like Judaism.

Due to the nature of this method, the official number of Muslims includes people with no religion, as well as converted people and anyone who is of a different religion from their Muslim parents, but has not applied for a change of their individual records.

(By this definition, technically I am Muslim?)

The records can be changed or even blanked on the request of citizen, by filing an e-government application since May 2020, using a valid electronic signature to sign the electronic application. 

Any change in religion records additionally results in a new ID card being issued.

Any change in religion record also leaves a permanent trail in the census record, however, record of change of religion is not accessible except for the citizen in question, next-of-kin of the citizen in question, the citizenship administration and the courts.

Turkey is officially a secular country with no official religion since the constitutional amendment in 1928 and later strengthened by Atatürk’s reforms and the appliance of laicism (which prohibits government influence in the determination of religion) by the country’s founder and first president Mustafa Kemal Atatürk on 5 February 1937.

Above: Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

However, currently all primary and secondary schools hold mandatory religion classes which mostly focus on the Sunni sect of Islam, though other religions are also covered briefly.

In these classes, children are required to learn prayers and other religious practices which belong specifically to Sunnism.

Above: Muslim denominations

Thus, although Turkey is officially a secular state, the teaching of religious practices in public grade schools has been controversial.

Its application to join the European Union (EU) divided existing members, some of which questioned whether a Muslim country could fit in.

Turkish politicians have accused the country’s EU opponents of favoring a “Christian club“.

Above: European Union flag

Above: (in green) The European Union

Beginning in the 1980s, the role of religion in the state has been a divisive issue, as influential religious factions challenged the complete secularization called for by Kemalism and the observance of Islamic practices experienced a substantial revival.

In the early 2000s, Islamic groups challenged the concept of a secular state with increasing vigor after Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) came into power in 2002.

Above: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

(Kemalism is sweeping political, social, cultural and religious reforms designed to separate the new Turkish state from its Ottoman predecessor and embrace a Western-style modernized lifestyle, including the establishment of secularism / laicism, state support of the sciences, free education, and many more.

Most of these reforms were first introduced to, and implemented in Turkey during Atatürk’s presidency.)

Above: Flag of the Republican People’s Party, showing the Six Arrows of Kemalism

It has been fervor of faith that has transformed the politics of Turkey since Andrew Finkel’s abovementioned 2012 book was published.

One of the most prominent faith movements existent in 2012 was founded by the charismatic preacher Fetullah Gülen.

Above: Fetullah Gülen, 2016

The movement – now designated a terrorist organization by Turkey, Pakistan and the Gulf States – that bears Gülen’s name managed to prosper less through sermons in the mosque and more through the media, think tanks and NGOs, financial services, commercial enterprises, and even universities.

The Gülen Movement created a huge network of nonreligious private and charter schools in Turkey as well as in over 100 other countries.

These schools were far more emissaries of Turkish culture – a privately financed form of public diplomacy – than centres of Islam.

In this they were the mirror image of elite foreign language high schools (German, French, Italian and English) in Turkey itself and have become vehicles for Turkish commercial penetration into parts of the world once beyond its reach.

The schools provided a high standard of education and were particularly popular in the former Soviet Union because of their discipline and teetotaling teachers.

Preaching, where it existed, was very much an afterschool activity.

Gülen himself advocated an “alternative” modernity that involved a very explicit rejection of the proposition that Islam is incompatible with contemporary life.

His Islam, though culturally conservative, had an emotional appeal as well as a mystic component that made it different from a fundamentalist state religion.

Gülen-associated institutions were active participants in interfaith dialogue.

Above: Fetullah Gülen

In 2012 the size of Gülen’s following was difficult to estimate.

Three million was a frequently cited figure.

Time magazine put the figure as high as 6 million.

The Movement had huge influence.

Zaman, the house newspaper of the Movement, was among Turkey’s largest circulating dailies and actively supported the AK Party government.

Above: Typical front page of Zaman (1986 – 2016)

By contrast, it did not back its predecessor, the Welfare Party, which had a much narrower, anti-Western and Muslim Brotherhood feel.

Above: Flag of the Muslim Brotherhood, whose aim is the establishment of a Sharia-based state

Some saw the Gülen Movement as the Islamic incarnation of Calvinism – a belief system that embodies the spirit of capitalism and legitimizes itself through the worldly success of its adherents.

Above: Jean Cauvin (aka John Calvin) (1509 – 1564)

Others believed that Gülen and those who sheltered under his banner tried to create “sleeper cells” within the bureaucracy and particularly within the police.

That the “Master Teacher” (Hoca Efendi), as Gülen has been respectfully called, has spent more than two decades in exile on an estate in Pennsylvania has only made him a more shadowy and sinister figure.

The suspicion is that he owes his allegiance not to where he grew up but where he eats.

Above: Fetullah Gülen

(Ergenekon was the name given to an alleged clandestine, secular ultra-nationalist organization in Turkey with possible ties to members of the country’s military and security forces. 

The would-be group, named after Ergenekon, a mythical place located in the inaccessible valleys of the Altay Mountains, was accused of terrorism in Turkey.

Ergenekon was by some believed to be part of the “deep state“.

The existence of the “deep state” was affirmed in Turkish opinion after the Susurluk Scandal in 1996.)

(The Susurluk Scandal (Susurluk kazası) was a scandal involving the close relationship among the deep state in Turkey (an alleged group of influential anti-democratic coalitions within the politics of Turkey composed of high-level elements within the intelligence services (domestic and foreign), the Turkish military, security agencies, the judiciary and mafia), the Grey Wolves (a Turkish far right organization and movement commonly described as ultra-nationalistic, Islamic fundamentalist extreme and neo-fascist youth organization which claims to be a cultural and educational foundation) and the Turkish mafia (the general term for criminal organizations based in Turkey and/or composed of (former) Turkish citizens).

Above: Logo of the Grey Wolves

It took place during the peak of the Kurdish-Turkish conflict, in the mid-1990s.

The relationship came into existence after the National Security Council (NSC) posited the need for the marshaling of the state’s resources to combat the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

Above: Headquarters of the National Security Council, Ankara, Turkey

The scandal surfaced with a car – truck collision on 3 November 1996, near Susurluk, in the province of Balikesir.

Above: Scene of the Susurluk car crash

The victims included the deputy chief of the Istanbul Police Department Huseyin Kocadağ, Member of Parliament Sedat Bucak, and Abdullah Çatli, the leader of the Grey Wolves and a contract killer for the National Intelligence Organization (Turkey’s equivalent to the CIA)(MİT), who was on Interpol’s red list at the time of his death.

The Susurluk car crash took place on 3 November 1996.

It resulted in the death of three of the passengers: 

  • Abdullah Çatli, a former ultra-rightist militant wanted by police for multiple murders and drug trafficking 
  • Huseyin Kocadağ, a senior police official
  • beauty queen Gonca Uş (Çatlı’s girlfriend)

MP Sedat Bucak escaped with a broken leg and fractured skull.

The peculiar associations of the crash victims and their links with Interior Minister Mehmet Agar led to a number of investigations, including a parliamentary investigation, of what became known as the Susurluk scandal.

Above: Mehmet Ağar

The state had been engaged in an escalating low intensity conflict with the PKK since 1984.

The conflict escalated in the early 1990s.

Towards the end of 1992, a furious debate in the NSC about how to proceed was taking place.

Moderates, like President Turgut Özal and General Eşref Bitlis, favoured a non-military solution.

However, both died in 1993.

Above: Turgut Özal (1927 – 1993)

The death of Bitlis (the General Commander of the Turkish Gendarmerie at the time) in a plane crash remains controversial.

Above: Eşref Bitlis (1933 – 1993)

The same year, the NSC ordered a co-ordinated black operations campaign using special forces. 

Then-Deputy Prime Minister Tansu Çiller tasked the police force, then under the leadership of Mehmet Ağar, with crippling the PKK and assassinating its leader, Abdullah Öcalan.

Above: Tansu Çiller

Above: Abdullah Öcalan

Turkish authorities had claimed that security officers, politicians and other authorities who had been involved in drug trafficking were initially tasked with preventing the Turkish mafia and the PKK from profiting from illegal activities, but that these officials then captured the business and fought over who would control it.

Intelligence expert Mahir Kaynak described the police camp as “pro-European“, and the MİT camp as “pro-American“.

Above: Seal of the Turkish National Intelligence Organization (MIT)

The authorities pocketed billions of dollars in profits from the drug smuggling.

This illegal activity on the state’s part was partly motivated, or at least justified as such, by the tens of billions of dollars in loss of trade with Iraq due to the Gulf War.

Above: Gulf War (1990 – 1991) images

To put this into perspective, the Turkish heroin trade, then worth $50 billion, exceeded the state budget of $48 billion.

(Other sources quote the 1998 budget as $62 billion and the drug market as $70 billion, though only a fraction of this was tapped as commission.)

Above: Black tar heroin

Although Ağar and Çiller resigned after the scandal, no one received any punitive sentences.

Ağar was eventually re-elected to Parliament (as a leader of the True Path Party, DYP), and the sole survivor of the crash, chieftain Sedat Bucak, was released.

Above: Logo of the True Path Party (1983 – 2007)

Some reforms were made:

The intelligence agency was restructured to end infighting.

Some hold that the scandal was made possible by the wresting of control of the MİT away from the Turkish military in 1992.)

Above: Emblem of the Turkish Armed Forces

(Alleged members of Ergenekon had been indicted on charges of plotting to foment unrest, among other things by assassinating intellectuals, politicians, judges, military staff, and religious leaders, with the ultimate goal of toppling the incumbent government.

By April 2011, over 500 people had been taken into custody and nearly 300 formally charged with membership of what prosecutors described as “the Ergenekon terrorist organization“, which they claimed had been responsible for virtually every act of political violence — and controlled every militant group —in Turkey over the last 30 years.

As of 2015 most of the people accused of such crimes were acquitted, forensic experts concluded the documents for supposed plots were fake and some of the executors of trials proved to be linked to the Gülen Movement and were charged with plotting against the Turkish Army.)

The Gülen Movement states that it is based on moral values and advocacy of universal access to education, civil society, tolerance and peace.

The emphasis among participants is to perform “service” (hizmet) as arising from individuals’ personal commitments to righteous imperatives.

Along with hizmet, the movement, which has no official name, is termed the Gülen Movement or cemaat (“congregation“, “community” or “assembly“).

The movement has been characterized as a “moderate blend of Islam“. 

Gülen and the Gülen Movement are technology-friendly, work within current market and commerce structures, and are savvy users of modern communications and public relations.

In 2008, Gülen was described as “the modern face of the Sufi Ottoman tradition“, who reassures his followers, including many members of “Turkey’s aspirational middle class“, that “they can combine the statist-nationalist beliefs of Atatürk’s republic with a traditional but flexible Islamic faith” and “Ottoman traditions that had been caricatured as theocratic by Atatürk and his ‘Kemalist’ heirs“.

Above: Fetullah Gülen

In the early 2000s, the Gülen Movement was seen as keeping a distance from established Islamic political parties.

Sources state that the Gülen Movement is vying to be recognized as the world’s leading Muslim network, one that is more reasonable than many of its rivals.

The movement builds on the activities of Gülen, who has won praise from non-Muslim quarters for his advocacy of science, interfaith dialogue, and multi-party democracy.

It has earned praise as “the world’s most global movement“.

It is impossible to calculate the size of the Gülen Movement” since the movement is not a centralized or formal organization with membership rosters, but rather a set of numerous, loosely organized networks of people inspired by Gülen.

Estimates of the size of the Movement vary, with one source stating that between 200,000 supporters and 4 million people are influenced by Gülen’s ideas (1997 Tempo estimate), and another stating that Gülen has “hundreds of thousands of supporters“.

The membership of the movement consists primarily of students, teachers, businessmen, academics, journalists and other professionals. 

Its members have founded schools, universities, an employers’ association, charities, real estate trusts, student organizations, radio and television stations, and newspapers.

The movement’s structure has been described as a flexible organizational network. 

Movement schools and businesses organize locally and link themselves into informal networks. 

Akin to Turkey’s Sufi tariqas (lay religious orders), Movement schools were banned in Turkey in 1925.

The Movement skirted Kemalist Turkey’s prohibitions against assembling in non-state sponsored religious meetings.

(As a young man, future President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdoğan belonged to the Naqshbandi tariqa, then technically banned in Turkey.)

Above: An election campaign poster featuring Erdoğan: “Istanbul is Ready, Target 2023“, Taksim Square, Istanbul

Each local Gülen movement school and community has a person designated its “informal” (in the sense of not being Turkish state-sponsored) prayer leader (imam).

In the Gülen Movement, this individual is a layman who serves for a stint within this voluntary position.

His identity is kept confidential, generally only purposely made known to those with close connections to those participating in decision-making and coordinating councils within the local group.

Above a grouping of such “secret” (not-publicly-acknowledged) imams is another such volunteer leader.

This relationship tree continues on up the ladder to the nation-level imam and to individuals who consult with Gülen himself.

(These individuals closest to Gülen, having degrees from theology schools, are offhandedly referred to within the movement as mullahs.)

Gülen’s position is analogous to that of a shaykh (master) of a Sufi tariqa.

Unlike with traditional tariqas, no one makes pledges of any sort, upon joining the Gülen Movement.

A person becomes a Movement participant simply by working with others to promote and effect the Movement’s objectives of education and service.

The Gülen Movement works within the given structures of modern secular states.

It encourages affiliated members to maximize the opportunities those countries afford rather than engaging in subversive activities.

In the words of Gülen himself, it promotes “an Ottoman Empire of the mind“.

Detractors of the Movement “have labeled Gülen community members as secretive missionaries, while those in the Movement and sympathetic observers class it as a civil society organization“.

Critics have complained that members of the Gülen movement are overly compliant to the directions from its leaders.

Gülen’s Movement “is generally perceived by its critics as a religio-political cult“.

Above: Fetullah Gülen

The Guardian editorial board described the Movement in 2013 as having “some of the characteristics of a cult or of an Islamic Opus Dei“.

(Opus Dei is an organization within the Catholic Church.)

Above: Opus Dei logo – “A cross embracing the world

Scholars such as Simon Robinson disagree with the characterization, writing that although “there is no doubt that Gülen remains a charismatic leader and that members of the movement hold him in the highest respect“, the Movement “differs markedly from a cult in several ways“, with Gülen stressing “the primacy of the scriptures” and “the imperative of service” and consistently avoiding “attempts to institutionalize power, to perceive him as the source of all truth, or to view him as taking responsibility for the Movement“.

Zeki Saritoprak says that the view of Gülen as “a cult leader or a man with ambitions” is mistaken, and contends that Gülen should be viewed in the context of a long line of Sufi masters who have long been a centre of attention “for their admirers and followers, both historically and currently“.

Above: Zeki Sartoprak

Beginning in 2008, the Dutch government investigated the Movement’s activities in the Netherlands in response to questions from Parliament.

The first two investigations concluded that the movement did not form a breeding ground for radicalism and found no indications that the movement worked against integration or that it was involved in terrorism or religious radicalization.

A further academic study sketched a portrait of a socially conservative, inwardly directed movement with an opaque organizational structure, but said that its members tend to be highly successful in society and thus form no threat to integration.

Above: Flag of the Netherlands

Hizmet-affiliated foundations and businesses were estimated as worth $20-to-$50 billion in 2015.

Fethullah Gülen’s and the Gülen Movement’s views and practices have been discussed in international conferences.

In October 2007 in London a conference was sponsored by the University of Birmingham, the Dialogue Society, the Irish School of Ecumenics, Leeds Metropolitan University, the London Middle East Institute, the Middle East Institute and the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.

Above: London, England

The Niagara Foundation of Chicago, together with several academic institutions, organized “The Gülen Movement: Paradigms, Projects and Aspirations” conference, which was held at the University of Chicago on 11–13 November 2010.

Above: Logo of the University of Chicago

In 2017 the German magazine Der Spiegel called the Movement a “secretive and dangerous cult” while calling Gülen a suspicious individual, saying:

The movement calls itself a tolerant service movement, while those who have left the movement call it a secretive Islamist organization with Fethullah Gülen as its leader“.

The article said pupils attending the “cult” schools in Germany were under immense pressure from their abis (tutors) telling them which books to read, which movies to watch, which friends to meet and whether to see their families or not, while the abis were keeping a protocol of all those staying in the cult’s dormitories.

Der Spiegel also criticized the movement regarding its activities towards freedom of the press.

Arguing, despite Gülen emphasizing how much he cares of the freedom of the press in interviews, the Movement launched a campaign towards the newspaper in 2012 after an article was written regarding the “cult“.

During which 2,000 readers sent by the cult wrote letters of complaint to the Press Council.

All of which were rejected by the Council. 

Der Spiegel said the Movement distorted events and threatened those who spoke against it and accused Der Spiegel of having ties to the Turkish mafia.

Above: Logo of Der Spiegel (The Mirror)

Gareth Jenkins of the Sunday Times said, despite portraying itself as a peaceful educational movement, the Gülen organization never hesitates using anti-democratic and anti-liberal methods.

The Süddeutsche Zeitung called the organization as “more dangerous than the Illuminati” and “not transparent as opposed to the claims“, and reported that the organization tried to reorganize in the Swabia region of Germany.

(Illuminati is a name given to several groups, both real and fictitious whose goals were to oppose superstition, obscurantism, religious influence over public life, and abuses of state power.

Historically, the name usually refers to the Bavarian Illuminati, an Enlightenment-era secret society founded on 1 May 1776 in Bavaria, today part of Germany.

The order of the day“, they wrote in their general statutes, “is to put an end to the machinations of the purveyors of injustice, to control them without dominating them.”

Above: Adam Weishaupt (1748–1830), founder of the Illuminati

The Illuminati — along with Freemasonry and other secret societies — were outlawed with the encouragement of the Catholic Church.

The group was generally vilified by conservative and religious critics who claimed that the Illuminati continued underground and were responsible for the French Revolution.

Many influential intellectuals and progressive politicians counted themselves as members.

It attracted literary men.

Above: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 – 1832), a member of the Illuminati

Illuminati” has referred to various organisations which have claimed, or have been claimed to be, connected to the original Bavarian Illuminati or similar secret societies, though these links have been unsubstantiated.

These organisations have often been alleged to conspire to control world affairs, by masterminding events and planting agents in government and corporations, in order to gain political power and influence and to establish a New World Order.

Central to some of the more widely known and elaborate conspiracy theories, the Illuminati have been depicted as lurking in the shadows and pulling the strings and levers of power in dozens of novels, films, television shows, comics, video games, and music videos.)

On 9 November 2005, a bookstore was bombed in Şemdinli.

The Şemdinli incident occurred on 9 November 2005 when a bookshop in Şemdinli, Hakkari Province, Turkey was attacked with grenades.

One person died and several were injured in the attack on the Umut bookshop.

The attack was carried out by Turkish Gendarmerie personnel, who were caught in the act by local residents.

The men are said to have worked for the Gendarmerie’s JITEM intelligence unit.

Two hand grenades were thrown, and a further two retrieved from the car of Kaya and İldeniz, which was registered to the local Gendarmerie.

Above: Emblem of the Turkish Gendarmerie

In 2010 grenades with the same serial number were found in a house in Erzincan as part of the Ergenekon investigation.

The incident has been compared with the Susurluk scandal for the light it casts on the Turkish “deep state“.

Above: Aftermath of the 9 November 2005 bookstore bombing

The prosecutor of the case, Ferhat Sarıkaya, prepared a criminal indictment in which Turkey’s Commander of Land Forces Yasar Büyükanit was accused of forming a gang and plotting the bombing.

A decade later, prosecutor Sarıkaya confessed that he was ordered by Gülenists to include General Yaşar Büyükanıt into the criminal indictment, in order to prevent his promotion in the army (Chief of General Staff) and to ease the grip on Gülenist structures within the army.

Above: Yaşar Büyükanıt (1940 – 2019)

The prominent Turkish – Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was assassinated in Istanbul on 19 January 2007.

Dink was a newspaper editor who had written and spoken about the Armenian genocide, and was well known for his efforts for reconciliation between Turks and Armenians and his advocacy of human and minority rights in Turkey.

At the time of his death, he was on trial for violating Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code and “denigrating Turkishness“.

Above: Hrant Dink

Above: Hrant Dink was assassinated in Istanbul around 12:00 GMT on 19 January 2007, as he returned to the offices of Agos.

His murder sparked both massive national protests in Turkey itself as well as widespread international outrage.

Above: A panorama from Halaskargazi Boulevard in the Sisli district of Istanbul.
One hundred thousand mourners marched in Dink’s funeral, protesting his assassination.

Hakan Bakırcıoglu, one of Hrant Dink’s lawyers, said in an interview with Deutsche Welle that the underaged perpetrator, Ogün Samast, had help from third parties, including people connected to the Istanbul and Trabzon police forces.

Four prosecutors in the trial have been dismissed from their posts due to their ties with the Movement, and for failing to make progress with the case.

Furthermore, police commissioners Ramazan Akyürek and Ali Fuat Yılmazer were accused of not sharing their foreknowledge of the attack with the prosecutors, gendarmarie, or the intelligence services despite being briefed of a planned assassination several times.

A Turkish court also said that 18 suspects in the case, among them 13 government officials were using the application ByLock on their phones, which the Turkish government claims are the communication tool of Gülen movement followers.

According to investigative journalist Nedim Şener, the Gülen movement used the assassination of Hrant Dink, the assassination of priest Andrea Santoro, the Zirve Publishing House murders, as well as other events, to create an atmosphere and illusion of a clandestine Kemalist ultra-nationalist organization holding responsible for these misdeeds.

Above: Nedim Şener

(Andrea Santoro (1945 – 2006) was a Roman Catholic priest in Turkey, murdered in the Santa Maria Church in Trabzon where he served as a member of the Catholic Church’s Fidei Donum missionary program. 

He was shot dead from behind while kneeling in prayer in the church.

The motive of the attack is not known.)

Above: Andrea Santoro (1945 – 2006)

(The Zirve Publishing House murders, called the missionary massacres by Turkish media, took place on 18 April 2007, in Zirve Publishing House, Malatya, Turkey.

Three employees of the Bible publishing house were attacked, tortured, and murdered by five Muslim assailants.

Two of the victims, Necati Aydın (36) and Uğur Yüksel (32) were Turkish converts from Islam.

The third man, Tilmann Geske (45) was a German citizen.

Necati Aydın was an actor who played the role of Jesus Christ in a theatre production that the TURK-7 network aired over the Easter holidays.

Aydın is survived by his wife, Şemse, and a son and daughter, both pre-school age.

Geske is survived by his wife Susanne and three children aged 8 to 13.

Yüksel was engaged.

Necati Aydin was a graduate of the Martin Bucer Seminary, whose president Thomas Schirrmacher said he simply cried when he learned of the deaths.)

With the start of the Ergenekon trials, this alleged Kemalist organization was called an “Ergenekon terrorist organization“.

The Gülenist media were instrumental in shaping public opinion during these operations.

In these court cases, military officials, parliamentarians and journalists were accused of plotting a violent coup to oust the government.

It later turned out that these cases were based on fabricated evidence, and that most such fabrications were produced by the Gülenists in the police.

In 2011, Nedim Şener was accused in the Ergenekon trials of being a member of Ergenekon and subsequently was arrested and held in pre-trial detention.

In 2010, the exam questions and answer keys of the Public Personnel Selection Examination (KPSS) were stolen and handed out to certain Gülenist members.

The members with high scores were placed strategically in the critical state bodies.

Above: Logo of the KPSS test

Members of the Gülen movement inside the intelligence agency were accused of reshaping Turkish politics to a more “workable form” by leaking secretly filmed sex tapes and corruption tapes of both government members and opposition members, with the resignation of main opposition leader Deniz Baykal in 2010 as one of the most notable examples.

Above: Deniz Baykal

(An alleged video-tape showing Baykal in bed with his former secretary, Member of Parliament Nesrin Baytok, was leaked to the media.)

Above: Nesrin Baytok

Politicians with no recorded scandalous behavior are believed to have been killed, like Great Unity Party leader Muhsin Yazicioğlu, who died in a helicopter crash in 2009.

Above: Muhsin Yazicioğlu

(Muhsin Yazıcıoğlu (1954 – 2009) was a Turkish politician and member of the Parliament of Turkey.

He was the leader and founder of the Great Unity Party (BBP), a right-wing, nationalist-Islamist political party.

Above: Logo of the Great Unity Party

Yazıcıoğlu died on 25 March 2009, in a helicopter crash in the southern Turkish province of Kahramanmaras, after a political rally there on the way to the next rally in Yozgat just four days before the local elections.

Above: The helicopter crash site

After the helicopter crash, journalist Ismail Güneş who was one of the passengers, called the Turkish emergency service number 112 and was able to talk to the dispatcher clearly.

He explained how the helicopter fell in a way which made some people believe that the crash was more of an assassination than an accident.

According to Ismail Güneş’s autopsy his chin was broken after the crash, suggesting he wouldn’t have been able to talk to the dispatcher.

Above: Ismail Güneş

Locals and soldiers searched for 48 hours until the bodies were found.

The Turkish magazine Aksiyon published a special file on the blood of the deceased.

It contained carbon monoxide before the helicopter fell.

According to Köksal Akpınar, it was proven that the carbon monoxide values in the blood of pilot Kaya İstekte and journalist İsmail Güneş were much higher when the helicopter was falling.

Above: Aksiyon (Action) logo

There is a tape illustrating Sergeant Aydın Özsıcak dismantling the GPS of the helicopter.

This tape was denied by the then-Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan.

However, after the failed military coup in 2016, President Erdoğan published the video since Aydın Özsıcak was one of the sergeants who tried to overthrow Erdoğan during the coup.

Today, the reason for the accident still remains a mystery.)

Above: (foreground) Aydin Özsicak

Turkish and Russian officials declared the Gülen Movement to be responsible for the assassination of Russian ambassador Andrei Karlov and accused the Movement of aiming to damage Russia-Turkey relations that had been normalizing since the 2016 coup d’état attempt.

Above: Andrei Karlov (1954 – 2016)

(Andrei Karlov was assassinated by Mevlüt Mert Altıntaş, an off-duty Turkish police officer, at an art exhibition in Ankara on the evening of 19 December 2016.

The assassination took place after several days of protests in Turkey over Russian involvement in the Syrian Civil War and the battle over Aleppo.

Karlov, the Russian Ambassador to Turkey, had been invited to deliver a speech at the opening of an exhibition of Turkish photography of the Russian countryside.

The exhibition, “Russia through Turks’ eyes“, was being held at the municipality owned Cagdas Sanat Merkezi Centre for Modern Arts in Ankara’s Cankaya district.

Above: Cagdas Sanat Merkezi Centre for Modern Arts, Ankara

Mevlüt Altıntaş entered the hall using his police identification, leading gallery security and attendees to believe he was one of Karlov’s personal bodyguards.

Karlov had begun his speech when Altıntaş suddenly fired several shots at the Russian ambassador from the back, fatally wounding him and injuring several other people.

Above: Mevlüt Mert Altıntaş

After shooting Karlov, Altıntaş circled the room, smashing pictures that were on display and shouting in Arabic and Turkish:

Allahu Akbar (God is the greatest).

We are the descendants of those who supported the Prophet Muhammad, for jihad.

Do not forget Aleppo, do not forget Syria.

We die in Aleppo, you die here.”

Shortly after, Altıntaş was fatally shot by Turkish security forces.

Karlov was taken to the hospital, but died from his injuries.)

Above: Russian commemorative stamp

Since 2013 the Gülen Movement has been accused by the Turkish government of collaborating with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

In 2014 the Movement reportedly conducted several meeting with the PKK, in parts of Northern Iraq under PKK control.

In 2015, the Turkish government said the movement had leaked the identity of 329 Turkish Gendermarie informants to the PKK, who were then executed.

On 15 April 2016, during the Kurdish-Turkish conflict Gülen movement member Brigadier General Ali Osman Gürcan deliberately sent 17 soldiers to a house that was packed with IEDs (improvised explosive devices), according to the testimony of his companions, which led to the death of a police officer and wounding of eight soldiers.

The house was marked on a map with the code ‘P368‘ for IED’s, which Gürcan erased from the map, leading to a brawl that led to his companions calling him a “traitor“. 

Gürcan later participated in the 2016 Turkish coup d’état attempt under the Peace at Home Council.

He was arrested after the coup’s failure and sentenced to life imprisonment.

Above: Ali Osman Gürcan

(The Council for Peace at Home (Yurtta Sulh Konseyi), alternatively called the Peace Council, claimed to be an executive body that led a coup attempt in Turkey (15-16 July 2016).

The name was made public in a statement read on air during the 15 July 2016 temporary takeover by soldiers of the headquarters of Turkish state broadcaster TRT.

It is the wish and order of the Turkish Armed Forces for this statement to be broadcast on all channels of the Turkish Republic.

The valuable citizens of the Turkish Republic have systematically been subject to constitutional and legal infringements threatening the basic characteristics and vital institutions of the state, while all state institutions including the Turkish Armed Forces have undergone attempts to be redesigned based on ideological motives, rendering them unfit for purpose.

Fundamental rights and freedoms as well as the secular democratic legal structure based on the separation of powers have been abolished by the heedless, misguided and even treacherous President and government officials.

Our state has lost its rightful international reputation and has become a country governed by an autocracy based on fear and where fundamental human rights are overlooked.

The wrong decisions taken by the political elite have resulted in the failure to combat growing terrorism, which has claimed the lives of several innocent citizens and security forces who have been fighting against terror.

The corruption and pilferage within the bureaucracy have reached serious levels, while the judicial system throughout the country has become unfit for purpose.

In these circumstances, the Turkish Armed Forces, that founded and has guarded to this day the Turkish Republic under extraordinary sacrifices, established under the leadership of the great Atatürk, has in order to continue the country’s indivisible unity in the wake of the Peace at Home, Peace in the World ideal, to safeguard the survival of the nation and the state, to eliminate the threats our Republic’s victories face, to eliminate the de facto obstructions to our justice system, to stop corruption that has become a national security threat, to allow efficient operations against all forms of terrorism, to bring forward fundamental and universal human rights to all our citizens regardless of race or ethnicity and to re-establish the constitutionally enshrined values of a secular democratic social and legal state, to regain our nation’s lost international reputation and to establish stronger relations and co-operate for international peace, stability and serenity, taken over administration.

The governance of the State will be undertaken by the established Peace at Home Council.

The Peace at Home Council has taken every action to ensure that it fulfils the obligations set by all international institutions, including the United Nations and NATO.

The government, which has lost all its legitimacy, has been dismissed from office.”

Above: The General Directorate of Police (EGM) bombing on 15 July 2016

The group was supposedly formed within the Turkish Armed Forces clandestinely.

It was declared to be the governing council of Turkey during the coup attempt.

The existence of the Council was firstly announced by Tijen Karaş, a news anchor at the state-owned TRT news channel, allegedly at gunpoint.

Above: Tijen Karaş

The name “Peace at Home Council” is derived from ‘Peace at Home, Peace in the World’, which is a famous quote of Atatürk.

Although it was self-declared as the successor to the incumbent 65th government of Turkey, the citizens taking to the streets failed the coup attempt meant that the Council took neither de facto nor de jure power in the country.

BBC article by Ezgi Başaran said that:

The statement of the junta, that was read on government TV as the coup got under way, bore a strong resemblance to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’s famous address to the Turkish Youth.

On the other hand, given that these references are too obvious, they may have been intentionally included to insinuate a Kemalist junta rather than a Gülenist one.”

In the aftermath of the coup attempt, commentators on social media alleged that the creation of the council had been staged to invoke greater support for the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP), with some sceptics citing the lack of any solid information on the Council’s actual composition as evidence that the entire ordeal had been faked by the government.

No official statement regarding the composition of the Council was ever given.

According to the state-run Anadolu News Agency, subsequent investigations and allegations pointed to the leader being former Colonel Muharrem Köse, who had been dismissed earlier in 2016 from his role as legal advisor to the Chief of Staff due to his apparent links with Fethullah Gülen.

Above: Muharrem Köse

On 15 July 2016, as reported just before 23:00, military jets were witnessed flying over Ankara, and both the Fatih Sultan Mehmet and Bosphorus Bridges in Istanbul were closed.

Above: Ankara

Above: Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge, Istanbul

Above: The Bosphorus Bridge (now called the 15 July Martyrs Bridge), Istanbul

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said military action was being “taken outside the chain of command” and it was an “illegal attempt” to seize power by “part of the military“.

He further said that those involved “will pay the highest price“.

Above: Binali Yildirim

Local media also reported tanks in Istanbul’s Atatürk Airport.

Above: Atatürk Airport, Istanbul

It was reported that Internet users within Turkey were blocked from accessing Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.

Twitter later stated that it had “no reason to think we’ve been fully blocked“. 

Above: Logo of Twitter

Some hostages were taken at military headquarters, including the Turkish Chief of the General Staff Hulusi Akar.

Above: Hulusi Akar

At around 21:00, the coup had invited Salih Zeki Çolak, the commander of the Turkish Land Forces to the military headquarters. When he arrived, he was immediately apprehended.

Above: Salih Zeki Çolak

Abidan Ünal, head of the Turkish Air Force, who had been attending a wedding in Istanbul, was abducted from there by soldiers who descended from a helicopter.

The coup then tried to force Akar to sign the coup declaration, almost strangling him using a belt in the process.

He refused and was then taken to the Akinci Air Base and other commanders at the headquarters.

Above: Abidin Ünal

 

The military also entered the Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) offices in Istanbul and asked people to leave.

Early reports said President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was safe in Marmaris, southwest Turkey, where he had been on holiday.

Above: Marmaris

From around 23:00 to midnight, helicopters bombed the police special forces headquarters and police air force headquarters in Gölbasi, just outside of Ankara.

The attacks left 42 dead and 43 injured. 

Above: General Directorate of Security logo

Türksat headquarters in Gölbaşı was also attacked, killing two security personnel.

At around 23:50, soldiers occupied Taksim Square in central Istanbul.

Above: Taksim Square, Istanbul, 15 July 2016

At 00:02, it was reported by Reuters that soldiers were inside the buildings of the state broadcaster, the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT), in Ankara.

During the coup attempt, soldiers forced anchor Tijen Karaş to read out a statement saying that “the democratic and secular rule of law has been eroded by the current government” and that Turkey was now led by the Peace at Home Council who would “ensure the safety of the population“. 

The statement read in part:

Turkish Armed Forces have completely taken over the administration of the country to reinstate constitutional order, human rights and freedoms, the rule of law and general security that was damaged.

All international agreements are still valid.

We hope that all of our good relationships with all countries will continue.

The plotters said they had “done so to preserve democratic order, and that the rule of law must remain a priority“.

The statement also ordered temporary martial rule, and said a new constitution would be prepared “as soon as possible“.

TRT was then taken off air.

Above: Tijen Karaş

Reuters reported on 15 July that an EU source described the coup as “well orchestrated” and predicted that “given the scale of the operation, it is difficult to imagine they will stop short of prevailing.”

Another EU diplomat said that the Turkish ambassador in his capital was shocked and “taking it very seriously”.

Above: Member states of the European Union

The Turkish Presidential office said President Erdoğan was on holiday inside Turkey and safe and condemned the coup attempt to attack democracy.

A presidential source also said Erdoğan and his government were still in power.

The first messages from Erdoğan were transmitted at around 00:23. 

At about 01:00, Erdoğan did a FaceTime interview with CNN Türk, in which he called upon his supporters to take to the streets in defiance of the military-imposed curfew, saying:

There is no power higher than the power of the people.

Let them do what they will at public squares and airports.”

Above: Logo of FaceTime

Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmuş appeared on live television, saying Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) is still in charge of the government.

Above: Numan Kurtulmuş

The mayor of Ankara, Melih Gökçek of the AKP, encouraged people to go out to the city’s streets in defiance, despite a curfew imposed by the military.

Above: Melih Gökçek

Erdoğan’s plane took off from Dalaman Airport near Marmaris at 23:47, but had to wait in the air south of Atatürk for the airport to be secured.

His plane landed at 02:50.

Above: Dalaman Airport

The First Army General Command in Istanbul stated in a news conference that the TSK did not support the coup and the perpetrators represented a tiny faction that were on the verge of being brought under control. 

Above: Logo of the First Army

Istanbul Atäturk Airport was closed.

All flights from the airport were cancelled.

Above: Istanbul Atatürk Airport, 2016 coup

There was an explosion in the TRT broadcasting headquarters and gunfire was reported in Ankara.

Soon after, it was stormed by a crowd of civilians and police, with four soldiers inside reportedly being “neutralized“.

The channel went back on air and Karaş, who had previously announced the coup, said live that she had been held hostage and forced to read the declaration of the coup at gunpoint.

By 01:00, it was reported that the military had pulled its forces from the Atatürk airport and people were coming inside, but by 01:13, it was reported that tanks were inside the airport and gunfire was heard.

Above: Istanbul Atatürk Airport, 2016 coup

Tanks opened fire near the Turkish Parliament Building

The parliamentary building was also hit from the air. 

Above: Parliament Building aftermath of 2016 coup

Injuries were reported among protesters following gunfire on Bosphorus Bridge.

Above: Bosphorous Bridge, 2016 coup

A helicopter belonging to the pro-coup forces was shot down by a Turkish military F-16 fighter jet.

There were also reports of pro-state jets flying over Ankara to “neutralize” helicopters used by those behind the coup.

At 03:08, a military helicopter opened fire on the Turkish parliament.

Above: Parliament Building, aftermath of 2016 coup

At 03:10, Turkish Armed Forces stated on their website that they had complete control over the country.

However, at 03:12, Yıldırım made a statement saying that the situation was under control and that a no-fly zone was declared over Ankara and that military planes that still flew would be shot down.

Above: Command Centre of the Turkish Armed Forces, Ankara

It was reported that the Turkish parliament had been bombed again at 03:23 and 03:33.

A helicopter belonging to the pro-coup forces was also seen flying by it.

Above: Aftermath of Turkish Parliament bombings, 2016 coup

Half an hour following the report of 12 deaths and 2 injuries in the parliament, soldiers entered CNN Türk’s headquarters and forced the studio to go off air.

After an hour of interruption by the pro-coup soldiers, CNN Türk resumed its broadcast.

Later, Ismail Kahraman said a bomb exploded at a corner of the public relations building inside the parliament, with no deaths but several injuries among police officers.

Above: İsmail Kahraman

At around 04:00 two or three helicopters attacked Erdogan’s hotel.

According to eyewitness accounts, ten to fifteen heavily armed men landed and started firing.

In the ensuing conflict, two policemen were killed and eight were injured.

Above: The team, consisting of Turkish SAT Commandos and Combat Search and Rescue (MAK) troops, attacked the hotel where President Erdoğan stayed.

The Doğan News Agency (DHA) reported that in Istanbul several individuals were injured after soldiers fired on a group of people attempting to cross the Bosphorus Bridge in protest of the attempted coup.

The Peace Council was eventually unable to take power after pro-coup forces were defeated and the incumbent AKP government retained control. 

Mass arrests were later made, targeting over 2,000 soldiers, including senior officers and generals.

Speculation emerged that former Turkish Air Force Commander Akin Öztürk had been in charge of the coup attempt.)

Above: Akin Öztürk

After Erdoğan flew into Istanbul, he made a televised speech inside the airport at around 04:00, whilst thousands gathered outside.

He addressed a crowd of supporters in the airport, at about 06:30.

He said:

In Turkey, armed forces are not governing the state or leading the state.

They cannot.

He blamed “those in Pennsylvania” (a reference to Fetullah Gülen, who lives in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania, and his Hizmet Movement) for the coup attempt.

Erdoğan also said he had plans to “clean up” the army, saying that:

This uprising is a gift from God to us.

Above: President Erdoğan addresses the crowd

State-run Anadolu Agency named former Colonel Muharrem Köse, who in March 2016 was dishonorably discharged for reported association with Gülen, as the suspected leader of the coup. 

However, the Alliance for Shared Values, a non-profit organization associated with Gülen, released a statement reiterating that it condemns any military intervention in domestic politics, and saying Erdoğan’s allegations against the movement were “highly irresponsible“. 

Gülen himself said in a brief statement just before midnight:

As someone who suffered under multiple military coups during the past five decades, it is especially insulting to be accused of having any link to such an attempt.

I categorically deny such accusations.

Above: Fetullah Gülen

Reuters reported that in early hours of 16 July, the coup appeared to have “crumbled” as crowds defied pro-coup military orders and gathered in major squares of Istanbul and Ankara to oppose it. 

Reuters also reported pro-coup soldiers surrendering to the police in Taksim Square, Istanbul.

It was reported that by 05:18, Atatürk Airport had completely been recaptured by the government whilst the police had surrounded the coup inside the Turkish army headquarters, calling for them to surrender.

Between 06:00 and 08:00 a skirmish took place there.

In Akar’s absence, Ümit Dündar, head of the First Army, was appointed Acting Chief of Staff.

In the early hours of the morning of 16 July, soldiers blocking the Bosphorus Bridge surrendered to the police.

According to the government-run Anadolu Agency, this consisted of a group of 50 soldiers.

Some of these soldiers were lynched by civilians despite the police’s efforts, who fired into the air to protect the surrendering soldiers.

Meanwhile, in the headquarters of the Turkish Army, 700 unarmed soldiers surrendered as the police conducted an operation into the building while 150 armed soldiers were kept inside by the police.

The coup in the TRT building in Istanbul surrendered in the early morning as well.

Chief of Staff Akar, held hostage at the Akinci Air Base in Ankara, was also rescued by pro-state forces.

One of the primary reasons that the coup failed was chaos among the plotters’ ranks.

Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization (MİT) head Hakan Fidan discovered the coup plot, and the plotters were forced to execute the coup five hours ahead of schedule.

Above: Hakan Fidan

One of the main organizers, General Semih Terzi, was shot dead by loyalist Sergeant Major Ömer Halisdemir at the onset, demoralizing and disrupting command and control of the rebels.

Above: Semih Terzi (1968 – 2016)

These two incidents resulted in the coup being carried out in an uncoordinated manner. 

The highest ranking staff officers opposed the coup and publicly ordered all personnel to return to their barracks.

Acting outside the military chain of command, the rebels lacked the coordination and resources to achieve their goals.

The conscripted soldiers that the rebels mobilized were uninformed of their mission’s true purpose and became demoralized.

Many surrendered rather than shoot demonstrators.

The commander of the First Army in Istanbul, General Ümit Dündar, personally called Erdoğan to warn him of the plot, persuading him to evacuate his hotel ahead of the plotters, and helped to secure Istanbul for Erdoğan to land.

The MİT also mobilized its anti-aircraft guns, which the plotters were unaware existed, deterring rebel jets and commando teams.

Above: Ümit Dündar

Equally important to the coup’s failure, according to military strategist Edward N. Luttwak, was the inability of the rebels to neutralize Erdoğan and other high ranking government officials, either by killing or detaining them.

Above: Edward Luttwak

A unit of special forces was sent via helicopter to kill or capture the President, but missed because he had been evacuated by his security detail just minutes before.

Once Erdoğan landed at Atatürk Airport (which had been recaptured from the rebels by his supporters), the coup was doomed.

Above: Shoulder badge of the Turkish Special Forces

According to a military source, several rebel F-16s targeted Erdoğan’s presidential jet en route to Istanbul, but they did not fire.

A senior Turkish counter-terrorism official later stated that the jets did not fire because the fighter jet pilots were told by President Erdoğan’s pilot over the radio that the flight of the Gulfstream IV was a Turkish Airlines flight.

Above: An example of a Gulfstream IV

According to Naunihal Singh, author of Seizing Power, the coup attempt also failed because the plotters failed to secure control of the media and shape the narrative.

Successful coups require that the rebels control the mass media. 

This allows even small rebel contingents to portray themselves as fully in control, and their victory as inevitable.

Consequently, they convince the public, along with neutral and even loyalist soldiers, to defect to them or not resist.

The rebels failed to properly broadcast their messages effectively across the media that they controlled.

They failed to capture Türksat, Turkey’s main cable and satellite communications company, and failed to gain control of the country’s television and mobile phone networks.

This allowed Erdoğan to make his Facetime call, and to speak on television.

Other scholars of civil-military relations, like Drew H. Kinney, have said reports like Luttwak and Singh’s miss the point of their own analysis:

Civil resistance thwarted the coup.

Luttwak argues that wayward elements of the Turkish armed forces could not silence Erdoğan.

Singh says that the rebels could not project success because they couldn’t control the message.

Kinney states that neither of these reasons on their own matter, but rather it’s their effect — civil disobedience — that is important.

We might find that “Gülen’s movement might have had nothing to do with the attempted takeover in July, but civilians nevertheless definitely played a role in thwarting the coup,” writes Kinney.

An unhappy civilian populace mobilized to face down the military.

Above: Drew Holland Kinney

Erdoğan wasn’t censored (Luttwak’s point) and was therefore able to use FaceTime to mobilize resistance, which in turn hindered the conspirators’ ability to project success (Singh’s point).

The result is civilian resistance to soldiers, i.e., people power.

The reason Singh, Luttwak and other scholars of civil-military relations miss this is, according to Kinney, because they “usually do not study extra-military reasons for coup failures/successes“, but rather put a premium on “the inner workings of the military operation“.

In short, they blame the military for its failure rather than acknowledge the power of the masses and their successes.

Pro-state forces sent text messages to every Turkish citizen calling for them to protest against the coup attempt.

Throughout the night sela prayers were repeatedly called from mosque minarets across the country to encourage people to resist the coup plotters.

While the sela is usually called from minarets to inform the public of a funeral, they are also traditionally performed to notify of a significant event, in this case “to rally people“.

The coup plotters initiated their operation hours ahead of the planned time when they understood that their plans had been compromised.

Had the coup been launched at its original time, the middle of the night, much of the population would have been asleep.

The streets would have been mostly empty.

Reports have emerged, neither confirmed nor denied by Russia or Turkey that the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) intercepted signals on an imminent coup passed on to loyal Turkish operatives.

The intercepted plans revealed several helicopters with commandos were on the way to Marmaris’s coastal resort, where Erdoğan stayed, capturing or killing him.

Pre-warned, Erdoğan left quickly to avoid them.

Above: Emblem of the GRU

Fethullah Gülen, whom President Erdoğan said as one of the principal conspirators, condemned the coup attempt and denied any role in it.

I condemn, in the strongest terms, the attempted military coup in Turkey,” he said in an emailed statement reported by The New York Times.

Government should be won through a process of free and fair elections, not force.

I pray to God for Turkey, Turkish citizens, and all those currently in Turkey that this situation is resolved peacefully and quickly.

As someone who suffered under multiple military coups during the past five decades, it is especially insulting to be accused of having any link to such an attempt.

I categorically deny such accusations.

President Erdoğan asked the United States to extradite Gülen:

I call on you again, after there was a coup attempt.

Extradite this man in Pennsylvania to Turkey!

If we are strategic partners or model partners, do what is necessary.”

Above: Fetullah Gülen

Prime Minister Yildirim has threatened war against any country that would support Gülen.

Above: Binali Yildirim

Turkish Labor Minister Süleyman Soylu said that “America is behind the coup“.

Above: Süleyman Soylu

Regarding the AKP’s statement against Gülen, Secretary of State John Kerry invited the Turkish government “to present us with any legitimate evidence that withstands scrutiny“, before they would accept an extradition request.

Above: John Kerry

On 15 August 2016, former United States diplomat James Jeffrey, who was the US Ambassador to Turkey from 2008 until 2010 made the following remarks:

The Gülen movement has some infiltration at the least in the military that I am aware of.

They of course had extreme infiltration into the police and judiciary earlier.

I saw that when I was in Turkey previously, particularly in the Sledgehammer case, Hakan Fidan case, and the corruption cases in 2013.

Obviously, significant segment of Turkey’s bureaucracy was infiltrated and had their allegiance to a movement.

That of course is absolutely unacceptable and extremely dangerous. It likely led to the coup attempt.

Above: James Jeffrey

Outside Turkey, in Beringen, Belgium, anti-coup protesters attempted to attack a building owned by the pro-Gülen movement group ‘Vuslat‘.

The police brought in a water cannon to keep the attackers at bay.

In news articles it was stated that the police also protected the houses of Gülen supporters.

People advocated on social media to go to Beringen once more, and there was unrest in Heusden-Zolder, elsewhere in Belgium.

Above: The Paalse Poort, gateway on Beringen’s central square

Furthermore, in Somalia the government ordered “the total closure of all activities” of an organization linked to the Gülen movement, and gave its staff seven days to leave the country.

Above: Flag of Somalia

On 2 August 2016, President Erdoğan said Western countries were “supporting terrorism” and the military coup, saying:

I’m calling on the United States:

What kind of strategic partners are we, that you can still host someone whose extradition I have asked for?

Above: Flag of the United States of America

On 31 January 2017, British Minister of State for Europe and the Americas, Alan Duncan said he believed the Gülen movement was responsible for the coup attempt.

Duncan went on saying “the organization which incorporated itself into the state tried to topple the democratic structure in Turkey“.

Above: Alan Duncan

Events surrounding the coup attempt and the purges in its aftermath reflect a complex power struggle between Islamist elites in Turkey.

During the coup attempt, over 300 people were killed and more than 2,100 were injured.

Many government buildings, including the Turkish Parliament and the Presidential Palace, were bombed from the air. 

Above: Presidential Palace

Mass arrests followed, with at least 40,000 detained, including at least 10,000 soldiers and, for reasons that remain unclear, 2,745 judges.

15,000 education staff were also suspended and the licenses of 21,000 teachers working at private institutions were revoked after the government stated they were loyal to Gülen. 

More than 77,000 people have been arrested and over 160,000 fired from their jobs, on reports of connections to Gülen.

Many reactions were against the coup attempt, both domestically and internationally.

The main opposition parties in Turkey condemned the attempt, while several international leaders — such as those of the US, NATO, the EU, and neighboring countries — called for “respect of the democratic institutions in Turkey and its elected officials“.

International organizations expressed themselves against the coup.

The UN Security Council, however, did not denounce the coup after disagreements over the phrasing of a statement.

Above: United Nations Security Council Chamber, UN Headquarters, New York City

Unlike some Middle Eastern governments that supported the coup or others that waited to see the outcome of the coup, Iran initially opposed the coup and advised Erdogan to defeat the coup plotters.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said the head of US Central Command General Joseph Votel was “siding with coup plotters“, after Votel criticized the Turkish government for arresting the Pentagon’s contacts in Turkey.

Above: Joseph Votel

In March 2017, Germany’s intelligence chief said Germany was unconvinced by Erdoğan’s statement that Fethullah Gülen was behind the failed coup attempt.

Above: Flag of Germany

The same month, the British Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Select Committee said some Gulenists were involved in the coup d’état attempt but found no hard evidence that Fethullah Gülen masterminded the failed coup and found no evidence to justify the UK designating the Gülen movement as a “terrorist organization“.)

Above: Flag of the United Kingdom

In 2016, the Gülen Movement was designated a terrorist organization.

Above: The “proof” against the Gülen Movement

In 2017, according to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, there was “no evidence to justify the designation of the Gülenists as a terrorist organisation by the UK“.

The same year, Gilles de Kerchove, EU Counter Terrorism Coordinator, said that the EU didn’t see the Gülen movement as a terrorist organisation and that the EU would need “substantive” evidence to change its stance.

Above: Gilles de Kerchove

In 2018, in a conference with Turkish President Erdogan, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that Germany needed more evidence to classify the Gülen movement as a terrorist organization.

Above: Angela Merkel

According to academic researcher Svante E. Cornell, director of the Central Asia – Caucasus Institute and Silk Road Studies Center:

With only slight exaggeration, the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) as well as the government it has led could be termed a coalition of religious orders.”

The Gülen Movement stayed away from electoral politics, focusing instead on increasing its presence in the state bureaucracy.

The Hizmet Movement’s stated success in this regard would initially make it Erdoğan’s main partner, but also his eventual nemesis.

Above: Svante E. Cornell

From 2002 to 2013, the Gülen movement comprehensively collaborated with the AKP and Erdoğan in obtaining political power in Turkey.

Questions have arisen about the Gülen Movement’s possible involvement in the ongoing Ergenekon investigation, which critics have characterized as “a pretext” by the government “to neutralize dissidents” in Turkey.

Despite Gülen’s and his followers’ statements that the organization is non-political in nature, analysts believed that a number of corruption-related arrests made against allies of Erdoğan reflect a growing political power struggle between Gülen and Erdoğan.

Above: Gülen and Erdoğan

These arrests led to the 2013 corruption scandal in Turkey, which the ruling Justice and Development Party’s supporters (along with Erdoğan himself) and the opposition parties alike have said were choreographed by Gülen after Erdoğan’s government came to the decision early in December 2013 to shut down many of his movement’s private pre-university schools in Turkey.

The Erdoğan government has said that the corruption investigation and comments by Gülen are the long term political agenda of Gülen’s movement to infiltrate security, intelligence, and justice institutions of the Turkish state, a charge almost identical to the charges against Gülen by the Chief Prosecutor of Turkey in his trial in 2000 before Erdoğan’s party had come into power.

Gülen had previously been tried in absentia in 2000, and acquitted of these charges in 2008 under Erdoğan’s AKP government.

Above: Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

The 2013 corruption scandal in Turkey or 17-25 December Corruption and Bribery Operation was a criminal investigation that involved several key people in the Turkish government.

All of the 52 people detained on 17 December were connected in various ways with the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

Prosecutors accused 14 people – including Suleyman Aslan, the director of state-owned Halkbank, Iranian businessman Reza Zarrab, and several family members of cabinet ministers – of bribery, corruption, fraud, money laundering and gold smuggling.

At the heart of the scandal was an alleged “gas for gold” scheme with Iran involving Aslan, who had US$4.5 million in cash stored in shoeboxes in his home, and Zarrab, who was involved in about US$9.6 billion of gold trading in 2012.

Both men were arrested.

Above: Suleyman Aslan

Above: Reza Zarrab

The scheme started after Turkish government officials found a loophole in the US sanctions against Iran that allowed them to access Iranian oil and gas.

The Turks exported some US$13 billion of gold to Iran directly, or through the United Arab Emirates (UAE), between March 2012 and July 2013.

In return, the Turks received Iranian natural gas and oil.

Above: Flag of Iran

The transactions were carried out through the Turkish state-owned bank, Halkbank.

In January 2013, the Obama Administration decided to close this loophole but instead of immediately charging Halkbank, the US government allowed its gold trading activities to continue until July 2013, because Turkey was an important ally regarding the American-led intervention in the Syrian Civil War, and the US had been working on a nuclear deal with Iran.

Above: Barrack Obama

In emailed comments to the Wall Street Journal in January 2014, Gülen said that “Turkish people are upset that in the last two years democratic progress is now being reversed“, but he denied being part of a plot to unseat the government.

Later, in January 2014 in an interview with BBC World, Gülen said:

If I were to say anything to people I may say people should vote for those who are respectful to democracy, rule of law, who get on well with people.

Telling or encouraging people to vote for a party would be an insult to peoples’ intellect.

Everybody very clearly sees what is going on.

According to some commentators, Gülen is to Erdoğan what Trotsky was to Stalin.

Above: Leon Trotsky (1879 – 1940)

Above: Joseph Stalin (1878 – 1953)

Ben Cohen of the Jewish News Syndicate wrote:

“Rather like Leon Trotsky, the founder of the Soviet Red Army who was hounded and chased out of the USSR by Joseph Stalin, Gülen has become an all-encompassing explanation for the existential threats, as Erdoğan perceives them, that are currently plaguing Turkey.

Stalin saw the influence of ‘Trotskyite counter-revolutionaries’ everywhere, and brutally purged every element of the Soviet apparatus.

Erdoğan is now doing much the same with the ‘Gülenist terrorists.'”

In March 2011, seven Turkish journalists were arrested, including Ahmet Şik, who had been writing a book, “Imamin Ordusu” (The Imam’s Army), which states that the Gülen movement has infiltrated the country’s security forces.

As Şık was taken into police custody, he shouted:

Whoever touches it the Movement gets burned!

Upon his arrest, drafts of the book were confiscated and its possession was banned.

Şık has also been charged with being part of the stated Ergenekon plot, despite being an investigator of the plot before his arrest.

Above: Ahmet Şık

In a reply, Abdullah Bozkurt, from the Gülen Movement newspaper Today’s Zaman (2007 – 2016), said Ahmet Şık was not being an investigative journalist conducting “independent research“, but was hatching “a plot designed and put into action by the terrorist network itself“.

According to Gareth H. Jenkins, a Senior Fellow of the Central Asia – Caucasus Institute and Silk Road Studies Joint Center at John Hopkins University:

From the outset, the pro-AKP media, particularly the newspapers and television channels run by the Gülen Movement such as Zaman, Today’s Zaman and Samanyolu TV, have vigorously supported the Ergenekon investigation.

This has included the illegal publication of “evidence” collected by the investigators before it has been presented in court, misrepresentations and distortions of the content of the indictments and smear campaigns against both the accused and anyone who questions the conduct of the investigations.

There have long been allegations that not only the media coverage but also the Ergenekon investigation itself is being run by Gülen’s supporters.

In August 2010, Hanefi Avci, a right-wing police chief who had once been sympathetic to the Gülen Movement, published a book in which he alleged that a network of Gülen’s supporters in the police were manipulating judicial processes and fixing internal appointments and promotions.

On 28 September 2010, two days before he was due to give a press conference to present documentary evidence to support his allegations, Avcı was arrested and charged with membership of an extremist leftist organization.

On 14 March 2011, Avcı was also formally charged with being a member of the alleged Ergenekon gang.

Above: Gareth Jenkins

The Gülen movement has also been implicated in what the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) – and after 2013 also President Erdoğan – have said were illegal court decisions against members of the Turkish military, including many during the Ergenekon investigation.

On 17 December 2013, an investigation into stated corrupt practices by several bureaucrats, ministers, mayors, and family members of the ruling AKP were uncovered, resulting in widespread protests and calls for the resignation of the government led by Prime Minister Erdoğan.

Due to the high level of political influence by the Gülen movement in Turkey, it is rumored to be facilitated by the movement’s influence on the Turkish police force and the judiciary, the investigation was said to be a result of a break in previously friendly relations between the Islamist-rooted government and the Movement.

President Erdoğan and the AKP have targeted the Movement since December 2013.

Immediately after the corruption statements, the government subjugated the judiciary, media and civil society critical of the government’s authoritarian trend in recent years.

After the corruption statements surfaced, Erdoğan labelled it as a “civilian coup” against his government.

Since then, Erdoğan has shuffled, dismissed or jailed hundreds of police officers, judges, prosecutors and journalists in the name of fighting against a “Parallel State” within the Turkish state.

Above: “Proof” of the “Parallel State

On 14 December 2014, Turkish police arrested more than two dozen senior journalists and media executives connected with the Gülen movement on various charges.

A statement by the US State Department cautioned Turkey not to violate its “own democratic foundations” while drawing attention to raids against media outlets “openly critical of the current Turkish government“.

EU Foreign Affairs chief Federica Mogherini and EU Enlargement Commissioner Johannes Hahn said that the arrests went “against European values” and “are incompatible with the freedom of media, which is a core principle of democracy“.

Above: Flag of the European Union

On 20 January 2015, Turkish police launched raids in Ankara and three other cities, detaining some 20 people suspected of illegally eavesdropping on President Erdoğan and other senior officials.

The suspects are linked to Turkey’s telecommunications authority and to its scientific and technological research centre TÜBITAK.

Local media said the move was aimed at the “parallel structure” — the term Erdogan uses to refer to Gülen’s supporters in the judiciary, police and other institutions.

The Turkish government took over the Gülenist Zaman Daily, on 4 March 2016.

Turkish police entered Zaman headquarters by force and fired tear gas at the protesting journalists and civilians.

Hundreds of protestors were injured.

In his efforts to eradicate the Movement within the country the Turkish National Security Council has identified the movement as the “Gülenist Terror Organization” (“Fethullahçı Terör Örgütü“)(FETÖ). 

The government has also been targeting individuals and businessmen who have supported the movement’s organizations and activities.

As aforementioned, in reaction to the 15 July 2016 coup attempt, led by a military faction operating outside the chain of command, the Turkish government quickly stated the coup’s leader to be Gülen.

In following days and weeks, a massive crackdown affected all entities affiliated to the Gülen Movement, from individuals to businesses, newspapers to schools and universities.

Above: Fetullah Gülen

Following the aforementioned assassination of Andrey Karlov, the Turkish government was reportedly investigating the assassin’s links to the “Gülenist Terrorist Organization” (FETÖ).

In a speech, President Erdogan said that the perpetrator was a member of FETÖ.

Above: Monument to Andrey Karlov on Andrey Karlov Street in Demre, Turkey

Among Turkish citizens within Turkey convicted for alleged memberships in the Gülen movement are Turkey’s honorary president of Amnesty International, Taner Kilic, and Amnesty’s Turkish branch, Idil Eser, in July 2020.

As of 2020, Turkey had successfully pressured a number of countries, especially those in Africa and Russia, to extradite over 80 alleged Gülenists to Turkey.

Above: Flag of Russia

In 2019 it was reported that Interpol had denied Turkey’s appeals of the agency’s rejections of Turkey’s red notice requests regarding 464 fugitives, citing Interpol’s legal definition of the 2016 Turkish coup d’état attempt as not terrorism but a failed military putsch.

In 2018, approximately 25,000 Turkish asylum requests were filed by alleged Gülenists in the European Union (a rise of 50% from 2017), with Germany’s share 10,000 and Greece’s about 5,000.

Above: Flag of Greece

Within the US, according to news reports, a number of Gülenists successfully receiving political asylum status are resettled in New Jersey.

Above: Flag of US state New Jersey

Opinions are like noses – everyone has one.

But there is something not quite right in my mind with the government account of events surrounding the Gülen Movement.

I find myself thinking of Niccolò Machiavelli and the notion that a prince must appear to be indispensable if he wishes to maintain power over his people.

Nothing makes a leader more indispensable than the notion that the nation must be defended against enemies, foreign and domestic.

Thus a nation must always have the perception that it has enemies.

Above: Niccolò Machiavelli (1469 – 1527)

But who shall we choose as our enemy?

Nationalism in Turkey is a powerful force.

Turks have no friends but themselves.” is a nationalist adage.

The nationalist tenets – including the depiction of Kurds as a threat to the unitary state, as well as the belief that Western powers have an ulterior strategy to divide and weaken Turkey – have found a comfortable place in the political mainstream.

Above: (in orange) Kurdistan in Turkey

Playing upon fears of an erosion of secularism, the elimination of democratic rule, and the disregard for human rights that the Islamic faith if unchecked might pose against the power of the state – the very same fears the Council cited as reasons for their attempted 2016 coup – the Gülen Movement has proven to be a very convenient target.

I am not suggesting that the entire Gülen body of believers are not culpable of all they have been accused of, but so many of the accusations cast upon them seem more like allegations rather than actual proofs of criminality.

The same arguments that President Erdoğan uses to defend Islam against those who would label all Muslims as terrorists could also apply to the Gülen Movement.

Just as not all Kurds support the violent acts of the PKK, not all who espouse the Movement’s tenets are guilty of the wrongful acts some Gülenists have been accused of.

It remains a constant in human psychology to label all members of a group by the actions of a few within that group.

Certainly many of us find it easy to condemn an entire nation of people for the ill-advised activities of its government.

Perhaps the tenacity of the Gülen Movement to adapt Islam to modernity, to make the faith of the Prophet a vehicle for social change, has left the powerful of Ankara nervous about the maintenance of their control over the hearts and minds of the Turkish people.

Demarginalize and denigrate the Movement and thus remove its potential to usurp power is the apparent strategy.

The need to diminish divinity and dominate the desires of faith in the name of preserving power seems to be the theme here in Turkey.

Ankara will tolerate religious expression unless it is the expression of dissent.

The power of belief is powerful if harnessed, channeled, controlled, monitored.

But all the edicts from all the governments in the world will never prevent humanity from seeking wisdom and comfort in a faith, regardless of whether religion is sometimes contrary to reason.

All Ankara can do is persuade people that some of the religious are not as good as they claim to be.

Above: Erdoğan vs Gülen

The opposite holds true in Europe.

Above: St. Gallen, Switzerland

A word first on religion in Switzerland, where, through marriage, I maintain a second residency.

Religion in Switzerland is predominantly Christianity, which, according to the national survey of the Swiss Federal Statistical Office in 2020 was adhered to by 61.2% of the Swiss people, of whom 33.8% were Catholics, 21.8% were Swiss Protestants, and 5.6% were followers of other Christian denominations.

Above: Tower of the Swiss Federal Statistical Office in Neuchâtel

The proportion of Christians has declined significantly since 1980, when they constituted about 94% of the population.

During the same time span, irreligious Swiss have grown from about 4% to 31% of the population, and people professing non-Christian religions have grown from about 1% to 7% of the population.

In 2020, according to church registers, 35.2% of the population were registered members of the country’s Catholic Church, while 23.3% were registered members of the Protestant Church of Switzerland.

Above: Typical large clocks characterising the towers of Swiss Protestant churches: here St. Peter and Fraumünster, Zürich.

Christianity was adopted by the Gaulish (mostly Helvetians) and Germanic (mostly Alemans) ancestors of the modern Swiss respectively between the 4th and 5th century late Roman domination and between the 6th and 7th century Frankish domination, abandoning their indigenous paganisms.

The Old Swiss Confederacy, which began to emerge in the 13th century, remained entirely Catholic until the 16th century, when it became one of the centres of the Protestant Reformation as a majority of the Swiss joined the Protestant movement of Calvinism.

Above: Flag of the Old Swiss Confederacy (1300 – 1798)

Conflicts, and even civil wars, between Protestants and Catholics persisted until the Sonderbund War of 1847, after which freedom of conscience was established by law — only for Christians. 

Legal discrimination against Jews and some restrictions against the Catholic Church persisted until the end of the 20th century. 

In the early 20th century, Switzerland had an absolute majority of Protestants (about 60%) and a large population of Catholics (about 40%).

Since the late 20th century and throughout the 21st century, the religious composition of the country has changed significantly, with a rise of the irreligious population, a sharp decline of Protestantism to about two tenths of the population, and a less sharp decline of Catholicism to about three tenths of the population.

Switzerland has no state religion, though most of its cantons (except for Geneva and Neuchâtel) recognise official churches (Landeskirchen), in all cases Catholic and Swiss Protestant, and in some cantons also the Old Catholic Church and Jewish congregations.

These churches are financed by taxation of their adherents.

In other words, taxpayer funded, albeit voluntarily.

A person can declare oneself to be irreligious and forego this tax payment.

Islam is the second largest religion in Switzerland after Christianity, adhered to by 5.4% of the population in 2020.

Swiss Muslims are mostly of foreign origin (mostly of Arab ancestry in the Gallo-Romance (French/Italian) regions, and mostly of Balkan, Turkish and Iranian ancestry in the Germanic regions), although there is an increasing number of native Swiss converts.

Above: Mosque, Wil, Canton St. Gallen, Switzerland

Religious Jews represented 0.2% of the Swiss population in 2020.

Above: Jewish synagogue, La Chaux de Fonds, Canton Neuchâtel, Switzerland

Other religions present in the country include Hinduism and Buddhism, practised by both local Swiss who have nurtured interest in Eastern doctrines and by immigrants from Asia.

Above: Interior of Sri Sivasubrahmaniar Hindu Temple, Adliswil, Canton Zürich, Switzerland

Above: Der Wat Srinagarindravararam Thai Buddhist Temple, Gretzenbach, Canton Solothurn, Switzerland

There is a Taoist temple, Ming Shan (“Mountain of Light“), located in Bullet, Vaud, and built according to the rules of feng shui.

It is the headquarters of the Swiss Taoist Association and the main centre in Europe of the Taoist tradition of Wujimen (“Gate of Infinity“), which originated in the Min Mountains of Sichuan, China.

Above: Ming Shang Taoist Temple, Bullet, Canton Vaud, Switzerland

In the country there are also various new religious movements, among which one of the most influential has been the theosophy-derived anthroposophy.

Above: Logo for the Theosophical Society

(Theosophy is a commitment “to form a nucleus of the Universal Brotherhood of Humanity without distinction of race, creed, sex, caste or colour“.

Anthroposophy is a movement that postulates the existence of an objective, intellectually comprehensible spiritual world, accessible to human experience.

Followers of anthroposophy aim to engage in spiritual discovery through a mode of thought independent of sensory experience.

They also aim to present their ideas in a manner verifiable by rational discourse and in studying the spiritual world seek comparable precision and clarity to that obtained by scientists investigating the physical world.)

Above: Goetheanum, Dornach, Canton Solothurn, Switzerland

The Anthroposophical Society was established by the Austrian occultist Rudolf Steiner in the 1920s and 1930s in Dornach, Solothurn.

Above: Rudolf Steiner (1861 – 1925)

Some observers have identified persisting discrimination against Jews and Muslims in Switzerland.

While cases of harassment have mostly been verbal, after 2016 there were a few reports of physical assault against Jews.

Muslim cemeteries were targets of vandalism.

In the November 2009 referendum, 57.5% of Swiss voters approved a popular initiative which prohibited the construction of minarets as part of Swiss Islamic mosques (though the four existing minarets of mosques in Zürich, Geneva, Winterthur and Wangen bei Olten were not affected retroactively and have remained in place).

Above: Mahmud Mosque, Zürich

This referendum originates from action on 1 May 2007, when a group of right of centre politicians, mainly from the Swiss People’s Party (SVP) (the ruling party) and the Federal Democratic Union (EDU), the Egerkinger Komittee (“Egerkingen Committee“) launched a federal popular initiative that sought a constitutional ban on minarets.

Above: Logo of the SVP

The minaret at the mosque of the local Turkish cultural association in Wangen bei Olten was the initial motivation for the initiative.

The association applied for a construction permit to erect a 6-metre-high minaret on the roof of its Islamic community centre.

The project faced opposition from surrounding residents, who had formed a group to prevent the tower’s erection.

The Turkish association claimed that the building authorities improperly and arbitrarily delayed its building application.

They also believed that the members of the local opposition group were motivated by religious bias.

The Communal Building and Planning Commission rejected the association’s application.

The applicants appealed to the Building and Justice Department, which reverted the decision and remanded.

As a consequence of that decision, local residents and the commune of Wangen brought the case before the Administrative Court of the Canton of Solothurn, but failed with their claims.

On appeal the Federal Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the lower court.

The 6-metre / 20 foot -high minaret was erected in July 2009.

Above: Mosque, Wangen bei Olten, Canton Solothurn, Switzerland

The Committee opined that the interests of residents, who are disturbed by specific kinds of religious land uses, are to be taken seriously.

Moreover, it argued that Swiss residents should be able to block unwanted and unusual projects such as the erection of Islamic minarets.

The Committee alleged that:

The construction of a minaret has no religious meaning.

Neither in the Qu’ran nor in any other holy scripture of Islam is the minaret expressly mentioned at any point.

The minaret is far more a symbol of a claim of religious-political power.”

Above: Old mill, Egerkingen, Canton Solothurn, Switzerland

The initiators justified their point of view by quoting parts of a speech in 1997 by Recep Tayyip Erdogan (later Prime Minister and President of Turkey), which stated:

Mosques are our barracks, domes our helmets, minarets our bayonets, believers our soldiers.

This holy army guards my religion.”

Ulrich Schluer, one of the Egerkinger Committee’s most prominent spokesmen, stated on that point:

A minaret has nothing to do with religion:

It just symbolises a place where Islamic law is established.

Above: Ulrich Schlüer

The Committee’s campaign featured posters featuring a drawing of a Muslim woman in an abaya and niqab, next to a number of minarets on a Swiss flag pictured in a way “reminiscent of missiles“.

Above: “Stop“, “Yes to the minaret ban“.

The SVP also published a similar poster, with the minarets protruding through the Swiss flag.

A few days before the election, campaigners drove a vehicle near Geneva Mosque in the Le Petit-Saconnex quarter imitating the adhan, the Islamic call to ritual prayer (salat) using loudspeakers.

Above: “Censorship, one more reason to say yes to the minaret ban“.

The British newspaper The Times cited support of the minaret ban from “radical feminists” who opposed the oppression of women in Islamic societies.

Among those named were the notable Dutch feminist and former politician Ayaan Hirso Ali, who gave her support to the ban with an article entitled “Swiss ban on minarets was a vote for tolerance and inclusion“.

Above: Ayaan Hirsi Ali

The Times further reported that in pre-election polling, Swiss women supported the ban by a greater percentage than Swiss men.

Above: Flag of Switzerland

The traditionalist Society of St Pius X (SSPX), which has its headquarters at Ecône in Switzerland, supported the ban on minarets, denouncing opposition to the ban by some Catholic bishops:

The confusion is maintained by certain Vatican II Council authorities between tolerating a person, whatever his religion, and tolerating an ideology that is incompatible with Christian tradition.”

It explained its support of the ban:

The Islamic doctrine cannot be accepted when you know what it is all about.

How can one expect to condone the propagation of an ideology that encourages husbands to beat their wives, the “believer” to murder the “infidel”, a justice that uses body mutilation as punishment, and pushes to reject Jews and Christians?

Above: Logo of the Society of St. Pius X

On 28 August 2008 the Swiss Federal Council opposed a building ban on minarets.

It said that the popular initiative against their construction had been submitted in accordance with the applicable regulations, but infringed guaranteed international human rights and contradicted the core values of the Swiss Federal Constitution.

It believed a ban would endanger peace between religions and would not help to prevent the spread of fundamentalist Islamic beliefs.

In its opinion, the Federal Council therefore recommended the Swiss people to reject the initiative.

Above: Logo of the Swiss Confederation

On 24 October 2008 the Federal Commission against Racism criticized the initiative, claiming that it defamed Muslims and violated religious freedom, which was protected by fundamental human rights and the ban on discrimination.

The Swiss government recommended that the proposed amendment be rejected as inconsistent with the basic principles of the Constitution.

However, after the results were tabulated, the government immediately announced that the ban was in effect.

Above: Results of the Minaret Initiative, 2009

The Society for Minorities in Switzerland called for freedom and equality and started an Internet-based campaign in order to gather as many symbolic signatures as possible against a possible minaret ban.

Amnesty International warned the minaret ban aimed to exploit fears of Muslims and encourage xenophobia for political gains.

This initiative claims to be a defense against rampant Islamification of Switzerland.”, Daniel Bolomey, the head of Amnesty’s Swiss office, said in a statement cited by Agence France-Presse (AFP). “But it seeks to discredit Muslims and defames them, pure and simple.”

Economie Suisse considered that an absolute construction ban would hit Swiss foreign interests negatively, claiming that merely the launch of the initiative had caused turmoil in the Islamic world.

The Swiss-based Unser Recht (“Our Law“) association published a number of articles against the minaret ban.

In autumn 2009, the Swiss Journal of Religious Freedom launched a public campaign for religious harmony, security, and justice in Switzerland, and distributed several thousand stickers in the streets of Zürich in support of the right to religious freedom.

Roman Catholic bishops opposed a minaret ban.

A statement from the Swiss Bishops Conference said that a ban would hinder interreligious dialogue and that the construction and operation of minarets were already regulated by Swiss building codes.

The statement added that:

Our request for the initiative to be rejected is based on our Christian values and the democratic principles in our country.

The official journal of the Roman Catholic Church in Switzerland published a series of articles on the minaret controversy.

Above: Stiftskirche St. Gallen and Othmar, St. Gallen

The Federation of Swiss Protestant Churches held that the federal popular initiative was not about minarets, but was rather an expression of the initiators’ concern and fear of Islam.

It viewed a minaret ban as a wrong approach to express such objections.

Above: Logo of the Federation of Swiss Protestant Churches

The Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities was also against any ban on building minarets.

Dr Herbert Winter, the president of the Federation, said in 2009:

As Jews we have our own experience.

For centuries we were excluded:

We were not allowed to construct synagogues or cupola roofs.

We do not want that kind of exclusion repeated.

Above: Logo of the Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities

Other religious organisations described the idea of a complete minaret ban as lamentable:

  • the Association of Evangelical Free Churches

Above: Logo of the Swiss Association of Evangelical Free Churches

  • the Swiss Evangelical Alliance

  • the Old Catholic Church in Switzerland

Above: Jesuit Church, Luzern

  • the Covenant of Swiss Baptists

  • the Salvation Army

  • the Federation of Evangelical Lutheran Churches in Switzerland

Above: Worship service for the 500th anniversary of the Reformation and 50 years of the Federation of Lutheran Churches in Switzerland and the Principality of Liechtenstein

  • the Orthodox Diocese of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople

Above: Coat of Arms of the Ecumenical Patriarchate Constantinople

  • the Serbian Orthodox Church in Switzerland

Above: Official coat of arms of Serbian Orthodox Church

  • the Anglican Church in Switzerland

Above: Canterbury Cathedral, England

Marcel Stüssi argued that any ban would be incompatible with articles of international law, to which Switzerland was a signatory.

In any case, cantonal zoning laws already prohibited the construction of buildings that did not match their surroundings.

Right-wing initiatives like the minaret one can misuse the system,” said Stüssi.

He called the initiative “obsolete and unnecessary“, but added that the public discourse on the issue could put Switzerland in a positive light, at least for the majority who at that point opposed a ban.

In July 2008, before the popular initiative, he argued that:

Crisis always creates an opportunity.

A popular vote against a proposed ban would be the highest declaration for the recognition of the Swiss Muslim community.”

It would also be an expressed statement that anybody is equally subject to the law and to the political process,” Stüssi said in an interview with World Radio Switzerland.

Above: Marcel Stüssi, Faculty of Law, University of Luzern

Heinrich Koller stated that:

Switzerland must abide by international law because both systems together form a unity.”

Above: Heinrich Koller, University of Basel

Giusep Nay stated that any state action must be in accordance with fundamental material justice, and applied not only to interpretations of applicable law but also to new law.

Above: Giusep Nay, former President of the Swiss Supreme Court

Erwin Tanner saw the initiative as breaching not only the constitutionally entrenched right to religious freedom, but also the rights to freedom of expression, enjoyment of property, and equality.

Above: Erwin Tanner, director of Missio Switzerland

The editorial board of the Revue de Droit Suisse (Swiss Law Review) called for invalidation of the initiative as “it appears that the material content of popular initiatives is subject to ill-considered draftsmanship because the drafters are affected by particular emotions that merely last for snatches.”

Sami Aldeeb positioned himself for the ban on the erection of minarets in Switzerland, since in his opinion the Constitution allows prayer, but not shouting.

Above: Swiss Palestinian lawyer Sami Aldeeb

An independent study carried out by political scientists Markus Freitag (University of Konstanz), Thomas Milic and Adrian Vatter (University of Bern) noted a good level of knowledge among voters.

Contrary to what had been previously thought, the surveys before the referendum did not influence voters, as it is hard to do so with people who are accustomed to them.

Those who voted did so according to their political convictions, and by taking into account the different arguments.

The study also attributed the result to the fact that supporters of the ban overwhelmingly turned out to vote in the referendum.

In March 2010, the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) narrowly passed a resolution condemning “defamation of religion“, which included reference to “Islamophobic” bans on building new minarets on mosques.

Above: Logo for the United Nations Human Rights Council

The resolution was proposed by the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).

OIC representative Babacar Ba said that the resolution was a “way to reaffirm once again our condemnation of the decision to ban construction of minarets in Switzerland.”

Above: Logo of the OIC

The resolution was opposed, mostly by Western nations, but it gained a majority due to the votes of Muslim nations, in addition to the support of other countries such as Cuba and China.

Eight states abstained.

Above: Flag of the United Nations

US Ambassador Eileen Donahoe criticized the resolution as an “instrument of division” and an “ineffective way to address” concerns about discrimination.

Above: Ambassador Eileen Donahue

The ban was also mentioned in the UNHRC special rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance in his 2010 report to the UN General Assembly.

Above: UN General Assembly Hall, UN Headquarters, New York City

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner condemned the ban, calling it “an expression of intolerance“, and said it amounted to “religious oppression“, hoping Switzerland would reverse its decision.

Above: Bernard Kouchner

Sweden condemned the ban, with Foreign Minister Carl Bildt stating that:

It’s an expression of quite a bit of prejudice and maybe even fear, but it is clear that it is a negative signal in every way, there’s no doubt about it“.

He also stated that:

Normally Sweden and other countries have city planners that decide this kind of issue.

To decide this kind of issue in a referendum seems very strange to me.”

Above: Carl Bildt

Then-Turkish President Abdullah Gül called the ban “shameful“.

Above: Abdullah Gül

Iranian Foreign Minister Manoucher Mottaki phoned his Swiss counterpart, and stated that the ban went “against the prestige of a country which claims to be an advocate of democracy and human rights“, and that it would “damage Switzerland’s image as a pioneer of respecting human rights among the Muslims’ public opinion“.

He also claimed that “values such as tolerance, dialogue, and respecting others’ religions should never be put to referendum“, and warned Switzerland of the “consequences of anti-Islamic acts“, and expressed hopes that the Swiss government would “take necessary steps and find a constitutional way to prevent the imposition of this ban“.

Above: Manouchehr Mottaki

Switzerland’s Ambassador to Iran was summoned before the Foreign Ministry, which protested against the ban.

Above: Logo of the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Then-Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi cited the minaret ban as grounds for his call for a jihad against Switzerland in a speech held in Benghazi on the occasion of Mawlid, four months after the vote.

Gaddafi also called on Muslims around the world to boycott Switzerland, and stated that:

Any Muslim in any part of the world that works with Switzerland is an apostate, is against Muhammad, Allah, and the Koran“.

Gaddafi called Switzerland an “infidel, obscene state which is destroying mosques“.

Above: Muammar al Gaddafi (1942 – 2011)

Libyan government spokesperson Mohammed Baayou announced that Libya had imposed an embargo on all economic and commercial exchanges with Switzerland.

Above: Flag of Libya

The Swiss referendum was welcomed by several European far right parties.

Above: Logo of the Alliance for the Future of Austria

Above: Logo of the Freedom Party of Austria

Above: Logo of the Danish People’s Party

Above: Logo of the Front National, France

Above: Logo of the Dutch Party for Freedom

Above: Logo of Italy’s Northern League

To my knowledge, the ban has never been reversed.

Above: On 8 December 2009, a mock minaret was erected over an industrial storage facility in Bussigny, Canton Vaud, Switzerland, in protest against the referendum outcome.

I must confess I am weary of Islamophobia, not because I am necessarily biased towards Islam as I now live in a predominantly Muslim nation, but because I have seen too many examples in religion and politics of entire groups being accused of the wrongdoing of a few within these groups.

We are not all the same.

We were born as individuals.

We live our lives as individuals.

We make individual decisions as to what we choose to believe, choose to think, choose to be.

The problem with religion is not with the faith itself, but rather with those who claim to follow that faith.

Above: Praying Hands, Albrecht Dürer

How many Muslims actually follow the teachings of Muhammad in the manner in which he intended?

Above: Al-Masjid an-Nabawi (“the Prophet’s mosque“) in Medina, Saudi Arabia, with the Green Dome built over Muhammad’s tomb in the centre

How many Christians actually act Christ-like?

Above: Christ the Saviour (Pantokrator), a 6th-century icon from Saint Catherine’s Monastery, Mount Sinai

How many Buddhists view the Buddha in the manner in which he wished to be viewed?

Above: Seated Buddha, Sarnath Museum, India

The same questioning can be extended to not only other religions but as well to the realms of philosophy and politics.

For example, how would Abraham Lincoln view the American Republican Party of today?

Above: Abraham Lincoln (1809 – 1865)

Above: Logo of the Republican Party

There are those who claim to represent Islam and do acts that run contrary to the sacred text of the Qu’ran.

Let us not paint the acts of a few as representative of the will of the majority.

Above: Muslim men at prayer, Umayyad Mosque, Damascus, Syria

No Muslim resident in Switzerland expects the adhan to be broadcast over Basel, just as no Christian in Turkey expects to hear church bells pealing in the streets of Konya.

Above: Images of Basel, Switzerland

Above: Konya, Turkey

Certainly it would be a fine thing to find minarets in Montreux or steeples in Izmir, but to assume that giving a minority the right to practice their faith will lead to that minority seeking to impose their faith upon the majority that surrounds them presupposes that every believer is infused with the zeal to become a missionary hellbent on converting the locals.

Above: Montreux, Switzerland

Above: Izmir, Turkey

That notion is as ridiculous as this Canadian blogger expecting everyone in Eskisehir to fly the maple leaf standard, subscribe to a sports channel that shows curling and ice hockey, and to demand poutine be served in all city restaurants.

Above: Flag of Canada

Above: Curling

Above: Ice hockey

Above: Poutine, Montréal, Québec, Canada

I did not come to Turkey expecting to make Canadians out of Turks.

Neither am I afraid of losing my Canadian identity to the Turkish environment that surrounds me.

I adapt insofar as I need to be respectful of the customs of the country wherein I find myself, but I will never become Turkish.

Because this is both impossible and undesirable.

My homeland is a part of who I am and though I may be distant from it Canada has defined who I am.

I will gladly try the local cuisine, try to learn the language, try to understand how the locals think.

But this is not to say I would prefer the fare of Trabzon to the cuisine of Toronto.

Above: Trabzon, Turkey

Above: Toronto, Ontario, Canada

This is not to say I will ever feel more comfortable speaking Turkish than my mother tongue of English.

This is not to say that an understanding of how the locals think will mean an automatic agreement with all that they think.

In Turkey, politics clashes with religion where the former feels threatened by the latter.

In Switzerland, politics attempts to use fear of unfamiliar faiths to exercise control over its native population.

In both nations, and perhaps universally around the globe, the reality of the conflict is never about morality.

It has been and always will be about wealth and power.

Religion may be the excuse, but it is never the real reason.

Religion should not involve itself in politics nor government regulate faith.

But what should be rarely is.

Please don’t tell me what to believe.

Please don’t tell me how to believe.

When I consider the gates of Heaven I find myself wondering:

Can we get there from here?

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Andrew Finkel, Turkey: What Everyone Needs to Know / Magsie Hamilton Little, The Thing about Islam: Exposing the Myths, Facts and Controversies / Orhan Pamuk, The Museum of Innocence

Canada Slim and That Which Can’t Be Had

Eskisehir, Turkey, Friday 7 May 2021

It is odd what can get under one’s skin.

On Wednesday morning, just before leaving my apartment to catch a train to Konya, my only practical knife decided to break.

This afternoon I walked over to ES Park shopping centre and the sole store open in this latest “total” lockdown (MMM Migros) (not sure of the reason for the MMM) to buy a knife.

Anything that isn’t edible, save for newspapers, (perhaps they are edible as well?) has been cordoned off with sticky tape resembling that securing a crime scene investigation.

I was somewhat mystified last week as to why all alcoholic beverages were rendered off-limits to consumers and I figure that the rationale must be that alcohol drinking is a social activity and socializing spreads a pandemic.

But I am baffled and bothered as to why buying a frying pan or a knife or a pen constitutes a clear and present danger to the health of the Turkish people.

The argument I hear is that the pandemic is airborne but can be transmitted onto the surfaces of anything that has come into contact with the virus.

But if this is so and a person with the virus comes into the store and shops only in the designated areas, he/she will nevertheless transmit the virus onto the edibles anyway.

The virus’ spread isn’t so much affected by too many tactile surfaces that a person can touch, but rather too many people who won’t wear their masks in the correct manner, with both mouth and nose completely covered.

Honestly, I am not certain if the powers that be truly know what to do in these extraordinary times.

Flag of Turkey

Above: Flag of Turkey

If the media can be believed, people last week continued to violate Turkey’s curfew rules after the country entered a “full” lockdown that will last for 17 days.

COVID-19 in Turkey - Cumulative positive cases per 100k residents.svg
Above: Covid-19 in Turkey – Cumulative positive cases per 100k residents as of 7 May 2021 (The darker the region, the more cases therein) (As of 11 May 2021, there are 5, 059, 033 cases (29% of the population) with 43,589 deaths.)

Some 66,161 people broke curfew rules between 26 April and 3 May, the country’s Interior Ministry said on Monday (3 May).

A man walks on otherwise busy Istiklal Avenue, in Istanbul, Turkey, May 3, 2021. (AA PHOTO)

The Ministry, however, stressed that a majority of citizens obeyed the lockdown which came into effect on the evening of 29 April.

Data provided by the Ministry show that the number of people who violated the weeknight curfews and weekend lockdowns stood at 42,000 between 19 April and 26 April, rising from 33,000 in the previous week.

Ministry of the Interior (Turkey) logo.svg
Above: Logo of the Ministry of the Interior

From 5 April and 12 April, authorities took procedural and administrative actions against a total of 24,400 violators.

The increase in the number of people subjected to actions for violating the curfews could be related to intensified nationwide in the wake of the full lockdown.

Limited violations reported during weekend COVID-19 curfew in Turkey |  Daily Sabah

The government imposed the full lockdown in an attempt to curb the spread of the corona virus after the daily infections and deaths from Covid-19 climbed record highs.

SARS-CoV-2 without background.png

During the 17-day lockdown, most businesses, except for those operating in essential industries, will be closed while intercity travel is also banned and subjected to special permission from authorities.

Authorities are issuing special permits for employees who are exempted from the lockdown.

The Interior Ministry reported on 3 May that nearly 4 million such permission documents have been issued via the online registry system e-Devlet.

Long lockdown triggers exodus from big cities - Turkey News

Police units are carrying our inspections, setting up checkpoints in and around cities and on highways to enforce the travel ban.

The authorities are also issuing special travel exemption permits for certain emergencies.

Curfew violations continue amid full lockdown - Turkey News

I have seen checkpoints.

I have not seen arrests.

I have not read anything about anyone arrested.

Over 2 million exemption permits issued during Turkey's lockdown - Turkey  News

It seems that, if the media is to be believed, more than 10 million people in Turkey have already been given both doses of the Covid-19 vaccine, while nearly 14.4 million people have received their first dose of the jab, data from the country’s Health Ministry have shown.

Turkey's COVID-19 vaccination goes on at full speed

Turkey launched its vaccination program against the corona virus on 14 January.

To date, it had administered more than 24.4 million doses of the injection to its citizens, including the first and the second doses.

COVID-19 vaccinations in Turkey exceed 1 million in 1st week | Daily Sabah

Turkey has inked agreements for a total of 240 million doses of the corona virus vaccines developed by the Chinese firm Sinovac, Pfizer/BioNTech and Russia’s Sputnik V, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca reminded following a Science Board meeting on 5 May, noting that there is three times the country’s population.

See caption
Above: Russia’s Sputnik 5 vaccine

Fahrettin Koca 20200311 2.jpg
Above: Fahrettin Koca

To date, Turkey has signed deals for 100 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech and another 50 million doses of the Sputnik V vaccines.

Covid19 vaccine biontech pfizer 3.jpg

It has been using the Chinese and the Pfizer/BioNTech injections in its inoculation drive.

SINOVAC COVID-19 vaccine.jpg

Koca also said that the daily number of virus cases has declined over the past 15 days thanks to measures and restrictions imposed to curb the spread of Covid-19.

The effects of this decline have also started to be seen in hospitalization with a ten-day lag, he added.

The government introduced a full lockdown from 29 April to 17 May after Covid-19 infections hit record highs, hitting around 60,000 daily cases.

Infections fell below 50,000 starting 23 April and continued to decline gradually in the following days, coming down to some 26,500 on 5 May.

The favourable impact of those measures will also be seen in the numbr of patients in critical condition and fatalities in these days,” Koca said.

COVID-19: Turkey announces full lockdown from Thursday

Talk on the street does not seem to correlate with the media’s spin.

No one seems to know anyone who has received the vaccine.

Rumours suggest that the vaccine may be running out.

No one knows what to believe or whom to trust.

All I know is I cannot buy a knife for my kitchen and must eat meat from my hand and tear it apart with my teeth.

Fortunately, I still have fire and language, so I haven’t completely devolved yet.

Premium Vector | Cartoon caveman eating meat

Still the lockdown has put a number of things into perspective.

Namely, a keen awareness of loss, a disappointment, an anger, a deeply-felt sadness, in the belated recognition that what we once had is now unavailable to us.

We cannot acquire what we once did, cannot celebrate life as we once did, cannot move about as we once did, cannot live as we did before.

We do survive nonetheless.

We learn to do without.

We learn to not do what we once did.

Turkish Lockdown Calls Grow as Epidemic Continues | Voice of America -  English

I am reminded of the movie Down and Out in Beverly Hills.

Imagine a world where you are surrounded by everything you cannot have, seeing others do what you cannot do.

They who have cannot perceive a life of the have-nots until they themselves have not.

You cannot truly comprehend a life of prosperity if you yourself have not prospered.

So we try to find what joys we can within the realities we know.

For some, there comes a time when the reality they know must be abandoned for the chance of finding another reality.

Down and Out in Beverly Hills.jpg

For some, there is a moment when they wonder what Shakespeare really meant when he wrote:

There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy
.”


– Hamlet (Act 1, Scene 5, Stanzas 167-8), Hamlet to Horatio

Is there more to life, more to living, than what we know, than what we have experienced?

A lockdown puts life into perspective.

We see what we once had and appreciate it only once it is denied us.

It is not without irony that this particular lockdown is happening within the month of Ramadan.

Turkey braces for toughest lockdown against COVID-19 pandemic | Daily Sabah

Ramadan, the month of the fast, whose name comes from the Arabic root r-m-d, “the green heat“, from the soaring heat in the deserts of Arabia, is the 9th month of the Muslim calendar.

It is special month for Muslims, and thus for Turks, as it was during this month that Muhammad received the call to be a prophet, and God (Allah) Himself instructed that this month should be the official month of fasting.

Ramadan is abut remembering to take nothing for granted and about removing daily distractions so that the mind is better able to focus on closeness with Allah.

On a practical level, this means no eating, drinking, smoking or sex from dawn to sunset for an entire month.

In the wider scheme, while fasting it is especially encouraged that the believer avoids sin, such as lying, violence, greed, lust, slander, anger, and evil thoughts.

The fast is about self-discipline and a Muslim is called to make an extra effort to cultivate a more spiritual outlook.

Ramadan montage.jpg
Above: Images of Ramadan

The observance of Ramadan is regarded as a source of blessing and not as a time of trial.

Muslims generally look forward to this time of bodily and spiritual cleansing, and do not view it as being arduous or a chore.

They hold it as a special period that brings them back in touch with the values at the heart of their faith.

They see it as a healthy time, during which rich foods are avoided and their digestive systems can be rested and cleaned.

At Ramadan, Muslims are given the opportunity to master all their natural appetites, mental, spiritual and physical.

It also allows them an opportunity to get together with friends and family, and to share their food after the hour of sunset.

According to Islamic tradition, during this time the gates of Heaven are opened, the gates of Hell are closed, and Satan is put into chains.

Hence, fasting during Ramadan is considered thirty times better than at any other time, although many Muslims do fast at other times, some even on a weekly basis.

Mobile Behavior in Turkey During Ramadan - AdColony

(By this standard, I am certain that I could never be a Muslim.)

Muslims welcome holy month of Ramadan

Ramadan observances do vary slightly from culture to culture, but most Muslims begin the fast, according to the Qu’ran‘s instruction, at the moment when dawn makes it possible to distinguish “a white thread from a black thread“.

They then break the fast as soon as possible at sunset, eating a light meal later in the evening, with perhaps a final light meal in the early pre-dawn hours before the next morning’s fast begins – but this all depends on local custom and personal preference.

The evening is a time of relaxation, of visiting, of prayer and Qur’anic recitation.

Printed Qur’ans divide the text into thirty sections to facilitate reading the whole book during Ramadan.

Many Muslims accomplish this.

Sounds of recitation punctuate the evening air.

Many go to the mosque during the evening, especially during the last ten days of the month.

Çay, Dolma and Künefe: A Look into a Delicious Turkish Ramadan | Mvslim

(Or would if the lockdown permitted.)

Government weighing stricter measures during Ramadan - Turkey News

Muslims say that Ramadan demands a certain spiritual attitude towards the body.

The hunger, supplemented by the prohibition on perfume and make-up, brings a Muslim back every year to what is regarded as a more natural state.

Whether it be experiencing the hunger of the less fortunate, expiating one’s sins, forgiving others theirs, renewing contact with one’s nearest and dearest, or simply taming one’s passions, a time of fasting is about reflection and contemplation, a return to the core values of Islam, and a reassessment of what it means to be a Muslim.

Whatever cultural variances exist between customs at Ramadan, overall the month is seen by Muslims as a very special time.

There is a feeling of camarderie.

The fast is a great leveller and brings out the best in everyone, whether rich or poor.

The problem is camarderie breeds contagion and thus the reason for the lockdown.

For our individual survival we must remain apart, separate from one another.

Collective Ramadan prayers cancelled amid virus scare in Turkey | Daily  Sabah

And it was this theme that followed our footsteps this past Valentine’s Day as we prepared ourselves for the separation to come….

Antique Valentine 1909 01.jpg

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Sunday 14 February 2021

I cannot speak of the lives of other married couples, for no man can know of another man’s relationship with his maiden.

Or put another way, in the words of Charlie Rich:

No one knows what goes on behind closed doors.

Cover of the Behind Closed Doors album with the singer Charlie Rich in a cowboy hat.

As well, I am an introverted man from a culture and a generation where men, even the closest of friends, do not share details of intimacy about their significant others.

The secrets of the bedroom are rarely the confessions of the barroom (or the blogpost).

I am not of the generation which tells all online, though I cannot deny that there is within me a certain begruding admiration for those who are courageous enough to reveal themselves so fearlessly and publicly.

I am not as brave.

Above: Photo from Jupiter’s Lair WordPress blog (https://jupiterslair.com)

On this Valentine’s Day 2021 the headlines were as grim as they ever were with the predominant headlines still those connected with Covid-19.

Stop Reading the News: A Manifesto for a Happier, Calmer and Wiser Life:  Dobelli, Rolf: Amazon.com.tr

Peru’s Foreign Minister Elizabeth Astete resigned amid an uproar over secret vaccination before the country receives one million doses for health workers.

Peru’s Foreign Minister has resigned amid uproar over government officials being secretly vaccinated against corona virus before the country recently received 1 million doses for health workers facing a resurgence in the pandemic.

Esther Astete 02 (cropped).jpg
Above: Elizabeth Astete

President Francisco Sagasti confirmed that Elizabeth Astete had stepped down and told a local television channel that Peruvians should feel “outraged and angry about this situation that jeopardises the enormous effort of many Peruvians working on the frontline against Covid”.

Francisco Sagasti president.jpg
Above: Peruvian President Francisco Sagasti

The scandal erupted on Thursday when the former President Martín Vizcarra, who was dismissed by Congress on 9 November over a corruption allegation, confirmed a newspaper report that he and his wife had secretly received shots of a vaccine from the Chinese state pharmaceutical company Sinopharm in October.

Martin Vizcarra (Presidential Portrait) (cropped).jpg
Above: Martin Vizcarra

Pilar Mazzetti resigned as Health Minister on Friday after legislators accused her of concealing information.

Foto-Oficial-Pilar-Mazzetti-MinSa.jpg
Above: Pilar Mazetti

Sagasti tweeted that during Vizcarra’s administration, an extra 2,000 doses of the vaccine had been received from Sinopharm and that “some senior public officials were vaccinated”.

Sinopharm COVID-19 vaccine (2021) K (cropped).jpeg
Above: Sinopharm Coivd-19 vaccine

The new Health Minister, Óscar Ugarte, said on Sunday night that Sagasti had ordered the resignation of all officials who secretly received the Chinese vaccine.

Ugarte said an investigation was under way to identify officials who were secretly vaccinated in September.

Óscar Ugarte.jpg
Above: Óscar Ugarte

Astete, who led the Peruvian negotiations to buy the 1 million doses of Sinopharm’s vaccine, released a statement on Sunday in which she said she was vaccinated with the first dose on 22 January.

“I am aware of the serious mistake I made, which is why I decided not to receive the second dose.”

Peru bought the vaccines in early January at a price that is secret under the contract.

Doctors and nurses have protested because they were not included in the first lists to be vaccinated with doses received from Sinopharm.

The pandemic has caused the deaths of 306 doctors and 125 nurses, with more than 20,000 doctors and nurses being infected.

Peru has had more than 1.2 million cases of corona virus, with 43,703 deaths related to Covid-19, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases around the world.

Flag of Peru
Above: Flag of Peru

Myanmar’s new military regime warned the public not to harbour fugitive political activists on Sunday (14 February) after issuing arrest warrants for veteran democracy campaigners supporting massive nationwide anti-coup protests.

Much of the country has been in uproar since the previous week when soldiers detained Aung San Suu Kyi and ousted her government, ending a decade-old fledgeling democracy after generations of junta rule.

Remise du Prix Sakharov à Aung San Suu Kyi Strasbourg 22 octobre 2013-18.jpg
Above: Aung San Suu Kyi

Security forces have stepped up arrests of doctors and others joining a civil disobedience movement that has seen huge crowds throng streets across big urban centres and isolated villages in mountainous frontier communities.

Police are now hunting seven people who have lent vocal support to the protests, including some of the country’s most famous democracy activists.

If you find any fugitives mentioned above or if you have information about them, report to the nearest police station,” said a notice in state media on Sunday.

Those who receive them will face action in accordance with the law.

Above: Thousands of protesters participate in an anti-military rally in Yangon

Among the list of fugitives was Min Ko Naing, who spent more than a decade in prison for helping lead protests against an earlier dictatorship in 1988 while a university student.

They are arresting the people at night and we have to be careful,” he said in a video published Saturday to Facebook, skirting a junta ban on the platform, hours before his arrest warrant was issued.

They could crack down forcefully and we will have to be prepared.”

MKN2.jpg
Above: Min Ko Naing

The 1988 protests vaulted Aung San Suu Kyi to the top of Myanmar’s democracy movement, and the Nobel laureate spent years under house arrest as a prisoner of the generals.

She has not been seen in public since she was detained on 1 February alongside top aides.

Nearly 400 others have been arrested in the days since including many of Aung San Suu Kyi’s top political allies, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners monitoring group.

Assistance Association for Political Prisoners logo.png
Above: Logo of the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP)

Military leader Min Aung Hlaing suspended requiring warrants for home searches and limiting detentions without court orders to 24 hours as part of several legal manoeuvres issued on Saturday.

Min Aung Hlaing in April 2019 (cropped).jpg
Above: Min Aung Hlaing

People in some urban neighbourhoods have begun forming neighbourhood watch brigades to monitor their communities overnight – defying a junta curfew – and prevent the arrests of residents participating in the civil disobedience movement.

Crowds returned to the streets of Yangon on Sunday, with hundreds massing on an intersection near the commercial capital’s famed Shwedagon Pagoda.

Shwedagon Pagoda 2017.jpg
Above: Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon, Myanmar

A day earlier, Buddhist monks gathered outside the city’s US embassy and chanted the Metta Sutta, a prayer that urges protection from harm.

We wanted them to know most citizens in Myanmar are against the military,” said Vicittalankara, one of the participants.

Anger over arrests in Myanmar at anti-coup protests - News Chant

The country’s new military leadership has so far been unmoved by a torrent of international condemnation.

An emergency session of the UN Human Rights Council on Friday called for the new regime to release all “arbitrarily detained” people and for the military to hand power back to Aung San Suu Kyi’s administration.

United Nations Human Rights Council Logo.svg
Above: Logo for the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC)

Solidarity protests have been staged in neighbouring Thailand, home to a large community of Myanmar migrant workers, as well as the United States, Japan and Australia.

But traditional allies of the country’s armed forces, including Russia and China, have dissociated themselves from what they have described as interference in Myanmar’s “internal affairs“.

The junta insists it took power lawfully and has instructed journalists in the country not to refer to itself as a government that took power in a coup.

We inform journalists and news media organisations not to write to cause public unrest,” said a notice sent by the information ministry to the country’s foreign correspondents’ club late on Saturday.

It also instructed reporters to follow “news media ethics” while reporting events in the country.

Flag of Myanmar
Above: Flag of Myanmar

Guinea has declared an Ebola epidemic after three people died and four others became ill in the country’s southeast.

The seven people fell ill with diarrhoea, vomiting and bleeding after attending a burial in Goueke, near the Liberian border.

The infected patients have been isolated in treatment centres, the health ministry said on Sunday.

Faced with this situation and in accordance with international health regulations, the Guinean government declares an Ebola epidemic,” the ministry said in a statement.

The deaths are the first in Guinea since a 2013-2016 epidemic which left 11,300 dead across West Africa [File: Cellou Binani/AFP]

Health Minister Remy Lamah said officials were “really concerned” about the deaths, the first since a 2013 – 2016 epidemic  – which began in Guinea – left 11,300 dead across West Africa.

The vast majority of cases were in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

A second round of tests is being carried out to confirm the latest Ebola diagnosis and health workers are working to trace and isolate the contacts of the cases, state health agency ANSS said.

Pourquoi les travailleurs de la santé sont importants, par Dr. Col. Rémy  Lamah - YouTube
Above: Remy Lamah

It reported Guinea would contact the World Health Organization (WHO) and other international health agencies to acquire Ebola vaccines.

The vaccines have greatly improved survival rates in recent years.

Dr Matshidiso Moeti, the WHO Regional Director for Africa, said the resurgence of Ebola in Guinea was a “huge concern”.

Health teams in Guinea are on the move to quickly trace the path of the virus and curb further infections,” she said.

WHO is supporting the authorities to set up testing, contact-tracing and treatment structures and to bring the overall response to full speed.”

World Health Organization Logo.svg

Speaking to Al Jazeera from the Guinean capital, Conakry, Dr Yuma Taido – of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies – said it was not clear how people had come into contact with the virus.

We are preparing to manage the outbreak.

We can’t explain yet how this epidemic came about.

The response team are heading to the epicentre of the outbreak from today,” Taido said.

Two flags waving
Above: Flags of the Red Cross and the Red Crescent

Meanwhile next door in Liberia, President George Weah on Sunday put his country’s health authorities on heightened alert.

Weah “has mandated the Liberian health authorities and related stakeholders in the sector to heighten the country’s surveillance and preventative activities in the wake of reports of the emergence of the deadly Ebola virus disease in neighbouring Guinea”, his office said in a statement.

President George Weah in 2019 (cropped).jpg
Above: Liberian President George Weah

Neighouring DRC has faced several outbreaks of the illness, with the WHO on Thursday confirming a resurgence three months after authorities declared the end of the country’s latest outbreak.

DRC, which declared the six-month epidemic over in November, confirmed a fourth case in North Kivu province on Sunday.

The widespread use of Ebola vaccinations, which were administered to more than 40,000 people, helped curb the disease.

Flag of Democratic Republic of the Congo
Above: Flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)

The 2013 – 2016 spread sped up the development of the vaccine against Ebola, with a global emergency stockpile of 500,000 doses planned to respond quickly to future outbreaks, the vaccine alliance Gavi said in January.

Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance

Insurgents killed at least 11 civilians and three soldiers in the northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo on Sunday, the army said.

Fighters from the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) attacked the town of Ndalya in Ituri region, killing at least 11 civilians, Ituri province army spokesman Lieutenant Jules Ngongo told AFP.

He added that in the ensuing fighting “three members of the armed forces fell on the battlefield” and the troops “neutralised four ADF elements“.

The enemy retreated into the bush,” he said.

We are still pursuing them so that we can put the people out of danger.

Ndalya is about 100 kilometres (60 miles) from the Ituri capital Bunia.

16 Killed, Church Burned When Suspected Islamic Terrorists Attack Village  in Africa's DRC - Tendo Radio

After a month of relative calm, a resurgence of attacks attributed to the ADF began earlier this month.

Originally Muslim rebels from neighbouring Uganda, the ADF settled in the DRC in 1995.

Flag of the Allied Democratic Forces.svg
Above: Flag of the Allied Democratic Forces

The UN has said 468 deaths in the east were attributed to the ADF in the second half of 2020, including 108 women and 15 children.

Flag of United Nations Arabic: منظمة الأمم المتحدة‎ Chinese: 联合国 French: Organisation des Nations unies Russian: Организация Объединённых Наций Spanish: Organización de las Naciones Unidas
Above: Flag of the United Nations

Militants of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) have executed 13 kidnapped Turks, including military and police personnel, in a cave in northern Iraq, Turkish officials said on Sunday, amid a military operation against the group.

Forty eight PKK militants were killed during the military operation, while three Turkish soldiers were killed and three wounded, Defence Minister Hulusi Akar said in a statement.

Twelve of the kidnapped Turks had been shot in the head and one in the shoulder, he said.

Turkey launched the military operation against the PKK in northern Iraq’s Gara region, some 35 km (22 miles) south of the Turkish border, on 10 February to secure its frontier and find citizens who had been kidnapped previously, he said.

The governor of Malatya province in southeast Turkey named six soldiers and two police officers, kidnapped in separate incidents in 2015 and 2016, as being among those killed in the cave.

Three of the dead have yet to be identified in autopsies being carried out in Malatya.

One senior security source told Reuters that Turkish intelligence personnel were among the dead.

According to initial information given by two terrorists captured alive, our citizens were martyred at the start of the operation by the terrorist responsible for the cave,” Akar said at the operation’s control centre near the Iraq border.

Hulusi Akar (cropped, 2019).jpg
Above: Hulusi Akar

A statement on a PKK website said some prisoners it was holding, including Turkish intelligence, police and military personnel, had died during clashes in the area.

The group denied it had ever hurt prisoners.

The PKK, designated a terrorist group by Turkey, the United States and European Union, launched its armed insurgency in mainly Kurdish southeast Turkey in 1984 and more than 40,000 people have been killed in the conflict.

In the last two years Turkey’s fight against the PKK has increasingly focused on northern Iraq, where the group has its stronghold in the Qandil mountains on the Iranian border.

Flag of Kurdistan Workers' Party.svg
Above: Flag of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK)

The presidency’s communications director Fahrettin Altun said on Twitter that as Turkey mourns it dead it also reiterates its commitment to “chase down every last terrorist hiding in their caves and safe houses”.

Our revenge will be painful.

Our justice will be swift,” he said, slamming the West’s “deafening silence” in the face of PKK attacks and pledging “steps against individuals and groups glorifying and encouraging terrorism at home and abroad”.

Fahrettin Altun'un paylaşımlarını yayan 'sahte hesap ordusu' ortaya çıktı
Above: Fahrettin Altun

In 2017, Turkey’s foreign minister said Ankara was working to bring back citizens he said had been kidnapped by the PKK, after Turkish media reported two Turkish intelligence officers had been captured by the PKK in Iraq.

Mevlut Cavusoglu portrait.jpg
Above: Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu

Not in Peru, Myanmar, the Congo or in Turkey did the day seem to be expressive of love.

Where Is the Love - Roberta Flack and Donny Hathaway.jpg

As I have written in my last blogpost, Germans (of which my wife is one) generally do not celebrate Valentine’s Day in the manner in which my North American, British or Australasian friends do, but under my influence she has compromised over the years to the point where we would have a Valentine’s Day dinner, usually over the border in Konstanz, Germany.

But Valentine’s Day 2021 meant restaurants in both Switzerland and Germany were closed and though mask wearing outdoors was no longer practiced in Switzerland, dining out still remained impossible at this time.

Unable to dine out as we formerly did, we did something we often do when we wish to engage in discussion with one another.

We went for a walk.

Flag of Germany
Above: Flag of Germany

I will never claim to be an expert on relationships, despite having been in a long-term one with my wife for a quarter of a century.

But there seems to be a certain truism in the notion that they rarely evolve in the manner in which one had expected.

Men-Mars-Women-Venus-Cover.jpg

Marriage, also called matrimony or wedlock, is a culturally recognised union between people, called spouses, that establishes rights and obligations between them, as well as between them and their children, and between them and their in-laws.

(I find the inclusion of “lock” in combination with “wed” interesting.)

Above: Love padlocks, Butchers’ Bridge, Ljubljana, Slovenia

And it is in this definition where problems arise between couples in the individual interpretation of what precisely is meant by “rights and obligations“, what one should get from the marriage, what one should give to the marriage.

Above: The ancient Germanic married couple Arminius (18 BC – 21 AD) and Thusnelda engaged in a romantic encounter

It is considered a cultural universal, but the definition of marriage varies between cultures and religions, and over time.

Above: Nepali wedding

I cannot speak to the variation of marriages between religions, though I am acquainted with couples from different faiths.

Ute and I are, statistically, of the same Christian faith, but beyond our origins she remains a good Catholic and I, at best, could be considered an uncommitted agnostic if not faithless barbarian.

R.E.M. - Losing My Religion.jpg

Our different cultural roots have caused tensions between us.

There are indeed differences between those raised as Canadians and those raised as Germans.

If I had to choose one main difference between our cultures it would be in our approaches to decision-making.

A vertical triband design (red, white, red) with a red maple leaf in the center.
Above: Flag of Canada

Generally speaking, from my perspective, a German will make a decision only if he / she has meticulously planned the outcome and has prepared for the inevitable result that was calculated.

A Canadian, on the other hand, while no less wise, is more laissez-faire in this regard, assuming that even the best-laid plans can, and probably will, go astray.

Embassy and Consulates of the Federal Republic of Germany in Canada | So  German!
Above: German Embassy, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

A German will do a thing only when he / she is certain that it is a wise and permissible thing to do.

A Canadian will do a thing until he / she is certain that it is not wise or permissible to do something.

Canadian Embassy Berlin / KPMB Architects with Gagnon + Gagnon Letellier  Cyr architectes + Smith Carter Architects + Engineers | ArchDaily
Above: Canadian Embassy, Berlin, Germany

A German will try something and will be utterly shocked when things do not go according to plan.

A Canadian will try and sometimes fail but is mostly undaunted by the setback and will simply try, try again.

At the top there is a rendition of St. Edward's Crown, with the crest of a crowned gold lion standing on a twisted wreath of red and white silk and holding a maple leaf in its right paw underneath. The lion is standing on top of a helm, which is above the escutcheon, ribbon, motto and compartment. There is a supporter of either side of the escutcheon and ribbon; an English lion on the left and a Scottish unicorn on the right.
Above: Coat of arms of Canada

As pairings go, it is unsurprisingly that there are marriages between Canadians and Germans, for their differences compliment one another.

Coat of arms of Germany
Above: Coat of arms of Germany

This Canadian should be more disciplined, more calculating in his life planning.

My German wife should have more faith in the instinct and intuition that make Canadians resilient to change.

A projection of North America with Canada highlighted in green
Above: Canada (in green)

Germans have a history where doing what is expected of them has led them down dark alleys in their past.

Canadians, though not without blemishes or mistakes, continue to evolve into compassionate humanists that have earned the world’s respect through hard, but brave, experimentation, trial and error, challenge and success.

EU-Germany (orthographic projection).svg
Above: Germany (in dark green) and the European Union (light green)

Typically, marriage is an institution in which interpersonal relationships, usually sexual, are acknowledged or sanctioned.

Above: Newlyweds leaving for their honeymoon boarding a Trans-Canada Air Lines plane, Montreal, 1946

I do not wish to discuss my intimate relations in such an open forum as this, but it does seem to me that there is pressure upon couples that sexual congress should eventually lead to matrimony.

In fact, a theme that is shared in both national cultures is the question:

So, where is this relationship going?

There is the notion that sex must lead to marriage, but nowhere is there written the promise that marriage will lead to the continuation of the intimacy that led them to the altar.

In a way I think that it is this expectation of result, that a relationship must be going somewhere, that it must be controlled and driven rather than simply evolving on its own, that is the cause of much of the tension that exists between couples.

The marriage of Inanna and Dumuzid
Above: Ancient Sumerian depiction of the marriage of the goddess Inanna and the god Dumuzid

In some cultures, marriage is recommended or considered to be compulsory before pursuing any sexual activity.

As much as I can see some wisdom in this thinking, for sex carries with it not only risks of contagion or pregnancy, along with the argument that the intimate act may be more than simply an intermingling of bodies but as well could be an intertwining of minds and souls, but there may also be wisdom in finding out before the commitment of matrimony whether or not there is an intimate compatability between the partners.

How important intimacy is to each partner, how intimacy should be experienced, is a bone of contention for many couples.

There are couples wherein sex is the pivot point upon which its continuance is predetermined, where there are expectations of quantity and quality that must be met for the relationship to survive.

A situation where one spouse demands from the other an obligation to meet certain standards of intimacy or else.

But I think when sex becomes an obligation rather than a spontaneous desire then the spark that founded the relationship no longer generates the heat that it once did.

Above: Wedding of Louis XIV of France (1638 – 1715) and Maria Theresa of Spain (1638 – 1683), an arranged marriage

I cannot nor will not speak for any other person but myself.

I consider the sharing of intimacy an amazing gift that is bestowed upon me.

I consider it a privilege, not a right.

If intimacy is not occuring in the frequency or intensity one hopes this is not the sole fault or responsibility of one’s partner to meet the other’s expectations.

Happiness is not given.

It is shared.

If a relationship hinges solely upon intimacy then perhaps the foundations of that relationship are not as strong as they could be.

Sex may be the spark that lit the flames, but it takes more than sex to keep the home fires burning.

A marriage ceremony is called a wedding.

And this is what a wedding is:

Ceremony, pomp lending, bestowing, significance to the circumstances.

How much planning, how much expense, is put into this (in theory) a once-in-a-lifetime event!

How much attention is given to making every bride’s whim realized!

From the moment a couple decides to make their union a formal affair comes the implicit understanding that formality has standards, expectations, that must be met.

What once was casual, natural and spontaneous, is transformed into demand and obligation.

Game over.

Time to get serious.

Above: White wedding, Pennsylvania, USA

Individuals may marry for several reasons, including legal, social, libidinal, emotional, financial, spiritual and religious purposes.

Marriage allows certain rights, creates social settings, adds permissiveness to intimacy and legitimacy to offspring, offers tax advantages and economic security, and makes the moral happy that the union has taken ethics into consideration.

Above: Roman Catholic white wedding, the Philippines

Whom they marry may be influenced by gender, socially determined rules of incest, prescriptive marriage rules, parental choice and individual desire.

Above: Muslim wedding, Tunisia

Certainly I am all for genetic sensibility.

There is both a physical and psychological wrongness in intimacy within one’s family.

Above: Family chart showing relatives who, in Islamic Sharia law, would be considered mahrim (or maharem): unmarriageable kin with whom sexual intercourse would be considered incestuous

And, yes, there are definitely prohibitions of behaviour that marriage dictates, many of them hinging upon avoiding the legal, social, emotional, financial and moral complications that violations of these dictates may produce.

As well, though the relationship should really be only about the wishes and desires of the partners, there are many influences upon the couple to conform and confirm the expectations of others, usually family and friends.

The word “should” is frequently inserted into these discussions.

Above: Hindu wedding, India

In an ideal world, the opinions of the world regarding the relationship of the couple should not matter to the couple.

Alas, this is not so.

Too often the opinions of others matter too much, sometimes to the point of mattering more than the stability of the marriage.

How often I have heard of partners not respecting one another’s opinion until confirmed by others outside the relationship!

Above: Wedding party, Lillienhoff Palace, Stockholm, Sweden

I have no parental role models to whom I have been able to seek counsel or comfort, so it has been difficult for me to fully comprehend those who do depend upon their families in steering the course of the relationship.

I assume that a family ultimately supports their members and seeks only their happiness.

I have been informed that this is not always the case in some families.

Where I think marriage becomes questionable is the division between what is good for the separate individuals within the union and what is good for the union.

It is this last upon which this blogpost hinges.

Above: Khmer wedding, Cambodia

In some areas of the world arranged marriage, child marriage, polygamy and forced marriage are practiced.

In other areas such practices are outlawed to preserve women’s rights or children’s rights (both female and male) or as a result of international law.

Above: Kandyan wedding, Sri Lanka

I cannot tell another culture how they should behave, for I know not enough about other cultures for me to act as judge and jury over others.

When it comes to arranged or forced marriages, personally, I want to accept the blame for my marriage.

I am not looking for others to blame!

I am against any union that is not made by the two consenting adults within that relationship.

Above: traditional wedding, Jomala, Äland, Finland

As for what constitutes a child, I am referring to not only physical maturity but emotional maturity as well.

Frankly, there are a number of adults for whom emotional maturity remains elusive.

Depending upon whom one speaks to, even I in my 50s might be considered less mature than I should be!

Above: Shinto wedding, Meiji Shrine, Tokyo, Japan

As for polygamy and promiscuity, I confess to being too lazy for infidelity or being involved with more than one woman.

Honestly, I can barely cope with one woman at a time.

I cannot imagine the complexity of more than one.

Above: The Harem Fountain, Frederick Arthur Bridgeman

Marriage has historically restricted the rights of women, who are sometimes considered the property of the husband.

I must confess that I have never been a fan of “my” to describe someone’s connection with me, for “my” does indeed infer ownership.

My” wife does not belong to me, no matter how much I might wish her to be with me.

It has always been, remains, and shall always be a woman’s choice to remain with me or not, to do as she will or not, regardless of how I may feel.

She makes her own choices.

It is up to me to decide if I can live with those choices.

I do not have the right to dictate what those choices should be.

Above: Assyrian wedding, Mechelen, Belgium

Around the world, primarily in developed democracies, there has been a general trend towards ensuring equal rights for women within marriage (including abolishing coverture, liberalizing divorce laws, and reforming reproductive and sexual rights) and legally recognizing the marriages of interfaith, interracial, and same sex couples.

Above: Jewish wedding

I am all for equal rights for women, for a relationship should be based on mutual respect for one another.

Above: Criticism about the Azeri (Azerbajan) society tradition from domestic violence to the social and political participation of women in the community – Azerbaijani magazine criticising the practice of forced marriage, domestic violence, and the social and political participation of women in society. Forced marriage is the theme for the cartoon with the caption in Russian Svobodnaya lyubov – Free love. The image should be read from right to left as Arabic script was used to write Azeri at the time. 
On the right: If you do not want to go voluntarily, I will take you by force. 
On the left: The akhun – cleric says: “Lady, since you don’t say anything, it seems that you agree. By the order of God I marry you to this gentleman.”

How a woman chooses to cover or not cover herself must always be her choice.

I do believe a woman is too easily influenced by what she thinks others think she should appear, but how she wishes to appear must remain her choice.

Woman wearing a niqab with baby
Above: Woman in niqab, Aleppo, Syria

Above: Young woman in a bikini, Waikiki Beach, Hawaii, USA

(Sadly, this is not a two-way street.

Too many women believe their men are fashionably stunted idiots when it comes to dressing themselves and are quick to tell their menfolk what they should or shouldn’t wear.)

MU Fashion Police (@MUFashionPolice) | Twitter

In respect to divorce, there is no question that marriage is not only a romantic liaison, but as well it is a financial arrangement, and it is in the division of assets that divorce can truly become a messy affair.

If marriage were not intertwined with emotions then discussion of its dissolution would be something that could be done dispassionately.

But fear and anger are invariably part and parcel of a marriage’s demise.

We live in a world where too often the disparity between a man’s wealth and a woman’s wealth is greatly in his favour.

This was a situation I never sought.

I have never wanted the reason a woman remains by my side, or the reason I remain by hers, to be financial.

A couple should not remain together because the financial consequences of their separation are too frightening to contemplate.

I married a doctor.

She married a freelance contract teacher and would-be writer.

Inequality of income between us was inherently clear from the start.

I do not want to be financially dependent on her and the nature of my chosen profession has meant that I have had to be.

Finances were never the reason for my seeking her hand in marriage nor my reason for remaining.

I have felt only pride in her accomplishments and I have done my best to contribute to our union despite the disparity of our incomes.

I have never wanted her to remain with me out of fear that a divorce would demand from her to financially recompense me for that disparity.

Above: Parsi wedding, Iran

Certainly living with a woman lends to a man’s life a home of comfort and luxuries that he might not otherwise have desired without her influence.

But of all that I might label as my possessions the only thing I truly value has been my library.

Our separation has taught me not only what it is that I need to live, but as well that which I must learn to live without.

As I age certainly I enjoy creature comforts like any other social animal, but the problem with possessions is that we don’t only possess them, they also possess us.

There is a kind of liberty, an intangible sense of freedom, to having the extent of your wealth defined only by what you can physically carry.

It is a liberty I once knew in my travelling days.

It was an insecure life, an uncertain life, but never have I felt so free.

I seek nothing from my wife except that which she voluntarily wishes to give me.

I have always sought a relationship of compassion, never compulsion.

Carefree Highway - Gordon Lightfoot.jpg

As for sexual and reproductive rights, I believe that a woman has a right over her own body and over whether she wishes to produce children or not.

Though our marriage was not blessed with children, I never felt that marriage must hinge upon them.

And intimacy is the icing on the cake, but it is not the cake itself.

As much as we desire exclusivity from and access to our significant partners’ form, ultimately we need to respect the other’s right to decide with whom or how often one wishes to be intimate.

Again, it all boils down to what one can live with and what one can live without.

Remaining with someone should always be a choice, never an obligation.

Above: Minangkabau wedding, Indonesia

As for matters of interfaith, interracial or diverse interpretations of sexual compatibility, I believe that in this crazy old violent world that we live in if two consenting adults can, against all odds, find love and companionship, then I have no right to tell them whether or not I think they should be together.

For example, I may not fully understand same sex couples, but they need neither my understanding nor my consent to live their lives as they so choose.

All that is needed is my respect and compassion for all human beings, regardless of whether their lives are similar to my own or not.

Above: Armenian wedding, Khor Virap, Armenia

Controversies continue regarding the legal status of married women, leniency towards violence within marriage, customs such as dowry and bride price, forced marriage, marrigeable age, and criminalization of premarital and extramarital sex.

Above: Catholic wedding, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA

I cannot comment on legal status as I am untrained in legal matters, but I find myself thinking that what I wish for myself should be the same for others.

Above: Statue of Lady Justice –  a symbolic personification of the coercive power of a tribunal: a sword representing state authority, scales representing an objective standard and a blindfold indicating that justice should be impartial.

I cannot condone or justify violence of any kind towards anyone, whether this violence is physical or psychological.

Marriage does not give a person the right to injure their spouse.

Purple ribbon.svg
Above: A purple ribbon to promote awareness of Interpersonal Violence and Abuse Prevention

I cannor comprehend the notions of dowry and bride price, for they feel too much like the bride is a commodity to be traded.

Truth be told, a woman’s value is beyond measure, and to be loved by a woman is to be truly blessed.

A blessing does not carry a price tag.

Venus symbol
Above: Venus symbol, representing woman

As for the criminalization of premarital and extramarital sex, I feel that the government does not belong in the bedrooms of the nation, that the human body is not the province of legislation or compulsion, that the sharing of intimacy should remain a matter of personal choice and not a matter determined by obligation or fear of punishment.

No Place For The State In The Bedrooms Of The Nation - Pierre Trudeau  (1967) - YouTube

Marriage can be recognized by a state, an organization, a religious authority, a tribal group, a local community, or peers.

Above: 2004 California wedding between a Filipina bride and a Nigerian groom

I find this notion that something is not valid until it is recongized as such by others saddening.

I was married in a civil ceremony at the Freiburg im Breisgau City Hall.

The ceremony was conducted solely in German, a language I had not as yet learned.

As I stood there beside my bride, as the clerk spoke of our commitment to one another, I understood not a word of what was uttered.

An elbow in the ribs was a reminder of when it was appropriate to emit gutteral noises of consent.

The vows I took were words within my thoughts and meant with all my heart and soul.

They were unspoken then and remain unspoken now.

That is the burden and the price of being a man of my generation.

So much goes without saying.

Above: Freiburg im Breisgau Rathaus (City Hall), Baden.Württemberg, Germany

Marriage is often viewed as a contract.

And sadly it is.

A contract infers the idea of something legally binding.

Perhaps this is the origin of the word “wedlock“?

Above: An open-air wedding in Hong Kong of a British man and an Italian lady: the wedding was conducted by a Hong Kong-authorised lawyer.

A religious marriage is performed by a religious institution to recognize and create the rights and obligations intrinsic to matrimony in that religion.

Religious marriage is known variously as sacramental marriage in Catholicism, nikah in Islam, nissuin in Judaism, and various other names in other faith traditions, each with their own constraints as to what constitutes, and who can enter into, a valid religious marriage.

Above: Sundanese wedding inside a mosque, West Java, Indonesia

In a sense, the couple is seeking the counsel and consent of their faith granting validity to their union.

And herein lies the question of how important faith is in the lives of the couple.

There is much about religion for which I have the highest regard and the utmost respect.

But where others choose to follow a pilgrim’s progress I find that religion is constraining through its use of fear and compulsion.

I find that faith loses its free will when bound by the restraints of religion.

When a marriage is performed and carried out by a government institution in accordance with the marriage laws of the jurisdiction, without religious content, it is a civil marriage.

Civil marriage recognizes and creates the rights and obligations intrinsic to matrimony in the eyes of the state.

Above: Civil marriage by country: State recognizes civil marriages only (turqoise), State recognizes both civil and certain religious marriages (green),  State recognizes civil marriages (light blue),  State recognizes religious marriages only (red),  Civil marriages only for foreigners (pink),  Civil marriages only for non-Muslims (yellow)

How wonderful it is that the state allows a couple to marry, for now the opportunity to contribute to the state is assured.

Married people are such stable taxpayers and stable taxpayers keep a nation afloat.

Above: The civil wedding, 19th century Switzerland, Albert Anker

Some countries do not recognize locally performed religious marriage on its own and require a separate civil marriage for official purposes.

Above: A couple waiting to be married, Alghero, Sardinia, Italy

Without recognition, without sanction, just because we think and feel, do we actually exist as individuals, as a couple?

Black Suit White Shirt Mannequins Photos - Free & Royalty-Free Stock Photos  from Dreamstime

Conversely, civil marriage does not exist in some countries governed by a religious legal system, such as Saudi Arabia, where marriages contracted abroad might not be recognized if they were contracted contrary to Saudi interpretations of Islamic religious law.

Flag of Saudi Arabia
Above: Flag of Saudi Arabia

Ah, religious law!

A group of men who decided that they represent God and thus their will is not to be questioned.

Above: Verses from the Quran. The Quran is the official constitution of the country and a primary source of law. Saudi Arabia is unique in enshrining a religious text as a political document.

In countries governed by a mixed secular – religious legal system, such as Lebanon and Israel, locally performed civil marriage does not exist within the country, which prevents interfaith and various other marriages that contradict religious laws from being entered into in the country.

Flag of Lebanon
Above: Flag of Lebanon

However, civil marriages performed abroad may be recognized by the state even if they conflict with religious laws.

For example, in the case of recognition of marriage in Israel, this includes recognition of not only interfaith civil marriages performed abroad, but also overseas same-sex civil marriages.

Centered blue star within a horizontal triband
Above: Flag of Israel

I have on occasion been asked how I view same sex marriage.

I respond:

Why should straight people be the only fools?

Above: Street art by Niall O’Loughlin in Dublin encouraging people to vote yes in 2015’s Irish referendum

She pulls the walk from the Internet, for even here technology is insiduous, directing the free man to follow the calculating mind, the physical following the path of the artificial.

The map suggests a walk above the Lake of Constance (Bodensee) from west to east and back again, from Ermatigen to Gottlieben and return, 11 klicks, 11 kilometres.

Bodensee satellit.jpg
Above: Satellite image of the Lake of Constance (Bodensee)

A walk through shuttered streets and forest shadows and dappled sunlight above rippling waters.

We drive without commentary to the starting point at Ermatigen Station, for it is the pace of walking that sets the pace of talking.

White building with red tiled roof
Above: Ermatigen Station

This has been our way over the past few years.

We live together, we live apart.

She has her computer which she is invested in upon the sofa in the living room.

I have mine in a room we have dubbed my study by nature of the clutter with which I have filled it.

Separate Lives by Phil Collins and Marilyn Martin UK vinyl handwriting.png

She is a doctor and a damned good one at that.

She is needed, she is valued, her life makes a difference in the lives of others, and there have been so many children she has helped restore to health.

Logo

It is February 2021 and a year has passed since I have been any use of all.

I am a teacher by profession, by training, by qualifications, but these are not as valued by Switzerland as those of my wife.

Flag of Switzerland
Above: Flag of Switzerland

Nine months have passed since I abandoned the steady income of Starbucks.

Starbucks Corporation Logo 2011.svg
Above: Logo of Starbucks

Four months have passed since I have done any work at all.

Income from teaching is an embarrassing trickle.

Not for seven years have I worked fulltime as a teacher.

I am not a victim, but neither am I victorious in my career endeavours.

Above: Old houses of St. Gallen – Much of my working life in Switzerland has been in this town.

Her star rises above the clouds while mine has sunk into forgotten oblivion and obscurity.

I do not, will not blame her, for where I am is the result of decisions I have made and the consequences of those acts.

That and a little thing known as a pandemic.

The buck stops here: why leadership requires taking responsibility
Above: US President Harry S. Truman (1884 – 1972)

A job is waiting for me in Turkey and this may be our last walk together for a long time.

This is her chance to gauge the temperature of the relationship.

This is her chance to sway me from my course, if I can indeed be swayed.

The sun is bright and the winter air is a balmy 2°.

Ermatingen village
Above: the village of Ermatingen

I have a hamstring injury that refuses to heal, that defies description, with a pain that comes and goes.

I do not if what ails my body is physical or psychological, but I do that my pace is no longer the same as it once was and no longer matches her own.

Already in the gentle climb from Ermatigen street to hillside pathway my hamstring bothers me.

Above: Aerial view of Ermatingen

She is younger than I, less patient than I, less tolerant than I of the weakness of men.

Her desire to speak with me, to insert herself into my thoughts, to impress herself within my feelings, lies beneath the surface of her countenance like an itch she cannot scratch.

She marches on ahead of me, simultaneously enjoying her physical independence and cursing her emotional dependence upon me.

Wanderung Thurgauer Seerücken (Müllheim – Steckborn, Bodensee) |  WegWandern.ch

She marches on, ever present in my horizon and yet out of my reach.

I am holding her back as she is holding me.

Portfolio - Geriatrix 3D | Foundry Community
Above: Geriatrix and Myopia (Asterix comics)

I look around me as if today might the last day I will ever see what can be seen.

For who knows what tomorrow brings?

The best laid plans of mice and men and all that.

These are the days of contagion.

These are the days of uncertainty.

And soon I will leave.

There are aspects of Switzerland I will miss: the landscape geographical and historical and literary, some friends I have made through teaching and Starbucks, and, in spite of everything, the presence of a woman who has filled my days and has haunted my thoughts for 25 years.

But it is the Swiss themselves, their mentality, their soullessness, that I will not miss.

I am not saying that all who are Swiss are to be painted with the same jaundiced brush nor would I suggest that there are not some amongst them who are decent, warm and wonderful folks.

But living as I have here in the past decade, one begins to get a general impression of things and of how people are.

Switzerland may be where I have lived but it has never truly felt like home.

I have lived here, but I will be damned if I want to die here, ever struggling to find my dignity, ever denied the hope of conforming to a place that merely tolerates foreigners rather than welcoming them with warmth and compassion.

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Above: The Matterhorn, Valais, Switzerland

These thoughts follow me as I lag behind, following in my wife’s footsteps.

I seek in the heritage of the towns we view some glimpse of memories worth preserving.

The police - every breath you take.jpg

Ermatingen is located on the southern shore of Lake Constance opposite the Island of Reichenau and consists of the districts Ermatingen and Triboltingen.

The lowest point of the municipality is the lake shore in the north and lies at approximately 396 metres above sea level, the highest point is on the lake ridge at the southern border of the municipality at 613 metres above sea level.

Above: Ermatingen

Ermatigen is a town that will not die, though not for lack of its foes trying.

Stone Age shoreline settlements were discovered in 1861 and studied extensively (1981 – 1983, with finds from the Pfyn, Horgen and Corded Ware cultures (4000 – 2500 BC.)

Above: Stone Age arrowhead

An Alamanni graveyard has also been found outside the early medieval village.

Above: Alemannic belt mountings, 7th century

There is nothing more conclusive than the bones of the dead to prove that there were lives of the living.

The village of Ermatingen is first mentioned in 724 as Erfmotingas.

(Which for all the world sounds to me like “Erf! Mounting gas!” and like mounting gas much of what was has vanished like a fart in a whirlwind.)

Ermatigen was part of the land owned by the Monastery of Reichenau, though why monks who have foresworn wealth and the company of chlidbearing women need property for is unclear to me.

The abbot was the landlord, judge and appointed the priest for the village.

Above: Monastery and cloisters of Reichenau Island

During the Council of Constance (1414 – 1418), one of the three counter-popes (or Antipopes), John XXIII, is said to have secretly fled Constance and came to Ermatingen.

Above: Council Hall, Konstanz

According to tradition, the Pope, as a thank you for the hospitality he received, allowed the Ermatinians to celebrate carnival again at this time.

The Ermatinger histories therefore attribute the Groppenfasnacht (known as the latest or last Carnival in the world) which takes place every three years on Sunday Laetare (Black Sunday) three weeks before Easter, to this Pope’s visit.

Above: Pope John XXIII (1370 – 1419)

Even after the conquest of Thurgau by the Swiss Confederation in 1460, the lower jurisdiction remained with the Abbot.

In the Swabian War of 1499 the village was destroyed by the Swabian army.

Above: Theatre of the Swabian War of 1499

Beyond the borders of Canton Thurgau (Switzerland) and the State of Baden-Württemberg (Germany), few have heard of and fewer have cared about a war that lasted only nine months.

But Thurgau has never forgotten nor forgiven Germany for this War.

Though Thurgau is heavily dependent upon trade with the German state on its northern flank, little excuse is needed to roundly curse the Germans time and time again in local newspaper editorials.

Flag of Thurgau
Above: Flag of Canton Thurgau

(The Swabian War of 1499 (Alemannic German (my wife’s dialect): Schwoobechrieg, Schwabenkrieg or Schweizerkrieg (“the Swiss War“) in Germany and Engadiner Krieg (“the War of the Engadin“) in Austria) was the last major armed conflict between the Old Swiss Confederacy and the House of Habsburg.

What had begun as a local conflict over the control of the Val Müstair and the Umbrail Pass in Graubünden soon got out of hand when both parties called upon their allies for help: the Habsburgs demanding the support of the Swabian League of Germany, and the Federation of the Three Leagues of Graubünden turning to the Swiss Eidgenossenschaft (Swiss Confederacy).

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Above: Santa Maria, Val Müstair, Graubünden, Switzerland

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Above: Umbrail Pass, Val Müstair

Hostilities quickly spread from Graubünden through the Rhine valley to Lake Constance and even to the Sundgau in southern Alsace (France), and the westernmost part of Habsburg Austria.

Many battles were fought from January to July 1499, and in all but a few minor skirmishes, the experienced Swiss soldiers defeated the Swabian and Habsburg armies.

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Above: The Battle of Hard (Austria) (Monday 20 February 1499), one of the battles of the Swabian War, as depicted in the Luzerner Schilling (1513)

After their victories in the Burgundian Wars (1474 – 1477), the Swiss had battle tested troops and commanders.

Flag of Swiss Confederacy
Above: Flag of the Old Swiss Confederacy (1300 – 1798)

On the Swabian side, distrust between the knights and their foot soldiers, disagreements amongst the military leadership, and a general reluctance to fight a war that even the Swabian Counts considered to be more in the interests of the powerful Habsburgs than in the interest of the Holy Roman Empire proved fatal handicaps.

When his military high commander fell in the Battle of Dornach, where the Swiss won a final decisive victory,

Above: The Battle of Dornach (Austria) (Saturday 22 July 1499) – The picture shows several phases of the battle: in the middle the main battle underneath the castle of Dorneck (on the left the cavalry of the Swabian League under the banner of the red Saint Andrew’s Cross, on the right the Swiss infantry under the banners of Bern, Thun, Zurich and Solothurn); underneath the slaughtering of the fleeing troups by the Swiss at the river Birs.

Emperor Maxmilian I had no choice but to agree to a peace treaty signed on 22 September 1499, in Basel.

Above: Albrecht Dürer portrait of Emperor Maxmilian I (1459 – 1519)

The treaty granted the Confederacy far-reaching independence from the Empire.

Although the Eidgenossenschaft officially remained a part of the Empire until the Treaty of Westphalia (that ended the Thirty Years War) in 1648, the Peace of Basel (Friday 22 September 1499) exempted the Swiss from imperial jurisdiction and taxes, thus de facto acknowledged it as a separate political entity.)

Above: The Milanese envoy presents his peace proposals to Maximilian’s delegation at the city hall of Basel.
A delegate from Lucerne (front left, in the blue-white dress) translates. (Luzerner Schilling).

By the 16th century, Ermatingen was on the way to becoming a town, with a high and low council, a court and various privileges.

In 1660 the town was granted market rights.

After the incorporation of the Abbey of Reichenau into the Diocese of Constance (Konstanz) in 1540, the lower court rights were held by the Bishop, until 1798.

Above: Ermatingen and Reichenau Island

The parish originally ran by the lake to the Seerücken Mountains, and, in the High Middle Ages, included Mannenbach and Triboltingen.

The church of Ermatingen was built in 1359 and was incorporated into the Abbey of Reichenau.

In 1528 it turned to the Protestant Reformation.

This meant that the Catholic Abbey (and after 1540 the Catholic Bishop of Constance) had the right to appoint the town priest in the mainly Reformed parish.

This situation remained until 1804, when the town acquired the right to appoint their own priest.

The town church became a shared church in 1546.

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Above: The Parity Church of St. Albin, Ermatingen

In 1756 the community acquired rights to most itself, except for the mills and water rights.

In 1763 the guild of master shoemakers opened in Ermatingen.

By the end of the 18th century, it possessed the internal customs and navigation rights.

In the 19th century, fishing, cereals grains, fruit, hemp and viticulture were the basis of the villagers economy.

After the defeat of Napoleon I, many French nobles settled at the Untersee (the Lower Lake of the Bodensee).

Above: Jacques-Louis David portrait of Napoleon I (1769 – 1821)

With the expansion of the Seestrasse (Lake Road) (1823), the steamship company on the Lake (since 1825) and the railway (1875), the town saw increased traffic.

In 1835, the Ermatinger Hartmann Friedrich Ammann founded the Cantonal Rifle Association together with Prince Louis Napoleon (Napoleon III) (in the Restaurant Hirschen (Stag).

Above: Alexandre Cabanel portrait of Napoleon III (1808 – 1873)

Ermatingen Hotel Hirschen: Ansichtskarten-Center Onlineshop
Above: Restaurant Hirschen, Ermatigen

After 1870, tourism became a major industry in Ermatingen.

At the end of the 19th century the mechanical embroidery and trans-shipping industries entered the town.

In 1848 a carpentry factory moved into the town, and in 1936 it became the Jacques Goldinger AG company.

In 1875 a tin can and aluminum products factory (Louis Sauter AG) opened in Ermatingen, followed by several other manufacturing companies.

Pack Aktuell | Gruppo ASA erwirbt italienisches Werk für  chemisch-technische Weissblechverpackungen von Crown

The Swiss National Railway station opened on 17 July 1875 on the Etzwilen–Konstanz/Kreuzlingen Hafen railway line, part of the sea line.

This connected Ermatingen to the national rail network. 

Logo
Above: Logo of Swiss National Railways

During the 20th century agriculture became increasingly less important.

The commercial fisheries have mostly vanished, though some fish breeding and the traditional “Gropp Carnival” remain in town.

Sallelujah Gugge Zürich

The UBS (United Bank of Switzerland) Training Center at Schloss Wolfsberg (Wolf Mountain Castle)(opened in 1975) and the Entrepreneurs’ Forum Lilienberg (since 1989) have turned Ermatingen into a nationally known training site (in 2000 almost two thirds of jobs were in the services sector).

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Schloss Wolfsberg – Michael's Beers & Beans
Above: Schloss Wolfsberg (Wolf Mountain Castle)

Above: Villa Lilienberg

In summer, the village can also be reached by cruise ship (line Schaffhausen-Kreuzlingen of the Swiss ship company Untersee & Rhein.

Ermatingen and the surrounding area are supplied with radio programmes by Swisscom from the German Lake Constance Island of Reichenau via the Reichenau broadcasting station.

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An important custom here is “gangfish shooting“.

This was first carried out in 1937 and is the largest winter shooting in Switzerland.

It attracts hundreds of gunmen to Ermatingen every December.

The gangfish, prepared according to a special recipe, is eaten at this time.

What a gangfish actually is, neither Wikipedia nor Google can tell me.

FACTSHEET VEREIN KULINARISCHES ERBE DER SCHWEIZ

In winter, Ermatinger fishermen lived from water bird hunting.

After constant denunciation of this hunt, nature and bird conservation associations launched a popular initiative to abolish it.

In the following voting campaign there was a lot of controversy about this hunt, which was called “Belchenschlacht” (the basin battle) by conservationists.

The initiative was adopted in 1984 as the first ever popular initiative in the canton of Thurgau with a majority of 1,000 votes.

Since the winter of 1984/1985, patent hunting (hunting season), the so-called “hunting of the little man“, has been prohibited.

Contrary to the promises made to conservationists, the waterbird reserve Ermatinger Becken was created for the purpose of the annual hunt.

Since then, thousands of ornithologists (bird watchers) have visited the Ermatiger Basin every winter.

File:Rostgänse im Ermatinger Becken.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

The eye spies a number of buildings of particular significance in Ermatigen.

The origins of the Joint Church of Ermatigen (also known as the Joint Church of St. Albin), date back to the 12th century.

In the Swabian War of 1499, it was burned.

In the course of the Reformation, the paintings and altars were removed from the church.

After the Second Kappel Peace (1531), the equal relationship between Catholics and Protestants was restored.

Since then it has been shared by the Roman Catholic and Protestant faiths.

Above: St. Albin Church, Ermatingen

The Adler (Eagle) is one of the oldest inns in the canton of Thurgau.

It was first mentioned in 1270.

Today’s stately bar building dates back to the 16th century.

It has also served as an audience for the Federal Landvogt (offices).

Above: Hotel Adler, Ermatingen

Famous guests among others have been: 

  • Prince Louis Napoleon (Napoleon III)

Above: Franz Xavier Winterhalter portrait of Napoleon III

  • French writer, politician and diplomat Francois René de Chateaubriand
Above: Francois René de Chateaubriand (1768 – 1848)

  • French writer Alexandre Dumas (the Elder)  

Above: Alexandre Dumas the Elder (1802 – 1870)

  • German writer Thomas Mann  

Above: Thomas Mann (1875 – 1955)

  • German inventor Graf (Count) Zeppelin  

Above: Ferdinand von Zeppelin (1838 – 1917)

  • German writer / poet / painter Hermann Hesse

Above: Hermann Hesse (1877 – 1962)

  • German author / biographer / founder of the Dada art movement Hugo Ball  

Above: Hugo Ball (1886 – 1927)

  • German writer Leonhard Frank

Above: Leonhard Frank (1882 – 1961)

  • French writer René Schickele  

Above: René Schickele (1883 – 1940)

  • German writer Ferdinand Hardekopf  

Above: John Höxter portrait of Ferdinand Hardekopf (1876 – 1954)

  • German writer Alfred Neumann

Künste im Exil - Personen - Alfred Neumann
Above: Alfred Neumann (1895 – 1952)

  • General Guisan

Above: General Henri Guisan

Far above the village, Wolf Walter von Gryffenberg built a cube-shaped castle building in 1571. 

Johann Friedrich Geldrich von Sigmarshofen, who bought it in 1595, received the lower jurisdiction for his estate and Wolfsberg became a free seat.

In 1731, Johannes Zollikofer bought it and rebuilt it as the form that Wolfsberg still shows today.

In 1795, St. Gallen banker Jean Jacques Hoegger (1747-1812) acquired the castle and had the Parquin House built southwest of the castle in 1797.

After Hoegger’s death, his daughter Juliane Wilhelmine (1776-1829), sold the estate in 1815 to Baron Ignaz von Wechingen from Feldkirch. 

In 1824, the castle came into the possession of the French Colonel Charles Parquin, who had Wolfsburg Castle rebuilt and set up a guesthouse here in 1839.

Other owners were the Englishman Joseph Martin Parry, who converted the estate into a model agricultural farm, and Karl Bürgi, who built a spa house in 1865, which remained until 1918.

Under the crime writer Wolf Schwertenbach, Wolfsberg was the meeting place of SS Brigadeführer Walter Schellenberg (1910-1952) and Oberstbrigadier Roger Masson.  

Grabenkämpfe, Spione und geheime Treffen im Zweiten Weltkrieg – und welche  Rolle der Wolfsberg ob Ermatingen spielte
Above: Paul Eduard Meyer (aka Wolf Schwertenbach) (1894 – 1966)

Above: Walter Schellenberg (1910 – 1952), German secret police

Colonel brigadier Roger Masson (1894-1967) | Revue Militaire Suisse
Above: Roger Masson (1894 – 1967), Swiss intelligence officer

In 1970, the castle was acquired by the Swiss bank UBS, which renovated it and expanded it into a training centre on the site with further buildings. 

On the west wall of the library building is an iron clockwork from the old castle, which was made around 1540 by Laurentius Liechti.

Above: Schloss Wolfsberg

I cannot decide what frightens me more about Ermatigen: the Nazis or the bankers.

Flag of Nazi Germany
Above: Flag of Nazi Germany (1935 – 1945)

Villa Lilienberg was built around 1840 by the Prussian Baroness Caroline von Waldau.

In 1848 she sold it to Baroness Betty von Fingerlin.

Her husband, Count Johann Baptist Zappi, was a friend of Napoleon III. 

The stately villa in the style of late Classicism went in 1897 to the Winterthur company Gebrüder Volkart, and in 1935 to the Reinhart family. 

Kulturgelder aus Britisch-Indien | WOZ Die Wochenzeitung

Werner Reinhart renovated the Villa and hosted Wilhelm Furtwängler and Othmar Schoek among others.

Werner Reinhart — Google Arts & Culture
Above: Swiss industrialist and patron of the arts Werner Reinhart (1884 – 1950)

Above: German composer/conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler (1886 – 1954)

Today I sing of Othmar Schoeck – Musica Kaleidoskopea
Above: Swiss composer / conductor Othmar Schoek (1886 – 1957)

The art patron Oskar Reinhart (1885 – 1965) (of Winterthur museum fame) also lived here.

Oskar Reinhart: 9783725309849: Amazon.com: Books

The site was acquired in 1985 by the Lilienberg Entrepreneurs Forum Foundation, and is now a meeting place for entrepreneurs.

Above: Lillienberg

The Villa am See (Villa by the Lake), in the style of a Appenzeller house, was built in 1798 by the Appenzell builder Grubenmann on the site of the former public bath house, which was demolished in 1782.

The house became known as the “Toblerhaus” and was owned by the entrepreneur Louis Sauter (Villa Sauter) since 1918. 

The German textile entrepreneur Uwe Holy acquired the building in 2005, making extensive renovations.

Louis Sauter - Vinorama Museum Ermatingen
Above: Louis Sauter

Uwe Holy | BILANZ
Above: Uwe Holy

Villa - Vinorama Museum Ermatingen
Above: Villa am See / Vinorama Museum, Ermatingen

Relling’s Castle, estimated to date back to the 12th century, burned down during the Swabian War, was rebuilt in 1501 and served as the free seat of Jechonias Rellingen von Feder from 1579.

The eastern part of the house stands as a square tower on high wall bases, it was extended in 1686 by the stairwell.

The western part of the house was later added as a trotte (wine press). 

Even today, the oak posts stand in the former trotte, which survived the fire of 1499.

Thanks to the adjustments of the owners for their needs, this building has been preserved and maintained.

It is probably the oldest surviving building in Ermatingen.

Above: Rellingsches Schlössli, Ermatingen

Famous folks who have lived in Ermatingen include:

  • Marie Espérance von Schwartz (1818 – 1899), a German-English writer who had her last residence here

Above: Marie Espérance von Schwartz

  • Ferenc Fricsay (1914 – 1963), Austrian conductor who lived here and is buried in the cemetery in Ermatingen

Above: Ferenc Fricsay

  • Oskar Naegeli (1885 – 1959), Swiss dermatologist and chess master, born in Ermatigen

Abb. 9 Unbekannt, Prof. Dr. Oskar Nägeli (1885-1959), Dermatologe und... |  Download Scientific Diagram
Above: Professor Dr. Oskar Naegeli

A remarkable thing about Switzerland is that it attracts and carefully conceals the rich and famous who to wish to live their lives out of the spotlight.

Among these hiding in plain sight in Switzerland are:

  • Phil Collins (Féchy)

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Above: Phil Collins

  • Tina Turner (Küsnacht)

Tina Turner 50th Anniversary Tour.jpg
Above: Tina Turner

  • Shania Twain (Corseaux)

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Above: Shania Twain

  • ABBA’s Anni-Frid Synni Lyngstad (Zermatt)

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Above: Anni-Frid Lyngstad

That entertainers and sports people reside in Ermatigen is such a commonplace occurence in Switzerland as to be almost unremarkable.

Above: Hauptstrasse (Main Street), Ermatingen

Marie Espérance von Schwartz, née Brandt (born in Southgate, England, died in Ermatingen), also known as Marie Esperance Kalm de SchwartzMarie Speranza von Schwartz, and best known by her gritty name Elpis Melena was a writer of German origin and English nationality. 

Above: Marie Espérance von Schwartz

She was a friend of the Italian freedom fighter Giuseppe Garibaldi and the Hungarian composer Franz Liszt and became known mainly in the field of travel and memoir literature.

Born in England to a Hamburg banker, she was brought up mainly in Geneva.

After an early short marriage to a cousin, she settled in Rome.

With her second husband, the Hamburg banker Ferdinand von Schwartz (1813 – 1883), whom she had met in Italy, she made adventurous journeys through Greece, Turkey, Asia Minor, Egypt and North Africa, but this marriage ended in divorce in 1854.

In Rome, the wealthy and educated, especially linguistically talented (a cunning linguist?), (She is said to have mastered eight languages.) Marie led a literary salon where numerous artists and aristocrats frequented. 

She maintained a lively exchange of letters with Franz Liszt for many years.

In addition, she continued to indulge in her desire to travel.

Above: Franz Liszt (1811 – 1886)

Since 1849, Marie Esperance von Schwartz had been interested in Garibaldi.

In the autumn of 1857, she entered into personal relations with Garibaldi on the island of Caprera (off the coast of Sardinia).

File:Caprera casa di Giuseppe Garibaldi.jpg - Wikipedia

Above: Giuseppe Garibaldi House, Caprera

melena elpis - Used - AbeBooks

She lived with him, cared for his children, supported his cause financially and through her writings, and cared for him during his captivity and after his wounding.

She was generally regarded as his mistress.

Garibaldi is said to have asked several times for her hand in marriage.

Out of gratitude for her sacrificial friendship, Garibaldi gave her the manuscript of his memoirs, which she quickly translated into German and was able to publish in 1861 before her competitor Alexandre Dumas the Elder.

Above: Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807 – 1882)

At the end of 1865, Marie moved her residence to Crete, where, undeterred by the fighting raging on the Island during the Cretan uprising (21 August 1866 – 20 January 1869), she had a charming villa built in the vineyards in Chalepa near Chania. 

(Crete was part of the Ottoman Empire from 1646 to 1898.)

Above: Marie astride her horse Huney in Crete

Her sympathy, unsurprisingly, belonged to the insurgents.

At her request, Garibaldi sent a contingent of 500 men to Crete to support the uprising.

Arkadi Cretan flag.png
Above: Flag of the Cretan rebellion

She devoted a lot of time and money to charitable institutions, founded hospitals, asylums, schools, translated German textbooks into modern Greek and Cretan folk songs, legends and folklore into German. 

She gained a great deal of respect from both Christian and Muslim Cretans.

Above: Ethnic map of Crete, 1861 – (blue) Christians / (red) Muslims

She developed a lively commitment in the field of animal welfare, her influence extending throughout Europe.

In Chania she founded an animal hospital for horses and donkeys.

Countless street dogs were fed daily.

Above: Chania, Crete, Greece

In numerous brochures in many languages, she campaigned for animal welfare and campaigned against animal testing.

After 20 years in Crete, she settled in Ermatingen, where she died at the age of 80.

Tierschutz auf Kreta - Marie Espérance von Schwartz. | Radio Kreta

Ferenc Karl Fricsay (born in Budapest, died in Basel and buried in Ermatigen) was a conductor, who worked mainly in Hungary, Austria and Germany.

Ferenc Fricsay - Télécharger et écouter les albums.
Above: Ferenc Fricsay

He came from a musical family and was the son of the Hungarian military chapel master Richard Fricsay and Berta Lengyel.

His father gave him his first music lessons.

Fricsay joined the Budapest Academy of Music at the age of 6, the famous Franz Liszt Academy of Music, where at the time, among others, Béla Bartik (pianist), Zoltan Kodély (composer) and Ernst von Dohnsnyi (pianist) taught.

Above: Béla Bartók (1881 – 1945)

Above: Zoltán Kodály (1882 – 1967)

Above: Ernó Dohnányi (1877 – 1960)

He learned almost all the orchestral instruments and also studied composition.

At the age of 15, he jumped in for his father and made his conductor’s debut.

Above: Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Budapest, Hungary

In 1933, after a successful final examination at the Academy, he refused a job at the Budapest Opera (now the Hungarian State Opera House) and received his first permanent position as Kapellmeister of the military chapel in the university and garrison town of Szeged.

Hungarian State Opera House(PDXdj).jpg
Above: Hungarian State Opera House, Budapest

In 1934, he also became conductor of the local municipal Philharmonic Orchestra.

He married for the first time this year.

They had three children.

Above: Aerial view of Szegedin, Hungary

In 1939, he made his first guest appearance at the Budapest Opera.

The following year he conducted for the first time in the Szegedin Opera (“Rigoletto” by Verdi).

In 1942, a military court case was opened against Fricsay for wanting to engage Jewish artists.

In mid-March 1944, German troops occupied Hungary in Operation Margarethe.

In the summer of this year, he warned friends and acquaintances of impending arrests by the Gestapo and thus put he himself in danger of being arrested.

Because of this and also because of his Jewish origin (his mother was Jewish, he himself was Roman Catholic) he had to flee Szeged with his wife and three children and go into hiding in Budapest.

Above: German Bf 110s flying over Budapest, January 1944.

In January 1945 he was offered the post of First Kapellmeister at the Budapest State Opera.

He also shared the chief conducting of the Budapest Capital Orchestra, (today’s Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra) and conducted a concert with this orchestra at the end of January 1945.

He left military service as a captain.

The State Opera was reopened in March 1945, the same month Fricsay’s father died.

In April 1945, Fricsay conducted a performance of Verdi’s La traviata.

At the end of 1946 he accepted an invitation to the Vienna State Opera and then the offer to take over the assistance of Otto Klemperer at the Salzburg Festival. 

Fricsay gave a concert in the summer of 1947 with the Budapest Capital Orchestra in Vienna.

Above: Otto Klemperer (1885 – 1973)

In August 1947, his international breakthrough came when he took over the world premiere of Danton’s Death of Gottfried von Einem at the Salzburg Festival for Otto Klemperer, who had a brain tumour.

Szenenbild der Hamburger Produktion, 1948
Above: Danton’s Death, Hamburg production, 1948

The invitation was also made at the suggestion of Herbert von Karajan, who assured the composer of the talent of the young Hungarian, having attended the aforementioned Vienna concert of 1947.

Invitations from everywhere followed, including those for the Salzburg Festival in 1948 and 1949.

Above: Herbert von Karajan (1908 – 1989)

From 1947 he was guest conductor at the Staatsoper in Vienna, where he conducted repertory operas.

After his experiences there, Fricsay made it a principle to conduct only productions that he had rehearsed himself.

Architektur STOP Front 20150922 C MichaelPoehn.jpg
Above: Vienna State Opera

In the following years Fricsay placed particular emphasis on the ensemble idea, (i.e. the development of a work and its performance with a solid core of like-minded performers).

Ferenc Fricsay – Primephonic
Above: Ferenc Fricsay

(Think of a classical music version of the Traveling Wilburys.)

The Traveling Wilburys in May 1988 (top: Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty; bottom: Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan, George Harrison)
Above: The Traveling Wilburys in May 1988 (top: Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty; bottom: Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan, George Harrison)

These ensembles included Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Riza Streich, Maria Stader, Ernst Haefliger, Josef Greindl, and, until his accidental death in 1954, Peter Anders.

Above: Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (1925 – 2012)

Above: Rita Streich as Olympia in the Opera Hoffmanns Erzählungen (Hoffmann’s Tales) (1946)

Above: Maria Stader (1911 – 1999)

Ernst Haefliger – Ernst Haefliger Singt Opernarien (1962, Vinyl) - Discogs
Above: Ernst Haefliger (1919 – 2007)

Josef Greindl | Discography | Discogs
Above: Josef Greindl (1912 – 1993)

Above: Peter Anders (1908 – 1954)

(Think of these performers as superstars of their time in classical music.)

Preferred instrumental soloists of Fricsay were Yehudi Menuhin, Géza Anda, Clara Haskil and Anne Fischer.

Above: Yehudi Menuhin (1916 – 1999)

Above: Géza Anda (1921 – 1976)

Above: Clara Haskil (1895 – 1960)

Above: Annie Fischer (1914 – 1995)

(All names that this country boy from St. Philippe d’Argenteuil has nary a notion about.)

He worked with these artists again and again until the end of his career as a conductor.

In 1948 he conducted the scenic premiere of Frank Martin’s Le vin herbé (Der Zaubertrank / The Magic Potion) at the Salzburg Festival and the performance of Carl Orff’s Antigonae in 1949.

Above: Frank Martin (1890 – 1974)

Above: Carl Orff

(Clearly, there is more in Heaven and on Earth than previously dreamed in my philosophy.)

There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in  your philosophy.” ― Will… | Hamlet quotes, William shakespeare quotes,  Shakespeare quotes

He received great international acclaim for both performances.

Already by 1948 he was invited to an opera and concert guest performance in Berlin.

Aussicht von der Siegessäule auf die Straße des 17. Juni Richtung Berliner Mitte (Oktober 2013)
Above: Berlin

He made his debut in November 1948 at the Städtische Oper Berlin (now the Deutsche Oper Berlin) with Verdi’s “Don Carlos“, in the same month with the Rundfunk Sinfonieorchester Berlin and in December 1948 with the Berliner Philharmoniker and the RIAS Symphony Orchestra (since 1993 Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin).

Deutsche Oper Berlin. Ansicht von Südosten.jpg
Above: German Opera Berlin

Above: Rundfunk Sinfonieorchester Berlin

After these successes, Fricsay was appointed General Music Director of the Städtische Oper Berlin and chief conductor of the RIAS Symphony Orchestra.

Fricsay re-formed the orchestra and within a few years led it to international prestige.

By 1949, he brought almost 30 of the best musicians of the famous Staatsoper Unter den Linden to the RIAS Symphony Orchestra, which became famous in the following years for its brass section.

From then on, Fricsay played a central role in the reconstruction of musical life in post-war Germany, especially in Berlin.

Above: Staatsoper Unten den Linden, Berlin

At the end of December 1948 he signed an exclusive contract with the Deutsch Grammophon Gesellsschaft, for which he recorded his first long-playing record in September 1949 (5th Symphony by Tchaikovskywith the Berliner Philharmoniker).

This also heralded the beginning of a productive phase of recording.

Ferenc Fricsay - Ferenc Fricsay: Complete Recordings on Deutsche  Grammophon, Vol.1 - Orchestral Works - Amazon.com Music

In 1948, in place of the ill Otto Klemperer, he conducted the world premiere of Gottfried von Einem’s opera “Dantons Tod” at the Salzburg Festival in place of the ill Otto Klemperer. 

Above: Gottfried von Einem (1918 – 1996)

In 1950 he conducted “Le nozze di Figaro” (Mozart) at the Edinburgh Festival and made his debut in Buenos Aires with the “Carmina Burana” (Orff).

He married his second wife Silvia, née Valeanu, (1913 – 2003), the divorced sister-in-law of the skier Horst Scheeser, who brought a son into the marriage.

In April 1951, he conducted the Italian premiere of “Duke Blaubart’s Castle” at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples. 

Above: Teatro San Carlo, Napoli, Italy

In November 1951 he gave his first concert with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra (Munich / München) and in the spring of 1952 with the Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam.

Above: The Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra

Logo des Concertgebouw-Orchesters

In May 1952, probably because of the strain of the double obligation, he asked for the resolution of his contract with the Städtische Oper Berlin.

This year he took over his concerts at the Salzburg Festival for the ill Wilhelm Furtwängler.

Above: Wilhelm Furtwängler (1886 – 1954)

He was the director of the RIAS Symphony Orchestra until 1954.

In the following years, however, he remained closely connected to the Orchestra through numerous guest performance, touring and record commitments.

Above: Logo of the RIAS (Radiofunk im Amerikan Sektor)

In 1952 Fricsay and his family moved into Westerfeld Haus in Ermatigen as a permanent residence.

Above: Houses on the Oberen Seestrasse (Upper Lake Street), Ermatingen

Since that time he was a permanent guest at the Lucerne Music Festival Weeks.

Where there he took over the concerts of the ill Wilhelm Fürtwangler.

Above: Luzerner Kultur- und Kongresszentrum (KKL) (Lucerne Cultural and Convention Centre), Vierwaldstättersee (Lake of Lucerne), Luzern (Lucerne), Schweiz (Switzerland) – site of the Lucerne Music Festival

And also that same year he gave a guest concert with the Cologne (Köln) Radio Symphony Orchestra (now the WDR Sinfonie Orchester) and performed at the Salzburg Festival with the Vienna Philharmonic (Wiener Philharmoniker).

Above: Logo of the West Deutscher Rundfunk Sinfonie Orchester

Logo

In 1953 he began an extensive travel conductorship (in Paris, at the Scala in Milan, in Lucerne), which also took him to the US (Boston, Houston and San Francisco) in November of that year.

Due to the very successful concert in Houston, he was hired there for the next season (1954/55) as music director and principal conductor.

In June 1954 he made his Israel debut with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra.

The work he performed there with great success was Verdi’s Requiem.

Requiem (Verdi) Titelblatt (1874).jpg

At the end of October 1954, Fricsay came to Houston to take over the Houston Symphony Orchestra, which ultimately failed.

The Orchestra did not keep to its promises, so he terminated the contract in January 1955.

Above: Houston Symphony Orchestra

After a second concert tour through Israel, Fricsay became General Music Director of the Bavarian State Opera (Munich) from 1956 to 1958.

However, resounding success did not come about, mainly due to the fact that he did not grant a more prominent position to the music of Richard Strauss and Richard Wagner, as is customary there.

Above: Richard Strauss (1864 – 1949)

Above: Richard Wagner (1813 – 1883)

In addition, Fricsay insisted on having an important say in production issues.

Instead of focusing on Wagner or Strauss, he pursued his main goal of rebuilding the Italian repertoire and setting new performances of “Otello” (Verdi), “Chowanschtschina” (Mussorgski), “Lucia di Lammermoor” (Donizetti), “Wozzeck” (Berg), “Le Roi David” (Honegger), “Un ballo in maschera” (Verdi), and “Oedipus Rex” (Stravinsky).

Above: Guiseppe Verdi (1813 – 1901)

Above: Modest Musorgskiy (1839 – 1881)

Above: Gaetano Donizetti (1797 – 1848)

Above: Alban Berg (1885 – 1935)

Above: Arthur Honegger (1892 – 1955)

Above: Igor Stravinsky (1882 – 1971)

In 1957 he recorded “Fidelio” (Beethoven) for the Deutsche Grammophon Gesellschaft in Munich, the first stereo recording of the German record industry.

In 1958 he conducted a charity concert for the reconstruction of the National Theatre in Munich.

Above: National Theatre, Munich

On this occasion, the first Eurovision live broadcast of a public concert from Germany took place.

In the same year he conducted the performance of “Le Nozze di Figaro” (Mozart) in June for the reopening of the Munich Cuvilliés (today: Altes Residenztheater).

He then converted his General Music Director’s contract into a guest performance contract.

Above: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 – 1791)

Außenansicht des Theaters
Above: Residenztheater, Munich

In 1958, Fricsay began a series of recordings of all Beethoven’s symphonies, which remained unfinished due to his early death.

Above: Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 – 1829)

At the end of November 1958 Fricsay was diagnosed with a stomach ulcer, for which he underwent surgery in Zürich the same month, followed by a second operation in January.

The result was a recovery period of several months until September 1959.

Altstadt Zürich
Above: Zürich, Switzerland

From 1959 until his death, Fricsay was chief conductor of the RIAS Symphony Orchestra (now called the Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin). 

Fricsay conducted the Orchestra in September 1959 in the first concert after his illness break and then in the reopening concert for the Great Broadcasting Hall of the broadcaster Sender Freies Berlin (SFB), the post-war start of German radio into stereophony.

Senderfreiesberlin-logo.svg

In 1960, Fricsay was granted Austrian citizenship after the failed Hungarian uprising of October 1956 permanently denied him access to his homeland.

Hole in flag - Budapest 1956.jpg
Above: Symbol of the revolution: Hungarian flag with the 1949–1956 Communist emblem cut out

In April he was again engaged as General Music Director in Berlin for the 1961/1962 season.

In the spring of 1961, the Radio Symphony Orchestra Berlin under Fricsay’s direction, together with Yehudi Menuhin as soloist, undertook a European tour through Germany, to Copenhagen, London and Paris. 

At the Salzburg Festival in 1961, Fricsay conducted Mozart’s “Idomeneo” three times at the Großer Festspielhaus Great Festival Hall) in Salzburg, which was intended as the beginning of a new Mozart cycle under his musical direction.

Above: Great Festival Hall, Salzburg, Austria

A few days after the construction of the Berlin Wall, he opened the newly built Deutsche Oper Berlin in Bismarckstraße on 24 September 1961 with a re-enduation of the “Don Giovanni” (Mozart).

This was also the first time that an opera has been broadcast live on television.

In October 1961, Fricsay was awarded the Grand Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and made his last record recording with the Radio Symphony Orchestra in Berlin.

Berliner Mauer
Above: The Berlin Wall (1961 – 1989)

In November 1961 Fricsay gave his last concert with this orchestra in Bonn.

That month, his last concert recording was recorded.

Above: Beethoven Hall, site of the Bonn Orchestra

After several guest performances in London, Fricsay fell seriously ill again in December 1961, which led to further surgeries.

On 7 December 1961, Fricsay gave his last concert ever.

He cancelled all other commitments.

In the summer of 1962, the disease also seemed to have been overcome, but this turned out to be wrong.

This year he published a book he wrote, “About Mozart and Bartik“, in which he set out his basic views on classical music in general and on the music of the composers named in the title in particular.

Ferenc Fricsay, Dukas • Kodály • Shostakovich • Hindemith • J. Strauss •  Beethoven • Mozart – Great Conductors Of The 20th Century (2002, CD) -  Discogs

Fricsay died in Basel in February 1963 at the age of only 48 from the consequences of a gall bladder perforation, which was not detected in time.

He is buried in the cemetery in Ermatigen.

Das Vogelnestli des Stardirigenten

Fricsay was a rehearsal conductor and orchestral educator who tried extensively and often rigorously, which sometimes did not make the orchestral musicians’ dealings with him easy.

However, he produced positive results in technical play and led to undoubtedly outstanding artistic achievements.

He also benefited from the fact that he had mastered all orchestral instruments (except the harp), a knowledge he brought to the fore as part of his always intensive rehearsal work.

The television recording of the rehearsal for “Moldova” illustrates another special feature of Fricsay’s rehearsal work, namely that he described the musical events to the orchestra in a vivid, lively and pictorial manner, and, if necessary, also sang in passages to illustrate his musical ideas and to achieve the tonal result he wanted.

This underlines that his rehearsals were always based on a comprehensive concept of the respective work and he knew exactly what he wanted.

Ferenc Fricsay - A Life in Music - DG: 4743832 - download | Presto Classical

Fricsay preferred a clear, transparent orchestral sound that was taut, elastic and precise.

At the same time, he had an excellent sense of rhythm. 

Especially his recordings from a young age testify to great strength, energy and vitality.

However, this was also a subject of criticism, as some of his early performances were acknowledged to be too emotionally cold with a certain rigidity.

Too much external brilliance and mere effect were complained about, as well as too little relaxation and detachment. This was an accusation that was not made in later years.

Since the beginning of 1959, Fricsay has been increasingly plagued by severe illness, which was often associated with simply another new conducting gesture of Fricsay’s.

Thus his recordings from this time seem more “spiritual“, at least they are almost always slower than those from the time before the outbreak of the disease.

Although this is often seen as a direct consequence of the disease, this is probably also a process of maturity of the artist and the person Fricsay as a whole, which only now had a full effect.

Ferenc Karl Fricsay - Vinorama Museum Ermatingen
Above: Ferenc Fricsay

His repertoire was extensive, from Georg Friedrich Handel to Bernd Alois Zimmerman.

Above: Georg Friedrich Handel (1685 – 1759)

Work of the Week – Bernd Alois Zimmermann: Ich wandte mich und sah an alles  Unrecht, das geschah unter der Sonne (Ecclesiastical Action) - Schott Music  (EN)
Above: Bernd Alois Zimmermann (1918 – 1970)

Mozart’s work was particularly focused.

From the very beginning, he also put the music of Joseph Haydn and music of the 20th century, which had been rather neglected in the concert hall, on the program.

Above: Joseph Haydn (1732 – 1809)

Despite his early death, he managed to record interpretations of more than 200 classical works for posterity and bring the RIAS Symphony Orchestra to a standard comparable to that of the Berliner Philharmoniker.

From the abundance of his recordings, in addition to his Bartik, Kodoly and Mozart recordings, the Tchaikovsky symphonies and those of the Strauss waltzes are particularly highlighted.

His recordings of the three piano concertos by Béla Bartik with Géza Anda as soloist became well-known.

Fricsay is regarded as the “first media artist of European standing” (Ulrich Schreiber) and decisively promoted both broadcasting and record recording technology.

Unlike many other conductors, he was very interested in recording technology.

Fricsay carried out an uncompromising quality control of his recordings and released them only when the tonal reproduction fully corresponded to his ideas.

Otherwise, he insisted on re-recordings.

He advocated stereophony early on, both on records and on the radio.

Fricsay became known to a wider public mainly through a television documentary, which shows him in 1960 during the rehearsal of “Moldova” by Smetana with the Südfunk Symphony Orchestra.

This was also the first attempt on European television to bring classical music to a wide audience through a workshop experience.

Ferenc Fricsay | Hall of fame | Zeneakadémia

Above: Ferenc Fricsay

Fricsay’s work, however, did not have adequate repercussions.

In addition to the circumstance of his early death, this is probably mainly due to the fact that Deutsche Grammophon immediately elevated another conductor as the figurehead in the succession to Fricsay after his death, who was a “media professional” and knew best about the art of self-staging: Herbert von Karajan.

Fricsay’s person and his merits were eclipsed, his legacy forgotten, his grave unvisited.

In November 1974, the Ferenc Fricsay Society was founded and constituted on the occasion of the Berlin Festival in 1975.

It is dedicated to preserving the conductor’s memory and promotes the publication of his recordings.

L'art de Ferenc Fricsay. - La Boîte à Musique

Sadly, a man these days is judged only by his publicity.

The dead are dreadful at self-marketing.

And those who do not engage in self-marketing might as well be dead.

There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and  that is

In the field of dermatology, the Naegeli syndrome is named after Oskar Naegeli.

Abb. 9 Unbekannt, Prof. Dr. Oskar Nägeli (1885-1959), Dermatologe und... |  Download Scientific Diagram
Above: Prof. Dr. Oskar Nägeli (1885 – 1959)

Naegeli syndrome is a rare and curious condition characterized by reticular skin pigmentation, diminished function of the sweat glands, a lack of teeth and the absence of fingerprint lines on the fingers.

A crime story just waiting in the wings to be written.

Above: Symptom of the Naegeli – Franceschetti – Jadassohn Syndrome

As we tramp the hills above Ermatigen and descend down to Triboltingen, Ute has slowed her pace impatiently waiting for me to accompany her.

Ever aware that a mere fortnight will soon separate us, the never-ending jukebox that resides within my mind finds itself playing lyrics from Kenny Rogers’ “Lucille” and Leonard Cohen’s “Famous Blue Raincoat“.

In a bar in Toledo, across from the depot,
On a barstool, she took off her ring.
I thought I’d get closer, so I walked on over.
I sat down and asked her name.
When the drinks finally hit her she said: “I’m no quitter
But I finally quit livin’ on dreams.
I’m hungry for laughter and here ever after
I’m after whatever the other life brings
.”


In the mirror, I saw him, and I closely watched him.
I thought how he looked out of place.
He came to the woman who sat there beside me.
He had a strange look on his face.
The big hands were calloused. He looked like a mountain.
For a minute I thought I was dead.
But he started shaking, his big heart was breaking.
He turned to the woman and said:

You picked a fine time to leave me, Lucille.
With four hungry children and a crop in the field.
I’ve had some bad times, lived through some sad times,
But this time your hurting won’t heal.
You picked a fine time to leave me, Lucille
.”

After he left us, I ordered more whiskey
I thought how she’d made him look small
From the lights of the barroom
To a rented hotel room
We walked without talking at all.


She was a beauty, but when she came to me,
She must have thought I’d lost my mind.
I couldn’t hold her. ’cause the words that he told her
Kept coming back time after time.

You picked a fine time to leave me, Lucille.
With four hungry children and a crop in the field.
I’ve had some bad times, lived through some sad times,
But this time your hurting won’t heal.
You picked a fine time to leave me, Lucille.

Kenny Rogers - Lucille single.jpg

It’s four in the morning, the end of December,
I’m writing you now just to see if you’re better.
New York is cold, but I like where I’m living.
There’s music on Clinton Street all through the evening.

I hear that you’re building your little house deep in the desert
You’re living for nothing now, I hope you’re keeping some kind of record.

And Jane came by with a lock of your hair
She said that you gave it to her
That night that you planned to go clear
Did you ever go clear?

Ah, the last time we saw you you looked so much older
Your famous blue raincoat was torn at the shoulder
You’d been to the station to meet every train, and
You came home without Lili Marlene

And you treated my woman to a flake of your life
And when she came back she was nobody’s wife

Well, I see you there with the rose in your teeth
One more thin gypsy thief


Well, I see Jane’s awake
She sends her regards

And what can I tell you, my brother, my killer
What can I possibly say?
I guess that I miss you, I guess I forgive you,
I’m glad you stood in my way

If you ever come by here, for Jane or for me
Well, your enemy is sleeping, and his woman is free

And thanks for the trouble you took from her eyes
I thought it was there for good, so I never tried

And Jane came by with a lock of your hair
She said that you gave it to her
That night that you planned to go clear

Sincerely, L Cohen

Songs of love and hate.jpg

The wife always says she likes my voice and likes to listen to me sing.

But I don’t feel much like singing this day, despite the music in my mind.

These are tunes that do not soothe the mood, though they reflect my inner turmoil.

Our path, printed out from the walkers’ website, leads us through the streets of the village of Triboltingen, a place wherein I once taught a schoolteacher the English she needed to pass a Cambridge course required by her school board.

It was not then and nor was it now a welcoming warren.

I taught her in the heart of a cold winter and I have returned to this town in the chill of a heartless pandemic.

Though cars speed by upon the main street that is merely a midpoint of Highway 13, the village feels nonetheless empty and devoid of cheer or life.

I point out to my wife where the schoolteacher lived and the path I took from the whistlestop of Triboltingen to reach her house.

It is an unremarkable account listened to with unremarkable inattentiveness.

Above: Hauptstrasse (Main Street), Triboltingen

The Strassendorf (“road village“) is located at the foot of the Lake Ridge (the Seerücken hills) and at the Untersee between Tägerwilen and Ermatingen.

Above: Hauptstrasse (Main Street), Triboltingen

(A Strassendorf is a village form of settlement and a special kind of terraced village.

There are both regulated (planned by systematic colonization as in the province of Québec) and unregulated (naturally formed).

Road villages are widespread in Europe, especially in Central Europe.

The courtyards are usually laid out at regular intervals, usually with residential buildings and ancillary facilities, such as stables, barns, walls, fences, gardens, lying on the traffic route. 

Like a terraced village, the street village is characterized by the fact that, if the local conditions and terrain make it possible to settle even further at the beginning and at the end of the street village, then further farmland or residential plots can be created.

In more recent times, other roads, often running in parallel, are also being built if necessary.)

Above: An example of a Strassendorf – Champlain, Québec, Canada

Triboltingen is served by Highway 13, the main road between Schaffhausen and Kreuzlingen, and it has been, since 1998, a stop on the parallel sea line of the aforementioned Untersee & Rhein cruise ship route.

Above: Hauptstrasse (Main Street), Triboltingen

A discovered incendiary moat from the 1st century indicates an early Roman settlement.

The village itself was founded by the Alemanns. 

Together with Salenstein, Fruthwilen, Mannenbach and Ermatingen, Triboltingen formed a market cooperative selling the yield of surrounding forest and pastures.

Around 950, Duke Hermann of Swabia donated the village to the Monastery of Reichenau.

According to one chronicle, the Triboltinger fled in the famine of 1146 with his belongings to the nearby Monastery of Petershausen in Konstanz.

The village was first mentioned in the Middle Ages.

Above: Triboltingen and Reichenau Island

(It may have been a Tuesday, but I am unsure of the particulars.) 

Tuesday Afternoon.jpg

The Monastery of Reichenau was the village’s most important landlord and courtmaster.

From 1540 to 1798, the village was under the jurisdiction of the Prince Bishop of Konstanz. 

Wappen Bistum Konstanz.png
Above: Coat of arms of the Prince Bishop of Konstanz

Above: Konstanz Cathedral

East of Triboltingen, a bloody battle of the Swabian War took place on 11 April 1499 in the nearby hamlet of Schwaderloh.

Die Schlacht im Schwaderloh aus der Chronik des Johannes Stumpf
Above: The Battle of Schwaderloh from the Chronicle of Johannes Stumpf

(In the early hours of Tuesday 11 April 1499, between 6,000 and 7,000 Swabian landsmen marched out of Konstanz to attack the Swiss federal division positioned near Ermatingen.

However, a simultaneous attack with boats from the Island of Reichenau did not bring the desired surprise effect, so that the attacked could prepare themselves in time.

The Swiss Confederates threw themselves at the attackers, as they suspected only a minor attack, but had to retreat to the nearby forests because of the attackers’ greater supremacy.

The Swiss lost around 80 men and had to leave behind the two Luzern guns which were taken to Reichenau from Ermatingen.

Swabian troops occupied the villages of Ermatingen, Triboltingen and Mannenbach and began to plunder.

Apparently, the daily goal for the commanders had already been reached.

In the meantime, the federal contingent of Ermatingen merged with the forces that had joined forces at Schwaderloh.

It was decided, despite the inferiority of numbers, to attack the Swabian troops before they could bring their prizes to safety in Constance.

Together with another Thurgau contingent of about 400 men, who arrived from Scherzingen (part of the Municipality of Münsterlingen of which Landschlacht is a part), around 1,800 Swiss Confederates marched directly through the forest between Schwaderloh and Triboltingen into the plain at the Untersee.

When the Swabian troops made their way back from Konstanz, a lot of wine had already been drunk, the Confederates attack came as a surprise.

Above: On the left, the onslaught of the Confederates, in the middle, the battle, on the right, the flight of the slain. Chronicle of Diebold Schilling (1513)

Niklaus Schradin reports in his chronicle of the Swabian War (1500) that the Confederates advanced with great noise, whistles and drums from the forest down the slope to Triboltingen.

The Swabian troops were able to form a battle just in time under the protection of the cavalry around a few pieces of artillery.

According to contemporary information, the Swabian artillery fired at the advancing Confederates, but aimed too high.

The resulting cover of smoke then allowed the Confederates to approach the fog-lost Swabian battle formation unseen and to overrun it by force.

When the Swabian battle order disintegrated and the foot soldiers began to flee, the federal formation split up.

The Swiss fought the Swabian knights on horseback, while spearmen and swordsmen chased the fugitive footmen.

The bloody pursuit reached the walls of Gottlieben, the Tägermoos (a German district administered by the Swiss town of Tägerwilen), and the very walls of Konstanz itself. 

Many Swabians were forced into Lake Constance and had to leave all their armor and equipment on the shore to swim to safety or be rescued by boats in a pre-Dunkirk scenario.

Most of the 2,000 men that the Swabian side had to mourn as a loss drowned in the swamps of the Tägermoos or in the Lake of Constance.

Added to this was the cruel warfare of the Confederates.

According to the decision of the Daily Statute (the orders) of 11 March, no prisoners were allowed to be made in this war, a condition to which the troops had to swear to obey.

So, anyone who was left injured was put down.

The 130 dead from Konstanz were recovered after the Battle, the remaining 1,000 dead remained on the battlefield deprived of their equipment and clothes.

The spoils of the Confederates were considerable:

The entire artillery of the Swabian federal troops, numerous field weapons, and the loot of the raids in and around Ermatingen fell into their hands.

The federal victory caused a considerable weakening of the troops of the Swabian League in Konstanz and until July 1499 stopped any efforts to make any serious success in Thurgau.)

Above: After the battle, women and clergy gather the bodies of the citizens of Konstanz on the battlefield in front of the city – Diebold Schilling

Though the majority of the town is comprised of followers of the Swiss Reformed Church, Triboltingen itself has always belonged to the parish of Ermatingen.

In the 18th century Triboltingen owned a town hall, the “Zwingwald” and vineyards, among other municipal estates.

In the 19th century, vine growing was the basis of the village’s prosperity.

Around 1900, embroidery was also practised.

After 1950, the decommissioning of farms began.

Converted into residential buildings, they shape the townscape with the resulting single-family houses found here since the beginning of the 21st century.

The numerous half-timbered buildings date from the 17th century.

The village of Triboltingen is listed in the Inventory of the Places Worth Protecting in Switzerland.

Wappen von Triboltingen
Above: Coat of arms of Triboltingen

Triboltingen’s Joint Chapel of St. Nicholas and the residence Zur Post/Haus Schwarz (of the Post / Black House) are listed in the List of Cultural Objects of Ermatigen.

The Chapel of St. Nikolas was probably built in the 13th century.

From this time, the high-altitude arched windows are still preserved.

The choir was constructed around 1500.

One outstanding feature of the Chapel is the roof rider built in 1602 with an expansive pointed helmet.

Inside, remnants of medieval murals can be seen in three layers.

On the north wall of the nave are rubella drawings and pilgrim inscriptions from the late 15th century.

After the Reformation, the chapel was no longer used for services.

In the Second World War it was used as a powder magazine.

It was renovated in 1957.

Today, the Chapel hosts occasional divine services and is also used for small concerts.

Above: Church of St. Niklaus, Triboltingen

Curiously, Triboltigen does not boast about personalities it has harboured, for what secrets it conceals are covered by the shadows of Ermatingen.

Above: Zum Weinberg Inn, Triboltingen

The trail leads us across the railroad tracks close to the Triboltingen whistlestop and finds us crossing fields and moor around and away from the town of Tägerwilen.

Shelter on concrete platform

In Tägerwilen there were traces of a Neolithic settlement from around 4000 BC.

In the 7th century, the Alemanns settled in Tägerwilen on the village streams, near the Roman road Konstanz – Winterthur.

The first documentary mention dates back to 990 as Tegirwilare.

The history of Tägerwilen is strongly connected with that of neighbouring Konstanz.

Officials of the Bishop of Konstanz also founded Tägerwilen Castle and the Castle Castell, which was later built next to it.

In the early Middle Ages, Tägerwilen belonged to the Konstanz Bischofshöri (bishop’s horn) – (The Bischofshöri was an area between Konstanz and Berg as well as Münsterlingen and Gottlieben in Canton Thurgau, in which the peasants belonging to the Bishopric of Konstanz had to pay the Bishop and his clerics levies.) –  from about 1300.

During the Swabian War in 1499 and after the Battle of Schwaderloh, the village of Tägerwilen was burned down and Castell Castle destroyed.

Above: Schloss Castell (Castell Castle), Tägerwilen

In addition to agriculture and cattle breeding, vine and fruit growing were also practised, and the large civic forest was important.

In Tägerwilen there were nine mills, a poorhouse and a school.

After the opening of the Etzwilen – Konstanz railway line in 1875 and the Konstanz – Wil line in 1911, the village expanded towards the stations.

Towards the end of the 19th century, numerous commercial enterprises were established, including an automobile manufacturer.

In 2005, industry and commerce provided a quarter of the jobs in the municipality, while agriculture still represented 10%. 

Above: Tägerwilen Dorf Station

Tägerwilen, nay, the entire district of Kreuzlingen, has never been a place I could embrace.

It is a charmless place of charmless people, at least for those who only visit and never linger.

This is not a place that draws the traveller in.

It does not whisper to the heart:

Wander, explore, seek.

Instead it is a place where the locals look at the visitor with skepticism and disdain asking you the question that you yourself have already asked:

Why are you here?

Wappen von Tägerwilen (mit Tägermoos)

Above: Coat of arms of Tägerwilen

And yet the place has produced its own personalities:

  • Elise Egloff (1821-1848), literary model for writers Berthold Auerbach, Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer, Gottfried Keller and George Bernard Shaw – Think of her as Eliza Doolittle of My Fair Lady.
  • Hermann Müller – Thurgau (1850-1927), a botanist who loved Canton Thurgau so much he adopted its name as his own

Above: Tägerwilen and Konstanz

Elise Egloff was born in Tägerwilen as an illegitimate daughter and grew up in the house of her grandfather, the butcher and community landlord Hans Jakob Egloff.

After his death in 1836 she did an apprenticeship as a seamstress and in 1841 came to Zürich as a child and sewing girl in the household of the German professor of chemistry Carl Löwig, to where the German anatomist Jacob Henle also travelled.

Above: Carl Jacob Loewig (1803 – 1890)

From their initially random encounters developed a deep love affair, about which Jacob Henle wrote:

…..and so the most ridiculous thing that can happen to a cavalier of the world in such a relationship happened to me: I was not only interested in her body, but also in the soul of the girl.” 

Above: Elise Egloff

When Henle received the call for a professorship in Heidelberg in the autumn of 1843, he wanted to finance Elise Egloff a small shop in Küsnacht (Canton Zürich). 

Above: Küsnacht, Canton Zürich

Her resulting desperation and love led Henle to the plan to bring Egloff to the point of being accepted in bourgeois society as his lover and as a bride.

Henle attached particular importance to his family’s judgment.

Above: Jakob Henle (1809 – 1885)

Initially, only his two brothers-in-law Carl Matthieu and Adolf Schöll were informed of Henle’s intentions.

In April 1844, Elise Egloff disappeared from Zurich without leaving any messages to family and acquaintances.

Jacob Henle put her in the care of his brother-in-law Carl Gustav August Mathieu, who in turn introduced her under a pseudonym to a girls’ boarding school for “higher daughters” in Traben (on the Moselle River), where Egloff went through the usual bourgeois educational program in the circle of significantly younger classmates: language education, religion, literature, mythology, declamation, piano playing, drawing and dance.

After targeted indiscretions by Adolf Schöll, who was driven by pity for Elise Egloff – who also collaborated the still secret story early on with Berthold Auerbach  – Jacob Henle inaugurated his sister Marie and instructed her a key role in the educational experiment:

From your hand I want to welcome her as my bride or never see her again.

Marie Mathieu immediately travelled to Traben to see Elise.

Her impression was unfavorable, so she tried to dampen her brother’s hopes for a successful outcome of the experiment.

On the intervention of Henle’s sister, the written contact between Jacob Henle and Elise Egloff was interrupted in August 1844, and a visit by the prominent scholar to Traben was ruled out. 

Traben-Trarbach, 2012-08 CN-01.jpg
Above: Traben-Trarbach

After a year of civic education in Traben without contact with Jacob Henle, Elise Egloff came to the house of the childless couple Mathieu in Trier in May 1845.

Here she was allowed to write letters to Henle again.

The upbringing in the house of Mathieu was marked by conflicts with Marie Mathieu, who was often overwhelmed and initially considered Egloff to be unsuitable.

Henle later wrote to Mathieu (in May 1846):

The mistake was less in the people than in the situations and I didn’t want to advise anyone to repeat the experiment.

A less tender sister and a less in love bride would not have done it.” 

At times it looked as if “the educational experiment has become a sustained character test and heart research that overwhelmed all participants.

Although Henle still thought in the autumn of 1845 that he could pull himself out of the affair without any major problems if the experiment failed, his tone in the letters to Egloff became more loving, and his reluctant sister asked for more objectivity in reporting on Elise.

Above: Porta Nigra, Trier

At the end of September 1845, Elise Egloff wrote to Jacob Henle:

Let me not live in uncertainty for years, but in everything I feel good and know it too well that you deserve a higher person who has more spirit and merit.

In October 1845, Elise Egloff and Jacob Henle met for the first time after a year and a half, and Henle informed his father.

Driven by another targeted indiscretion by Adolf Schöll, the engagement was publicly announced in December 1845, Henle wrote (partly ironically):

….and so I am now the groom of a girl from Thurgau, who I met in Zürich, parentless, poor but beautiful and good, named Elise Egloff, who has been living with my sister for a year, in order to acquire some German education, because the Swiss one was not enough for my high rank.” 

In February 1846 Jacob Henle wrote to Schöll:

I have a certainty that I will be loved with an insensitivity that I can hardly live by myself, and I have a rather extensive heart.

In Trier, I felt this happiness in full, which means to possess a being completely and to be everything to him.

That is why I look forward to the future with joyful confidence.

In March 1846 the wedding ceremony took place in Trier.

Above: Trier, 1900

Already on her honeymoon to Vienna the bride suffered from coughing fits and “blood cough” (tuberculosis).

The couple lived at the Henles school in Heidelberg.

Above: Heidelberg

In December 1846 their son Karl Henle was born, on 20 January 1848, the daughter Elise Henle.

Her mother died of pulmonary tuberculosis on 21 February 1848.

Already in time one wondered whether the “experimental arrangement of this educational experiment had an unfavorable influence on the course of the disease.

This is how the Henle biographer Friedrich Merkel reports:

Although Elise may have carried the germ around her for a long time, it is very possible, even probable, that the excitement and the tremendous spiritual work of the last two years had accelerated the ominous outbreak of suffering.” 

Jacob Henle himself made great accusations about the two-year apprenticeship he had expected his late wife to “ate social capacity“:

He was tortured by the remorse that he had not spared Elise the two-year detour, and that she had married immediately, and the idea tormented him that her body was weakened and no longer resilient to the treacherous disease by the longing she suffered in the Trier period with Marie Mathieu.” 

The physician Jacob Henle wrote to his siblings on the anniversary of her death:

Sooner than I would expect, I must say, Hope, death has redeemed my good poor Elise from her sufferings and spared her worse.

Today at 5 o’clock she died in my arms.

Now, in fact, I feel my abandonment not so much as the happiness of seeing the poor lover escape from some of the horrors of the disease that were still ahead of her.” 

After the death of Elise Egloff, there seemed to have been repeated discussions within the Henle family about the “educational experiment“.

Merkel wrote that Henle himself or his family often wondered whether his marriage to Elise would have been “satisfactory” permanently if she had not died at the birth of her second child.

The question is answered at least by the chronicler Merkel as such:

Although it is now very understandable to us that this question has arisen, it is, of course, a idle one.

After all, no one knows how she would have developed if she had lived longer.

It possessed three qualities which would have been able to continue to and continue to educate, promote and exalt them.

Above all, she fulfilled an unlimited love for her husband and she could never get enough evidence of how cordially she had approached him to please him, for her nothing was too much.

A second characteristic that adorned Mrs Elise was her extraordinary energy, and one can be sure that by the same one that had already lifted her so high, she would continue to fill the gaps that, of course, still attached to her education.

She felt very vividly that she was not yet fully at the height of her husband and once played out in her presence a little battle of words, which was conducted with all the weapons of spirit, wit and reading, then she became silent and was annoyed that she could not follow it.

She would no doubt have set all her ambition to get to the point where she could have given up the role of silent listener in any case.

A third characteristic, which she had to bring to her husband’s attention, was the ability to enjoy a cheerful life, which was so completely his own and which he had to appreciate to the utmost with his wife.”

Elise Egloff was buried on 23 February 1848 in the Bergfriedhof (mountain cemetery) in Heidelberg in the presence of witnesses Reinhard Blum and Ludwig Häusser, both professors and colleagues of Jacob Henle at the University of Heidelberg.

Henle himself was unable to attend his wife’s funeral due to illness.

The Kaufgräberbuch contains an entry of February 24, 1848 about the completion of the grave for “Henle, Anna, Frau Hofrat, Grabreihe E, Grab 21.”

In 1958, the tomb of Elise Henle was confiscated, according to the dissolution decision of 25 February 1958. 

Above: Bergfriedhof Haupteingang (main gate of Mountain Cemetery), Heidelberg

(It is customary after a time in Germany to “recycle” gravesites.

Only the truly famous are guaranteed a permanent resting place.)

Berthold Auerbach learned from Adolf Schöll the then still secret history of the relationship between Elise Egloff and Jacob Henle in 1845, and later he also met Elise Egloff personally.

Auerbach was inspired by this to create the story Die Frau Professorin (1846) as part of his Black Forest Village Stories in which Reinhard, a professor of the academy of art, and Lorle, a host daughter from a rural village, fall in love.

They get married and move to a residence town.

Here, however, it becomes apparent that the fresh natural child Lorle does not find her way around in the urban world and in the courtly educational bourgeoisie, is rude and simple.

Reinhard, who initially raved about the naturalness of village life and of his wife, is increasingly falling into the city life and the Residence Cabal and is tired of his wife “pre-spelling the ABC of education.

He withdraws from her inwardly and increasingly takes refuge in alcohol.

The attempt to strike a balance between the worlds of life fails, Lorle comes to this conclusion and returns to her village.

The Black Forest Village Stories are considered to be the authoritative foundation of the genre of village history.

Above: Berthold Auerbach (1812 – 1882)

Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer worked on Auerbach’s village history in 1847 and turned The Woman Professor into a successful stage play entitled Village and Town. 

Auerbach sued (unsuccessfully) Birch-Pfeiffer for copyright infringement.

Despite, or precisely because of, the resulting sensation, the play contributed significantly to the popularity of this village history.

Auerbach had meanwhile moved to Heidelberg and was friendly with Jacob Henle, who stayed at the same time as Elise Henle (née Egloff) for the cure in Badenweiler (July 1847).

After Elise’s death, he became closer with Jacob Henle, because Auerbach had also lost his wife in his bed at about the same time. 

It was only through the success of the Village and Town that Henle learned of Auerbach’s story and felt deceived:

I was really outraged by the way he [Auerbach] used my tragic marriage almost only for jewellery and side work.

That is not to rise above human suffering, but to make a profit out of them.” 

In his pain, Henle had apparently not taken note of the fact that Auerbach had completed the story before Elise’s death.

Above: Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer (1800 – 1868)

Thematically related to Auerbach’s story is The Lost Handwriting (1864) by Gustav Freytag, a friend of Auerbach’s:

A professor wins a farmer’s daughter as a partner, and the problem of the peasant girl transplanted into the city and in farm circles arises. 

Above: Gustav Freytag (1816 – 1895)

Ludwig Anzengruber tells a story in Der Sternsteinhof (1885), presumably consciously meant as a contrast to Auerbach and probably also to Die Frau Professorin: 

A poor girl decides that she will become the mistress of the rich Sternsteinhof.

She ruthlessly realizes her dream and then becomes an exemplary farmer.

The naturalistic, neither romantic nor sentimental depiction of a peasant character stands in contrast to Auerbach’s tendency (especially after 1848) to the transfigured village romanticism, in whose tradition the local novels still stand today as trivial literature.

Above: Ludwig Anzengruber (1839 – 1889)

Gottfried Keller’s Regine in the novella of the same name is regarded in literary research as a “poetic monument” of Elise Egloff.

Keller had met Henle and his wife in Zürich in 1846 and left a rather bizarre impression on the couple.

Two years later Keller visited Henle’s anthropological college in Heidelberg, which he described in Der Grüne Heinrich

(Keller on the lecture:

The first hour had such an effect on me that I forgot the purpose that brought me and everything and was alone curious about the coming experience.”)

Like other authors, Keller took a critical view of the Village Stories of Auerbach.

Above: Gottfried Keller (1819 – 1890)

In 1851, he began in Berlin with conceptions for a Galatea novella cycle, which turned against “this miserable Reinhard” and also referred generally polemically to Auerbach, who was accused in the later literary review of “natural swarming“, “clichéd trivial basic constellations” in the plot and a characteristic “shield against the problem contents of the time” (Fritz Martini).

Above all, Keller originally objected to the irreconcilability of culture and nature, or town and village, which was dealt with in The Woman Professor.

Keller, however, held back the story for 30 years, perhaps because he met Berthold Auerbach in 1856, made friends with him and was supported by Auerbach, who was even better known at the time.

It was not until 1880, at the urging of his publisher, that he began to work on the work, and the novella cycle Das Sinngedicht was created:

Keller contrasts the art professor Reinhard with the naturalist Reinhart, the “Mrs. Professor” Lorle with his art creations Lucie and Regine.

Above: Pygmalion creates Galatea

The frame narrative begins with the naturalist Reinhart deciding in his laboratory to ride into the vast country due to signs of fatigue and to test an epigram of Friedrich von Logaus  – The Poem of Meaning (Sinngedicht)– in reality:

How do you want to turn white lilies into red roses? / Kiss a white Galatea: she will laugh blushingly

The Pygmalion – Galatea complex is thus laid out as a basic theme, but is then dissolved in the 8th chapter (out of a total of 13) with Regine. 

Lucie engages her interlocutor Reinhart in a narrative contest about problems of partner choice and the understanding of roles of the sexes.

In the context of the competition, Reinhart reproduces, among other things, the story of Regine, which is much closer to the true events of Elise Egloff and Jacob Henle than Auerbach’s The Woman Professor:

The embassy attaché Erwin Altenauer, a wealthy and art-loving American of German origin, falls in love with the maid Regine.

Erwin successfully promotes the catching-up education of Regine when he is suddenly recalled to America.

However, he does not want to take Regine with him until she knows how to behave in all respects.

She is subjected to an educational program to overcome the boundaries of the status, and it leaves Regine in the society of three women who are enthusiastic about the art and culture scene, but of whom Keller paints a rather negative picture.

After Erwin’s return, the experiment fails in distrust and alienation, which, however, for the time being has nothing to do with the educational experiment itself, but above all – as Keller points out – are determined by fate:

Regine’s shame for her brother’s murder and Erwin’s suspicion that Regine is unfaithful to him, as well as the inability to talk about both, lead to tragedy.

In her perplexity, the “beautiful upstart” (Gunhild Kübler) takes her own life. 

Keller Gottfried, Regine“ – Bücher gebraucht, antiquarisch & neu kaufen

Kübler interprets as follows:

Behind Altenauer’s attempt to educate a woman according to her own conceptions of noble femininity, a mythical figure that shimmers in the ‘sense poem’ becomes visible:

Galatea, the statue created by the ancient sculptor Pygmalion and, at his request, animated by the love goddess – the woman who exists by man’s graces.

With Galatea-Regine’s death, the myth is torn, and in the refractions of the narrative duel between Reinhart and Lucie, he is said to be out of date.

As a pattern of a relationship between a man and a woman, he has become obsolete, because the role instructions corresponding to him are no longer playable for both sexes.

In its place are new, enlightening-egalitarian notions of eroticism and marital love, as they are unique in the literature of this time.”

Above: Pygmalion and Galatea

The comedy Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw was premiered in German on 16 October 1913, and Shaw published the play anonymously in England in 1913.

Against Shaw’s express will, after his death, it underwent a reworking into the musical My Fair Lady.

My fair lady poster.jpg

Shaw himself gave no indication of a reference by Pygmalion to the historical event surrounding Elise Egloff or to the literary German-language translations.

A random analogy in content seems rather unlikely to some authors, however, given the many similarities,  the flower girl Eliza Doolittle takes on the role of the sewing girl Elise Egloff in this interpretation.

Shaw wrote in his foreword to Pygmalion that Professor Higgins’ character had a connection to the English linguist Henry Sweet.

Above: Henry Sweet (1845 – 1912)

Sweet specialized in Germanic languages and studied several times in Germany, in 1864 also at the University of Heidelberg, where the couple Henle had lived and where he might have experienced the well-known and literary mirrored love story of Elise Egloff and Jacob Henle.

Logo
Above: Logo of the University of Heidelberg

Perhaps Shaw came across the subject by reading Gottfried Keller’s poem or its review:

The London weekly Saturday Review, in which Shaw later worked (from 1895 to 1898), brought a longer review of the entire work in 1882, with Regine being highlighted as the most powerful narrative.

Another British weekly magazine, The Spectator, reviewed the poem in more detail a short time later, saying:

A new book from the pen of Gottfried Keller is an event not to be passed over.

He is, besides, the most genial, original novel-writer at present wielding the German language.

Both in the English press and in the circles of German studies, superlatives were used very early on, with Keller named as the greatest German-speaking author after Goethe.

Comparisons were initially drawn with Berthold Auerbach, who had already been well introduced in England and America, and the success of his Village Stories was largely due to the positive acceptance of the Keller novels.

Auerbach’s Die Frau Professorin appeared several times in English (first published in 1850).

Unlike Auerbach, interest in Keller did not dry up even after his death, even the term “Shakespeare of the Novelle“, coined by Paul Heyse on Keller, was adopted. 

Above: Paul Heyse (1830 – 1914)

It is not yet possible, but it is quite conceivable, that Shaw became aware of the material, especially since he spoke German well:

For the premiere in Vienna, Shaw translated the text of Pygmalion himself into German, but Siegfried Trebitsch then took over the translation of the printed book version.

Above: Siegfried Trebitsch (1868 – 1956)

In the comedy Pygmalion, the linguist Professor Henry Higgins notices the distinctive alley jargon of the flower girl Eliza Doolittle.

Convinced that the social position of an Englishman depends solely on his accent, he bets with his colleague Colonel Pickering that he can make Eliza appear in the best company as a fine lady, alone by freeing her from her Cockney accent and her poor manners.

But the comfort of Higgins’s bachelor household doesn’t long deceive Eliza about the humiliating fact that the self-deserving Higgins abuses her as a guinea pig without thinking about the consequences for Eliza.

The debut in society at a reception shows that Higgins has only addressed her accent and manners of a lady, shocking her vulgar phrases in the best pronunciation, and exhilarating those present, including Freddy Eynsford Hill, to the Eliza’s naturalness.

It is thanks not so much to the rude Professor Higgins, but to the gentleman Pickering – whose role resembles that of  Adolf Schöll in the historical event – that the experiment still succeeds:

It passes the decisive test, a message reception, brilliant.

Higgins basks in his triumph and is completely unable to understand Eliza’s despair.

Eliza realizes that she is now unfit for her previous life and that Higgins is also indifferent to her future.

She flees to Freddy, reckons with her “creator” Higgins in a big scene and demonstrates that it is not education but self-respect that makes up her personality.

Higgins sets out his selfish-self-serving attitude for the first time.

Shaw avoids a happy ending, however, so as not to (partially) undo the emancipation of his Galatea – much to the disappointment of theatergoers and readers who expected a final domestic idyll between Higgins and Eliza.

This request of the audience was only granted – against the express will of Shaw – with My Fair Lady.

Above: George Bernard Shaw (1856 – 1950)

There is much in Elise’s story with which I can relate, but beyond these stirrings there is nothing that compels us to drift from our programmed progress.

No compulsion is no deviation.

Tägerwilen, gegen Norden
Above: Tägerwilen from a distance

Meanwhile my mental jukebox has changed its tune from Cohen to the soundtrack of My Fair Lady.

I’m an ordinary man
Who desires nothing more than just an ordinary chance
To live exactly as he likes and do precisely what he wants
An average man am I, of no eccentric whim,
Who likes to live his life free of strife
Doing whatever he thinks is best for him
Well, just an ordinary man

But, let a woman in your life
And your serenity is through
She’ll redecorate your home, from the cellar to the dome
And then go on to the enthralling fun of overhauling you

Let a woman in your life
And you’re up against a wall
Make a plan and you will find she has something else in mind
And so rather than do either, you do something else that neither likes at all

You want to talk of Keats or Milton
She only wants to talk of love
You go to see a play or ballet
And spend it searching for her glove

Let a woman in your life
And you invite eternal strife
Let them buy their wedding bands
For those anxious little hands
I’d be equally as willing
For a dentist to be drilling
Than to ever let a woman in my life

I’m a very gentle man
Even-tempered and good-natured who you never hear complain
Who has the milk of human kindness by the quart in every vein
A patient man am I, down to my fingertips,
The sort who never would, never could
Let an insulting remark escape his lips
A very gentle man

But, let a woman in your life
And patience hasn’t got a chance
She will beg you for advice, your reply will be concise
And she’ll listen very nicely, and then go out and do precisely what she wants

You are a man of grace and polish
Who never spoke above a hush
Now all at once you’re using language
That would make a sailor blush

Let a woman in your life
And you’re plunging in a knife
Let the others of my sex tie the knot around their necks
I prefer a new edition of the Spanish Inquisition
Than to ever let a woman in my life

I’m a quiet living man
Who prefers to spend the evening in the silence of his room
Who likes an atmosphere as restful as an undiscovered tomb
A pensive man am I, of philosophical joys,
Who likes to meditate, contemplate,
Free from humanity’s mad inhuman noise
Just a quiet living man

But, let a woman in your life
And your sabbatical is through
In a line that never ends comes an army of her friends
Come to jabber and to chatter
And to tell her what the matter is with you!

She’ll have a booming boisterous family
Who will descend on you en masse
She’ll have a large Wagnarian mother
With a voice that shatters glass
Let a woman in your life
Let a woman in your life

I shall never let a woman in my life

I'm An Ordinary Man Paroles – MY FAIR LADY – GreatSong
Above: Rex Harrison, My Fair Lady

But the problem is that I already have.

Damn! Damn! Damn! Damn!
I’ve grown accustomed to her face
She almost makes the day begin
I’ve grown accustomed to the tune that
She whistles night and noon

Her smiles, her frowns
Her ups, her downs
Are second nature to me now
Like breathing out and breathing in

I was serenely independent and content before we met
Surely I could always be that way again
And yet
I’ve grown accustomed to her look
Accustomed to her voice
Accustomed to her face

But I’m so used to hear her say
Good morning” everyday
Her joys, her woes
Her highs, her lows

Are second nature to me now
Like breathing out and breathing in
I’m very grateful she’s a woman
And so easy to forget

Rather like a habit
One can always break
And yet
I’ve grown accustomed to the trace
Of something in the air
Accustomed to her face

My Fair Lady (1964) - I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face - YouTube
Above: Rex Harrison, My Fair Lady

The path leads us to the heart of Gottlieben, a town with a name that translates into English as “God’s love”.

Gottlieben was first mentioned as Agoiliubon at the end of the 10th century.

In 1251 Bishop Eberhard II of Waldburg built Castle Gottlieben, which served as a residence for the Bishops of Konstance, in Gottlieben.

The former water castle with two towers was built, together with a wooden bridge over the Rhine.

In doing so, the Bishop wanted to compete with the nearby city of Konstanz, with whose citizens he was at odds.

Above: Seal of Bishop Eberhard II (r. 1248 – 1274)

The two land-side corner towers of the middle 13th century, together with the palace added in 1346, the east wing from 1434 to 1446 and the north wing from 1475 to 1491, formed a mighty water castle, which was surrounded by a fortification.

In 1355, Gottlieben was attacked and burned down by Konrad von Homburg.

At the time of the Council of Konstanz in 1415, the reformer Jan Hus, Jerome of Prague and the deposed Pope John XXIII, who originally convened the Council and had invited Hus, were imprisoned together in the western tower of Castle Gottlieben. 

Above: Jan Hus (1370 – 1415)

Hieronymus prag a.jpg
Above: Jerome of Prague (1365—1416)

Above: John XXIII (1370 – 1419)

Above: Gottlieben Castle

After the Swabian War in 1499, the episcopal Obervogt (authorities) managed from Castle Gottlieben until 1798 the legal administration of the communnities of Gottlieben, Engwilen, Siegershausen and Tägerwilen.

In 1526, the Bishop left Gottlieben and built his residence in Meersburg. 

Above: Meersburg Castle

In the Thirty Years War (1618 – 1648), Swedish Field Marshal Gustaf Horn set up his headquarters in the fight against Konstanz in Gottlieben.

Above: Gustaf Horn (1592 – 1657)

On 24 February 1692, three houses sank into the Rhine during a storm.

In 1808, Gottlieben Castle came into private ownership.

After the death of his mother Hortense de Beauharnais, Prince Louis Napoleon (later Napoleon III) thought of an alternative residence to Arenenberg Castle and bought Gottlieben Castle, which he lived in only very briefly.

Above: Arenenberg

In 1837, the complex was redesigned in neo-Gothic style.

During the reconstruction, massive windows from the cloister of Konstanz Cathedral, which had burnt down in 1824, were used.

Above: Gottlieben Castle

Originally, Gottlieben was located in the parish of Tägerwilen.

During the Reformation in 1529, the whole congregation converted to the new faith.

From 1734 to 1735 the church was built and the reformed parish of Gottlieben was formed, which has been associated with Tägerwilen since 1912. 

Above: Gottlieben Reformed Church

In the 17th and 18th centuries, Gottlieben experienced an economic boom as a trading and transshipment point, especially salt, iron and wine, due to its favourable traffic situation on the Rhine.

In 1678 Gottlieben was granted market rights.

Although smaller industries settled in Gottlieben as early as the 19th century (button factory, horse-hair spinning mill), until after the middle of the 20th century, fishing, crafts and commerce formed the main acquisition of the population.

Above: Riegelhaus, Gottlieben

At the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century there was an artist colony in Gottlieben, initiated by German writer Emanuel von Bodman (1874-1946) and German writer, painter and sculptor Heinrich Ernst Kromer (1866-1948).

Emanuel von Bodman - Liebesgedichte und Biographie
Above: Emanuel von Bodman

Portraits von und mit Heinrich Ernst Kromer | Biosphärengebiet Schwarzwald  Veranstaltungen
Above: Self portrait of Heinrich Ernst Kromer

There was a lively exchange with cultural figures of the turn of the century, such as: 

  • German poet Richard Dehmel

Above: Richard Dehmel (1863 – 1920)

  • Alsatian writer René Schickele 

Above: René Schickle (1883 – 1940)

  • German writer Wilhelm von Scholz 

Above: Wilhelm von Scholz (1874 – 1969)

  • Czech poet Rainer Maria Rilke

Above: Rainer Maria Rilke (1875 – 1926)

  • German writer / physician Ludwig Finckh  (1876 – 1964)

  • German philosopher / psychologist Ludwig Klages

Ludwig Klages - Wikipedia
Above: Ludwig Klages (1872 – 1956)

  • German writer Hermann Hesse
Above: Hermann Hesse (1877 – 1962)

 

  • German writer Thomas Mann 

Above: Thomas Mann (1875 – 1955)

In 1926, the German diplomat Wilhelm Muehlom, who emigrated to Switzerland in 1916, acquired Gottlieben Castle.

In the long run, however, Muehlon’s proximity to the border seemed too dangerous and he gave up this residence in September 1939 in favour of a domicile in Klosters in the Grisons Mountains of Graubünden.

Above: Klosters in winter

After 1945, tourism developed, so that today, besides two boatyards and the well-known Hüppen Bakery, gastronomy in Gottlieben is the most important employer.

Gottlieben is home to a bakery whose Göttlieber Hüppen (filled waffle rolls) are an internationally renowned pastry speciality.

In 1950, the Swiss opera singer Lisa della Casa and her husband Dragan Debeljevic acquired Gottlieben Castle.

Lisa Della Casa
Above: Lisa della Casa (1919 – 2012)

In 2000, a memorial and cultural site was opened with the Bodman House, the former residence of the poet Emanuel von Bodman.

Above: Bodman House (left) and the Old Schoolhouse (right), Gottlieben

Among the personalities that Gottlieben has known:

  • Robert Hallum (1360 -1417), Chancellor of the University of Oxford (1403-1405), Bishop of Salisbury (1407-1417)

Robert Hallum studied at the University of Oxford, served as the Archbishop of Canterbury from 1381 and was Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 1403 to 1405.

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Above: Coat of arms of the University of Oxford

In 1406 he was appointed Archbishop of York, but King Henry IV did not accept it.

Above: King Henry IV of England (1366 – 1413)

In 1407 he was appointed Bishop of Salisbury by Pope Gregory XII.

Above: Pope Gregory XII (1335 – 1417)

On June 6, 1411, he was created a Cardinal by Pope John XXIII, but Hallum did not take the position.

Above: Coat of arms of Pope John XXIII

At the Council of Pisa in 1409 he represented the English Church.

Above: Leaning Tower and the Cathedral, Pisa, Italy

At the Council of Konstanz he was the chief ambassador of the English embassy.

Above: Council of Konstanz (1414 – 1418) in discussion with Konstanz Cathedral

For King Henry V he represented a course of church reform.

Above: King Henry V of England (1387 – 1422)

During the Council he died unexpectedly in Gottlieben and was buried at his request in Konstanz Cathedral, where a relief plaque in front of the steps to the high choir commemorates him.

Above: Grave slab of Robert Hallum in Konstanz Cathedral

  • Lisa della Casa (1919 – 2012), opera singer, owner of Gottlieben Castle

OPERA NEWS - Lisa Della Casa, 93, Nonpareil Interpreter of Mozart and  Strauss Heroines, Has Died
Above: Lisa della Casa

Lisa Della Casa was the second child of the ophthalmologist Dr. Francesco Roberto Della Casa (1879 – 1949) and his wife Magarete (1877-1948).

From the age of 15 she received singing lessons.

After studying singing in Bern and Zürich, she made her first appearance in 1941 as an opera singer in Solothurn – Biel in the role of Cio-Cio-San in Puccini’s “Madame Butterfly“.

Madama Butterfly, Illustration von Adolfo Hohenstein

From then, her career path was mapped out.

She made her debut at the Stadttheater Zürich (now Opernhaus Zürich) in 1943, where she was a member of the ensemble until 1950, and sang for the first time at the Salzburg Festival in 1947.

Above: Zürich Opera House

In the film Füsilier Wipf (1938), della Casa played the Vreneli (speaking role).

Fuesilier Wipf - DVD - online kaufen | Ex Libris

Della Casa starred in the 1940 film Mier lönd nöd lugg.

Lisa Della Casa (1919–2012) Opernsängerin, Theater-Schauspielerin. Dialekt Theateraufführung «Mier lönd nöd lugg» von Regisseur H.Haller. Von links nach rechts: Häddy Wettstein, Nelly Ruff, Hauptarstellerin Lisa Della Casa und Lilo Aufdermaur. (1940)
Above: Lisa Della Casa in the leading role of the theatrical performance Mier lönd nöd lugg (1940)

Della Casa was from 1947 a member of the Vienna State Opera, from 1953 to 1968 a member of the Metropolitan Opera in New York, as well as a permanent guest of the Bavarian State Opera in Munich and of the Salzburg Festival.

Architektur STOP Front 20150922 C MichaelPoehn.jpg
Above: Vienna State Opera

Above: Metropolitan Opera, New York City

Above: Bavarian State Opera, Munich

In 1951 she performed at the Glyndebourne Festival.

Above: Glyndebourne Opera House, Sussex, England

A year later she made her debut in Bayreuth, but she felt the atmosphere there as stiff and pretentious. 

Above: Richard Wagner Festival House, Bayreuth, Germany

In 1952 she was appointed chamber singer.

In 1944 Lisa della Casa married Ernst Geiser from Langenthal and divorced him five years later.

At the end of 1949 she married the Serbian art historian, musicologist and publicist Dragan Debeljevic (1921-2014).

In 1950, she and her second husband, Dragan Debeljevic, acquired Gottlieben Castle, where she lived in complete seclusion until her death.

Above: Gottlieben Castle

Their daughter Vesna-Rajka was born in 1951.

Surprisingly, she retired from the stage in 1974.

The end of her career had to do with a personal stroke of fate – the serious illness of her daughter Vesna.

Dragan Debeljevic published her biography a year later under the title “A Life with Lisa Della Casa“.

Ein Leben mit Lisa Della Casa oder "In dem Schatten ihrer Locken"“ – Bücher  gebraucht, antiquarisch & neu kaufen

The parents of Lisa della Casa founded a well-known restaurant in Bern under the surname, which still exists today.

Restaurants - della-casas Webseite!
Above: Restaurant Della Casa, Bern

On 10 December 2012, Lisa Della Casa died in Münsterlingen on Lake Constance.

Lisa della Casa was one of the leading figures of the post-war period, especially in the Mozart and Richard Strauss discipline.

The beauty of her appearance, the aristocratic nobility of her appearance, the silver timbre, the almost incorporeal immaculateness of her vocal line and the credibility of her design, which combined elegance with intensity, made her exceptional.

Lisa Della Casa | Female singers, Opera singers, Sopranos
Above: Lisa della Casa

  • Udo Jürgens (1934 – 2014), Austrian composer, pianist and singer, had a second home in Gottlieben and died while walking on the lake promenade

Udo Jürgens (born Jürgen Udo Bockelmann) was a composer, pianist and singer of mainly German-language songs. 

In addition to Austrian citizenship, he also held Swiss citizenship from 2007 until his death.

With over 100 million records sold, Udo Jürgens was one of the most commercially successful entertainment musicians in the German-speaking world.

His career spanned nearly 60 years.

He is stylistically between hits, chanson, jazz and pop music.

He was the first Austrian to win the Eurovision Song Contest in 1966.

Above: Udo Jürgens

Udo Jürgens was born in Klagenfurt to German parents.

Jürgens grew up in his parents’ castle Ottmanach on the Magdalensberg (Magdalen Mountain) in Carinthia together with his two brothers John (1931 – 2006) and Manfred.

Above: Ottmanach Castle, Magdalensberg, Carinthia, Austria

He taught himself how to play the piano.

He received systematic instruction only later.

According to his biography The Man with the Bassoon, he received a violent slap from a Hitler Youth group leader which resulted in a reduction in his hearing ability on one ear. 

He left high school one year before graduation.

Later he studied music at the Carinthian State Conservatory (now the Gustav Mahler Private University of Music) in Klagenfurt and at the Mozarteum in Salzburg.

Above: Concert Hall, Gustav Mahler Private University of Music, Klagenfurt, Austria

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Above: Logo of the Mozarteum

From 1964 to 1989 Jürgens was married to former model Erika Meier, called Panja.

They had two children, John and Jenny.

In addition, Udo Jürgens had two daughters out of wedlock, Sonja Jürgens and Gloria Burda.

Udo und Panja Jürgens - Allgemeines - Die Udo Jürgens Fan-Site
Above: Jürgens, John, Jenny and Panja

In June 1977, Jürgens moved into a penthouse apartment at the Bellevue in Zürich.

Bellevue
Above: Bellevue Place, Zürich

Since at that time both Austria and Germany had tax debts, this move was interpreted in various media as tax evasion.

Jürgens, however, saw this debt covered by a “seven-figure amount” deposited in a Munich blocked account. 

On July 4, 1999 he married his long-term partner Corinna Reinhold (from Mönchengladbach – Rheydt) in New York.

Together they moved into a house in Zumikon, Switzerland, in 1997.

They divorced in 2006.

Udo Jürgens: Der Sänger war keiner seiner Frauen treu | GALA.de
Above: Corinna Reinhold and Udo Jürgens

In February 2007, Udo Jürgens obtained Swiss citizenship.

He was allowed to retain his Austrian citizenship, so that he was a dual citizen.

In July 2012, Jürgens acquired a villa in the municipality of Meilen, which Migros founder Gottlieb Duttweiler had built in 1930.

Above: Gottlieb Duttweiler

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The Gottlieb-Duttweiler-Villa was completely renovated between 2012 and 2016.

He lived in Gottlieben during the reconstruction period.

In 2015, he wanted to move into the villa in Meilen, but his death prevented this.

Kirche Meilen, Fähre
Above: Meilen

Udo Jürgens repeatedly referred to himself as an atheist in public. 

After the Swiss initiative “Against Mass Immigration” was decided by a narrow majority in February 2014, Jürgens was quoted in the German-language media after an interview with the Bild newspaper as saying:

That shocked me and deeply disappointed me.

Europe is the best idea this continent has had for a thousand years.

I was ashamed of the decision for Switzerland” and that he “no longer felt welcome in Switzerland”, which subsequently led to controversial reactions.

Logo der Bild-Zeitung

In another interview with Bluewin Entertainment, he put these statements into perspective as a misunderstanding, noting:

“I’m sorry for this statement, I honestly admit that.” 

On 21 December 2014, Udo Jürgens collapsed unconscious during a walk in Gottlieben and died of heart failure at the age of 80 despite an attempt to resuscitate him in the hospital in Münsterlingen.

Two weeks earlier, he had completed the first part of his 25th concert tour in Zürich, which was under the motto “Mitten im Leben“.

He made his last public appearance on 12 December 2014 at the Berlin Velodrome in the Helene Fischer Show.

Above: Helene Fischer

The performance was televised shortly after his death at Christmas.

According to his own wishes, his body was cremated.

The cremation was carried out on 23 December 2014, two days after his death.

On 15 January 2015, around 200 friends and companions bid farewell to Udo Jürgens at a memorial service in Zürich.

On 23 January, Jürgens’ urn was erected in the Volkshalle of the Vienna City Hall, where the public was able to pay their last respects to the musician.

Above: Vienna City Hall (Wiener Rathaus)

Officials such as Austrian President Heinz Fischer and Federal Chancellor Werner Faymann entered their names in the condolence books.

Above: Heinz Fischer

Above: Werner Faymann

He was buried on 9 May 2015 in an honorary grave of the city of Vienna (group 33 G, grave no. 85) in the Central Cemetery.

The tombstone represents a wing wrapped in a white mourning cloth.

One of the tombstone’s passages reads:

You are the sheet of music that was all for me. 

I’ll leave you everything.

I’ll leave you all there.” 

Above: Final resting place of Udo Jürgens

Udo Jürgens is considered one of the most important entertainers of the 20th and early 21st century.

He composed more than 1,000 songs, released more than 50 music albums and sold more than 105 million records during his more than sixty-year career. 

He is one of the most successful male solo artists in the world.

Since 2015, he has also held the world record as the longest successful artist in the charts with over 57 years, from his first entry in 1958 to 2015.

Jürgens holds the record as the most frequently represented German-speaking singer with 61 rankings in the album charts and has a total of 616 album placements and 411 single rankings by the end of 2014.

Above: Udo Jürgens

In his early years he was mostly seen as a pop singer, later he pushed his boundaries with his extensive compositional work.

His lyrics, which come from various lyricists and from himself, often addressed social themes, for example, decadence in his Café Größenwahn (1993).

Udo Jürgens – Café Grössenwahn (1993, CD) - Discogs

With An Honourable House (1975) he caricatured the bourgeois bigotry in relation to “wild marriage“, which was often still perceived as problematic at the time – the “marriage without a marriage certificate“.

Udo Jürgens - Ein ehrenwertes Haus - - YouTube

He also commented on the problem of guest workers (Greek Wine, 1974), on the environment (5 minutes before 12, 1982), on the arms race (Dream Dancer,1983) and on the drug problem (Red blooms the poppy, 1984).

ultratop.be - Udo Jürgens - Griechischer Wein

Udo Jürgens – 5 Minuten Vor 12 (1982, Vinyl) - Discogs

Udo Jürgens – Rot Blüht Der Mohn (1984, Vinyl) - Discogs

In the title Go and multiply from The Blue Album (1988), he created a connection between the Pope and a Biblical quotation.

The radio programmers of the Bayerischer Rundfunk therefore included the song on their non-play list.

Jurgens, Udo - Das Blaue Album - Amazon.com Music

Also on this album is the song Moscow – New York, in which Jürgens sings of the fall of the Berlin Wall a year earlier.

His wide-ranging work also includes symphonic compositions, such as Word and The Crown of Creation, which were recorded with the Berliner Philharmoniker.

On 2 December 2007 was the premiere of the Udo Jürgens musical Ich war noch niemals in New York at the Operettenhaus in Hamburg.

Since then, the musical has been performed in Vienna (from 2010), Stuttgart (from 2010), Tokyo (from 2011), Oberhausen and Zurich (from 2012) and in Berlin (from 2015).

In 1992 Jürgens played on the Donauinsel (Danube Island) in Vienna in front of 220,000 spectators.

A hallmark of his live concerts were the encores, which he always sang in a white bathrobe.

Udo Jürgens: Ich war noch niemals in New York

Gottlieben is home to two boatyards as well as hotel and restoration companies are located here.

The location of the municipality on the shipping line and the picturesque townscape, which is characterized by half-timbered houses, make the municipality a popular tourist destination, especially in the summer months.

Gottlieben is a stop of the shipping company Untersee & Rhein.

Hafen von Gottlieben | Mapio.net

It is the bakery’s café that makes us yearn for an end to the lockdown, for the café setting on the shore, their wonderful drinks and yummy desserts, and their impeccable service have also attracted us to Gottlieben.

The café is closed.

Above: The dessert, Lubin Baugin

We brought some snacks with us and a thermos of tea and so we sit on a bench near the cruise ship landing.

So much should be said, so much goes unsaid.

Gottlieben - Kleiner Ort, große Schätze

I long to tell her how I feel like a latter-day male Eliza Doolittle in trying to fit in a society that is unwelcoming and judgmental.

I long to tell how even when I was teaching fulltime that Switzerland never felt like home.

I long to tell her of the music running through my mind (usually 80s hits) and how like John Waite’s song “Missing You” in all its ironic denial of loss (playing at that moment) I really feel.

To make the song accurate only requires switching “I” with “you”

I spend my time
Thinking about you
And it’s almost driving me wild
And that’s my heart that’s breaking
Down this long distance line tonight

I ain’t missing you at all
Since you’ve been gone away
I ain’t missing you
No matter
What my friends say

There’s a message in the wire
And I’m sending you this signal tonight
You don’t know how desperate I’ve become
And it looks like I’m losing this fight

In your world I have no meaning
Though I’m trying hard to understand
And it’s my heart that’s breaking
Down this long distance line tonight

But I ain’t missing you at all
Since you’ve been gone away
I ain’t missing you
No matter what I might say

John Waite - Missing You.jpg

I need to go to Turkey.

I need to rediscover the joy of doing a job I love.

But doing what I love means a separation of months and possibly years.

I long for her happiness but I can no longer sacrifice my own desires for hers.

The song changes to Jim Croce’s “Lover’s Cross” as the descending sun encourages our walking back to Ermatingen before darkness claims the remains of the day.

I guess that it was bound to happen
Was just a matter of time
Now I’ve come to my decision
And it’s a one of the painful kind
‘Cause now it seems that you wanted a martyr
Just a regular guy wouldn’t do
But baby, I can’t hang upon no lover’s cross for you

I really gotta hand it to ya
‘Cause girl you really tried
But for every time that we spent laughin’
There were two times that I cried
And you were tryin’ to make me your martyr
And that’s the one thing I just couldn’t do
‘Cause baby, I can’t hang upon no lover’s cross for you

‘Cause tables are meant for turnin’
And people are bound to change
And bridges are meant for burnin’
When the people and memories
They join aren’t the same

Still I hope that you can find another
Who can take what I could not
He’ll have to be a super guy
Or maybe a super god
‘Cause I never was much of a martyr before
And I ain’t ’bout to start nothin’ new
And baby, I can’t hang upon no lover’s cross for you.

Jim Croce – Lover's Cross (1985, Vinyl) - Discogs

I don’t expect her to be a martyr for me nor I for her.

I cannot stop loving her, but I must start loving myself.

Love : Buscaglia, Leo F : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet  Archive

We say what does not matter.

What matters we do not say.

The path follows the railroad and in two weeks’ time this railroad will lead to the airport.

Bild: Bahnhof "Ermatingen" • Schienenverkehr-Schweiz.ch

I am not remotely religious but I identify with Moses in one respect:

A faltering tongue.

As a child I stuttered.

As a man I struggle to find the words to express myself in speech.

As a man in a discussion with a woman I am at a disadvantage.

Guido Reni - Moses with the Tables of the Law - WGA19289.jpg
Above: Moses with the tablets of the Ten Commandments, Guido Reni

I want to tell her that just because I am leaving her behind doesn’t not mean that she is out of my life.

The difficulty is not in that I don’t care.

The difficulty is that I care too damn much.

Murray McLauchlan – Try Walking Away / Don't Put Your Faith In Men (1979,  Vinyl) - Discogs

The wind tosses the grasses barely covered by remnants of snow.

The Lake softly murmurs.

The only other sound is the crunching of pebbles beneath our feet.

The murmuring and crunching can barely conceal the racing beat of my heart.

Something else she cannot hear.

Damit die aussergewöhnliche Vogelwelt am Untersee nicht gestört wird: Hunde  gehören an die Leine zwischen Ermatingen und Gottlieben | St.Galler Tagblatt

Baby, I’ve been waiting,
I’ve been waiting night and day
I didn’t see the time,
I waited half my life away
There were lots of invitations
And I know you sent me some
But I was waiting
For the miracle, for the miracle to come

I know you really loved me
But, you see, my hands were tied
And I know it must have hurt you,
It must have hurt your pride
To have to stand beneath my window
With your bugle and your drum
And me I’m up there waiting
For the miracle, for the miracle to come

Ah I don’t believe you’d like it,
You wouldn’t like it here
There ain’t no entertainment
And the judgments are severe
The Maestro says it’s Mozart
But it sounds like bubble gum
When you’re waiting
For the miracle, for the miracle to come

Waiting for the miracle
There’s nothing left to do
I haven’t been this happy
Since the end of World War II

Nothing left to do
When you know that you’ve been taken
Nothing left to do
When you’re begging for a crumb
Nothing left to do
When you’ve got to go on waiting
Waiting for the miracle to come

I dreamed about you, baby
It was just the other night
Most of you was naked
Ah but some of you was light
The sands of time were falling
From your fingers and your thumb
And you were waiting
For the miracle, for the miracle to come

Ah baby, let’s get married
We’ve been alone too long
Let’s be alone together
Let’s see if we’re that strong
Yeah let’s do something crazy,
Something absolutely wrong
While we’re waiting
For the miracle, for the miracle to come

Nothing left to do
When you know that you’ve been taken
Nothing left to do
When you’re begging for a crumb
Nothing left to do
When you’ve got to go on waiting
Waiting for the miracle to come

When you’ve fallen on the highway
And you’re lying in the rain,
And they ask you how you’re doing
Of course you’ll say you can’t complain
If you’re squeezed for information,
That’s when you’ve got to play it dumb
You just say you’re out there waiting
For the miracle, for the miracle to come

LeonardCohenTheFuture.gif

THere are many things I should say and many things that I cannot say.

Of all that goes unsaid are the words:

Happy Valentine’s Day

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Hürriyet Daily News, 7 May 2021 / “Peru’s foreign minister resigns in scandal over early vaccination of official“, The Guardian, 15 February 2021 / “Myanmar junta warns public not to hide fugitive protestors“, Channel News Asia, 14 February 2021 / “Guinea declares Ebola epidemic after three deaths“, Al-Jazeera, 14 February 2021 / “DR Congo militia kills 11 civilians: army“, Manila Standard, 15 February 2021 / “Turkey says militants executed 13, including soldiers in Iraq“, Reuters, 14 February 2021 / Soundtrack, My Fair Lady / Lucille, Kenny Rogers / Famous Blue Raincoat, Leonard Cohen / Missing You, John Waite / Waiting for the Miracle, Leonard Cohen

Canada Slim and the Friendly City

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Thursday 21 January 2021

It is a feeling of being underestimated that often overwhelms us.

50+ Quotes about Change | Cuded

Examples of this abound in history:

Fifteen men, of whom only three are universally remembered, broke the thousand-year tradition of church-state union by being the first modern practioners of adult baptism.

The name Anabaptist means “one who baptizes again“.

Their persecutors named them this, referring to the practice of baptizing persons when they converted or declared their faith in Christ even if they had been baptized as infants.

Anabaptists require that baptismal candidates be able to make a confession of faith that is freely chosen and so rejected baptism of infants.

The New Testament teaches to repent and then be baptized, and infants are not able to repent and turn away from sin to a life of following Jesus.

The early members of this movement did not accept the name Anabaptist claiming that infant baptism was not part of scripture and was therefore null and void.

They said that baptizing self-confessed believers was their first true baptism.

Anabaptists were heavily persecuted by state churches, both Magisterial Protestants (those who worked with the government on religious reform) and Roman Catholics, beginning in the 16th century and continuing thereafter, largely because of their interpretation of scripture, which put them at odds with official state church interpretations and local government control.

Anabaptism was never established by any state and therefore never enjoyed any associated privileges.

Most Anabaptists adhere to a literal interpretation of the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew 5 – 7, which teaches against hate, killing, violence, taking oaths, participating in use of force or any military actions, and against participation in civil government.

Anabaptists view themselves as primarily citizens of the Kingdom of God, not of earthly governments.

As committed followers of Jesus, they seek to pattern their life after his.

Over four million Anabaptists live in the world today with adherents scattered across all inhabited continents.

In addition to a number of minor Anabaptist groups, the most numerous include the Mennonites at 2.1 million, the German Baptist Brethren at 1.5 million, the Amish at 350,000 and the Hutterites at 50,000.

Lancaster County Amish 03.jpg

Anabaptism in Switzerland began as an offshoot of the church reforms instigated by Ulrich Zwingli.

As early as 1522 it became evident that Zwingli was on a path of reform preaching when he began to question or criticize such Catholic practices as tithes, the mass, and even infant baptism.

Zwingli had gathered a group of reform-minded men around him, with whom he studied classical literature and the scriptures.

However, some of these young men began to feel that Zwingli was not moving fast enough in his reform.

The division between Zwingli and his more radical disciples became apparent in an October 1523 disputation held in Zurich.

Ulrich-Zwingli-1.jpg

Above: Ulrich Zwingli (1484 – 1531)

When the discussion of the mass was about to be ended without making any actual change in practice, Conrad Grebel stood up and asked “What should be done about the mass?

Zwingli responded by saying the Council would make that decision.

At this point, Simon Stumpf, a radical priest from Höngg (a Zürich district), answered saying:

The decision has already been made by the Spirit of God.”

Above: Modern Höngg

This incident illustrated clearly that Zwingli and his more radical disciples had different expectations.

To Zwingli, the reforms would only go as fast as the city Council allowed them.

To the radicals, the Council had no right to make that decision, but rather the Bible was the final authority of church reform.

Feeling frustrated, some of them began to meet on their own for Bible study.

Zürich.jpg

Above: Zürich

As early as 1523, William Reublin began to preach against infant baptism in villages surrounding Zurich, encouraging parents to not baptize their children.

Mennonite History Is Marked by Persecution

Above: William Reublin

Seeking fellowship with other reform-minded people, the radical group wrote letters to Martin Luther, Andreas Karlstadt, and Thomas Müntzer.

Martin Luther by Cranach-restoration.jpg

Above: Martin Luther (1483 – 1546)

Andreas Bodenstein.jpg

Above: Andreas Karlstadt (1486 – 1541)

Thomas Muentzer.jpg

Above: Thomas Müntzer (1489 – 1525)

Felix Manz began to publish some of Karlstadt’s writings in Zurich in late 1524.

By this time the question of infant baptism had become agitated and the Zurich council had instructed Zwingli to meet weekly with those who rejected infant baptism “until the matter could be resolved“.

Zwingli broke off the meetings after two sessions, and Felix Manz petitioned the Council to find a solution, since he felt Zwingli was too hard to work with.

FelixManzImage.jpg

Above: Felix Manz

The council then called a meeting for 17 January 1525.

The Council ruled in this meeting that all who continued to refuse to baptize their infants should be expelled from Zurich if they did not have them baptized within one week.

Since Conrad Grebel had refused to baptize his daughter Rachel, born on 5 January 1525, the Council decision was extremely personal to him and others who had not baptized their children.

Grebel, Conrad (ca. 1498-1526) - GAMEO

Above: Conrad Grebel

Thus, when sixteen of the radicals met on Saturday evening, 21 January 1525, the situation seemed particularly dark.

The Hutterian Chronicle records the event:

After prayer, George of the House of Jacob (George Blaurock) stood up and besought Conrad Grebel for God’s sake to baptize him with the true Christian baptism upon his faith and knowledge.

And when he knelt down with such a request and desire, Conrad baptized him, since at that time there was no ordained minister to perform such work.

The Chronicle of the Hutterian Brethren, Volume I. — Hutterian Brethren  Book Centre

Afterwards Blaurock was baptized, he in turn baptized others at the meeting.

Blaurock, Georg (ca. 1492-1529) - GAMEO

Above: George Blaurock

Even though some had rejected infant baptism before this date, these baptisms marked the first re-baptisms of those who had been baptized as infants and thus, technically, Swiss Anabaptism was born on that day.

The early Anabaptists formulated their beliefs in a document called the Schleitheim Confession.

In 1527, Michael Sattler presided over a meeting at Schleitheim (in Canton Schaffhausen, on the Swiss-German border), where Anabaptist leaders drew up the Schleitheim Confession of Faith.

Sattler was arrested and executed soon afterwards.

Anabaptist groups varied widely in their specific beliefs, but the Schleitheim Confession represents foundational Anabaptist beliefs as well as any single document can. 

MennoMedia: The Schleitheim Confession

The three of fifteen remembered from this Zürich Saturday night in 1525 are Conrad Grebel (1498 – 1526), Felix Manz (1498 – 1527) and George Blaurock (1491 – 1529).

Who are Anabaptists? Origin & History of Movement

Being well known in Zürich, Grebel left the work to others and set out on an evangelistic mission to the surrounding cities.

In February, Grebel baptized Wolfgang Ulimann by immersion in the Rhine River.

Ulimann was in St. Gall, and Grebel traveled there in the spring.

Conrad Grebel and Wolfgang Ulimann spent several months preaching with much success in the area of St. Gall.

In the summer he went to Grüningen and preached with great effect.

In October 1525 he was arrested and imprisoned.

While in prison, Grebel was able to prepare a defense of the Anabaptist position on baptism.

Through the help of some friends, he escaped in March 1526.

He continued his ministry and was at some point able to get his pamphlet printed.

Grebel removed to the Maienfeld area (Heidiland) in the Canton of Graubünden (where his oldest sister lived).

Shortly after arrival he died.

Above: Commemorative plaque for Konrad Grebel in Neumarkt, Zürich

On 7 March 1526, the Zürich council had passed an edict that made adult re-baptism punishable by drowning.

On 5 January 1527, Manz became the first casualty of the edict, and the first Swiss Anabaptist to be martyred at the hands of magisterial Protestants.

While Manz stated that he wished to bring together those who were willing to accept Christ, obey the Word, and follow in His footsteps, to unite with these by baptism, and to purchase the rest in their present conviction, Zwingli and the Council accused him of obstinately refusing to recede from his error and caprice.

At 3:00 p.m., as he was led from the Wellenburg to a boat, he praised God and preached to the people.

A Reformed minister went along, seeking to silence him, and hoping to give him an opportunity to recant.

Manz’s brother and mother encouraged him to stand firm and suffer for Jesus’ sake.

He was taken by boat onto the River Limmat.

His hands were bound and pulled behind his knees and a pole was placed between them.

The birth of Anabaptism | Anabaptist World

He was executed by drowning in Lake Zürich on the Limmat.

His alleged last words were:

Into thy hands, O God, I commend my spirit.

Above: Memorial plate on the river wall opposite number 43 Schipfe in Zürich, in remembrance of Manz and other Anabaptists executed in the early 16th century by the Zürich city government

His property was confiscated by government of Zürich, and he was buried in the St. Jakobs cemetery.

Manz left written testimony of his faith, an eighteen-stanza hymn, and was apparently the author of Protestation und Schutzschrift (a defense of Anabaptism presented to the Zürich Council).

Above. “Protestation und Schutzschrift” by Felix Manz

On the same day as Manz’s martyrdom, Blaurock was severely beaten and permanently expelled from Zürich.

He kept moving, laboring at Bern, Biel, the Grisons, and Appenzell.

After his arrest and fourth banishment in April 1527, Blaurock left Switzerland never to return.

Swiss cantons

From here he turned to the Tyrol.

In 1529 he became the pastor of the church in Adige Valley, after their former pastor, Michael Kürschner, was burned at the stake.

Blaurock conducted a very successful ministry in Tyrol.

Many believers were baptized and churches founded.

Location of Tyrol

Above: (in red) Tyrol, Austria

The example of discipleship in full communities of goods that began among the churches that Blaurock started continues to be a source of inspiration to intentional communities such as the Hutterites and the Bruderhof.

Above: Members of the Anabaptist Christian Bruderhof Communities live, eat, work and worship communally.

In August, Blaurock and Hans Langegger were arrested by Innsbruck authorities.

While in captivity they were tortured for information.

On 6 September 1529, Blaurock and Langegger were burned at the stake near Klausen.

Chiusa - Klausen.jpg

The only writings left by Blaurock were a letter and two hymns written during his last three weeks of life.

The hymns are entitled Gott Führt Ein Recht Gericht (“God Holds a Righteous Judgment“) and Gott, dich will ich loben (“God, You I Will Praise“).

Both hymns are preserved in the Ausbund, an old Anabaptist hymnal still used by the Amish.

The Ausbund - Amish Country Insider

On the night of 17 – 18 October 1534, anti-Catholic posters appeared in public places in Paris and in the four major provincial cities of Blois, Rouen, Tours and Orléans.

One of the posters was posted on the bedchamber door of King Francis I at Amboise, an affront and a breach of security that left him shaken.

François Ier Louvre.jpg

Above: Francois I (1515 – 1547)

The placards carried the title “Genuine articles on the horrific, great and unbearable abuses of the papal mass, invented directly contrary to the Holy Supper of our Lord, sole mediator and sole savior Jesus Christ

This provocative title was a direct attack on Catholic conceptions of the Eucharist.

The text supported Zwingli’s position on the Mass which denied the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist (communion).

St Michael the Archangel, Findlay, OH - bread and wine crop 1.jpg

The individual who was the chief inspiration, was Antoine de Marcourt, a Swiss pastor of Neuchâtel originally from Picardy.

Writing anonymously the following month, Marcourt took credit for the placards in the address to benevolent readers of his anonymous “Most useful and salutary little treatise of the holy Eucharist“, published at Neuchâtel, 16 November 1534, in which he avers:

I have been moved by true affection to compose and edit in writing some true articles on the unbearable abuses of the Mass.

Which articles I wish to be published and posted throughout the public places of the land.

Francis I, because of this, led an anti-Protestant procession through Paris on 21 January 1535.

Above: Le livre des marchans by Antoine Marcourt, 1533

The Power of Sympathy was first published by Isaiah Thomas (1749 – 1831) in Boston on 21 January 1789 and sold at the price of nine shillings.

It was an 18th-century American sentimental novel written in epistolary form (as a series of documents) by William Hill Brown (1765 – 1793) and is widely considered to be the first American novel.

The Power of Sympathy was Brown’s first novel.

The characters’ struggles illustrate the dangers of seduction and the pitfalls of giving in to one’s passions, while advocating the moral education of women and the use of rational thinking as ways to prevent the consequences of such actions. 

The novel did not sell well.

On Monday, 21 January 1793, French King Louis XVI (1754 – 1793), at age 38, was beheaded by guillotine on the Place de la Révolution.

Antoine-François Callet - Louis XVI, roi de France et de Navarre (1754-1793), revêtu du grand costume royal en 1779 - Google Art Project.jpg

Above: Louis XVI

As Louis XVI mounted the scaffold, he appeared dignified and resigned.

He delivered a short speech in which he pardoned “…those who are the cause of my death….

He then declared himself innocent of the crimes of which he was accused, praying that his blood would not fall back on France.

Many accounts suggest Louis XVI’s desire to say more, but Antoine-Joseph Santerre (1752 – 1809), a general in the National Guard, halted the speech by ordering a drum roll.

Antoine Joseph Santerre.jpeg

The former king was then quickly beheaded.

Some accounts of Louis’s beheading indicate that the blade did not sever his neck entirely the first time.

There are also accounts of a blood-curdling scream issuing from Louis after the blade fell but this is unlikely, since the blade severed Louis’s spine.

The executioner, Charles Henri Sanson (1739 – 1806), testified that the former king had bravely met his fate.

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Above: Charles Henri Sanson

Immediately after his execution, Louis XVI’s corpse was transported in a cart to the nearby Madeleine cemetery, on rue d’Anjou, where those guillotined at the Place de la Révolution were buried in mass graves.

Before his burial, a short religious service was held in the Madeleine church (destroyed in 1799) by two priests who had sworn allegiance to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy.

Afterward, Louis XVI, his severed head placed between his feet, was buried in an unmarked grave, with quicklime spread over his body.

The Madeleine cemetery was closed in 1794.

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Above: Plaque in the Catacombs of Paris indicating the placement of the bones transferred from the Madeleine Cemetery

In 1815 Louis XVIII (1755 – 1824) had the remains of his brother Louis XVI and of his sister-in-law, Marie-Antoinette (1755 – 1793) transferred and buried in the Basilica of St. Denis, the royal necropolis of the kings and queens of France.

Gérard - Louis XVIII of France in Coronation Robes.jpg

Above: Louis XVIII

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Above: Marie Antoinette

Between 1816 and 1826, a commemorative monument, the Chapelle expiatoire, was erected at the location of the former cemetery and church.

La chapelle expiatoire - façade.jpg

While Louis’s blood dripped to the ground, several onlookers ran forward to dip their handkerchiefs in it.

This account was proven true in 2012 after a DNA comparison linked blood thought to be from Louis XVI’s beheading to DNA taken from tissue samples originating from what was long thought to be the mummified head of his ancestor, Henri IV of France (1553 – 1610).

The blood sample was taken from a squash gourd carved to commemorate the heroes of the French Revolution that had, according to legend, been used to house one of the handkerchiefs dipped in Louis’s blood.

Henri-Pourbus.jpg

Above: Henri IV (1553 – 1610)

The 19th-century historian Jules Michelet (1798 – 1874) attributed the restoration of the French monarchy to the sympathy that had been engendered by the execution of Louis XVI.

Portrait of Jules Michelet by Thomas Couture

Above: Jules Michelet

Michelet’s Histoire de la Révolution Française and Alphonse de Lamartine’s (1790 – 1869) Histoire des Girondins, in particular, showed the marks of the feelings aroused by the revolution’s regicide.

Alphonse de Lamartine.PNG

Above: Alphonse de Lamartine

The two writers did not share the same socio-political vision, but they agreed that, even though the monarchy was rightly ended in 1792, the lives of the royal family should have been spared.

Lack of compassion at that moment contributed to a radicalization of revolutionary violence and to greater divisiveness among Frenchmen.

For the 20th century novelist Albert Camus (1913 – 1960) the execution signaled the end of the role of God in history, for which he mourned.

Albert Camus, gagnant de prix Nobel, portrait en buste, posé au bureau, faisant face à gauche, cigarette de tabagisme.jpg

Above: Albert Camus

For the 20th century philosopher Jean-Francois Lyotard (1924 – 1998) the regicide was the starting point of all French thought, the memory of which acts as a reminder that French modernity began under the sign of a crime.

Jean-Francois Lyotard cropped.jpg

Above: Jean-Francois Lyotard

She was large, fast and technically advanced.

On 21 January 1854, within 48 hours of sailing, the RMS Tayleur (a full-rigged iron clipper ship) found herself, on her maiden voyage from Liverpool bound for Melbourne, in a fog and a storm, heading straight for the island of Lambay.

The rudder was undersized for her tonnage, so that she was unable to tack around the island.

The rigging was also faulty:

The ropes had not been properly stretched, so that they became slack, making it nearly impossible to control the sails.

Despite dropping both anchors as soon as rocks were sighted, she ran aground on the east coast of Lambay Island, about five miles from Dublin Bay.

Initially, attempts were made to lower the ship’s lifeboats, but when the first one was smashed on the rocks, launching further boats was deemed unsafe. 

Tayleur was so close to land that the crew was able to collapse a mast onto the shore, and some people aboard were able to jump onto land by clambering along the collapsed mast.

Some who reached shore had carried ropes from the ship, allowing others to pull themselves to safety on the ropes.

Captain Noble waited on board Tayleur until the last minute, then jumped towards shore, being rescued by one of the passengers.

With the storm and high seas continuing, the ship was then washed into deeper water.

She sank to the bottom with only the tops of her masts showing.

A surviving passenger alerted the coast guard station on the island.

This passenger and four coast guards launched the coast guard galley.

When they reached the wreck they found the last survivor, William Vivers, who had climbed to the tops of the rigging, and had spent 14 hours there.

He was rescued by the coastguards.

Of more than 650 aboard, only 280 survived.

Tayleur.jpg

Above: RMS Tayleur

Newspaper accounts blamed the crew for negligence, but the official coroner’s inquest absolved Captain Noble and placed the blame on the ship’s owners, accusing them of neglect for allowing the ship to depart without its compasses being properly adjusted.

The Board of Trade, however, did fault the captain for not taking soundings, a standard practice when sailing in low visibility.

The causes of the wreck were complex and included:

  • Compass problems due to the placing of an iron river steamer on the deck after the compasses had been swung.
  • Absence of a mast head compass placed at a distance from the iron hull.
  • Northerly current in the Irish sea similar to that which drove the Great Britain northward.
  • Slotting effect of the wind in the sails driving the ship sideways.
  • Small untried crew to manage the sails.
  • Large turning circle making ship unmaneuverable.
  • The anchor chains broke when they were dropped in final efforts to save the ship.
  • The captain had been injured in a serious fall and may have had head injuries.
  • Lack of lifebelts – then uncommon and panic led to increased loss of life, those who kept their heads or could swim, escaped.

The Sinking Of RMS Tayleur: The Lost Story Of The Victorian Titanic by Gill  Hoffs | Daily Mail Online

Above: RMS Tayleur

Tayleur has been compared with the RMS Titanic.

They shared similarities in their separate times.

Both were RMS ships and White Star Liners (although these were different companies).

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Both went down on their maiden voyages.

Inadequate or faulty equipment contributed to both disasters (faulty compasses and rigging for the Tayleur, and lack of binoculars and life boats for the Titanic).

RMS Titanic 3.jpg

Above: RMS Titanic

In the December 1918 election to the Parliament of the United Kingdom, the Irish republican party Sinn Féin won a landslide victory in Ireland.

In line with their manifesto, its MPs refused to take their seats.

Sinn Fein logo 2018.png

On 21 January 1919 they founded a separate parliament in Dublin called Dáil Éireann (“Assembly of Ireland“).

Flag of Ireland.svg

Above: Flag of Ireland

They declared Irish independence, ratifying the Proclamation of the Irish Republic that had been issued in the 1916 Easter Rising, and adopted a provisional constitution (the Dáil Constitution).

Easter Proclamation of 1916.png

Its first meeting happened on the same day as one of the first engagements (the Solohedbeg Ambush) of what became the Irish War of Independence (1919 – 1921).

Soloheadbeg ambush: what really happened in January 1919?

Although the Dáil had not authorised any armed action, it became a “symbol of popular resistance and a source of legitimacy for fighting men in the guerrilla war that developed“.

The Dáil was outlawed by the British government in September 1919, and thereafter it met in secret.

The First Dáil met 21 times and its main business was establishing the Irish Republic.

It created the beginnings of an independent Irish government and state apparatus.

Dáil Éireann meeting in the Mansion House, August, 1921 (17068860698).jpg

The flag of Quebec, called the Fleurdelisé (the Lily-flowered) represents the Canadian province of Québec, from whence your humble blogger comes.

It consists of a white cross on a blue background, with four white fleurs-de-lis.

Flag of Quebec.svg

It was adopted by the government of Québec during the administration of Premier Maurice Duplessis (1890 – 1969).

Maurice Duplessis.jpg

Above: Maurice Duplessis

It was the first provincial flag officially adopted in Canada, first shown on 21 January 1948, at the Parliament Building of the Assemblée Nationale in Québec City.

Québec’s Flag Day (21 January) commemorates its adoption each year.

Quebec City (14765614666).jpg

The Coalbrook mining disaster is the worst mining accident in the history of South Africa.

The disaster occurred in the Coalbrook coal mine of Clydesdale Colliery on 21 January 1960 at around 19:00 when approximately 900 pillars caved in, almost 180 metres underground.

The mine is situated 21 km southwest of Vereeniging.

About 1,000 miners were in the mine at the time and 437 died after being trapped, while the rest escaped through an incline shaft.

The miners were suffocated by methane gas and crushed to death by rockfall.

Miners felt a strong blast wind, many of whom rushed up to the surface, but were instructed to return underground or face imprisonment.

Only two miners refused to go back underground.

The majority of the miners at Clydesdale Colliery were Basutoland and Portuguese East Africa nationals.

Immediately after the incident, rescue teams arrived from other mines in the region and boreholes were drilled into areas where survivors were expected to be.

When microphones were lowered, no signs of life were detected.

After 11 days the rescue was called off.

The Golden Thread: Coalbrook mine disaster, 1960

The 2011 Albanian opposition demonstrations (also known as 21 January events) were a series of anti-government protests in cities around Albania following 18 months of political conflict over alleged electoral fraud by the opposition.

A video surfaced which portrayed the deputy prime minister arranging a corrupt deal with the minister of economy.

The public outcry over the video resulted in the resignation of the deputy prime minister.

Tirana demonstrations of 21 January 2011 NOCAPTIONS.jpg

A demonstration was called by parliamentary opposition parties, which include the Socialist Party and the Unity for Human Rights Party.

Partia Socialiste.svg

Above: Logo of the Socialist Party

Party for Justice, Integration and Unity - Wikipedia

Aobve: Logo of the Unity of Human Rights Party

These were called on 21 January in order to protest the alleged corruption of the Albanian government as well as widespread unemployment and poverty in the country.

Red flag with a black double-headed eagle in the center.

Above: Flag of Albania

On 21 January, a protest in Tirana led to the killings of three demonstrators by the Republican Guard during a rally in front of the office of Prime Minister Sali Berisha.

A fourth person died several days later in a hospital in Ankara, Turkey.

Sali Berisha, October 2008.jpg

Above: Sali Berisha

According to police and the international media, an estimated 20,000 people attended this anti-government demonstration in Tirana, but the opposition claimed there were about 200,000 demonstrators.

The large number of police coupled with continuous provocations and rising political tensions during the week preceding the demonstration, were major factors in the development of the protest.

Anti-government chants were followed by clashes with a group of around 600 protesters who threw umbrellas at the riot police.

When a group of 600 protesters started throwing stones and Molotov cocktails the police reacted using tear gas and batons.

Clashes continued for two hours until police forces and the Republican Guard began firing bullets into the air in an attempt to stave off and scare away the demonstrators.

Live fire was at some point used against demonstrators in the crowd, killing three demonstrators on the spot and injuring another who died after a week-long coma.

After the demonstrators began running away from the main square, hundreds were rounded up by plainclothes police as well as riot police.

The opposition parties considered the shooting “extreme and unjustified.”

Berisha denied that there was a specific order to shoot the protesters, but he confirmed that it was the Republican Guard that perpetrated the shooting.

Nevertheless, the Albanian Constitution and its Penal Code allow the Republican Guard to non-fatally injure individuals who try to enter any governmental institution.

Garda e Republikës.svg

The leader of the opposition, Edi Rama, said:

People protested for a better Albania and lost their lives for an Albania we are forced to live with but that we shall definitely change.”

Albania′s Prime Minister Edi Rama: ′The past cannot hold us back′ | Europe|  News and current affairs from around the continent | DW | 22.10.2014

Above: Edi Rama

Sali Berisha stated on 21 January that the three protesters who died during the opposition rally were killed by other demonstrators in an attempt to create victims and ultimately start a coup d’état against his government.

Albania | History, Geography, Customs, & Traditions | Britannica

The Women’s March was a worldwide protest on 21 January 2017, the day after the Inauguration of President Donald Trump.

It was prompted by the fact that several of Trump’s statements were considered by many as anti-women or otherwise offensive to women.

It was the largest single-day protest in US history.

Women's March on Washington (32593123745).jpg

The goal of the annual marches is to advocate legislation and policies regarding human rights and other issues, including:

  • women’s rights
  • immigration reform
  • healthcare reform
  • disability justice 
  • reproductive rights
  • the environment 
  • LGBTQ rights 
  • racial equality
  • freedom of religion
  • workers’ rights
  • tolerance

According to organizers, the goal was to “send a bold message to our new administration on their first day in office, and to the world that women’s rights are human rights“.

The main protest was in Washington DC, and is known as the Women’s March on Washington with many other marches taking place worldwide.

The Washington March was streamed live on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter.

The Washington March drew over 470,000 people.

Between 3,267,134 and 5,246,670 people participated in the marches in the US, approximately 1.0% to 1.6% of the US population.

Worldwide participation has been estimated at over seven million.

At least 408 marches were reported to have been planned in the US and 168 in 81 other countries.

After the marches, organizers reported that around 673 marches took place worldwide, on all seven continents, 29 in Canada, 20 in Mexico, and one in Antarctica.

The crowds were peaceful:

No arrests were made in DC, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York City, or Seattle, where a combined total of about two million people marched.

The organization’s website states that they wanted to adhere to “the nonviolent ideology of the Civil Rights movement”.

Following the march, the organizers of the Women’s March on Washington posted the “10 Actions for the first 100 Days” campaign for joint activism to keep up momentum from the March.

While the march aimed to create a social movement, Marcia Chatelain of Georgetown University’s Center for Social Justice commented that its success will depend on the marchers’ ability to maintain momentum.

One of the goals of any type of march or any type of visible sign of solidarity is to get inspired, to inspire people to do more.

And the question is, at the march, what kind of organizational structures or movements will also be present to help people know how to channel their energy for the next day and for the long haul?

Georgetown University Logotype.svg

Historian Michael Kazin also commented on the importance of a long-term strategy:

All successful movements in history have both inside and outside strategy.

If you’re just protesting, and it just stops there, you’re not going to get anything done.”

Historians on the 2016 Election – Michael Kazin - YouTube

It is this overwhelming sense of underestimation that reminds me of Woodstock….

Official logo of Woodstock

Above: Logo of Woodstock

Toronto – London, Ontario, Canada, Sunday 12 January 2020

Ever since childhood, when I lived within earshot of the railroad, I have seldom heard a train go by and not wished I was on it.

Those whistles sing bewitchment.

Railways are irresistible bazaars, snaking along perfectly level no matter what the landscape, improving your mood with speed and never upsetting your drink.

The train can reassure you in awful places – a far cry from the anxious sweats of doom airplanes inspire or the nauseating gas sickness of the long distance bus or the analysis that affects the car passenger.

If a train is large and comfortable you don’t even need a destination.

A corner seat is enough.

You can be one of those travellers who stay in motion, straddling the tracks, and never arrive or feel they ought to….

Business class from Toronto to London on VIA - Via Rail Canada, Toronto  Traveller Reviews - Tripadvisor

Like that lucky man who lives on Italian Railways because he is retired and has a free pass.

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Better to go than to arrive.

The journey is the goal.

Anything is possible on a train: a great meal, a binge, a visit from card players, an intrigue, a good night’s sleep, strangers’ monologues framed like Russian short stories….

How far are you going?

Paul Theroux, The Great Railway Bazaar

Toronto – Oakville – Aldershot – Brantford behind me.

Woodstock – Ingersoll – London ahead.

.

VIA Rail train #85 at Stratford ON, from Toronto to London (2019-Aug-20) -  YouTube

To be honest with you, my gentle readers, I really did not know what to expect.

The name “Woodstock” conjures up images of the very first cinema movie I ever saw:

Woodstock.

WoodstockFilmPoster.jpg

I thought about how John Fogerty, one of the performers, at the 1969 world-famous concert, described it:

We were ready to rock out and we waited and waited and finally it was our turn.

There were a half million people asleep.

These people were out.

It was sort of like a painting of a Dante scene, just bodies from hell, all intertwined and asleep, covered with mud.

And this is the moment I will never forget as long as I live:

A quarter mile away in the darkness, on the other edge of this bowl, there was some guy flicking his Bic, and in the night I hear:

“Don’t worry about it, John.

We’re with you.”

I played the rest of the show for that guy.”

— John Fogerty recalling Creedance Clearwater Revival’s 3:30 a.m. start time at Woodstock

Creedence Clearwater Revival - Creedence Clearwater Revival.jpg

Woodstock attracted an audience of more than 400,000.

Thirty-two acts performed outdoors despite sporadic rain.

The festival has become widely regarded as a pivotal moment in popular music history as well as a defining event for the counterculture generation.

The event’s significance was reinforced by the abovementioned 1970 documentary film, an accompanying soundtrack album, and a song written by Joni Mitchell that became a major hit for both Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and Matthews Southern Comfort.

Woodstock Original Soundtrack 1970.jpg

Music events bearing the Woodstock name have been planned for anniversaries including the 10th (1979), 20th (1989), 25th (1994), 30th (1999), 40th (2009) and 50th (2019).

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In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine listed it as #19 of the 50 Moments That Changed the History of Rock and Roll.

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In 2017, the festival site became listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Woodstock poster.jpg

What would I find in its Canadian namesake?

Farmers’ fields, rock music, peace and love?

A vertical triband design (red, white, red) with a red maple leaf in the center.

Woodstock, Ontario (population: 41,000) is the seat of Oxford County, at the head of the non-navigable Thames River, approximately 128 km from Toronto and 43 km from London.

Committed to a Healthy and Vital Thames River

The city is known as the Dairy Capital of Canada and promotes itself as the Friendly City.

Woodstock (Ont.) : Digital Archive : Pictures & Photographs : Toronto  Public Library

Oxford County is Ontario's dairy capital and home to the first Cheese  Trail. This is the queen of dairy cows. Springbank Snow C… | Oxford county,  Woodstock, Ontario

Welcome to Woodstock Population 40,902 - 104.7 Heart FM

Woodstock was first settled by European colonists and United Empire Loyalists in 1800, starting with Zacharias Burtch and Levi Luddington, and was incorporated as a town in 1851.

Since then, Woodstock has maintained steady growth, and is now a small city in Southwestern Ontario.

As a small historic city, Woodstock is one of the few cities in Ontario to still have all of its original administration buildings.

The city has developed a strong economic focus towards manufacturing and tourism.

It is also a market city for the surrounding agricultural industry.

Farmers' Market - Woodstock, Ontario - Farmers' Markets on Waymarking.com

Woodstock is home to a campus of Fanshawe College.

Fanshawe College Logo vecotrized.svg

The city plays host to a number of cultural and artistic exhibits, including the Woodstock Museum, a national historic site.

Woodstock Museum National Historic Site, 466 Dundas Street, Woodstock, ON  (2021)

Woodstock’s summer festivals contribute to its tourism industry.

31st Annual Woodstock Woodworking Show | Country 104

Canada's Outdoor Farm Show

Colin James to Headline Cowapolooza 2017 - 104.7 Heart FM

Woodstock Fleece Festival - Cancelled | Ontario Handweavers and Spinners

However, its economic activity is centred on the manufacturing centre, the city being home to several auto-manufacturing factories.

The city’s west end has exceptionally well-preserved Victorian streetscapes.

Most notable of these streets is Vansittart Avenue, named after Admiral Henry Vansittart, one of the city’s first settlers.

Woodstock, Ontario - Wikiwand

Woodstock has a large community centre with a rink capable of accommodating 2,500 spectators for hockey games.

The centre also has a large banquet hall and atrium which play host to many social gatherings for the community.

Facility Rentals - City of Woodstock

Woodstock was first settled by Europeans in 1800.

The early settlers were generally American immigrants from New York State (United Empire Loyalists).

Increased immigration from Great Britain followed in the 1820s and 1830s, including the half-pay officers Henry Vansittart and Andrew Drew.

Admiral Vansittart commissioned Colonel Andrew Drew to build a church (Old St. Paul’s) in a new area of Oxford that was known as the “Town Plot“.

The men would later quarrel, which would lead to the construction of a second church known as “New St. Paul’s“.

Biography – DREW, ANDREW – Volume X (1871-1880) – Dictionary of Canadian  Biography

Above: Colonel Andrew Drew

From 1900 to 1920, an electric train ran down the streets of Woodstock.

The Estelle was the streetcar that ran between Woodstock and Ingersoll. -  Woodstock Newsgroup By Paul Roberts

As well, after 1920, bricks were used to pave the main street of Woodstock.

The bricks were removed in the 1940s.

File:Woodstock Ontario Dundas Street a010848.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

Sir Oliver Mowat, a native of Kingston, served as member of the Provincial Parliament for the region from 1872 to 1896, during which time he was also Premier of the province of Ontario.

Oliver Mowat.jpg

Above: Oliver Mowat (1820 – 1903)

It all began with the arrest of Reginald Birchall in Niagara Falls, Ontario.

Skyline of Niagara Falls, Ontario

Birchall was held at the Woodstock jail for seven months until his murder trial began in September of that year.

Students

The trial took place at the Woodstock Town Hall as the Court House was under construction at the time.

The trial received worldwide media coverage, with reporters camped out across from the Town Hall in the Oxford Hotel.

A Drink & a Warm Bed

Reginald Birchall (aka Lord Frederick A. Somerset) (1866 – 1890) was a British conman who was convicted of killing one of his victims in Canada.

Murder put Woodstock on the map, and now its citizens are again asking,  'why us?' | National Post

Above: Reginald Birchall

He was hanged at Woodstock.

Strange Company: John Birchall's Bad Bet

Born into a wealthy family in Lancashire, England, Birchall entered Lincoln College, Oxford in 1885.

While at Lincoln, Birchall spent his time partying and incurring debt, where he founded the Black and Tan Club.

In 1888 Birchall was forced to leave college and sell off his is inheritance to pay his debts.

Lincoln College Quad, Oxford, UK - Diliff.jpg

That same year he paid £600 for an estate in Woodstock.

After eloping with his fiancée, the couple travelled to Canada.

When they arrived in Woodstock, they discovered that the property was a small farm, not an estate.

After six months of creating more debt in Woodstock, the couple returned to England.

Once in England, Birchall concocted a scheme to defraud several wealthy people.

He took out an advertisement in a London newspaper claiming to be the owner of a prosperous horse farm in Canada who was looking for investors.

His plan was to take the money, place bets in the Derby horse race, and pay back the investors with his winnings.

Jean Louis Théodore Géricault 001.jpg

However the British investors wanted to inspect the Canadian farm and its financial records before investing.

In February 1890, the Birchalls and the investors arrived in New York City and then travelled to Buffalo.

At this point, Birchall took Frederick Benwell, the son of the biggest potential investor, to Ontario to view the farm.

Above: Frederick Benwell (1866 – 1890)

After arriving near Woodstock, Birch led Benwell into the woods, then shot him twice in the back of the head.

Birchall then returned to Buffalo, telling the other investors that Benway had decided to return to England separately.

However, on 20 February, Birchall telegraphed Benwell’s father in England, saying that his son had agreed to the investment and he should immediately wire over £500.

On 23 February 1890, hunters found a body in a swamp in Princeton, Ontario.

Clothing tags had been removed, and a watch was found close to the body.

Still in Buffalo, one of Birchall’s investors saw a picture of the body in a newspaper and recognized him as Benwell.

Above: Buffalo

He travelled to Ontario to identify the body and speak with police.

Birchall was arrested in Niagara Falls on 3 March and transported back to Princeton.

Birchall denied murdering Benwell.

Murder in a Swamp | Maclean's | May 15th 1931

On 22 September, Birchall’s trial started at Woodstock’s Town Hall.

Given that both the suspect and the victim were members of the British aristocracy, the trial garnered substantial attention.

News organizations from England, France, Germany and Italy covered the trial.

Benwell Murder

Birchall was convicted of murder based on circumstantial evidence and sentenced to death on 30 September.

Birchall professed his innocence to the end.

Above: The jury on the Birchall trial

He wrote a long account of the affair while in prison.

This memoir was published in an attempt to create an income for his wife after his death.

Addingham man pens true crime book | Ilkley Gazette

Birchall was hanged on 14 November 1890.

He was buried in the courtyard of the Woodstock City Gaol, where he still remains.

Above: Woodstock City Gaol

The swamp in Princeton was called “Benwell Swamp” by the locals.

Oxford County, Ontario

Above: Benwell Swamp

On 7 August 1979, the Woodstock area was hit by three tornadoes, two of which were rated F4 on the Fujita scale.

On the west side of town along Ingersoll Road, a Dominion Food Store was heavily damaged while the tornadoes skipped over every other home and business.

Dickson’s Florist was wiped out and the Fry home was moved on its foundation.

Father Grondziel of the new Polish Roman Catholic Church, next to the Dominion Food Store, had just stepped into the washroom when one of the tornadoes passed by and took off the roof of the church and everything in the room he had just been in.

No one on the street was injured but the cleanup took many weeks.

On the south side, the buildings of the Maranatha Christian Reformed Church and the John Knox Christian School were destroyed.

Remembering the Woodstock, Ontario F4 Tornadoes - August 7th, 1979

The Grand Trunk Railway owned and operated the Woodstock trains in 1914.

They would later go bankrupt and be bought out by CN. 

VIA Railway resides in the heritage building once occupied by Grand Trunk.

Woodstock railway station is a railway station for VIA Rail trains running from Toronto west to Windsor.

The station is located between Wellington and Bay Streets.

Trains are wheelchair accessible (immediate for eastbound passengers, but 24 hours’ notice required for westbound passengers).

It opens as a shelter 30 minutes prior to train arrival and remains open for 30 minutes after train departure.

The ticket counter has been replaced by a self-service kiosk.

VIA Rail Canada Logo.svg

The Old Town Hall, now the Woodstock Museum was built in 1853 and modelled architecturally on the Town Hall in Woodstock, England.

Designed by Peter Craib, the Town Hall was built by David White, W.P. Dixon and William McKay.

It is majestic for its size, with semi-circular windows and a domed cupola.

Old City Hall Woodstock Ontario 1.jpg

It served as the first market, first fire hall, community hall, and lockup for the town, and was the location of the world-famous Birchall-Benwell murder trial in 1890.

Canada’s first elected female mayor of a city, Bernadette Smith, served here from 1952 to 1965, and the original town council chamber used from 1871 to 1968 inside has been restored.

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The Pattulo Fountain sits in front of the Woodstock Museum or Old Town Hall.

The fountain was erected in 1916 in honour of Andrew Pattulo, who was head of the Sentinel-Review newspaper in the early 20th century.

The Woodstock Market was built in 1895 by the architect W.B. Ford, using 140,000 feet of lumber, 1 1/4 tons of nails, and 1 1/4 miles of putty on a site previously occupied by wooden market sheds.

The low roof and wide canopies are typical of market construction in this period, and interesting features included the twin towers, the drinking fountain at the front door, and the use of stone in the trim.

The old jail was built in 1854 by Hamilton architects Clark and Murray in the Italianate style, with many arches, and an octagonal ​2 12-storey tower.

In this case, the architecture camouflages the function of the institution.

Old Oxford jail to get heritage restoration | The Woodstock Sentinel Review

Four men and one woman were hanged in the yard, including the infamous Birchall, who posing as “Lord Somerset” duped the entire town and murdered his gentlemen farmer apprentice:

This was Victorian Canada’s most sensational murder case.

Birchall trial - Woodstock Chief of police in Lockport NY searching for  evidence in Birchall trial - Newspapers.com

The death mask at the entrance is of blind Thomas Cook, hanged in 1862 for murdering his wife.

His head rolled into the crowd, and afterwards public hangings were discontinued.

Ryan Heighton on Twitter: "I found this hidden gem outside the old  Woodstock jail. Death mask of Thomas Cook, the last man executed here by  public hanging.… https://t.co/rXX26533Ab"

The building was recently restored by Carlos Ventin of The Ventin Group architects of Simcoe, after a decade of lobbying by the “Save the Jail” Committee, with spectacular results, and is now occupied by Oxford County Public Health.

The Woodstock Public Library was built in 1909 by Chadwick and Beckett of Toronto on a Carnegie library grant, and it is considered one of the most attractive Carnegie libraries in Ontario.

Above: Andrew Carnegie (1835 – 1919)

(A Carnegie library is a library built with money donated by Scottish-American businessman and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie.

A total of 2,509 Carnegie libraries were built between 1883 and 1929, including some belonging to public and university library systems. 

1,689 were built in the United States, 660 in the United Kingdom and Ireland, 125 in Canada, and others in Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, Serbia, Belgium, France, the Caribbean, Mauritius, Malaysia, and Fiji.)

It is in classical revival style, with a graceful entrance, bi-chromatic brickwork, and well-balanced windows.

The rotunda inside is beautifully proportioned and dramatic.

The library traces its history back to a reading society formed in 1835 with Reverend William Bettridge of Old St. Paul’s Church as president, and possesses the only complete set of minute books in the province dating back to 1835.

Built in 1892 to replace a Regency predecessor of 1839, the Courthouse is a massive building of sandstone in the Richardsonian Romanesque style, with a complex roof line.

The first architect was dismissed in 1890 after the walls were found to be faulty, and replaced by Cuthbertson of Woodstock and Fowler of Toronto.

Monkey heads are hidden among the capitals of the red marble pillars at the two front entrances, and the monkey at the peak is said to have been carved by the contractor to represent the County Council after a dispute over payment.

1 Dairy County Dollar - Woodstock, Ontario - * Tokens * – Numista

A courthouse plaque commemorates Sir Francis Hincks.

Project:1867 – Sir Francis Hincks – Alex Luyckx | Blog

Sir Francis Hincks (1807 – 1885) was a Canadian businessman, politician, and British colonial administrator.

Hincks was elected to the Legislative Assembly of the 1st Parliament of the Province of Canada, sitting from 1841 to 1843, representing Oxford Count.

He was defeated in 1843, but elected in 1848 and subsequent elections, sitting from 1848 to 1855.

Of Irish descent, he was the Co-Premier of the Province of Canada (the union of Canada West/Ontario and Canada East/Québec) (1851-1854), Governor of Barbados (1856-1862), Governor of British Guiana (1862-1869) and Canadian Minister of Finance (1869-1873).

He introduced the Bank Act of 1871 which laid the foundation of the banking system.

Sir Francis Hincks.jpg

Above: Francis Hincks (1807 – 1885)

The current City Hall was originally built in 1901 as a post office during the term of Alexander McClenaghan, postmaster for thirty years.

Bourgue DesRivieres of Ottawa were the architects and William Hall Burns, a prominent Ottawa sculptor of the Library of Parliament, was commissioned to do the exterior stone carving.

Ottawa - ON - Library of Parliament.jpg

Above: Library of Parliament

Built of warm sandstone, with decorative trim in the gables and a bold corner tower with four clocks, it was converted to municipal offices in 1968. 

The Perry Street firehall was built in 1899 at a cost of $7,500 to house the horse-drawn wagons.

On Saturday evenings, people would gather to see the horses rush out of their stalls at the sound of the regular nine o’clock bell, race around the building and back themselves into the shafts ready to be harnessed by firefighters as they slid down the pole from their upstairs quarters.

The firehall features a square tower with detailed brickwork at the top, and a miniature tower to the right.

The tower bell used to ring for fires, curfews, and lost children, and is now mounted in Southside Park.

The old Armouries was erected in 1904 by Nagle and Mills of Ingersoll as the home of the Oxford Rifles until 1954.

The crenelated towers give it an appearance of heavy fortification, and its architecture reveals function through its exterior form, making interesting use of stone and brick.

In 1971, after being declared surplus to Department of National Defence needs, it was transformed into offices for the Oxford County Board of Education, at which times its two wrought-iron spiral staircases (valued at $3000) were sold at public auction for $250 a piece.

CANADA The Armouries, Woodstock ONTARIO 1930s-era Car White Border  c1915-1930 | eBay

A stone cairn made with stones from the beach of Dieppe, where members of the Battalion participated in the Battle of Dieppe on 19 August 1942, accounts the history of the Oxford Rifles.

Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-362-2211-04, Dieppe, Landungsversuch, englischer Spähpanzer.jpg

The Old Registry Office, now housing Oxford County Social Services, was constructed in 1876 to replace an earlier building on the County Square’s opposite front corner, and served as a registry office until 1952.

Italianate in style like the old jail, it is highlighted by semi-circular masonry over the windows carried out in the arch over the door.

Its walls are two feet thick and its roof is said to be filled with sand, making the structure fireproof, and conforming to design plans common to registry offices of that era in Ontario.

Above: The Old Registry Office

The Oxford Hotel, located across from Market Square and the Town Hall in Woodstock, was built in 1880 as “the O’Neill House“.

It saw guests such as Oscar Wilde (1882) and Reginald Birchall, and later had a double purpose – it was the meeting spot for media in Birchall’s trial.

Wilde in 1882

Above: Oscar Wilde (1854 – 1900)

In 1895, the hotel saw a new owner, who named it “Oxford” and it would change hands twice more in the 20th century.

Above: The Oxford Hotel

The Oxford Hotel also booked some interesting acts.

In 1924, the “Human Fly“, Harry Gardiner (1871 – 1933) who was then all the rage across Canada and the United States, walked across the walls of Oxford’s Hotel.

Human Fly crawls up walls of Camden NJ Courthouse cropped Feb 10 1915.png

Above: The Human Fly

The Hotel sits empty now and is available for purchase.

There is a historical plaque on the building, recognizing its contributions to local history.

90 Historic Oxford ideas | historical sites, local history, historical

Nearby is a plaque for Captain Andrew Drew (1792–1878), co-founder of Woodstock with Andrew Vansittart.

Read the Plaque - Captain Andrew Drew, R.N., 1792-1878

He led the Loyalist forces, which destroyed the American steamer Caroline during the 1837 Rebellion.

Above: The destruction of the Caroline

The Reform Movement of Upper Canada (today’s Ontario) was a movement to make the British colonial administration in Canada more democratic and less corrupt. 

William Lyon Mackenzie was one of the key leaders of this movement.

WilliamLyonMackenzie.jpeg

Above: William Lyon Mackenzie (1795 – 1861)

He was repeatedly elected to serve in a hostile parliament that repeatedly ejected him for his reform efforts.

By 1837, Mackenzie had given up on peaceful means for reform and began to prepare for an uprising.

In December 1837, Mackenzie began the Upper Canada Rebellion by fighting the British in the Battle of Montgomery’s Tavern (Toronto).

Mackenzie’s forces were seriously outnumbered and outgunned, and they were defeated in less than an hour.

Montgomery's Tavern.jpg

Above: Battle of Montgomery’s Tavern, 7 December 1837

He also suffered another major defeat a few days later in London.

After these defeats, Mackenzie fled to Navy Island in the Niagara River, which they declared the Republic of Canada, on board the vessel SS Caroline.

Throughout these events, the Canadian rebels enjoyed widespread support from the Americans, who provided them supplies and bases from which to launch raids on the British.

Navy Island map.png

Flag of Republic of Canada

Above: Flag of the Republic of Canada (1837 – 1838)

On 29 December 1837, while the Canadian rebels were on Navy Island, Canadian Loyalist Colonel Sir Allan Macnab and Captain Andrew Drew of the Royal Navy commanding a party of militia, acting on information and guidance from Alexander McLeod that the vessel belonged to Mackenzie, crossed the international boundary and seized the Caroline.

ANMacNab.jpg

Above: Allan MacNab (1798 – 1862)

They chased off the crew, towed her into the current, set her afire, and cast her adrift over Niagara Falls.

The steamer 'Caroline' drifting over Niagara Falls, 1837. The Stock Photo -  Alamy

An African American watchmaker named Amos Durfee was shot and killed in the process, although who shot him and for what reason remain unknown.

He was possibly accidentally shot by Alexander McLeod, a Scottish Canadian sheriff who had participated in the affair.

The body of Durfee was later exhibited in front of a recruiting tavern in Buffalo.

Above: 1841 sketch by MacKenzie showing the body of Durfee lying on the ground [foreground] while the burning wreck of the “Caroline” drifts toward the Falls (background)

Britain’s ambassador H.S. Fox (1791 – 1846), in an 1841 letter to US Secretary of State John Forsyth (1780 – 1841), summarized the British justification for the incursion, the pre-emptive strike:

The steamboat Caroline was a hostile vessel engaged in piratical war against her Majesty’s people.

It was under such circumstances, which it is to be hoped will never recur, that the vessel was attacked by a party of her Majesty’s people, captured and destroyed.

John Forsyth US Secretary of State.jpg

Above: John Forsyth

New York’s response:

Those of our fellow citizens, single-handed and alone, left our territory and united themselves with a foreign power, have violated no law.

They have done no more than has been done again and again by the people of every nation.

Your own recollections of history will furnish your minds with hundreds of examples.

The Swiss nation have, for hundreds of years, fed all the armies of Europe.

Who ever thought of holding them responsible for it?

Coat of arms[1] of Switzerland

Above: Coat of arms of Switzerland

They did no more than Admiral Lord Cochrane did in taking part with South America.

Alexander Cochrane.jpg

Above: Alexander Cochrane (1758 – 1832)

They did no more than Lord Byron did, who gave his life to aid the Greeks in breaking the chains of Turkish bondage.

Portrait of Byron

Above: Lord Byron (1788 – 1824)

They did no more than Lafayette.

Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette.PNG

Above: Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette (1757 – 1834)

Gentlemen, I am not deviating from the case further than is necessary to remove the just odium which has been unjustly thrown upon those who joined the insurgents.

Willis Hall, Attorney General of New York, on the Caroline Affair.

Seal of the Attorney General of New York.jpg

US newspapers falsely reported “the death of twenty-two of her crew” when in fact, only Durfee was killed.

Public opinion across the United States was outraged against the British.

President Martin Van Buren protested strongly to London, but was ignored.

Martin Van Buren by Mathew Brady c1855-58.jpg

Above: Martin Van Buren (1782 – 1862)

Shortly after the incident, a Canadian sheriff named Alexander McLeod claimed that he had helped attack the Caroline during the Caroline affair.

McLeod was arrested in the United States in 1840 for his role in Durfee’s death during the attack.

This caused yet another international incident, as the British demanded his release, stating that he should not be held criminally responsible for following orders.

The trial attempted to identify who exactly had shot Durfee, but this proved futile.

Above: The body of Durfee

McLeod was acquitted of all charges as witness statements made it clear that he had no involvement in the incident.

Many towns bordering Canada insisted that the United States enter a war with Britain because of this incident.

The American government paused their prosecutions for violations of the neutrality law and President Martin Van Buren paused his campaign to restrain Patriots.

USFlag.org: A website dedicated to the Flag of the United States of America  - The 26-Star Flag

Meanwhile, Canadians celebrated the incident and MacNab was knighted for his efforts.

On 29 May 1838, 13 raiders, mostly Canadian and American refugees from the 1837 rebellion, led by American William “Pirate Bill” Johnston, retaliated by capturing, looting, and burning the British steamer Sir Robert Peel while she was in US waters.

Above: William Johnston (1782 – 1870)

The Burning of the “Sir Robert Peel”… > Thousand Islands Life Magazine >  Thousand Islands Life Magazine All Archives

Above: The burning of the Sir Robert Peel

President Martin Van Buren sent General Winfield Scott to prevent further incursions into Canada.

Winfield Scott by Fredricks, 1862.jpg

Above: Winfield Scott (1786 – 1866)

However, there were several other attacks, the biggest being the Battle of the Windmill (Prescott, Ontario) in November 1838.

Battle of the Windmill.jpg

Above: The Battle of the Windmill, 12 – 16 November 1838

Later that year, Irish-Canadian rebel Benjamin Lett murdered a Loyalist, Captain Edgeworth Ussher, who had been involved in the Caroline affair.

Mackenzie published an account of the incident called The Caroline Almanack.

He hoped the almanac would decrease American attitudes towards Canada.

The Caroline Almanack, and American Freeman's Chronicle, for 1840: Being  Bissextile or Leap Year, and the 64th of American Independence; Calculated  ... New York, the Northern and Middle States, New: Mackenzie, William

The case was finally disposed of by US Secretary of State Daniel Webster and Alexander Baring, 1st Baron Ashburton, in the course of their negotiations leading to the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842.

Daniel Webster.jpg

Above: Daniel Webster (1782 – 1852)

AlexanderBaring.jpg

Above: Lord Baring (1774 – 1848)

Secretary Webster admitted that the employment of force might have been justified by the necessity of self-defence, but denied that such necessity existed, while Lord Ashburton, although he maintained that the circumstances afforded excuse for what was done, apologized for the invasion of United States territory.

Amazon.com: Crossed Poles USA & UK Union Jack Waving Flags Sticker (american  british): Automotive

130 Finkle Street is the oldest house in Woodstock, built in 1819 by Dr. Perry, the first doctor and teacher in Woodstock.

Dr. Perry

Above: The Perry House

The home (1895) of Thomas “Carbide” Willson, inventor of the first commercial calcium-carbide process for the manufacturer of acetylene gas.

It was the residence of the Sisters of St. Joseph’s until 1975.

It’s now a guesthouse/B&B named Château la Motte owned by Alida and François Joubert.

They are from South Africa, but François’ family comes from the south of France (La Motte-d’Aiques, Provence).

CARBIDE WILLSON GUEST HOUSE - Reviews (Woodstock, Ontario) - Tripadvisor

Above: Château La Motte

Thomas Leopold “Carbide” Willson (1860 – 1915) was a Canadian inventor.

Thomas Leopold Willson.jpg

Above: Thomas “Carbide” Willson

He was born on a farm near Princeton in 1860 and went to school in Hamilton.

By the age of 21, he had designed and patented the first electric arc lamps used in Hamilton.

Carbide Willson was a great Canadian inventor | Wat on Earth | University of  Waterloo

He moved to the US in search of opportunities to sell his ideas.

In 1892, he discovered an economically efficient process for creating calcium carbide, which is used in the production of acetylene gas.

In 1895, he sold his patent to Union Carbide.

Union Carbide.svg

In the same year, he married Mary Parks in California and moved back to Canada.

He built a house for his mother in Woodstock in 1895.

Chateau la Motte - Joubert Honeymoon Suite - Houses for Rent in Woodstock,  Ontario, Canada

During 1900 and 1901, he moved to Ottawa and opened carbide plants both in Ontario (Merritton and Ottawa) and Quebec (Shawinigan).

Willson Carbide Works, 1896 (82 Oakdale... - St. Catharines Museum &  Welland Canals Centre | Facebook

Above: Willson Plant, Merriton (St. Catherines)

In 1911, he founded the International Marine Signal Company to manufacture marine buoys and lighthouse beacons.

Biography – WILLSON, THOMAS LEOPOLD – Volume XIV (1911-1920) – Dictionary  of Canadian Biography

He was the first person to own an automobile in Ottawa.

RR Silver Wraith | Abandoned cars, Abandoned, Barn find cars

In 1907 he built a summer house on Meech Lake in what is now Gatineau Park.

The house is now owned by the federal government and notable for being the site of negotiations on the Meech Lake Accord.

Carbide Willson Ruins - National Capital Commission

Above: Willson House, Meech Lake

Above: “Meech Lake is one of about two million lakes in Canada. However pleasant, the attention it has attracted is far out of proportion to its size, beauty, or history.” — Andrew Cohen

(The Meech Lake Accord (Accord du lac Meech) was a series of proposed amendments to the Constitution of Canada negotiated in 1987 by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and all 10 Canadian provincial premiers.

Mulroney.jpg

Above: Brian Mulroney

It was intended to persuade the government of Québec to symbolically endorse the 1982 constitutional amendments by providing for some decentralization of the Canadian federation.

The proposed amendments were initially popular and backed by nearly all political leaders.

Royal Shield of arms of Canada.svg

Above: Coat of arms of Canada

However, former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, feminist activists, and Indigenous groups raised concerns about the lack of citizen involvement in the Accord’s drafting and its future effects on Canadian federalism, and support for the Accord began to decline.

Pierre Trudeau (1975).jpg

Above: Pierre Trudeau (1919 – 2000)

Changes in government in New Brunswick, Manitoba and Newfoundland brought ministries to power that declined to accept the Accord.

Further negotiations were conducted but tension increased between Quebec and the predominantly English-speaking provinces.

A dramatic final meeting among first ministers a month before the Accord’s constitutionally-mandated ratification deadline seemed to show renewed agreement on a second series of amendments that would address the concerns raised in the intervening debates.

Despite this, the original accord would not gain acceptance in the Manitoba or Newfoundland legislatures in time for ratification.

Failure to pass the Accord greatly increased tensions between Quebec and the remainder of the country.

Canada Map and Satellite Image

The Québec sovereignity movement gained renewed support for a time.

The general aims of the Accord would be addressed in the Charlottetown Accord, which failed to gain a majority vote in a referendum on 26 October 1992.)

In 1911, Willson began experimenting with the condensation of phosphoric acid in the manufacture of fertilizers at a mill on Meech Creek within the park.

Due to this venture and running out of capital, he missed one interest payment and lost nearly all of his estate to his creditor, American tobacco king J.B. “Buck” Dale.

BuckDuke.jpg

Above: James Buchanan Duke (1856 – 1925)

The Meech Lake estate was then sold to Arthur Vining Davis who would go on to further Willson’s enterprising effort by establishing the Quebec aluminum industry at Arvida, the name of the town being a portmanteau of his own name.

Arthur V. Davis.jpg

Above: Arthur Vining Davis (1867 – 1962)

In 1915, Willson died of a heart attack in New York City while trying to raise funds for a hydroelectric project in Labrador.

His dream was finally realized in 1974 as the Churchill Falls project.

Above: Churchill Falls, 1890

The bell tower of St. Paul’s Church (1834) is said to have been used as a prison during the Rebellion of 1837.

The church has the original box pews.

The altar and pulpit were built from the boxes in which the first organ was shipped from England.

Vice Admiral Henry Vansittart, who founded Woodstock in 1834, is buried in the crypt.

Please join us online this Sunday for... - Old St. Paul's Anglican Church

Woodstock has several parks and gardens.

Most notable is Southside Park, which has a playground, baseball diamonds, public washrooms, soccer fields, gardens, and a new Skatepark.

It also has a large pond, and many walking trails. 

Southside Park, Woodstock - photo by Bruce Hartley - Oxford Creative  ConnectionsOxford Creative Connections

Tip O’Neill Field at Southside Park is home for the Woodstock Rangers OBA Junior baseball team.

With money from a government grant and the City of Woodstock, Tip O'Neill  Park was revamped | The Woodstock Sentinel Review

(James Edward “Tip” O’Neill (1860 – 1915) was a Canadian professional baseball player from approximately 1875 to 1892.

He began playing organized baseball in Woodstock and later played ten seasons in Major League Baseball, principally as a left fielder, but also as a pitcher, for four major league clubs.

While playing with the St. Louis Browns (later renamed the Cardinals) from 1884 to 1889, O’Neill helped the club compile a 516–247 record while also winning four pennants and the 1886 World Series.

St. Louis Cardinals logo.svg

O’Neill won two American Association batting championships during those years and became the second person in major league history to hit for a triple crown, leading the league in 1887 with a .435 batting average, 14 home runs and 123 runs batted in (RBIs).

He also rewrote the major league record book, establishing new records in at least eight categories, including the highest batting average (originally .492, adjusted to .435), on-base percentage (.490) and slugging percentage (.691), and the most hits (225), runs scored (167), doubles (52), extra base hits (84), and total bases (357) in a single season.

His adjusted .435 batting average in 1887 remains the second highest in major league history.

O’Neill has been dubbed “Canada’s Babe Ruth” and was posthumously inducted into both the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame (St. Marys, Ontario) and the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame.

Each year since 1984, the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame has presented the Tip O’Neill Award to the best Canadian baseball player.)

Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.jpg

Above: Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame, St. Marys

At the North End of the city is Roth Park and the Gordon Pittock Conservation Area, which stretch along the shores Gordon Pittock Reservoir, an artificial lake created by the construction of the Pittock Dam.

This park contains a playground and several kilometers of walking, running, and biking trails.

Pittock Dam Walkway Will Open to Pedestrians on Friday - 104.7 Heart FM

Above: Pittock Dam

The Woodstock Dragon Boat Club also uses the Gordon Pittock Reservoir as their home.

They are a growing dragon boat community consisting of both adult and junior teams.

Woodstock Dragon Boat Club - Home | Facebook

Woodstock has two ice rinks, two at the Community Complex at the south end of the city, and one at the fairgrounds in the central region.

Southwood Arena at the Community Complex is home for the Woodstock Navy-Vets OHA Junior hockey team.

Woodstock Minor Hockey

Woodstock also has a roller derby team called the Woodstock Warriors. 

Woodstock roller derby was founded in 2011.

Woodstock Warriors | The Derby Nerd

The Woodstock Soccer Club has built an indoor and outdoor soccer park in the northwestern corner of the city, at the former site of the Oxford Regional Centre.

Woodstock FC – Home of the Strikers and Stallions

The city has two indoor swimming pools (Southside Aquatic Centre and the YMCA) and one outdoor pool (the Lions Pool).

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The city’s fine Craigowan (Oxford) Golf Club, a private facility, dates from 1909, on a different site from that used by the current course.

It has hosted provincial championships, and in 2014 staged the Canadian Women’s Amateur Championship.

Craigowan Golf Club - Home | Facebook

In June 2005, Toyota announced plans to build a new, $1.1 billion automobile assembly plant in Woodstock on a 1,000-acre (4 km2) undeveloped site in the city’s northeast end.

The plant was expected to employ 2,000 people and begin full production of the Toyota RAV4 SUV in November 2008, at the rate of 150,000 a year.

However, because of slowing car sales and bleeding market share to South Korean marques, Toyota cut production by 50% to 75,000 a year and reduced the work force 40% to 1,200 people.

The other 800 workers are expected to be recalled when (if ever) car sales increase.

It was the first new auto assembly plant to be built in Canada in two decades.

In January 2010 the second shift was added and production increased to 150,000 units per year.

In 2012 they began production of the all electric RAV4 EV in conjunction with Tesla motors.

In 2013, the combined production of the RAV4 and RAV4 EV will increase to 200,000 units per year and an additional 400 workers well be added.

This will bring the total work force at the Woodstock facility to 2,400.

Toyota carlogo.svg

In early March 2006, Hino Motors, a Toyota Motor Co. subsidiary, announced that it will be the first Japanese truck manufacturer to build its vehicles in Canada with a new Woodstock plant slated to begin production in April 2006, in the former General Seating plant in the Pattullo Ridge Business Park near Highway 401 and Highway 59.

The $3 million, 11,000-square-metre (120,000 sq ft) plant will employ 45 and assemble 2,000 trucks a year when it begins production.

In late November 2008 the Hino Motors automotive plant was completed.

Hino-logo.png

Woodstock is also home to industries:

  • General Motors National Parts Distribution Warehouse, with approximately 1,000,000 square feet of floor space, it is the largest of its kind in Canada (est. 1976)
  • Vuteq Canada, an automotive supply company to General Motors and Toyota and employs 450.
  • Toyota Boshoku, an automotive supply company to Toyota.
  • Tigercat Industries, a forestry and logging equipment manufacturer.
  • RWF Bron, a heavy equipment manufacturer.
  • Woodstock Precision Machining, a precision machine part supplier .
  • Kelsey Hayes, an automotive supply company for Ford.
  • Firestone, a textile/tire manufacturing company since 1936 (scheduled to close in 2019)
  • Agribrand Purina, pet food/feed manufacturing and distribution centre
  • Green Metals Canada Inc, recycling company service of Toyota group companies
  • Harvan Manufacturing Ltd, manufacturer of gears, shafts, valve components, torsion bars, stabilizer bars, suspension control arms and drive components.

Notable personalities:

Mary Bothwell (1900 – mid-1970s) was a Canadian classical vocalist and painter.

As a singer she began her career as a contralto, but ultimately ended up performing soprano parts in the opera and concert repertoire.

Above: Mary Bothwell

Bothwell was born in Hickson near Woodstock.

She studied at the Canadian Academy of Music (renamed the Royal Conservatory of Music) in Toronto.

Royal Conservatory of Music logo.svg

From 1920 to 1929 she performed as a contralto in opera and oratorio performances in Toronto and Buffalo.

In 1937 she went to Austria to study singing at the Mozarteum University of Salzburg.

Mozarteum logo.jpg

The following year she moved to New York City.

Bothwell made her recital debut in New York City at the Town Hall on 1 November 1938 and continued to appear there until the early 1960s.

Town Hall 123 W43 near sun jeh.jpg

In 1947, she made her first European tour which included performances in Germany, the Netherlands and England.

That same year she was praised at the Scheveningen Festival for her portrayal of the Marschallin in Der Rosenkavalier.

Robert Sterl Schuch dirigiert Rosenkavalier.jpg

She was also celebrated for her portrayal of Isolde in Tristan und Isolde, a role she notably performed with the BBC Symphony Orchestra under conductor Adrian Boult in 1948.

BBC Symphony Orchestra Logo.jpg

She performed on radio in New York City, Paris, London and Basel.

Bothwell was elected president of the Canadian Women’s Club of New York City in 1958.

During her term as president she encouraged the careers of young Canadian performers.

Bothwell became known also for her paintings of flowers.

Wild Flowers of Switzerland“, 36 botanical studies in oil by Mary Bothwell was exhibited for the first time at the Horticultural Society of New York on 18 April 1971.

11 beautiful spring flower blossoms spots in Switzerland – Family Earth Trek

Joseph Whiteside Boyle (1867 – 1923), better known as Klondike Joe Boyle, was a Canadian adventurer who became a businessman and entrepreneur in the United Kingdom.

1918 - Colonelul Joseph (Joe) Boyle.png

Through he was born in Toronto, he grew up in Woodstock.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL JOSEPH WHITESIDE BOYLE, D.S.O. 1867-1923" - Woodstock -  Ontario Provincial Plaques on Waymarking.com

Boyle was early to recognize the potential of large-scale gold mining in the Klondike gold fields, and as the initial placer mining operations waned after 1900, Boyle and other companies imported equipment to assemble enormous dredges, usually electric-powered, that took millions more ounces of gold from the creeks while turning the landscape upside-down, shifting creeks.

An avid hockey fan, Boyle began in 1902 to sponsor hockey teams to play in Dawson City for the benefit of the miners.

Boyle organized an ice hockey team in 1905, often known as the Dawson City Nuggets, that endured a difficult journey to Ottawa (by overland sled, train, coastal steamer, then transcontinental train) to play the Ottawa Silver Seven for the Stanley Cup, which until 1924 was awarded to the top ice hockey team in Canada and could be challenged for by a team.

Ottawa thrashed the Dawson team.

In 1909, he married an American woman, Elma Louise Humphries while on a visit to Detroit. 

On 4 August 1914, Great Britain declared war on Germany following the invasion of Belgium and Canada as part of the British empire was now at war.

On 4 August 1914, Boyle attended a rally at the Dawson City Athletic Association to sing God Save the King and declared his support for the war.

Boyle took an ultra-patriotic line, declaring that if any of his employees expressed any sympathy for the enemy, they would be fired immediately.

His greatest disappointment came when his attempt to volunteer for the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) was turned down on the account of his age, being informed at 46 he was too old for the CEF.

During World War I, Boyle organised a machine gun company, giving the soldiers insignia made of gold, to fight in Europe.

In 1914, he wrote Sam Hughes, the Minister of National Defense, offering to raise at his own expense the machine gun company made up of Yukon miners.

Samuel Hughes, 1905.jpg

Above: Sam Hughes (1853 – 1921)

The company was trained in Dawson City under the direction of the local Royal Northwest Mounted Police detachment and the Dawson City Rifle Association and later received more professional military training when it reached Vancouver.

Boyle was present at the parade on 27 October 1914 when the company left Dawson City for Vancouver.

Morale problems began in the winter of 1914-1915 when the unit was not deployed to Europe immediately as promised, and were indeed not officially accepted as part of the Canadian Expeditionary Force until 18 February 1915.

Boyle wrote several letters to Hughes warning that with the unit living in tents in Hastings Park it would wither away due to desertion if kept there much longer, and finally on 11 June 1915 the “Boyle Battery” boarded a ship for Britain.

On 19 June 1915, a puzzled Boyle wrote to Hughes asking why he had not been presented with the invoice for the costs of raising the “Boyle battery” and for the purchasing machine guns, insisting he wanted to pay these costs out of his pocket.

Only later did Boyle realize that Hughes had promoted such a chaotic mobilization that he had forgotten that Boyle was supposed to pay for the costs of raising the “Boyle Battery” himself.

The unit was incorporated into larger units of the Canadian Army.

Lesser badge of the Canadian Army.svg

Above: Badge of the Canadian Army

On 27 July 1916, Boyle left Dawson City for London with the intention of negotiating a deal with the South African Goldfields Company to operate a gold-mining concession in Russia.

Boyle was especially interested in the gold fields around the Lena River in Siberia owing to the similarities between Siberia and the Yukon.

Lena River basin.png

Hughes was visiting London in August 1916 when Boyle arrived, and thus Boyle finally met the bombastic Defense Minister whom he had corresponding with since August 1914.

In September 1916, Hughes appointed Boyle an honorary lieutenant colonel of the militia, allowing Boyle to wear a uniform which he embellished by adding in maple leafs made of Yukon gold.

In London, Boyle also met in London a prominent American engineer and businessman, Herbert Hoover, who was a member of the American Committee of Engineers and who had much money invested in Russia.

President Hoover portrait.jpg

Above: Herbert Hoover (1874 – 1964)

In June 1917, Boyle undertook a mission to Russia on behalf of the American Committee of Engineers in London to help reorganize the country’s railway system.

Boyle arrived in Petrograd (modern St. Petersburg) on 25 June 1917.

Above. St. Petersburg, Russia

In December 1917, he successfully petitioned the new Bolshevik government of Russia to return archives and paper currency from the Kremlin to Romania.

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Above: Coat of arms of the Soviet Union

Coat of arms of Romania

Above: Coat of arms of Romania

In February 1918 he served as the principal intermediary on behalf of the Romanian government in effecting a ceasefire with revolutionary forces in Bessarabia.

Above: Map of Bessarabia within Moldova and Ukraine

On 23 February 1918, when Romania was on the brink of defeat, Boyle first met Queen Marie, who was lying dejected on her sofa as she heard the news that Romania had asked for an armistice with Germany.

Kraljica marija.jpg

Above: Queen Marie (1900 – 1961)

Although Marie was only a Queen Consort, she was vastly more popular with the Romanian people than her husband, King Ferdinand, and it she who was the focal point of popular affection.

King Ferdinand of Romania.jpg

Above: King Ferdinand (1865 – 1927)

At the time she vowed:

My English blood refuses to accept disaster.

If there remains the smallest, most meagre fighting chance, I shall fight on-a losing battle no doubt, but I shall consider myself unworthy of my own ideals were I to give in before I am completely convinced that all is lost“.

Boyle’s arrival at the Romanian court and his promise as he got on his knees to shake the Queen’s hand and to swear that he would never abandon her did much to lift her spirits.

FOTO Istoria fascinantă a lui Joseph „Joe“ Boyle, aventurierul canadian  care a cucerit-o pe Regina Maria a României

Above: Boyle and the Queen

Marie later wrote of him:

I can honestly say that during that dark period of my life, Joe Boyle kept me from despairing.

This strong, self-reliant man had been my rock on a stormy sea“.

One biographer of Queen Marie wrote of him:

An exaggeration of a man, Colonel Boyle reads today like a fictional hero created by his contemporaries to lighten the frustrations of defeat.

Were it not for the corroborating memoirs of his partner, Captain George A. Hill of the British Secret Service, we would write Boyle off as the wish fulfillment of a desperate Queen looking for a 20th century version of Lancelot“.

Boyle, in cooperation with Captain George Alexander Hill, a Russian-speaking member of the British Secret Service, carried out clandestine operations against German and Bolshevik forces in Bessarabia and southwestern Russia.

Secret Intelligence Service logo.svg

Just one of their many exploits together had been secreting the Romanian crown jewels and Romanian treasury out of the Kremlin and back into Romania.

Joe Boyle

In March and April 1918, he rescued some 50 high-ranking Rumanians held in Odessa by revolutionaries.

colonel joe boyle – From Lancs to the Levant

This made Boyle a national hero in Romania and gave him influence within its royal court.

Flag of Romania

Above: Flag of Romania

At a time when defeatism was rampant in Romania, Boyle together with Queen Marie and her lover, Prince Barbu Stirbey were the main advocates that the Allies would still win the war.

Above: Prince Barbu Stirbey (1872 – 1946)

Over the queen’s strong opposition, Romania signed on 7 May 1918 the humiliating Treaty of Bucharest.

One of the terms of the Treaty of Bucharest was that German civil servants were to be placed in charge of every Romanian ministry with the power to veto decisions by Romanian cabinet ministers and to fire Romanian civil servants, a clause which effectively stripped Romania of its independence and turned it into a German protectorate.

Other terms of the treaty subjected Romania to a ruthless policy of economic exploitation, which caused living standards in Romania to collapse.

Marie spent much of her fortune on charity attempting to assist her destitute people, an endeavour in which Boyle joined in, spending much of his own fortune on charity.

Adding to Marie’s woes, on 31 August 1918, the Crown Prince Carol, whose debauchery and dissolute ways had often worried her, impulsively deserted his Romanian Army unit and eloped to marry, in Odessa, Zizi Lambrino.

Marie was strongly opposed to her son’s marriage to Lambrino and feared the fact he had deserted his unit would discredit the monarchy.

Carol II and Zizi Lambrino.jpg

Above: Prince Carol of Rumania (future King Carol II) and his first wife, Joanna “Zizi” Lambrino

Boyle provided the Queen much emotional support as she later wrote that Carol’s actions were “a staggering family tragedy which hit us suddenly, a stunning blow for which we were entirely unprepared.

I felt myself very sick.

Carol!

My honest big boy, at such a moment when the country is in such a state, when all our moral courage is needed, when we, the Royal Family, are the only thing that holds it together.

I was completely crushed.

Only Boyle and Barbu knew“.

Boyle advised Marie to be strict with Carol, who technically could have been executed for desertion, arguing that if Carol was not punished in some way, then the monarchy would be discredited with the Romanian people.

Boyle realized that as the Romanian Army had executed a number of men for desertion during the war that to allow Carol to escape unpunished for doing the same thing that commoners were executed for would ruin the prestige of the monarchy.

Above: Prince Carol, 1918

Carol was banished to a remote Orthodox monastery located high up in the Carpathian mountains with instructions that he would be released only after he agreed to annul his marriage to the commoner Zambrino and publicly apologise for deserting his unit.

Marie visited the monastery to inform him that King Ferdinand was planning to exclude him from the succession unless he met their conditions.

When Marie could not convince Carol that she was serious with this threat, Boyle visited Carol at the monastery on her behalf and was more successful.

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Above: Bistrița Monastery, Neamț County, Romania

When Boyle returned to tell the Queen that Carol had agreed, she wrote:

“Boyle was as near tears as a man can be, it was a cruel and sickening victory.

Nando [her pet name for Ferdinand] and I both thanked Boyle with emotion”.

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Above: Carol II (1893 – 1953)

On 8 November 1918, Romania renounced the Treaty of Bucharest and declared war again on the Austrian Empire and Germany, thus technically making Romania one of the victorious allies. 

Through Romania was finally able to gain Transylvania, Marie confessed to Boyle that she was highly worried about the future, writing to him:

“The main dangers and difficulties are, it seems, the famine danger and a strong Bolshevik propaganda conducted by the Germans in the occupied territories, a ruthless propaganda because they carry with them whatever could be carried, and the empty stomach doesn’t reason.

The theory is:

If they fall, they want Romania to sink first, to be totally destroyed under all aspects; but we don’t want it destroyed, do we?

Greater Romania - Wikipedia

Marie was the driving force behind the promise issued by King Ferdinand that to reward his subjects for their wartime suffering, then postwar Romania would pursue land reform, breaking up the estates of the boyars (nobility) to provide land for their peasants and provide universal suffrage.

At the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 Boyle was instrumental in helping Romania to obtain a $25-million credit from the Canadian government.

He was awarded the special title of “Saviour of Romania“.

He remained a close friend of the Romanian Queen.

On the Queen’s behalf, Boyle organized millions of dollars of Canadian relief for Romanians, earning the title of hero.

Pins Romania-Canada | Friendship Pins Romania-XXX | Flags R | Crossed Flag  Pins Shop

He was decorated for his exploits by the governments of Russia, France, Britain and Romania.

Queen Marie, who was notably fond of him, made him the Duke of Jassy.

His relationship with the Queen remains something of a mystery.

Queen Marie, Joe Boyle and Princess Ileana at Bicaz

 Above: Marie, Queen of Rumania (left), Joe Boyle (centre) and Ileana, Princess of Rumania (right), summer 1918, Bicaz, Rumania

Some historians speculated they were lovers and point to a mysterious woman in black who is said to have brought flowers to his grave every year on the anniversary of his death in 1923.

Queen Marie died in 1938 and nobody appeared at his grave after that year, so it was always thought that she was the mystery woman.

Boyle died at ‘Wayside‘ in St James’s Road, Hampton Hill, on 14 April 1923.

His remains were buried in the churchyard of St. James on 17 April 1923.

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Above: St. James, Hampton Hill

Boyle’s remains were re-interred in his Canadian home town of Woodstock in 1983, in a full military funeral.

Joseph W. Boyle Memorial - Woodstock, ON - Grave of a Famous Person on  Waymarking.com

Above: Joe Boyle Monument, Woodstock

Ross Butler (1907–1995) was a farmer, photographer, songwriter, livestock judge, cattle and poultry breeder, pioneer of cattle artificial insemination, painter and sculptor of farm animals, as well as an author.

Ross Butler: 1907-1995 | Ross butler, Ross, Butler

Butler began his career as an artist in earnest in the 1920s with a few commissioned portraits and paintings of animals.

Notability came in 1939 when Butler was commissioned by the education and agriculture ministries to create a series of pictures of farm animals to be placed in schools across Canada.

The contract called for more than 500 “Standard Type” paintings of each breed of cattle, swine, horses, sheep, poultry and other Canadian livestock.

The Ross Butler Studio | Oxford county, Historical sites, Ross butler

Butler’s unusual commission was big news.

The story ran in newspapers around the world, including the National Enquirer.

Ross Butler, was known as “the world’s leading livestock artist“.

He created more than 500 works in his lifetime.

Ross Butler Studio Agricultural Art Gallery

His painting of the Springbank Snow Countess was the model for the Springbank Snow Countess monument located on Dundas Street East in Woodstock.

About — Ross Butler Gallery

Another of his sculptures was at the Canadian National Exhibition (CNE)(Toronto) in 1952.

It was a life-size butter sculpture of Queen Elizabeth II and her horse, Winston, to commemorate her coronation.

A photograph of Queen Elizabeth II in her eighty-ninth year

Above: Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II

Butler was a founding father of the Oxford Jersey Club, the first president and manager of the Oxford Museum, the founder of the Oxford Historical and Museum Society and the “Central Unit” – the first independent, all-breed artificial insemination facility for cattle in Canada.

He authored his autobiography, My Father’s Farm.

Journey to Perfection: The Agricultural Art of Ross Butler by Irene  Crawford-Siano

Florence Emily Carlyle (1864 – 1923) was a Canadian figure and portrait painter in the modernist style, known especially as a colourist.

Photo of Florence Carlyle.jpg

Her work is included in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada.

She had studios in London and Woodstock.

In 1897, she became the first woman to be elected an Associate of the Royal Canadian Academy.

In 1899, she established a studio in New York City.

In 1904, her oil painting The Tiff was selected to appear in the Canadian exhibition at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, where it won a silver medal.

Above: “The Tiff

The Montréal Gazette described this painting (now in the permanent collection of the Art Gallery of Ontario) as “a strong piece of work depicting a lover’s quarrel“, and praised its execution as “clear cut and decisive.”

The last twenty years of her life were spent in Crowborough, Sussex, England, where she and a friend, Julie Hastings, bought an English cottage they called “Sweet Haws“.

Carlyle died at Crowborough in the spring of 1923.

Most of her work is in the collection of the Woodstock Art Gallery.

Florence Carlyle | artnet

Elizabeth Wettlaufer was born and raised in Zorra Township, a rural community near Woodstock.

Who is alleged serial killer Elizabeth Tracey Mae Wettlaufer? - CityNews  Toronto

Growing up in a staunchly Baptist household, she went on to earn a bachelor’s degree in religious education counselling from London Baptist Bible College (renamed Heritage College & Seminary) after graduating from Huron Park Secondary School (Woodstock) in the mid-1980s.

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Wettlaufer then studied nursing at Conestoga College (Kitchener).

Conestoga College logo

In 2007, Wettlaufer was hired onto the staff at Caressant Care, a long-term care home in Woodstock.

She was initially regarded by co-workers to be a caring and professional individual.

However, throughout her tenure, Wettlaufer struggled with substance abuse and alcoholism.

She faced accusations of showing up to work drunk, and at one point was found passed out in the facility’s basement during the night shift.

Wettlaufer was suspended four times for “medication-related errors“, then was finally fired in March 2014 over a “serious” incident in which she gave the wrong medication to a patient.

After leaving Caressant Care, Wettlaufer had difficulty holding down a job.

Woodstock Retirement Home | Caressant Care

She was hired by the Meadow Park Care Center in London, but lost this job after checking herself into a drug rehab facility in Niagara.

She took various temp jobs at other care homes.

Meadow Park London | Jarlette Health Services

Wettlaufer admitted to a neighbor that she was fired from one of these jobs for stealing medication, and was fired from another job for making a medication error while high that nearly resulted in the death of a patient.

While she was a nurse at Caressant Care, Wettlaufer began injecting some of the patients with insulin.

In some cases, the amount was not enough to kill the patient.

She was charged with, and confessed to, aggravated assault or attempted murder for those cases.

Wettlaufer’s first assaults occurred sometime between 25 June and 31 December 2007.

She confessed that she injected sisters Clotilde Adriano (87) and Albina Demedeiros (88) with insulin.

While they later died, neither of their deaths was attributed to Wettlaufer.

She confessed to two counts of aggravated assault in these matters.

Amazon.com: Elizabeth Wettlaufer The Killer Nurse: A collection of True  Crime eBook: Dover, Pete: Kindle Store

Wettlaufer entered an in-patient drug rehabilitation program at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), a psychiatric hospital in Toronto, on 16 September 2016.

She confessed to staff about killing and attempting to kill her patients, and CAMH staff notified the College of Nurses of Ontario and the Toronto Police Service of her confession.

She then personally emailed the College of Nurses to resign as a registered nurse because she had “deliberately harmed patients in her care and was now being investigated by the police for same“, personally called an investigator from the College, and had CAMH staff fax a four-page handwritten confession.

Wettlaufer had confessed to killing patients several times prior to her confession at CAMH, including to a lawyer who advised her to keep it a secret and not report this to police. 

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.svg

After providing police with a two-hour-long confession, Wettlaufer was formally charged with the eight murders on 25 October.

After further investigation, she was also charged with four counts of attempted murder and two counts of aggravated assault on 13 January 2017.

She waived her right to a preliminary hearing and confessed to all charges in court on 1 June.

On 26 June, Wettlaufer was sentenced to eight concurrent life terms in prison, with no possibility of parole for 25 years.

In her confession, Wettlaufer admitted that she “knew the difference between right and wrong” but she was visited by “surges” she could not control.

She said:

God or the devil or whatever, wanted me to do it.”

After one murder, she felt “the surging.

And then I heard my own laughter afterwards, which was really, it was like a cackling from the pit of hell.

Pin on True Crime - Past

Wettlaufer told police she had tried to stop the murders and she had told friends, a former partner and her pastor about the killings, but no one took her seriously.

During the police interview she described the laughter as a feeling within her mid-chest (visually using her hands) and the feeling prompted her to overdose and subsequently kill.

Coming from her stomach region, the laughter was a feeling, not audible.

She never claimed to derive pleasure from it, always saying the feeling was horrible.

Toronto Police Service - Wikipedia

Wettlaufer was held at the Grand Valley Institution for Women in Kitchener.

In March 2018, she was transferred from Grand Valley to an unspecified secure facility in Montréal to receive medical treatment.

Inmate at Kitchener, Ont. prison tests positive for coronavirus |  Globalnews.ca

Woodstock Canada is not Woodstock America.

Still it is a town like any other.

It is a place of the best of times and the worst of times, of angels and monsters, saints and sinners, heroes and villains.

Such as it is, such as it ever will be.

Railway stations in Woodstock Ontario

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Readers Digest Explore Canada

Isolated incidents

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Tuesday 5 January 2021

This evening I am, once again, at home by myself, as my wife, Frau Dr. K is at the local hospital making sick children better.

Above: Landschlacht

I live in a town where I am friends with no one, at least an hour’s distance from my nearest friends in St. Gallen.

A view of St. Gallen

Above: St. Gallen

Meanwhile, my closest friends are oceans away in Canada and Australia.

The song Lemon Tree, by Fools Garden, plays without any need for YouTube or a sound system of any kind:

I’m sitting here in a boring room
It’s just another rainy Sunday afternoon
I’m wasting my time, I got nothing to do
I’m hanging around, I’m waiting for you
But nothing ever happens
And I wonder

I’m driving around in my car
I’m driving too fast, I’m driving too far
I’d like to change my point of view
I feel so lonely, I’m waiting for you
But nothing ever happens
And I wonder

I wonder how, I wonder why
Yesterday you told me ’bout the
Blue, blue sky
And all that I can see
Is just a yellow lemon tree
I’m turning my head up and down
I’m turning, turning, turning, turning
Turning around
And all that I can see
Is just another lemon tree

Sing dah
Dah-dah-dah-dam, dee-dab-dah
Dah-dah-dah-dam, dee-dab-dah
Dab-deedly dah

I’m sitting here, I miss the power
I’d like to go out, taking a shower
But there’s a heavy cloud inside my head
I feel so tired, put myself into bed
Well, nothing ever happens
And I wonder

Isolation is not good for me
Isolation, I don’t want to
Sit on a lemon tree
I’m steppin’ around in a desert of joy
Maybe anyhow I’ll get another toy
And everything will happen
And you wonder

I wonder how, I wonder why
Yesterday you told me ’bout the
Blue, blue sky
And all that I can see
Is just another yellow lemon tree
I’m turning my head up and down
I’m turning, turning, turning, turning
Turning around
And all that I can see
Is just a yellow lemon tree
And I wonder, wonder

I wonder how, I wonder why
Yesterday you told me ’bout the
Blue, blue sky
And all that I can see
And all that I can see
And all that I can see
Is just a yellow lemon tree

Lemon Tree (Fool's Garden song) coverart.jpg

To further the funk that I feel, Switzerland is in the midst of its second national lockdown which started just the week before Christmas.

Flag of Switzerland

Above: Flag of Switzerland

(Covid-19 arrived in Switzerland on 25 February 2020.

As of 1 January 2021, there are 452,296 confirmed cases, 317,600 recoveries, 7,082 deaths.)

COVID-19 Outbreak Cases in Switzerland by Canton.svg

Above: Corona virus (COVID-19) cases in Switzerland. The darker the region, the more cases therein.

Granted this second lockdown is not as extreme as our first lockdown (17 March – 3 May 2020) nor as restrictive as the regulations by our neighbours Austria and Germany, but still what activities that might give me incentive to go to St. Gallen (cinemas, bars, restaurants) are all denied to me at this time.

Flag of Austria

Above: Flag of Austria

(Covid-19 arrived in Austria on 8 February 2020.

As of 30 May 2020, there are 369,721 confirmed cases, 343,039 recoveries, 6,457 deaths.)

COVID-19 Austria cases per capita (last 14 days).svg

Above: Corona virus cases (Covid-19) in Austria. The darker the region, the more cases therein.

Flag of Germany

Above: Flag of Germany

(Covid-19 arrived in Germany on 27 January 2020.

As of 19 December 2020, there have been 1,719,737 confirmed casesm 1,328,200 recoveries, 33,071 deaths.)

COVID-19 Germany - Cases per capita.svg

Above. Corona virus cases (Covid-19) cases in Germany. The darker the region, the more cases therein.

Being 5 January, I am reminded of the most amazing reunion I had last year in Dorion-Vaudreuil with old high school classmates with Denise and Kenny Grills, Peter Nault and Linda Dawson, Ken Howard and Dickie Loo.

Image may contain: 8 people, including Adam Kerr and Ken Grills, people smiling, people sitting, drink and indoor

Above: “A bunch of the boys were whooping it up in the Malamute saloon

And only the evening after I was reunited with three other LRHS grads: Steve O’Brien, Nicky Barlow and Mark MacVicar in Lachute.

Image may contain: text that says 'SPECTRUM 1982 TOGETHER FOREVER FOR .FORNOW NOW'

Isolation is not good for me.

Ciro PL on Twitter: "Isolation is not good for me 🎶 Isolation I don't want  to sit on the lemon-tree🎶 I wonder how🎶I wonder why Yesterday you told me  'bout the blue

Above: Use the farce, Luke.

A vertical triband design (red, white, red) with a red maple leaf in the center.

Above: Flag of Canada

(Covid-19 arrived in Canada on 22 January 2020.

As of 12 December 2020, there are 611,424 confirmed cases, 517,884 recoveries, 16,074 deaths.)

COVID-19 Outbreak Cases in Canada (Pop Density).svg

Above: Corona virus cases in Canada (Covid-19). The darker the region, the more cases therein.

Being 5 January, I think of the cold of the Limmat River in Zürich.

Zürich.jpg

Above: Zürich

On this day in 1527 Felix Manz became the first casualty of the edict making adult baptism punishable by drowning and the first Swiss Anabaptist to be martyred at the hands of magisterial Protestants.

FelixManzImage.jpg

Above: Felix Manz

While Manz stated that he wished to bring together those who were willing to accept Christ, obey the Word, and follow in His footsteps, to unite with these by baptism, and to purchase the rest in their present conviction, Huldrych Zwingli (1484 – 1531) and the Zürich City Council accused Manz of obstinately refusing to recede from his error and caprice.

Ulrich-Zwingli-1.jpg

Above: Huldrych Zwingli

At 3 p.m., as Manz was led from the Wellenburg to a boat, he praised God and preached to the people.

A Reformed minister went along, seeking to silence him, and hoping to give him an opportunity to recant.

Manz’s brother and mother encouraged him to stand firm and suffer for Jesus’ sake.

He was taken by boat onto the River Limmat.

His hands were bound and pulled behind his knees and a pole was placed between them.

He was executed by drowning in Lake Zürich where it meets the Limmat.

His alleged last words were:

“Into thy hands, O God, I commend my spirit.”

His property was confiscated by government of Zürich.

He was buried in St. Jakobs Cemetery.

I have a hard time understanding both the convinction of Manz willing to die for his faith and the conviction of Zwingli and Zürich willing to kill for theirs.

Above: Memorial plaque for Manz

I think of how winter clothing can save lives.

On 5 January 1757, as the King Louis XV (1710 – 1774) of France was getting into his carriage in the courtyard of the Grand Trianon Versailles, a demented man, Robert-Francois Damiens (1715 – 1757), pushed through the King’s guards and attacked the King, stabbing him in the side with a small knife.

The King’s guards seized Damien.

The King ordered them to hold him but not harm him.

Above: Robert-Francois Damiens

The King walked up the steps to his rooms at the Trianon, where he found he was bleeding seriously.

He summoned his doctor and a priest, and then fainted.

Louis was saved from greater harm by the thickness of the winter clothing he was wearing. 

Louis XV by Maurice-Quentin de La Tour.jpg

Above: King Louis XV of France

File:Flag of France.svg

Above: Flag of France

(Covid-19 arrived in France on 24 January 2020.

As of 10 April 2020, there have been 2,643,239 confirmed cases, 195,174 recoveries, 64,921 deaths.)

COVID-19 outbreak France per capita deaths map.svg

Above: Corona virus deaths in France. The darker the area, the more deaths therein.

I think of how an ordinary day for myself was a terrible day for others:

  • French army officer Alfred Dreyfus was stripped of his rank today and sentenced to life imprisonment on Devil’s Island (one of the Salvation Islands off the coast of French Guiana). (1895)
Alfred Dreyfus (1859-1935).jpg

Above: Alfred Dreyfus (1859 – 1935)

  • Vladimir Lenin formed the Bolshevik Party at a Socialist conference in Prague. (1912)
Vladimir Lenin.jpg

Above: Vladimir Lenin (1870 – 1924)

  • The German Workers’ Party (Nazis) was formed in Munich. (1919)
Logo of the German Workers' Party

  • Amy Johnson, a 37-year-old pilot and the first woman to fly solo from London to Australia, disappears after bailing out of her plane over the River Thames, and is presumed dead. (1941)
Black and white portrait photograph taken around 1930 of Amy Johnson, wearing aviator attire; googles, leather cap, leather and wool flying jacket

Above: Amy Johnson (1903 – 1941)

  • The Sverdlovsk air disaster sees all 19 of those on board killed, including almost the entire national ice hockey team (VVS Moscow) of the Soviet Air Force – 11 players, as well as a team doctor and a masseur.
Lisunov Li-2 Soviet AF Monino 1994.jpg

  • The Tonghai earthquake shakes China. Between 10,000 and 15,000 people are known to have been killed and about another 26,000 are injured. (1970)
The 10 China`s Largest Earthquakes of the 20th Century | China Whisper

  • In the early hours of the morning, a car crashes into a group of German tourists in Luttach, Italy killing six people and injuring 11 others. The driver was reportedly drunk and is charged with murder. (2020)

Some 160 emergency workers were at the scene of the tragedy in Lutago in the Italian Alps.

So many reasons to feel depressed about this day of solitude.

Oh, to be in Harbin, China, equidistant from both the Russian and North Korean borders, to attend the largest ice and snow festival in the world!

Can’t.

The festival is probably cancelled and I am not certain whether I could fly there even if I wanted to because of either Swiss restrictions or Chinese restrictions.

Harbin Ice Festival.jpg

Flag of China

Above: Flag of China

(Covid-19 arrived in China on1 December 2019.

As of 15 November 2020, there have been 86,338 confirmed cases, 81,319 recoveries, 4,634 deaths.)

File:COVID-19 attack rate in Mainland China.svg

Above: Corona virus cases in China. The darker the region, the more cases therein.

Instead my thoughts turn to a place even more isolated than Landschlacht.

Off the west coast of northern Scotland is a group of islands called the Small Islands – the isles of Rùm, Eigg, Muck and Canna – to the south of better-known Isle of Skye.

Each of the Small Islands has a population of far less than 100 souls – by comparison, Landschlacht has 1,450.

Hebridesmap Small Isles.png

Eigg is without a doubt the friendliest of the Small Isles, with sandy beaches, a nice easy hill to climb and lots of peace and quiet.

Eigg measures just five miles by three, is mostly made up of a basalt plateau 1,000 feet above sea level and a great stump of columnar pitchstone lava (An Sgurr) rising out of the plateau another 290 feet.

An Sgurr

Eigg is by far the most vibrant, populous and welcoming of the Small Isles, with a real strong sense of community.

Each of the Small Isles is easily accessible by ferry in ordinary times.

These are not ordinary times.

Eilean Chathastail, lighthouse - geograph.org.uk - 916403.jpg

Years of social distancing have made Lucy Conway well prepared for the pandemic.

Her home on Eigg, in the Inner Hebrides, remains untouched by the corona virus, because its remoteness and the sea are natural harbours against infection.

We are very used to isolation, so there has been very little change for us,” Ms. Conway (58) explained.

Although some things are different now, our day-to-day approach to living is more or less the same.

Her sense of relative security is shared by much of the rural population of Britain, which encompasses about 6.4 million people, 165,000 of whom live further than 2 kilometres from a significant road, pharmacy or supermarket.

Winter weather can mean that the island’s residents are cut off from the mainland for weeks at a stretch.

Only accessible by ferry or helicopter, and off the national grid, the community has learnt to manage on its own.

Eigg generates its electricity from renewable sources, thus it has “resilience built-in”.

Panic buying has not troubled its one shop, which has managed to keep its shelves well-stocked and its customers satisfied.

For Ms. Conway, the routine has hardly changed.

Strolls on the beach with her husband, Eddie, and their Lakeland terrier Fiji have continued.

Her friends and neighbours still chip in to help them grow potatoes, leeks and herbs in their gardens.

She enjoys chats with about 15 islanders she passes daily on Eigg’s one road or meets in the store.

All at a safe distance, of course.

Tourism has been badly hit, but in terms of everything else it is kind of normal.

People are just getting on with life as usual,” Ms. Conway, who works in the island’s primary school, said.

There are no intensive care beds with ventilators on the island, and it is a long, long way to the nearest hospital, with any medical evacuations to the mainland dependent on the weather.

School has shut for the time being.

The ferry service, for essential re-supplies only, has been reduced to three times a week.

But there has been no recorded cases of corona virus infection.

During the lockdown, we have not been isolated from anything we were not already used to being isolated from.

All our support mechanisms are still there,” added Ms. Conway.

What preys on people’s minds most is what if the virus did come to Eigg.

Because if somebody gets a cold on Eigg, then everybody gets a cold on Eigg.

But now we are at the point where as far as we know the virus isn’t here.

So we are not being relaxed or anything – still social distancing and so on – but it does mean that we feel that we have got to this kind of position where we have shielded ourselves.”

Ben Thompson, a councillor who is one of the coordinators of the island’s response to the pandemic, said that every year the residents might be two or three weeks “without any food supply” when the weather turns and ferries are cancelled.

They are living a level of resilience that you or I are not in our daily lives,” he said.

But they do it all the time.

In some sense, they are better prepared for this crisis than most places in the UK in fact.

In April 2020 as Thompson scrambled to organize community groups as the crisis unfolded, he said it was Eigg and neighbouring island of Rùm that he was least worried about.

They are totally on the ball.

You would think it was a world-class NGO (non-governmental organization) that had gone into a disaster zone based on the documentation and resilience planning, ” he said.

Ms. Conway said the relentless weather in January and February prevents the island’s farmers, elderly and families from living their normal lives.

That was actually a lot more stressful for everyone.

Now, even though our choices have been limited, we are living relatively stree free – ignoring the fact that our businesses are all screwed, of course!

Eigg’s lockdown story is similar to that of the dozens of populated islands of the Western Isles, but it resonates with the lonelier parts of the mainland.

Some 19% of the UK is not served by primary, secondary or tertiary roads.

Britain ranks 14th in Europe in terms of rural accessibility, behind France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Portugal and the Netherlands.

Despite being potentially sheltered from the dangers of city contagion, the looming threat of Covid-19 is prompting sleepless nights for many rural dwellers.

It is feared that just one case of corona virus could cause catastrophe if it infiltrates their isolated bubbles.

In the Isle of Wight (an island to the south of the English mainland), islanders have expressed concerns that second home owners will move from contaminated city suburbs and bring infection with them.

David Stewart, a county councillor, said the few people that populate the area mean “social distancing is not a major problem“.

At a local level people have adapted fairly quickly to the lockdown restrictions in a way that those in a central London highrise block cannot,” he said.

The big fear is second homes.

We have a lot of second homes on the island.

People worry that somebody will get over across the ferries, and suddenly we will all be infected.

File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg

Above: Flag of Britain

(Covid-19 arrived in the UK on 31 January 2020.

As of 15 November 2020, there have been 2,488,780 confirmed cases, 73,512 deaths.)

File:Slides to accompany UK coronavirus press conference- 11 May 2020 - UK COVID Alert Levels.pdf

Let us compare sparsely populated Eigg with a country where one in every four Africans live:

Nigeria (orthographic projection).svg

For Nurudeen Olugbade, taking photographs of life in Orile-Iganmu, Lagos State, Nigeria, during the pandemic is a way to affirm that the disruption it has wrought on the neglected town does matter.

We are not really seen.

There is very little attention paid to us, but the struggle out here is real,” says Olugbade (28), who has documented the crisis on his phone.

At Orile-Iganmu, many are the afflictions of residents – The Sun Nigeria

In 2020, the strict measures to curb the spread of Covid-19 have changed the character of the town.

Ordinarily, Orile is a vibrant town, but football has waned on the streets lines with makeshift stores built out from weathered housing units.

Many of the businesses that are allowed to trade as the lockdown slowly eases are open for fewer hours, to fewer customers.

Orile-Iganmu, Lagos (The Way We Live)

Informal work, such as cleaning and making deliveries, usually serving more affluent parts of the city of Ikeja, have slowed.

For months in 2020, a powdered milk factory in Orile that employs hundreds of people has been shut.

Why Orile Iganmu Is Better - Orileblog

An alarming rise in armed robberies, cult killings and gang warfare has unsettled those in communities that are struggling during the pandemic, roaming the area in search of work during the day and too frightened to sleep at night.

Everybody is on their guard,” says Olugbade.

For weeks, a situation has been going on in the area.

One million boys – they are an infamous gang that is terrorising places and looting.

They have not come yet, but people are really afraid.

Orile-Iganmu police station on fire by suspected hoodlums - TNT Nigeria

Olugbade works for a small business delivering grilled chicken from Orile, mainly to middle class customers on Lagos Island.

Business quickly dried up under lockdown.

Most customers aren’t calling for food much, because they don’t want you bringing corona virus to them.

They are afraid of being infected, but we are afraid of losing our jobs.

orile iganmu Archives – The Sun Nigeria

Taking and editing pictures absorbs the hours between rare deliveries, he says.

For Olugbade, taking pictures during a pandemic is not too difficult.

He wears a mask and maintains a distance.

A phone is less provocative than a camera, he says.

But not everyone he wants to take photos of permit him to do so.

Most people find taking pictures intrusive and end up declining, which is understandable.

Not everyone wants to be documented,” he says.

Photo: Stranded commuters trek in Lagos - Latest Nigeria News, Nigerian  Newspapers, Politics

Scattered among the trampled plastic in his slum are often the clear sachets used for drinking water, commonly called “pure water“.

He used shoelaces to turn some of these sachets into face masks.

For the photo series, one evening his neighbours’ children wore the plastic masks that draw against the mouth when they breathe.

The children stood against a wall, facing his smartphone squarely and holding up lined paper with two-line statements:

No face masks“, “no sanitizer“, “no food“.

UNAIDS and the wider United Nations system supporting the COVID-19 response  in Nigeria | UNAIDS

Olugbade says his intention was to highlight the inequalities exacerbated by the lockdown measures.

There is a rule that says you have to wear face masks, but people feel they are not readily available here,” he says.

I wanted to speak to that because the government has failed people.

They aren’t making any provisions whatsoever.

Nigeria confirms 97 new coronavirus cases

A face mask costs 100 naira ($0.26), which many people cannot afford during the lockdown.

Sanitizers, gloves and soap have all become more expensive as demand has gone up.

Those residents who can afford to mostly stay in their homes, following the government measures intended to inhibit the spread of the virus.

For others, however, the measures are unfeasible and the protections too expensive, fuelling apathy towards the outbreak.

Nigeria naira.jpg

In Orile, constant exposure to dangerous environmental conditions also compounds the lack of urgency for many residents.

There are so many chemicals around.

You inhale so many things in the environment.

The pollution is bad,” Olugbade says.

Nigerians demand air quality data over pollution fears

The borehole that we get water from is contaminated.

It is surrounded by slums.

So when you get the water you just put lime in it and use it.

I think many people find it hard to really take this virus as being more serious than what they experience every day.”

Water Pollution In Lagos - Friends Of The Environment Nigeria

Some people see the masks less as a precaution against the virus and more of a license to be able to leave the area without being stopped by police.

Someone close by sells them, but people try on different masks, handling them then buy it and wear it,” he laughs.

Really, I feel it is just a passport.

COVID-19 is Threatening Food Security in Nigeria | Voice of America -  English

Half of the 4,900 confirmed Covid-19 infections in Nigeria (15 May 2020) are in Lagos.

The rate of new cases across the country is acclerating, doubling in days.

But his sense is that in the minds of many local people, the virus itself is less of a risk than its effects on daily life.

People are not scared of corona virus, the thing people are scared of is hunger.

Nigeria im Kampf gegen das Coronavirus

When lockdown measures were brought in, the Lagos state government announced that food packages would be distributed to the poorer areas.

But such help has been limited and irregular, fuelling resentment.

Last week a couple of people were going house to house to count people because the local government wanted to give provisions.

Later there were rumours that they gave the food to a few people and split it among themselves.

We didn’t see any of the help they promised.

COVID-19: Fighting conflict and coronavirus in Nigeria's Borno | ICRC

Flag of Nigeria

Above: Flag of Nigeria

(Covid-19 arrived in Nigeria on 27 February 2020.

As of 5 January 2021, there have been 91,351 confirmed cases, 75,699 recoveries, 1,318 deaths.)

Nigeria

Above: Corona virus cases in Nigeria (Covid-19). The darker the region, the more cases therein.

(Compare these stats with those of the US:

Covid-19 arrived in the United States on 13 January 2020.

As of 4 January 2021, there have been 20,558,489 confirmed cases, 9,505,958 recoveries, 350,664 deaths.)

Flag of the United States

(Globally, there have been 86,195,556 confirmed cases, 1,863,556 deaths.)

The Blue Marble photograph of Earth, taken by the Apollo 17 mission. The Arabian peninsula, Africa and Madagascar lie in the upper half of the disc, whereas Antarctica is at the bottom.

Let me be blunt.

My situation here sucks.

But by comparison with other places, the situation could be much worse.

Life is not as perfect as I wish it were, but I try to be grateful for what it is.

130 Gratitude Quotes That Will Bring You Happiness

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Emmanuel Akinwotu, “People are more scared of hunger“, The Guardian, 15 May 2020 / Charlie Parker, “Self-isolation? We know all about it, say remote corners of Britain“, The Times, 3 May 2020 / Rough Guide to Scotland / Lonely Planet Africa On a Shoestring

Canada Slim and the Sound of Silence

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Monday 17 August 2020

Every day is a rare and precious thing and time and health are dwindling resources that too many people take for granted.

I try to be consequent and record each and every day, either in my daily journal or as part of my Facebook posts, but even then the memory is still the determining factor as to what ends up in my blogs and what never sees the light of day.

 

 

 

 

On 13 July and 11 August 2020 I began telling of my adventures and discoveries getting to and travelling about the Flims region in Canton Graubünden.

(Please see Canada Slim and the Love of Landscape and Canada Slim and the Castle of Happiness of this blog.)

 

 

Flims Dorf under "Flimserstein"

Above: Flims Dorf

 

 

With all that has happened in my life since the 2020 Swiss Lockdown ended – the aforementioned Flims trip, travels and hiking in Canton Valais, the departure from Starbucks, the search for new employment, and the neverending cycle of events that happen around me and around the world, sometimes events slip from my memory that deserve more attention.

I am referring to walks I have done, sometimes solo, sometimes accompanied by my wife, within the region referred to as the Bodensee Süd (southern Lake Constance), which includes Thurgau Canton (where I live), St. Gallen Canton (where I work), Appenzellerland (next door to St. Gallen Canton and the Austrian State of Vorarlberg (bordering on Cantons St. Gallen and Graubünden, the Principality of Liechtenstein and the German States of Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria).

 

 

Bergverlag Rother – Bodensee Süd

 

 

Somehow a walk I accomplished prior to 28 May 2020, though only day trips, slipped my memory.

I believe that this two walk – done on 24 May  – is worth recording here as it offers a glimpse of what life is like here in Switzerland.

 

 

Flag of Switzerland

 

 

Sunday 24 May 2020, Diepoldsau, Canton St. Gallen

The Rhine (Latin: Rhenus, Romansh: Rein, German: Rhein, French: Rhin, Italian: Reno, Dutch: Rijn, Alemannic German: Rhi(n) including Alsatian/Low Alemannic German) is one of the major European rivers, which has its sources in Switzerland and flows in a mostly northerly direction through Germany and the Netherlands, emptying into the North Sea.

The river begins in the Swiss canton of Graubünden in the southeastern Swiss Alps, forms part of the Swiss-Liechtenstein, Swiss-Austrian, Swiss-German and then the Franco-German border, then flows through the German Rhineland and the Netherlands and eventually empties into the North Sea.

It is the second-longest river in Central and Western Europe (after the Danube), at about 1,230 km (760 mi), with an average discharge of about 2,900 m3/s (100,000 cu ft/s).

The Rhine and the Danube formed most of the northern inland frontier of the Roman Empire and, since those days, the Rhine has been a vital and navigable waterway carrying trade and goods deep inland.

Its importance as a waterway in the Holy Roman Empire is supported by the many castles and fortifications built along it.

In the modern era, it has become a symbol of German nationalism.

Among the largest and most important cities on the Rhine are Cologne (Köln), Düsseldorf, Rotterdam, Strasbourg and Basel.

 

 

Flusssystemkarte Rhein 04.jpg

 

 

The mouth of the Rhine into Lake Constance forms an inland delta.

The delta is delimited in the west by the Alter Rhein (“Old Rhine“) and in the east by a modern canalized section.

Most of the delta is a nature reserve and bird sanctuary.

It includes the Austrian towns of Gaißau, Höchst and Fußach.

The natural Rhine originally branched into at least two arms and formed small islands by precipitating sediments.

 

 

 

In the local Alemannic dialect, the singular is pronounced “Isel” and this is also the local pronunciation of Esel (“donkey“).

Many local fields have an official name containing this element.

 

 

Donkey in Clovelly, North Devon, England.jpg

 

 

A regulation of the Rhine was called for, with an upper canal near Diepoldsau and a lower canal at Fußach, in order to counteract the constant flooding and strong sedimentation in the western Rhine Delta.

 

 

 

 

The Dornbirner Ach had to be diverted, too, and it now flows parallel to the canalized Rhine into the lake.

Its water has a darker color than the Rhine.

The latter’s lighter suspended load comes from higher up the mountains.

It is expected that the continuous input of sediment into the lake will silt up the lake.

 

 

Dornbirn wikicon 31.08.2012 14-24-27.jpg

 

 

This has already happened to the former Lake Tuggenersee.

The cut-off Old Rhine at first formed a swamp landscape.

Later an artificial ditch of about two km was dug.

It was made navigable to the Swiss town of Rheineck.

 

 

Alter Rhein.png

 

 

The Wahlkreis Rheintal (English: Rhine Valley) is a constituency (Wahlkreis) of the canton of St. Gallen, Switzerland, formed under the new constitution of the Canton on 10 June 2001.

It consists largely of the former districts of Oberrheintal (Upper Rhine Valley) and Unterrheintal (Lower Rhine Valley).

The Wahlrkreis is comprised of 13 municipalities, of which the focus of this post, Diepoldsau is one of them.

 

 

Karte von Wahlkreis Rheintal

 

 

While today’s Rhine River purposefully flows into Lake Constance in its straightened bed, the Old Rhine is one of its still waters.

The still original arms of the Old Rhine, separated from the New Rhine due to flooding a century ago, are characterized by a specific flora and fauna.

Apart from a short start and an abrupt end, the swift flatland circuit we followed is formed by both the old and new banks of the River.

 

 

Above: Painting by Max Bach (1841-1914) of the view of Rheineck and the former mouth of the Rhine into Lake Constance

 

 

It is a 41-minute / 51-kilometre car journey from Landschlacht to Diepoldsau via Highways 13 and 1.1, but in some ways this mere distance seems greater.

 

 

Above: Landschlacht, Canton Thurgau

 

 

It was on this day on this three-hour / 12-kilometre walk that I once again considered aspects of Switzerland that unsettle me.

 

 

Diepoldsau 9 Schrägseilbrücke Ortstafel.jpg

 

 

This is a nation wherein I reside, but it is a nation which I do not believe that I will ever embrace as beloved.

 

 

Coat of arms of Switzerland

 

 

It is a land that claims to be the best democracy in terms of its practices – such as frequent referendums and in some cantons public direct voting in the market squares – and yet all Swiss men are required to serve the nation in a military or civil service capacity for several weeks a year until such age they are no longer considered useful.

 

 

 

 

This is a land that prides itself on its humanitarianism – with noteworthy institutions like the European branch of the United Nations and the International Red Cross – and yet this is a land where children were sold for their labour….

 

 

Above: Headquarters of the International Red Cross, Geneva

 

 

(The Schwabenkinder of the 19th century – peasant children from poor families in the Alps of Austria and Switzerland who went to find work on farms in Upper Swabia and the Swabian Jura.

Usually they were sent by their parents to become seasonal workers.

They were taken in spring and brought to the child markets in Germany, mainly in Upper Swabia, where they would be purchased or “rented” by farmers for the season.

It was not uncommon for five and six-year-old children to be taken.)

 

 

 

 

….. and refugees from the Nazi Holocaust were denied entry,

 

 

Selection on the ramp at Auschwitz-Birkenau, 1944 (Auschwitz Album) 1a.jpg

 

 

This is a land where immense profits were made from the manufacture of arms in wars they refused to enter, where secret bank accounts hid the ill-gotten gains of corrupt depositors.

 

 

Swiss Banks Name Holders of Dormant Accounts Worth $45 Million - WSJ

 

 

This is a land eager to show that it does not discriminate and, in fairness, per capita Switzerland does admit many more foreigners into its territory than many other nations have, but the ability for the foreigner to rise in society is no easier in Switzerland than anywhere else.

 

 

Above: Poster against illegal Muslim immigration

 

 

I have witnessed sexual discrimination, racial discrimination and age discrimination, but like many democratic nations the discrimination is well-cloaked in terminology and legalese to justify the discriminatory activities.

 

 

 

 

Let me be clear on a few points:

 

I am not suggesting that there is a single nation on the planet that has not, at some time in its history, blood on its hands.

 

 

"The Blue Marble" photograph of Earth, taken by the Apollo 17 mission. The Arabian peninsula, Africa and Madagascar lie in the upper half of the disc, whereas Antarctica is at the bottom.

 

 

Nor am I suggesting that the entire population of a nation be judged on the actions of a few.

 

 

Flag of United Nations Arabic: منظمة الأمم المتحدة‎ Chinese: 联合国 French: Organisation des Nations unies Russian: Организация Объединённых Наций Spanish: Organización de las Naciones Unidas

 

 

All I am saying is we should not embrace our nationalism without sober reflection of all that was done, both positive and negative, in the name of that nation.

 

 

 

 

The cries of our victims should not be drowned beneath national anthems and the drumbeat of progress.

 

 

Hear The Most Popular 7 Seconds of Drumming Ever Recorded | Mental ...

 

 

As Marcus Aurelius wrote:

A man does not sin by commission (doing things he should not have done) only, but often by omission (not doing things he should have done).”

 

 

Marble bust of Marcus Aurelius

Above: Marble bust of Marcus Aurelius (AD 121 – 180)

 

 

Switzerland may not have had a war since the days of Napoleon, but its actions (or lack of actions) despite this is how the nation should be judged.

 

 

As a resident foreigner, I have often felt that there has always been a whiff of hypocracy in the rarified Swiss air, a pretense of being purer than it is, much like a whore pretending to be a virgin.

Every once in a while, I am reminded of the double standard, smoke and mirrors, layers beneath the image by which the Swiss would like to be seen.

 

 

 

 

As a neutral state bordering Germany, Switzerland was easy to reach for refugees from the Nazis.

 

 

Above: German-Swiss border

 

 

Switzerland’s refugee laws, especially with respect to Jews fleeing Germany, were strict and have caused controversy since the end of World War II.

From 1933 until 1944 asylum for refugees could only be granted to those who were under personal threat owing to their political activities only.

It did not include those who were under threat due to race, religion or ethnicity.

On the basis of this definition, Switzerland granted asylum to only 644 people between 1933 and 1945.

Of these, 252 cases were admitted during the war.

All other refugees were admitted by the individual cantons and were granted different permits, including a “tolerance permit” that allowed them to live in the canton but not to work.

Over the course of the war, Switzerland interned 300,000 refugees.

Of these, 104,000 were foreign troops interned according to the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers outlined in the Hague Conventions.

 

 

Above: The Peace Palace, The Hague, The Netherlands

 

 

The rest were foreign civilians and were either interned or granted tolerance or residence permits by the cantonal authorities.

Refugees were not allowed to hold jobs.

Of the refugees, 60,000 were civilians escaping persecution by the Nazis.

Of these 60,000, 27,000 were Jews.

Between 10,000 and 24,000 Jewish civilian refugees were refused entry.

These refugees were refused entry on the asserted claim of dwindling supplies.

Of those refused entry, a Swiss government representative said:

“Our little lifeboat is full”.

 

 

Above: Eduard von Steiger (1881 – 1962), Swiss Minister of Justice and the Police, who coined the lifeboat phrase

 

 

 

At the beginning of the war, Switzerland had a Jewish population of between 18,000 and 28,000 and a total population of about four million.

By the end of the war, there were over 115,000 refuge-seeking people of all categories in Switzerland, representing the maximum number of refugees at any one time.

 

 

The boat is full': 75 years later - SWI swissinfo.ch

 

 

In August 1938, Switzerland closed its borders to Jewish refugees who tried to evade the Nazi regime.

Migration of Jewish people across the green border to Switzerland was declared by the Swiss government to be illegal and refugees were sent back to Austria and Germany.

Hundreds of people without a valid visa tried to cross the border to be safe and secure in Switzerland from the Holocaust, many of them crossing the border from Austria to Canton St. Gallen.

These “illegal migrations” and the background of the border crossings and its clandestine support by Swiss officials and citizens, got the attention of the Swiss immigration police.

 

 

Swiss Border Guard - Wikipedia

 

 

Diepoldsau (pop: 6,471+) – the start and end points of our circular walk –  was first mentioned in 891.

In 1868, a disastrous fire struck Diepoldsau:

141 people lost their homes as 23 houses burned to the ground.

Three years later, a major flood struck the town.

Another flood of the Rhine followed in 1888 when the Diepoldsau Dam broke.

Another dam broke a year later, followed by a famine due to all the destroyed crops.

 

 

 

 

An international treaty between the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Switzerland on the regulation of the Rhine was decided in 1892.

Between 1910 and 1912 work began on the Diepoldsau Rhine.

The First World War largely hindered the continuation of work on the river.

During the Great War, a large number of residents made a lot of money smuggling thread.

 

 

 

 

On 18 April 1923, the Rhine was diverted to its new bed,

In 1932, the municipality created the first groundwater supply with a pumping system and a pipeline network of 14 kilometres.

 

 

Alter Rhein/Diepoldsau | TOURENSPUREN

 

 

But Diepoldsau’s claim to fame was that it was the crossing point for Jews escaping Nazi Germany (and German-annexed Austria) into Canton St. Gallen.

Thousands of Jews were saved here, despite the general Swiss policy of severely restricting Jewish escape from their Nazi persecutors.

In Diepoldsau, a refugee camp for up to 300 people was built in June 1938 in an old empty ship embroidery factory, maintained by the Swiss Red Cross and financed by the Jewish community of St. Gallen.

 

 

Switzerland – Évian Conference – Online-Exhibition

 

 

The Swiss federal government did not participate in the funding.

The inmates were subject to strict camp regulations and were not allowed to work.

They were prohibited from contacting the local population, but this rule was mostly not adhered to.

 

 

The police commander who saved hundreds of Jews | House of Switzerland

 

 

Swiss immigration police senior official Heinrich Rothmund ordered police inspector Robert Frei, a ruthless, loyal and authoritarian official, to investigate Canton St. Gallen.

Jewish refugees appeared to be supported by parts of the local population, with the approval of the Canton police commandant Paul Grüninger.

Frei’s investigation confirmed the suspicion that Grüninger allowed Jewish refugees to enter Switzerland without a valid visa.

Grüninger falsified documents and personally helped refugees to illegally cross the border.

 

 

The police commander who saved hundreds of Jews | House of Switzerland

 

 

Grüninger confessed to Frei, but he claimed that he was not acting against the law or against the state security of Switzerland.

His motives were based on pure humanity.

Frei was overawed by Grüninger’s integrity, intransigence and personal views and came to doubt the legality of his investigations.

Nonetheless Grüninger was dismissed from the police, convicted of official misconduct and heavily fined.

Grüninger received no pension and died in poverty.

 

 

Above: Paul Grüninger (1891 – 1972)

 

 

After his death, Grüninger’s reputation was brought back partially in the public memory by some publications beginning in 1984.

Steps to rehabilitate his reputation were set in motion.

The first attempt to restore Grüninger’s honour was rejected by the Swiss Council.

Only as late as 1995 did the Swiss federal government finally annul Grüninger’s conviction.

The district court of St. Gallen revoked the judgment against him and cleared him of all charges.

Three years later, the cantonal government paid compensation to Grüninger’s descendants.

 

 

Coat of arms of Kanton St. Gallen

Above: Coat of arms of Canton St. Gallen

 

 

In 1999, the Bergier Commission’s report rehabilitated Grüninger as well as the surviving people who had been convicted for their assistance to refugees – a mere 137 persons out of a wartime population of five million (today, over eight million).

 

 

Le déviationnisme coupable de la commission Bergier - Les Observateurs

 

 

The Bergier commission in Bern was formed by the Swiss government on 12 December 1996.

It is also known as the ICE (Independent Commission of Experts).

Founded in a decade when Switzerland had come under recurring criticism for its behaviour during World War II, particularly with respect to its relations with the Nazi government in Germany, the commission was established by the Swiss Parliament and headed by Jean-François Bergier, an economic historian.

Made up of Polish, American, Israeli and Swiss historians, the Commission’s mandate was to investigate the volume and fate of assets moved to Switzerland before, during, and immediately after the Second World War.

The investigation was to be made from a historical and legal point of view, with a particular emphasis on the links between the Nazi regime and Swiss banks.

The mandate covers almost every type of asset, including gold, currency and cultural assets.

The content of the research program was broadened by the government to include economic relations, arms production, “Aryanisation measures”, the monetary system, and refugee policy.

 

 

Flag of the NSDAP (1920–1945).svg

 

 

Since the 19th century, Switzerland had a positive humanitarian image based upon the tradition of granting asylum, providing good offices, humanitarian aid, particularly through the work of the Geneva-based International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

However, after the First World War, Switzerland was not immune to xenophobic and anti-semitic sentiments that were spreading through Europe.

As in other Western countries in the 1930s, Switzerland, increasingly applied restrictions on the admission of foreigners in the name of national security.

Switzerland, apparently on its own initiative began to openly apply racist selection criteria according to the Nazi definition.

In 1938, even before the war broke out, the Swiss Government requested the Nazi authorities to stamp all passports of German Jews with a “J” as the Swiss did not recognize the right to asylum of those fleeing racial persecution.

 

 

German J stamped Passport for the East - Our Passports

 

 

With the increasing persecution of Jews by the Nazi regime, Swiss restrictions were set apart from other restrictive policies of the Allies due to its geographical location:

It was the easiest country on the continent for refugees to reach.

 

 

 

 

Thousands of refugees were sent back even though authorities knew that they were likely sending them to their deaths.

 

 

Part 1: Walking in the darkness, tripping over the truth | Words ...

 

 

The ICE concluded:

Switzerland, and in particular its political leaders, failed when it came to generously offering protection to persecuted Jews.

This is all the more serious in view of the fact that the authorities, who were quite aware of the possible consequences of their decision, not only closed the borders in August 1942, but continued to apply this restrictive policy for over a year.

By adopting numerous measures making it more difficult for refugees to reach safety, and by handing over the refugees caught directly to their persecutors, the Swiss authorities were instrumental in helping the Nazi regime to attain its goals.

 

 

Escape | Jüdisches Museum Hohenems

 

 

Refugee figures are hard to come by.

However the Commission concluded that during the Second World War Switzerland offered refuge from Nazi persecution to some 60,000 refugees for varying periods of time, a little under 50% of whom were Jewish.

The commission carefully explained the difficulty of estimating the number of refugees, most of whom were probably Jewish, turned away.

In a preliminary report for the Commission, an estimate of 24,000 “documented rejections” was published.

However, in the final report, perhaps having taken into account criticism of the earlier figures, the commission was more cautious, indicating that it must be assumed that “Switzerland turned back or deported over 20,000 refugees during the Second World War.

Specifically, they reported that during the period from 1 January 1942, after the borders were closed, to 31 December 1942, 3,507 refugees were turned back.

In August 2001 when the Commission issued a final conclusion, with respect to refugee policy, stating that, “measured against its previous stand in terms of humanitarian aid and asylum where its refugee policy was concerned, neutral Switzerland not only failed to live up to its own standards, but also violated fundamental humanitarian principles.”

 

 

Flight and Expulsion of the Jews from Austria – Évian Conference ...

 

 

The initial reaction to Nazi policy of discriminating against Jews was mixed with some of the companies complying readily and even anticipating laws to come, while others held out and resisted discriminating as long as they could.

However, the Commission found that the practice of certifying the Aryan origin of its staff was widespread among owners and senior managers of Swiss companies in Nazi-occupied territory.

Even before 1938, the Swiss Federal Political Department had suggested the applying of German law concerning race to Swiss companies.

The commission concluded that this “clearly shows that the FPD, either completely misjudged the legal, political and ethical implications of doing so, or ignored any misgivings they might have had for the sake of commercial interests.

After 1938, it became impossible for Swiss companies operating in Nazi controlled areas to avoid applying aryanization policy if they were to continue to operate.

The commission concluded, “that Swiss firms played an active role in the ‘Aryanisation’ process.

Not only were their head offices in Switzerland aware of what was happening – often because their subsidiaries within Nazi-controlled territory were involved in the acquisition of Jewish businesses – but they approved of or even encouraged the process.”

 

 

JDC in the 1930s | JDC Archives

 

 

The commission also addressed the issue of the use of slave and forced labor in Swiss-owned firms and concluded: “that the figure quoted in the media – a total of over 11,000 forced labourers and prisoners of war employed in Swiss subsidiary companies throughout the Reich – is likely to be on the low side.”

 

The commission examined the role of the Swiss diplomatic service in protecting Swiss-owned property held in the Reich and concluded that a double standard was applied: whereas international law was strictly applied vis-a-vis Swiss property in the Soviet Union, Swiss authorities, “increasingly favoured the so-called theory of equal treatment, i.e., that if Germany was discriminating against its own Jewish citizens it was hardly possible to legally contest its equally harsh treatment of foreign Jews living in Germany.

 

 

CHF coins.jpg

 

 

German race laws were implicitly endorsed by the Swiss government

  • In 1938 the Swiss asked the German government to stamp a J in the passports of all German Jews in order that they could be treated differently from other German passport holders.
  • In 1942 the Swiss officials closed their borders and refused to admit Jewish children among children brought to Switzerland for holidays.
  • Anti-semitic attitudes held by Swiss authorities contributed to such decisions.
  • In 1941 when the Nazi government stripped German Jews of their citizenship, the Swiss authorities applied the law to German Jews living in Switzerland by declaring them stateless; when in February 1945 Swiss authorities blocked German Bank accounts held in Switzerland they declared that the German Jews were no longer stateless, but were once again German and blocked their Swiss bank accounts as well.

 

While it is true that Swiss offered humanitarian assistance to refugees in Switzerland and others in distress abroad, the Swiss government did not use its unique geographical and historical positions to offer protection to those persecuted by the Nazi state, rather they progressively closed their borders and returned refugees to Nazi authorities, driving many people to certain death.

 

 

Swiss Act to Check Refugee Influx; Threaten to Return New Emigres ...

 

 

Consistent with historical business ties and Swiss neutrality, Swiss firms continued and often increased their relationship with the economies in Nazi occupied Europe.

However, in a number of cases Swiss businessmen went out of their way to conform to the German political climate to the extent of removing Jewish employees in their factories and offices in Germany and even sometimes in Switzerland.

Swiss firms also neglected the interests, particularly in the banking and insurance sectors of clients who were persecuted by the Nazis.

Some Swiss firms in adapting to the restructured German economy found themselves employing forced labour and in some cases labour from concentration camps.

Even though statistics are hard to come by, it is clear that Nazi-plundered gold flowed into Switzerland with the knowledge of the highest authorities in spite of promises that were made to the Allies to forbid such trade.

 

 

Nazi Reichsbank Gold Bars

 

 

The Commission concluded that the dual responsibilities of a democratic state to its own people and to the international community were not met during the period examined, and were often ignored during the fifty year post-war period.

After the war, when victims of the Holocaust or relatives of victims tried to access bank accounts that had been dormant during the war, Swiss banking authorities hid behind an interpretation of banking secrecy laws to block access and restitution.

Such behavior was deemed to have been determined by institutional self-interest rather than the interests of the victims of the Nazi state who had transferred their assets to Switzerland for safekeeping.

 

 

Bundesarchiv Bild 183-N0827-318, KZ Auschwitz, Ankunft ungarischer Juden.jpg

 

 

 

Grüninger was recognized as one of the Righteous Among the Nations by the Yad Vashem Holocaust Foundation in 1971.

In other words, this recognition, and subsequent publications a decade later, was needed before the Swiss government finally felt the compulsion to exonerate Grüninger.

 

 

Righteous Among the Nations medal simplified.svg

 

Above: The Righteous Among the Nations medal

 

 

A street located in the northern Jerusalem neighbourhood of Pisgat Ze’ev, a stadium in Brühl (St. Gallen), the Rhine bridge between Diepoldsau (Switzerland) and Hohenems (Austria), and a path in Oerlikon (Zürich) are named after Paul Grüninger.

 

 

Paul Grüninger in Israel geehrt - SWI swissinfo.ch

Above: Paul Grüninger Street, Jerusalem

 

 

Paul-Grüninger-Stadion - Stadion in St. Gallen

Above: Paul Grüninger Stadium, Brühl (St. Gallen)

 

 

RHE246 Paul Grüninger Bridge over the Alter Rhein River, D… | Flickr

Above: Paul Grüninger Bridge

 

 

File:Oerlikon - Paul Grüninger-Weg 2015-06-14 16-10-36.JPG

Above: Paul Grüninger Weg, Oerlikon

 

 

Which may be comforting to Grüninger’s descendants and ease the guilty conscience of the Swiss government, but is no consolation for the dead.

 

 

Paul Grueninger Stiftung _Grab

Above: Final resting place of Paul and Alice Grüninger, Au, Canton St. Gallen

 

 

My wife and I arrived in Diepoldsau, found a place to park in the city centre near the bus stop Diepoldsau Dorf (near the post office), and walked in the direction of Heerbrugg, following signage marked “Rhein Rundweg” (Rhine Circle Path) to lead us to the Rhine bridge leading to the Swiss town of Widnau.

Our path was no so much a circle as it was in the form of an inverted letter “C” or a dented “D“.

A trail to a dam that evolved into a farm path led us north near the river bank.

 

 

Wanderpfad auf der Landesgrenze mitten im Alten Rhein | St.Galler ...

 

 

The gently rolling Appenzeller foothills rose to our left, the rugged Bregenzerwald mountains to our right, above this strikingly flat and resistant manmade Diepoldsau peninsula created by the old and new Rhine rivers.

Every 250 metres beside the concrete path stood a “museum hut” – a little wooden cabin, not much larger than an outhouse or portable potty – with three small windows allowing the voyeur to see souvenirs of the past.

 

 

Natur- und Erholungsparadies Alter Rhein

 

 

At the state border to Vorarlberg, the circular route turned to the southeast at the Unter Spitz (410 metres above sea level), the northern apex of the path.

We then leisurely strolled along the long-drawn out natural landscape protected area known as the Alterrhein (old Rhine), an important recreational spot, towards the defiant Rätikonberge (Rätikon mountains) and the Alvier elevation on the Swiss side.

Again and again we directed our curious gaze through the trees to contemplate the atmospheric tranquillity of the surface of the water.

 

 

Bilder und Texte zu meinen Wanderungen mit Hund: Rundwanderung in ...

 

 

From the Schmitterbrücke Zollamt (Schmitter Bridge Customs Office)(413 metres above sea level), the path runs through a wonderfully soothing strip of riparian forest, which is replaced by a Vitaparcours (a fitness trail).

 

 

 

 

At the Diepoldsau Lido (an outdoor swimming pool facility)(410 metres above sea level) we had to switch to a parellel route.

 

 

Luzern – Lido | Museum für Gestaltung eGuide

 

 

After crossing Hohenems Road, that bisects the D-shaped Diepoldsau peninsula and leads to the Austrian city of Hohenems, our narrow circular trail followed the bank of the Old Rhine for a long time.

From the water supply dam (411 metres above sea level) with a beautiful view of the Hoher Kasten (1,791 m / 5,876 ft), a mountain in nearby Appenzell, an agricultural path, lined with birches, led us alongside the dam through the Isenriet (a marsh) back to the town of Diepoldsau.

 

 

Rundweg Alter Rhein • Wanderung » outdooractive.com

 

 

I found myself thinking about events in history that took place on this day (24 May) and I am reminded that on this day in 1981 Ecuadorian President Jaime Roldós Aguilera died in an aviation accident while travelling from Quito to Zapotillo, minutes after he had given his most famous speech regarding the anniversary of the Battle of Pichincha (24 May 1822) in a short war against Peru.

 

 

Roldos aguilera.png

Above: Jaime Roldós Aguilera (1940 – 1981)

 

 

Roldós is best known for his firm stance on human rights.

He reduced the workweek to 42 hours, doubled the minimum wage and proposed the signing of a Charter of Conduct with Columbia, Peru and Venezuela in which the principles of universal justice and human rights were reaffirmed, signaling protection of human rights as a more important principle than non-intervention.

 

 

 

 

I won’t get into the suspicious nature of the crash (wherein even a team of Zürich Police were brought to Ecuador to conduct an investigation), but rather I would like to share with you the essence of his last speech  –  at Atahulpa Stadium in front of a crowd of thousands  –  in an attempt to show you how I think nationalism should be practised.

 

 

Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa (15665410999).jpg

Above: Atahulpa Olympic Stadium, Quito, Ecuador

 

 

We have worked 21 months under a constitutional government when in countries like ours, having a democratic stability means conquering it daily.

 

 

Flag of Ecuador

Above: Flag of Ecuador

 

 

Ecuadorians, we were honest.

We continue to be honest in each and all of our actions.

Actions, not words, will prove our intentions.

It is the time of work and solidarity, not the time for strikes, threats or rumours.

Let us prove we love our country by complying our duties.

Our great passion is and should always be Ecuador.

Our great passion, listen to me, is and should be Ecuador.

 

 

Ecuador Map | Infoplease

 

 

We don’t want this Ecuador to be enmeshed in the insignificant but in the most important, in the untiring building-up a destiny of nobility, a heroic Ecuador won on Pichincha, an Ecuador with brave people, brave fighters….

A heroic Ecuador of the Condor Mountain Range.

An eternal and united Ecuador in defence of its territory.

A democratic Ecuador capable of teaching humanism, work and liberty.

This Amazonian Ecuador, forever and always.

Long live this nation.

 

 

Ecuador recuerda a su presidente Jaime Roldós Aguilera ...

 

 

Grüninger and Roldós paid a heavy price for their idealism, but their lives meant something significant.

They taught us that we can be better than we are, by doing what we should and refraining from doing what we should not.

 

 

There are so many problems in the world, but imagine what we could accomplish if we all together decided to try.

 

 

Rundwanderung am Alten Rhein bei Hohenems, Vorarlberg

 

 

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Herbert Mayr, Bodensee Süd (Rother Wanderführer)

Canada Slim and the Castle of Happiness

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Tuesday 11 August 2020

The idea of a castle invokes many images in my mind:

 

  • A snow-covered hill where armed with a pyramid of carefully packed snowballs, I would, as a child, taunt my schoolyard enemies with:

I’m the king of the castle and you’re the dirty rascal.

 

Six Pieces of Advice if You're Headed to a Snowball Fight

 

 

  • Castle Greyskull, which resembled a grey skull, home to fictional hero He-Man’s main villain, Skeletor

 

MASTERS of the UNIVERSE - CASTLE GRAYSKULL. Art by Andy Walsh ...

 

 

  • Marlinspike Hall (or the Château de Moulinsart), the home of Tintin’s friend Captain Haddock

 

 

 

  • The White Witch’s Castle, of C.S. Lewis’ The Chronicles of Narnia

 

Whitewitch.png

 

 

  • Camelot, of the Arthurian legends

 

Idylls of the King 3.jpg

 

 

Later as I aged and read more, different castle images manifested themselves.

 

  • Castle Dracula, from Bram Stoker’s Dracula

 

 

 

  • Minas Tirith, of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy

 

Minas Tirith | The One Wiki to Rule Them All | Fandom

 

 

  • Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto, the first gothic horror novel

 

The Castle of Otranto - Kindle edition by Walpole, Horace. Mystery ...

 

 

  • The insurmountable difficulty of bureaucracy

 

Read The Castle Online by Franz Kafka | Books

 

 

  • Castle Caladan of the Clan of Atriedes of Frank Herbert’s sci-fi series Dune

 

Castle Caladan by AndrewRyanArt on DeviantArt

 

 

  • There is, of course, Cinderella’s Castle, of the Walt Disney franchise

 

Magic Kingdom - Cinderella Castle panorama - by mrkathika.jpg

 

 

  • And, lest we forget, there is the castle of the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry from the J.K. Rowling Harry Potter franchise

 

Hogwarts model studio tour.jpg

 

 

In my travels I have tried to visit as many castles as I could.

 

Among them:

  • Casa Loma, Toronto

 

Exterior of Casa Loma, June 2012.jpg

 

 

  • the Château Frontenac, Québec City

 

Château Frontenac01.jpg

 

 

  • Château Laurier, Ottawa

 

Château Laurier Ottawa Canada (6).jpg

 

 

  • the Armoury, Québec City

 

Québec - manège militaire 1.jpg

 

 

  • Rideau Hall, the Governor-General of Canada’s official residence, Ottawa

 

Ottawa - Rideau Hall.JPG

 

 

  • Boldt Castle, Heart Island, Thousand Islands, New York

 

 

 

  • Hohensalzburg Fortress, Salzburg, Austria

 

Hohensalzburg Castle.jpg

 

 

  • Schattenburg, Feldkirch, Austria

 

Feldkirch-Schattenburg-01.jpg

 

 

  • Diocletian’s Palace, Split, Croatia

 

Peristyle, Split 1.jpg

 

 

  • Neuschwanstein Castle, Füssen, Germany

 

 

 

  • Castel Sant Angelo, Rome

 

 

 

  • Gutenberg Castle, Balzars, Liechtenstein

 

2008-05-19 Balzers Liechtenstein 5472.jpg

 

 

  • Belgrade Fortress, Belgrade, Serbia

 

Dizd ops.jpg

 

 

  • Nîs Fortress, Nîs, Serbia

 

Pogled na glavnu ulaz u Nišku tvrđavu sa keja Nišave.JPG

 

 

  • Conwy Castle, Wales

 

 

 

  • Caernarfon Castle, Wales

 

 

 

I have visited castles in:

  • Austria
  • Belgium
  • Canada
  • Croatia
  • Cyprus
  • the Czech Republic
  • Denmark
  • England
  • France
  • Germany
  • Hungary
  • Ireland
  • Italy
  • Japan
  • Liechtenstein
  • the Netherlands
  • Portugal
  • Serbia
  • Slovenia
  • Spain
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • Turkey
  • Wales

 

 

I mention all of this not in an attempt to show you how well-travelled I am but rather to show you my passion for castles.

Castles invoke me images and memories of fear and power and strength and tradition.

They also invoke from me memories of great happiness, exploring dungeons, climbing staircases, scaling battlements, crossing moats, standing from historic heights as I view present prospects and troubled times.

 

A castle, seen at the end of a long avenue, lit pink and red by the sunset. The castle gives an impression of tremendous size, and has an imposing, twin-towered gatehouse and, to the left, a large round keep.

 

 

castle, as encyclopedias define it, is a type of fortified structure built during the Middle Ages predominantly by the nobility or royalty and by military orders.

Scholars debate the scope of the word castle, but usually consider it to be the private fortified residence of a lord or noble.

This is distinct from a palace, which is not fortified; from a fortress, which was not always a residence for royalty or nobility; and from a fortified settlement, which was a public defence – though there are many similarities among these types of construction.

Usage of the term has varied over time and has been applied to structures as diverse as hill forts and country houses.

Over the approximately 900 years that castles were built, they took on a great many forms with many different features, although some, such as curtain walls, arrowslits, and portcullises, were commonplace.

 

 

A castle high on a rocky peninsula above a plain. It is dominated by a tall rectangular tower rising above a main building with steep slate roof. The walls are pink, and covered with a sculptural pattern. There is a variety of turrets and details.

 

 

In its simplest terms, the definition of a castle accepted amongst academics is “a private fortified residence“.

This contrasts with earlier fortifications – such as Anglo-Saxon burhs and walled cities, such as Constantinople and Antioch in the Middle East – castles were not communal defences but were built and owned by the local feudal lords, either for themselves or for their monarch.

Feudalism was the link between a lord and his vassal where, in return for military service and the expectation of loyalty, the lord would grant the vassal land.

In the late 20th century, there was a trend to refine the definition of a castle by including the criterion of feudal ownership, thus tying castles to the medieval period.

However, this does not necessarily reflect the terminology used in the medieval period.

During the First Crusade (1096–1099), the Frankish armies encountered walled settlements and forts that they indiscriminately referred to as castles, but which would not be considered as such under the modern definition.

 

 

A castle of square plan surrounded by a water-filled moat. It has round corner towers and a forbidding appearance.

 

 

Castles served a range of purposes, the most important of which were military, administrative, and domestic.

As well as defensive structures, castles were also offensive tools which could be used as a base of operations in enemy territory.

Castles were established by Norman invaders of England for both defensive purposes and to pacify the country’s inhabitants.

As William the Conqueror advanced through England, he fortified key positions to secure the land he had taken.

Between 1066 and 1087, he established 36 castles such as Warwick Castle, which he used to guard against rebellion in the English Midlands.

 

 

Warwick Castle May 2016.jpg

 

 

Towards the end of the Middle Ages, castles tended to lose their military significance due to the advent of powerful cannons and permanent artillery fortifications.

As a result, castles became more important as residences and statements of power.

A castle could act as a stronghold and prison but was also a place where a knight or lord could entertain his peers.

Over time the aesthetics of the design became more important, as the castle’s appearance and size began to reflect the prestige and power of its occupant.

Comfortable homes were often fashioned within their fortified walls.

Although castles still provided protection from low levels of violence in later periods, eventually they were succeeded by country houses as high status residences.

 

 

A keep seen from a river, rising behind a gate. The keep is large, square in plan, and has four corner towers, three square and one round, all topped by lead cupolas.

 

 

My wife Ute is not quite so addicted to castles as I am, but nonetheless she does enjoy visiting one once in a while in our travels.

 

 

I began on 20 July 2020 (Canada Slim and the Love of Landscape) to describe a journey my wife and I did from 28 to 31 May travelling to and from Switzerland’s Canton Thurgau (where we live), through Cantons St. Gallen and Appenzell (where I have often worked), to and from Canton Graubünden (a canton we have often visited and the focus of this long weekend.

 

Swiss cantons

 

I described, in the aforementioned blog post, in great detail, the attractions of travelling through the Swiss countryside from Landschlacht (where we live) to Wildhaus (birthplace of Swiss reformer Huldrych Zwingli).

 

Above: Landschlacht, Canton Thurgau

 

 

Above: Huldrych Zwingli Birthplace Museum, Wildhaus, Canton St. Gallen

 

 

Of the remaining portion of our journey from Wildhaus to the hub town of Flims, from where we would launch our daily explorations….

 

Flims Dorf unter der Wand des Flimsersteins

Above: Flims, Canton Graubünden

 

 

….there remains only one place in between that I wish to share with you, my gentle readers:  Werdenberg.

I have visited Werdenberg on my own before I began to write blogs, but I have not until now written of this place in these blogs nor have I spoken of why I think Werdenberg might interest you.

It is time to remedy this.

 

 

Schloss und Städtchen Werdenberg

Above: Werdenberg, Canton St. Gallen

 

 

Landschlacht to Flims (Part Two), Thursday 28 May 2020

Blink, and you will miss Werdenberg, this village founded in the 13th century and said to be the oldest settlement of timber houses in Switzerland.

 

 

This huddle of some 40-odd houses lies between an oversized pond (that marks the boundary between the municipalities of Buchs and Grabs) and a grapevine-covered hill topped by a castle.

 

 

The construction of Werdenberg Castle began in 1228 under Count Rudolf von Montfort (died 1243).

The castle’s slightly trapezoid floor plan measures around 11 metres on the outside and is consistently around two metres thick.

In 1232, the palace and the curtain wall were built.

The knight’s hall dates from this time as well and has remained almost unchanged to this day.

The staircase was not built until the castle was expanded into a palace.

 

 

In 1230 the brothers Rudolf I and Hugo II von Montfort shared the inheritance of Werdenberg.

Rudolf received territory mainly on the left bank of the Rhine River and thus it is surmised that it was he who probably had Werdenberg constructed.

 

 

Above: Territory of the Counts of Werdenberg and Montfort in the 14th century

 

 

Rudolf’s descendants named themselves “von Werdenberg” thereafter.

 

 

The castle and surrounding settlement was the seat of the Counts of Werdenberg until Rudolf II (died 1302) and his brother Hugo V (died 1310) both died without descendants.

After their deaths, Werdenberg changed hands frequently.

 

 

In 1483, the castle and the community came into the possession of Count Johann Peter von Sax-Misox (1462–1540), who only two years later sold the authority and the property to the Swiss federal state of Luzern.

 

 

Above: Territory of the Lords and Counts of Sax

 

 

Wappen von Luzern

 

Above: Coat of arms of Luzern

 

Luzern sold the remote rule in 1493 to the South Tyrolean Barons Georg and Mathis von Castelwart.

They in turn sold Werdenberg to the Swiss federal state of Glarus, which meant that Glarus bailiffs (governors) resided at the castle from then on, replacing each other every three years.

 

 

Wappen

Above: Coat of arms of Canton Glaurus

 

 

 

In 1695, the castle fell victim to a fire on the occasion of a ceremony to mark the beginning of the tenure of new governor Johannes Zweifel.

It is believed that the fire broke out in the castle kitchen and then quickly spread to the wooden interior of the keep.

 

 

The first and second floors of the hall and the structure of the roof were destroyed in the fire.

 

 

After the collapse of the Old Swiss Confederation in 1798, custodianship of Werdenberg was temporarily vacated.

It was later assigned to Werdenberg District of the (now defunct) canton of Linth.

 

 

Kantone Linth und Saentis.png

 

Above: Cantons Säntis and Linth of the Helvetic Republic (French rule)(1798 – 1803)

 

 

After the dissolution of the canton, the community of Werdenberg was assigned to the municipality of Grabs of Canton St. Gallen, while the castle itself remained in Glarus ownership.

 

 

In 1835, the abandoned and neglected castle was bought by Johann Ulrich Hilty, the father of the legal scholar and philosopher Carl Hilty.

Johann gradually had the premises repaired, partially rebuilt and furnished in a grand style.

 

 

The last resident of Werdenberg Castle was Frieda Hilty.

During the warm months, Frieda lived in the Castle with her partner, Miss Hiller, and two employees.

 

 

In 1956, Frieda donated the castle and its furnishings to the Canton of St. Gallen, which made both keep and community accessible to the public.

 

 

In 1960, the Pro Werdenberg Foundation was established, which initiated the restoration of Werdenberg town and castle.

In 1977, an exterior renovation of the castle was carried out.

 

 

 

In 1985, Albert Lortzing’s Wildschütz was the first opera to be performed in the castle courtyard.

 

 

Above: Albert Lortzig (1801 – 1851)

 

 

Since then cultural events, such as the Werdenberg Castle Festival, have been held at the castle again and again.

 

 

The festival’s first season started in 2009 with a cultural programme and artistic installations by Pipilotti Rist and Niki Schawalder.

 

 

Pipilotti Rist at Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona

Above: Pipilotti Rist

 

 

Above: Stadtlounge, St. Gallen (by Pipilotti Rist)

 

 

The Werdenberg Castle Association is responsible for cultural projects.

The Schlossmediale, the international festival for early music, Neue Musik, and audiovisual art, has been taking place annually since 2012.

 

 

Das Festival – Schlossmediale

 

 

(Excepting, of course, 2020 due to the corona virus pandemic.)

 

 

(Early music generally comprises Medieval music (500–1400) and Renaissance music (1400–1600), but can also include Baroque music (1600–1750).

Neue Musik (English: new music, French: musique nouvelle) is the collective term for a vast number of different currents of composed, Central European-influenced music from about 1910 to the present.

Its focus is on compositions of 20th century music.)

 

In 2015, after a year-long closure, a new permanent exhibition was opened at the castle, complementing the Schlangenhaus (snake house) Regional Museum, which opened below the castle in 1998.

A bistro in the castle courtyard and an information centre by the village’s remaining main gate complete the tourist package.

The Schlagenhaus and the Schloss Werdenberg are open from 1 April to 31 October, Tuesday to Sunday, 10 am to 5 pm.

 

 

 

Nearby for the visitor is a serendipitious selection of castles:

 

  • Burg Hohensax

 

 

  • Burg Frischenberg

Ruine Frischenberg - burgenseite.ch

 

 

  • Schlössli Sax

LANDGASTHOF SCHLÖSSLI SAX - Restaurant Bewertungen, Telefonnummer ...

 

 

  • Burg Forstegg

 

 

  • Burg Herrenberg

Werdenberg.ch: Burgen im Werdenberg

 

 

  • Procha Burg

Ruine Procha Burg - burgenseite.ch

 

 

  • Burg Wartau

Burg Wartau – Wikipedia

 

 

The Buchs Cultural Trail (Kulturweg Buchs) gives interested parties a wide range of insights into the history and culture of the Buchs community.

Using buildings, streets, personalities and historical information, the Cultural Trail outlines a picture of the community and brings you closer to its special features.

 

Kulturweg Buchs... - BERGFEX - Themenweg - Tour Ostschweiz

 

 

With its length and diverse uses, the Grabser Mühlbach (Grabs Mill Stream) is unique in Switzerland.

It’s a 1.7 km long commercial canal that runs through the middle of the village.

Its water was the driving force for sawmills, mills, and other businesses, and is still used today.

There is now a well-preserved hammer mill and a complete corn mill on the canal, both of which are real treasures.

Other gems are a public laundry room, a wool washing facility and a micro power station.

Guided groups can also visit these establishments from the inside.

The existing and former waterworks are provided with interesting information boards so that those interested can explore the Grabser Mühlbach on their own.

Or simply book a guided tour which will explain the exciting details to you.

 

Grabser Mühlbach - vielfältige Nutzung - Grabser Mühlbach ...

 

 

The Artillery Fortress Magletsch is one of the largest fortifications built during the Second World War.

It is the northernmost bulwark of Sargans Fortress.

The facility, designed for 381 men, is closed today.

The Schollberg fortress with its 22 fighting stalls and bunkers was given the task of closing off the Sargans basin from the north.

 

Werdenberg.ch: Artillerie Fort Magletsch

 

On the tours you will get an impression of the threat situation at the time of construction of the Sargans fortress and you will get to know the infrastucture of the place.

Good shoes and a jacket are recommended, as well as a good constitution as access to the main part of the fortress is via a 150-metre long inclined tunnel at a 30-metre difference in altitude.

Mandatory tours take place on the first Sunday of the months of March to December from 2 pm to 4:30 pm for groups of a minimum of ten people.

The tour ain’t cheap, costing CHF 53 per adult, CHF 29.50 per child.

 

Artillerie-Fort – Magletsch - St. Gallen - Oberschan - Aktivitäten

 

 

A century ago the Postlis Stadel building in Oberschan was used for agriculture, for horses and the stagecoach, which first drove from Trübbach to Oberschan in 1903.

Today the building houses a collection of over 1,000 items.

Divided into the themes of living, agriculture, handicrafts, viticulture, embroidery, and the fire brigade, a tour through the various rooms is very varied.

The local history exhibition documents life in the Wartnau community – especially over the past 100 years – in a unique way.

It is definitely worth a visit.

 

 

Startseite

 

 

On the Storchenbüel, a hill in the middle of Sevelen, Mali Gubser and Gert Gschwendtner have created an impressive sculpture park.

The Mind Mountain (Gedankenberg) consists of 14 stations and extends over 20,000 square metres.

If you look at the oeuvre of the artists you are always confronted with “observer” figures.

These challenge the viewer to become aware of their own perception in an impressive panoptican that relates art, nature and cultural history with one another.

 

 

GedankenBerg | Freizeit, Kultur | Leben in Sevelen | Gemeinde Sevelen

 

 

The Hammerschmiede (hammer mill) – built in 1860 as a tool forge and run until 1974 by three generations of the Beusch company – was bought in 1981 by Christoph and Margrit Friedrich and reactivited today as a metal design company using both old and new techniques.

Guided tours are possible on Fridays and Saturdays by appointment.

 

 

Oberschan – Wikipedia

 

 

And, oh, the things you can do!

 

 

In Werdenberg there is the Farbiggli Theatre and a cinema that is open every night.

 

fabriggli werdenberger kleintheater

 

There are cultural performances at the Alte Mühle in Gams and dance performances at the Krempl Club in Buchs.

 

Alte Mühle Gams SG > Home

 

You can visit the Naturena working farm in Oberschan, from March to October every day from 8 am to 6:30 pm.

 

Werdenberg SG | NATURENA

 

Or the Rietli Birds of Prey Park in Buchs, from 1 April to 31 October, Wednesday to Sunday from 10 am to 5 pm; from 1 November to 30 March, Friday to Sunday, 1 pm to 4 pm, with bird performances on Saturday and Sunday at 3 pm.

 

Greifvogelpark Buchs | Die Welt der Greifvögel zum Greifen nahe

 

There is llama trekking in Sennwald, carriage rides in Frumsen, minigolf and bowling in Buchs.

 

Llama Trekking Seebodenalp | Rigi

 

Once a month in summer there is a flea and antique market in Gams, and a farmers market in Grabs from June to December on the first Saturday of the month from 8 am to noon.

 

Werdenberg.ch: Floh- und Antiquitätenmarkt

 

But all these side attractions are distractions from Werdenburg itself and its history of counts and knights, dames and damsels, keep, kennel and courtyard.

Werdenburg Castle is a 800-year-old social history, brilliantly illustrated through audiovisual aides, such as films and stereoscopes, shadow and silhouette, paintings and panels.

 

 

 

The Schlagenhaus shows up close and personal how people used to live in the Werdenberg region.

 

 

From the first traces of settlement to the emerging interest in this unique medieval timber construction in the 1960s, the Schlagenhaus draws a wide arc from past to present.

 

 

Glarus bailiffs left, the canton of St. Gallen came, but before that the French frequented Werdenberg.

 

 

Whether by choice or compulsion, Werdenbergers emigrated to become:

  • mercenaries of war
  • East Prussian settlers
  • farm workers on coffee plantations of Santo Domingo

 

 

Around 1800, home embroidery brought a real source of income to Werdenberg households that kept both parents and children busy until late at night.

Until the embroidery bubble burst and many people became empoverished, resulting in more emigration.

 

The little town beside the lake, sheltered under the protection of the proud fortress, looks quietly and calmly into each new day.

 

 

Two alleys cross where under arbors plays a lively crowd of children in blissful belief in a fortunate future.

This house is mine and yet not mine“, it says on the facade of the house, where the city gate stood very close to the Seegestade (lakeside).

After the rear of the three city gates had already disappeared, the last gate, the lakeside gate was also demolished in 1832, as “the townspeople couldn’t get through well with their hayfeed“.

Even then there must have been really good farmers in Werdenberg, which had market rights despite having neither church nor well..

Today, you can only see the remains of the city walls into which the gates were inserted.

Countless tourists have photographed, drawn or painted the house of the legendary and popular medical Dr. Otto Hilty who ran his practice in the former gatehouse.

And thousands have probably taken to heart the aforementioned ingenious inscription that adorns the facade of the house alongside the coats of arms of the Hilty family, the Counts of Werdenberg and the peacock of the “city” of Werdenberg.

 

 

Already at the turn of the 19th century into the 20th century, the castle and community of Werdenberg were among the most photographed subjects in Switzerland.

And since the extensive renovations of the castle and the restoration of over 30 houses in the community and the crown of the Europa Nostra Prize on 19 May 1979, the flow of tourists has never stopped.

 

 

We were but two in the history of an anonymous sea of visitors Werdenberg has known, but this year, this year of the Plague, this year of the Pandemic, we were made most welcome, for the ocean of tourists that was 2019 is now a lake in 2020.

 

 

 

What caught my attention within the walls of Werdenberg Castle was a small display case featuring the life and works of Carl Hilty (1833 – 1909).

 

 

Carl Hilty was a Swiss philosopher, professor, politician, writer, and lawyer.

He famously said:

Peace is only a hair’s breadth away from war.

Although a Christian, he was no pacifist, and expected the coming world war.

He also served as a high officer in the Swiss Army.

He was married to a German wife named Johanna Gaertner.

Hilty was a spokesman for women’s rights to vote and to be elected, several decades before the subject became mainstream.

Hilty argued that Switzerland, as a nation-state comprising several nationalities and languages, had a unique mission of demonstrating that a nation-state could transcend tribal tendencies.

 

Fahne und Wappen der Schweiz

 

 

Carl Hilty was born in Werdenberg.

 

Above: Birthplace of Carl Hilty, Werdenberg

 

 

He studied at the Universities of Göttingen and Heidelberg.

To improve his languages and see the world, he also spent some time in London and Paris.

He then began his work as a lawyer in Chur, where he lived for almost 20 years.

In 1874, he became a professor of constitutional law (Staats- und Volkerrecht) at the University of Bern.

From 1886, he edited Politisches Jahrbuch der schweizerischen Eidgenossenschaft (The Journal of Swiss Jurisprudence).

In 1890, he became a member of the Nationalrat, the Swiss parliament.

 

 

Bundeshaus

Above: Bundesrat, Bern

 

 

Hilty’s philosophical concern was practical in nature.

He wrote about happiness, the meaning of life and work, developing good habits, time management, and winning the battles of life.

He became famous from his writings about happiness, which first appeared in three volumes in 1891, 1895 and 1899.

These essays were eventually collected into a single volume entitled: Happiness: Essays on the Meaning of Life. (available for free online)

 

 

Happiness by Carl Hilty 1903 Antique Book about the meaning of | Etsy

 

 

In this work, Hilty combines ancient stoic thought with Christian beliefs.

The work was translated into English by Professor Francis Greenwood Peabody, Professor of Christian Morals at Harvard University, and first appeared in the United States in 1903.

 

Hilty supported the Salvation Army, which opened their services in Zürich.

At first he made jokes about their noisy appearance, but only a few years later, he recognized them as one of the few groups who were able to put the words of Jesus in practice.

 

 

The Salvation Army.svg

 

 

Hilty was in his time one of the few intellectuals who still believed in the Gospel, while many other intellectuals dedicated themselves to the so-called “monastic” philosophy following the new sciences after Darwin.

He believed in a new reformation beyond the dogmas of churches and politics, after the time of materialism.

Hilty’s work influenced the thinking of William James, “the father of American psychology“.

Hilty died in Clarens, Canton Vaud in 1909.

 

 

Carl Hilty quote: The paths by which people journey toward ...

 

 

From the foreword of Carl Hilty’s Happiness (1903 translation):

Great numbers of thoughtful people are just now much perplexed to know what to make of the facts of life and are looking about them for some reasonable interpretation of the modern world.

They cannot abandon the work of the world, but are conscious that they have not learned the art of work.

They have to fight the battle of life, but they are not sure what weapons are fit for that battle.

They are so beset by the cares of living that they have no time for life itself.

They observe that happiness often eludes them who most eagerly pursue it.

And that the meaning of life is often hidden from those whose way would seem to be most free.

To this state of mind – hesitating, restless and dissatisfied – in the world but not content to be of the world – the reflections of Professor Hilty, as published in Switzerland and Germany, have already brought much reassurance and composure.

His message seems hardly less applicable to English and American life.

Here also the fever of commercialism threatens the vitality of idealism.

Here also the art of life is lost in the pace of living.

 

 

I personally find much of what Hilty has written very applicable to not only Hilty’s time but to our times as well.

Hilty speaks of the importance and the nature of work, of how to fight the battles of life, of the importance and the development of good habits of living, the art of having time to do what is important for you, the meaning and development of happiness, and his opinion as to the true nature and meaning of life.

 

I will let you, gentle readers, form your own opinions through the Open Library online.

 

 

Had I not noticed the display case on Hilty in Werdenberg Castle I might have never heard of this man nor have stumbled across his writing.

 

 

I will simply say for myself alone, after having read Hilty’s Happiness in preparation for this blog post, that there is much of what he writes that I can relate to in my own life.

  • Life is not given to man to enjoy, but to be used effectively.
  • The happiest workmen are those who can absolutely lose themselves in their work, like the artist whose soul must be wholly occupied with his subject if he hopes to grasp and reproduce it, or like the scholar who has no eye for anything beyond his special task.
  • The first thing then, for our modern world to acquire is the conviction and experience that well-directed work is the necessary and universal condition of physical and intellectual health and thus the way to happiness.
  • Every man is naturally lazy and moral laziness is our original sin.  Therefore, a love of work must proceed from a motive which is stronger than the motive of physical idleness, like a sense of duty or a love, either for the work itself or for the persons for whom the work is done.  Work should be done from a sense of duty, or for the love of what you are doing, or for the love of certain persons.
  • Attach yourself to some great interest of human life and you will soon discover an impulse proceeding from this cause to yourself.
  • Happiness does not come through wealth or honour or power or learning.  The strength of health renews itself through self-forgetting work and thrives on unselfish service done for worthy ends.
  • Attainable happiness, independent of all changes, is to be found in a life given to great thoughts and in a work peacefully directed towards great ends.
  • Looking at people as individuals, their lives appear full of contrasts, but taking them all together, their lives are very much alike.
  • The best possessions are:
    • firm moral principles
    • intellectual discipline
    • love
    • loyalty
    • the capacity for work
    • the enjoyment of work
    • spiritual health
    • physical health
    • a very moderate amount of worldly goods
  • An obstacle to any worthy life is the desire for praise or pleasure, making one a slave of the opinions of or tastes of others.
  • Make it a habit to cultivate love for others, not first of all inquiring whether they deserve that love or not.
  • Without love, life is without joy.  Without love, we sink into indifference, indifference becomes hate, hate poisons life making it no better than death.  Our dislikes must be directed not against people but against problems.  Permit neither your philosophy nor your experience to crowd out of your life the power to love.  Love is the only way of keeping one’s inner life in peace and of maintaining an interest in life.  Without love, life becomes an annoyance and an affront.  Love is the highest wisdom.
  • See the good side of people and take for granted that there is good in them.  Then it only happens that they often make the effort to be good and become actually better through one’s appreciation of them and it can also happen that one is saved from the personal experience of regret or distress.
  • People are generally better than they pretend to be.  What they lack is the courage to be good.  They do not have a sufficiently substantial confidence in the moral order of the world to guide them in their struggle for existence.
  • The most immediate reason for lack of time is to be found in the character of the present age.  There is a prevailing restlessness and a continuous mood of excitement from which most cannot wholly escape.  One who lives at all in these days must live fast.  Something of this bewilderment is felt by almost everyone who is involved in the movement of the time.  There are a great many people who have not the least idea of why they are always in a hurry, simply yielding to the general movement.
  • The modern world seems pitiless in its exhortation to work.  Human beings are driven like horses until they drop.  Many lives are ruined by the pace, but there are always more lives ready like horses to be driven.
  • The nervous haste of our day cannot be wholy explained by assuming that modern men do more work or better work than their predecessors.  It is possible to live without haste and still accomplish something.

 

I believe that happiness can be found. If I thought otherwise, I ...

 

Two songs come to mind when I consider our visit to Werdenberg and my subsequent discovery of the writing of Hilty:

 

 

People say I’m crazy
Doin’ what I’m doin’
Well, they give me all kinds of warnings
To save me from ruin
When I say that I’m okay
Well, they look at me kinda strange
Surely you’re not happy now
You no longer play the game
People say I’m lazy
Dreamin’ my life away
Well, they give me all kinds of advice
Designed to enlighten me
When I tell them that I’m doin’ fine
Watchin’ shadows on the wall
Don’t you miss the big time, boy?
You’re no longer on the ball
I’m just sittin’ here watchin’ the wheels go round and round
I really love to watch them roll
No longer ridin’ on the merry-go-round
I just had to let it go
People askin’ questions
Lost in confusion
Well, I tell them there’s no problem
Only solutions
Well, they shake their heads
And they look at me as if I’ve lost my mind
I tell them there’s no hurry
I’m just sittin’ here doin’ time
I’m just sittin’ here watchin’ the wheels go round and round
I really love to watch them roll
No longer ridin’ on the merry-go-rounds
I just had to let it go
I just had to let it go
I just had to let it go
Watching the Wheels (John Lennon single - cover art).jpg
Under the ruins of a walled city
Crumbling towers in beams of yellow light.
No flags of truce, no cries of pity;
The siege guns had been pounding through the night.
It took a day to build the city.
We walked through its streets in the afternoon.
As I returned across the fields I’d known,
I recognized the walls that I once made.
Had to stop in my tracks for fear of walking on the mines I’d laid.
And if I’ve built this fortress around your heart,
Encircled you in trenches and barbed wire,
Then let me build a bridge, for I cannot fill the chasm,
And let me set the battlements on fire.
Then I went off the fight some battle that I’d invented inside my head.
Away so long for years and years,
You probably thought or even wished that I was dead.
While the armies are all sleeping beneath the tattered flag we’d made.
I had to stop in my tracks for fear of walking on the mines I’d laid.
And if I’ve built this fortress around your heart,
Encircled you in trenches and barbed wire,
Then let me build a bridge, for I cannot fill the chasm,
And let me set the battlements on fire.
This prison has now become your home,
A sentence you seem prepared to pay.
It took a day to build the city.
We walked through its streets in the afternoon.
As I returned across the fields I’d known,
I recognized the walls that I once made.
Had to stop in my tracks for fear of walking on the mines I’d laid.
And if I’ve built this fortress around your heart,
Encircled you in trenches and barbed wire,
Then let me build a bridge, for I cannot fill the chasm,
And let me set the battlements on fire.
Fortress Around Your Heart Sting UK 12-inch.jpg
I am glad for the castle of Werdenberg, for from its battlements I have found new fire.
There have been moments in 2020 that have found me questioning what (and whom) I believe in.
But I believe that happiness can be found, first from within, then from without.
And that makes life worth living.
Werdenberg – die älteste Holzsiedlung der Schweiz und vielleicht ...
Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Facebook / Carl Hilty, Happiness

 

Canada Slim and the Love of Landscape

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Monday 20 July 2020

Think of this blog as a prologue.

It is named “Building Everest“, for it is here where I practice building something impressive (hopefully), my writing career.

Everest kalapatthar.jpg

Above: Mount Everest

On Monday (13 July) I phoned an old friend in Gatineau, Québec, Canada and we got to talking about our literary passions and ambitions.

Both of us in our 50s we have come to the realization that there are probably more years behind us than ahead of us, and there is no guarantee that the years that remain will necessarily be healthy years.

Happily, our creative projects do not conflict.

Gatineau downtown area

Above: Gatineau, Québec, Canada

He would like to write science fiction and fantasy similar to C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.

Monochrome head-and-left-shoulder photo portrait of 50-year-old Lewis

Above: C(live) S(taples) Lewis (1898 – 1963)

Tolkien as a second lieutenant in the Lancashire Fusiliers (in 1916, aged 24)

Above: J(ohn) R(onald) R(euel) Tolkien (1892 – 1973)

I want to write novels and travel books similar to Charles Dickens and Paul Theroux.

Charles Dickens

Above: Charles Dickens (1812 – 1870)

Theroux in 2008

Above: Paul Theroux (b. 1941)

I miss my friend and Ottawa where our sporadic reunions usually take place and I wish we lived closer to one another and we could be like his literary heroes.

Centre Block on Parliament Hill, the Government House, Downtown Ottawa, the Château Laurier, the National Gallery of Canada and the Rideau Canal

Above: Images of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (across the river from Gatineau)

Lewis, Tolkien and their friends were a regular feature of the Oxford scenery in the years during and after the Second World War.

From top left to bottom right: Oxford skyline panorama from St Mary's Church; Radcliffe Camera; High Street from above looking east; University College, main quadrangle; High Street by night; Natural History Museum and Pitt Rivers Museum

Above: Images of Oxford, England

They drank beer on Tuesday at “the Bird and Baby” (The Eagle and Child Pub) and on Thursday nights they met in Lewis’s Magdalen College rooms to read aloud from the books they were writing, jokingly calling themselves “the Inklings“.

The Eagle and Child.jpg

Above: The Eagle and Child, Oxford

Magdalen-may-morning-2007-panorama.jpg

Above: Magdalen (pronounced Maud-lin) College, Oxford

Above: The corner of the Eagle and Child where the Inklings regularly met

Lewis and Tolkien first introduced the former’s The Screwtape Letters and the latter’s The Lord of the Rings to an audience in this company.

Thescrewtapeletters.jpg

First Single Volume Edition of The Lord of the Rings.gif

As a English Canadian living in Deutschschweiz, I long for some sort of local creative writing club where I could share my writing worries and hopes in a way much like Lewis, in a letter to his friend A(lfred) K(enneth) Hamilton Jenkin (1900 – 1980), described the idyllic setting of his college rooms:

Above: Linguistic map (German, French, Italian, Rumansh) of Switzerland

The Story of Cornwall: A.K. Hamilton Jenkin: Amazon.com: Books

I wish there was anyone here childish enough (or permanent enough, not the slave of his particular and outward age) to share it with me.

Is it that no man makes real friends after he has passed the undergraduate age?

Because I have got no forr’arder, since the old days.

I go to Barfield (Owen Barfield) for sheer wisdom and a sort of richness of spirit.

Owen Barfield – AnthroWiki

Above: Arthur Owen Barfield (1898 – 1997)

I go to you for some smaller and yet more intimate connexion with the feel of things.

But the question I am asking is why I meet no such men now.

Is it that I am blind?

Some of the older men are delightful:

The younger fellows are none of them men of understanding.

Oh, for the people who speak one’s own language!

I guess this blog must serve this capacity.

So many ideas float through my mind and are captured in my chapbook.

(Normally, a chapbook refers to a small publication of about 40 pages, but I use this word in the context of a portable notebook where ideas are recorded as they spontaneously occur.)

Above: Chapbook frontispiece of Voltaire’s The Extraordinary Tragical Fate of Calas, showing a man being tortured on a breaking wheel, late 18th century

Just a sample:

  • Scaling the Fish: Travels around Lake Constance

Bodensee satellit.jpg

  • Mellow Yellow: Switzerland Discovered in Slow Motion

  • The Coffeehouse Chronicles (an older man in love with a much younger woman)

Above: Café de Flore in Paris is one of the oldest coffeehouses in the city.

It is celebrated for its famous clientele, which in the past included high-profile writers and philosophers

  • America 47 (think 47 Ronin meets Trumpian times)

Flag of the United States

  • 20th Century Man (think time travel)

The Time Machine (H. G. Wells, William Heinemann, 1895) title page.jpg

  • Lover’s Cross (a Beta male escapes his Alpha wife)

Jim Croce - Lover's Cross (1985, Vinyl) | Discogs

  • Alicia in Switzerland (Alice in Wonderland meets Gulliver’s Travels in Switzerland)

Alice in Wonderland (1951 film) poster.jpg

  • Love in the Time of Corona (though the title is reminiscent of Love in the Time of Cholera, the story is more about the virtues of faith, family and hope in periods of plague)

LoveInTheTimeOfCholera.jpg

  • Gone Mad (what is sanity and how is the world seen by those judged ill in this regard)

Above: Engraving of the eighth print of A Rake’s Progress, depicting inmates at Bedlam Asylum, by William Hogarth.

  • The Forest of Shadows (sci-fi that asks the question what if the past never dies?)

Above: Conifer forest, Swiss National Park

I have the ideas.

I believe I have the talent.

What is lacking is the ability to market myself and the discipline to be a prolific writer.

Still I believe that each day I am getting closer to the realization of my ambitions.

Doug And The Slugs - Day By Day (1985, Vinyl) | Discogs

One thing that inspires my creativity is my travels and sometimes even a drive through the country can be the spark that ignites my imagination.

Landschlacht to Flims (Part One), Thursday 28 May 2020

Transport of the mails, transport of the human voice, transport of flickering pictures – in this century, as in others, our highest accomplishments still have the single aim of bringing men together.” (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry)

Saint-Exupéry in Toulouse, 1933

Above: Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (1900 – 1944)

He and She

In a sense, it is travelling together that can make (or break) a relationship.

My wife and I don’t always live together harmoniously, but, generally, we travel well together.

Like any relationship with two (or more) people, harmony is possible once an understanding of who the other person is and what they like becomes clearer.

He said she said.jpg

My wife is an efficient German doctor who sets a goal and will not stop until it is realized, and for this she does have my respect.

I am the “life is a journey, not a destination dreamer in the relationship.

Life Is a Highway Tom Cochrane.jpg

I recall a bitter battle of poorly chosen words between us when on a journey between Freiburg im Breisgau (Black Forest of southwestern Germany) and Bretagne (on the Atlantic coast of France) we argued over efficiency over effectiveness.

I wanted to explore the regions between the Black Forest and Bretagne instead of simply rushing through them.

She, the driver, found driving through towns far more exhausting than sticking to motorways.

I, the passenger, wanted to see more than concrete rest stops where we wouldn’t stop and far-off fields we would never walk.

Main eventposter.jpg

Over the years we have come to an unspoken compromise.

We travel slowly to our travel destination and zoom home after our time there was complete.

Above: The Tortoise and the Hare“, from an edition of Caleb’s Fables illustrated by Arthur Rackham, 1912

On this day our journey in Switzerland (as of this day the borders around Switzerland were not yet open) wasn’t far by Canadian driving standards: a little over an hour and an half if we followed Highway 13 and Expressway 62 from Landschlacht in Canton Thurgau to Flims in Canton Graubünden.

Instead we opted to take the scenic route, avoiding as much as humanly possible heavily trafficked Autobahns, extending the journey at least another hour if we did not stop on the way.

Flag of Switzerland

I’ve no use for statements in which something is kept back, ” he added.  “And that is why I shall not furnish information in supprt of yours.

The journalist smiled.

You talk the language of St. Just.

Without raising his voice Rieux said he knew nothing about that.

The language he used was that of a man who was sick and tired of the world he lived in – though he had much liking for his fellow men – and had resolved, for his part, to have no truck with injustice and compromises with the truth.

His shoulders hunched, Rambert gazed at the doctor for some Moments without speaking.

Then, “I think I understand you,” he said, getting up from his chair.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

La Peste book cover.jpg

The Private Secret Language of Altnau

What I do know for certain is that what is regarded as success in a rational materialistic society only impresses superficial minds. 

It amounts to nothing and will not help us rout the destructive forces threatening us today. 

What may be our salvation is the discovery of the identity hidden deep in any one of us, and which may be found in even the most desperate individual, if he cares to search the spiritual womb which contains the embryo of what can be one’s personal contribution to truth and life.

(Patrick White)

White in Sydney, 1973

Above: Patrick White (1912 – 1990)

Heading east along Highway 13 from Landschlacht, the Traveller comes to Altnau (population: 2,244).

During the Lockdown (16 March to 10 May 2020) I often followed the walking path that hugs the shore of Lake Constance, north of both the Lake Road (Highway #13) and the Thurbo rail line, from Landschlacht to Altnau.

Visitors that zoom past Landschlacht often zoom past Altnau as well, as both Highway #13 and the railroad lie north of the town centre, so neither connection to Altnau is a boon to tourism or the economy as a whole.

Altnau remains for most people only a deliberate distant choice, which is a shame as the town entire has been designated as part of the Inventory of Swiss Heritage Sites, with a special focus on the town’s Reformed and Catholic churches and the Apfelweg (apple path).

Oberdorf Altnau

Above: Upper town, Altnau, Canton Thurgau, Switzerland

The Apfelweg, the first fruit educational path in Switzerland, is a nine-kilometre long circular route which explains with 16 signs everything you didn’t know you wanted to know about apples and apple production.

Understandably the Apfelweg is best done in the spring when the blossoms are on the orchards or late summer when the apples are ready to be harvested.

Apfelweg Altnau - Thurgau Tourismus

What can be seen by the lakeside visitor, even viewed from the highway or the train, is the Altnau Pier (Schiffsanlegesteg Altnau).

Completed in 2010, at a length of 270 metres, because of the wide shallow water zone, the Pier is the longest jetty on Lake Constance.

Altnauers call this jetty the Eiffel Tower of Lake Constance because the length of the jetty is the same as the height of the Tower.

Above: Altnau Pier

Notable people have formed the fabric of Altnau.

Hans Baumgartner (1911 – 1996), a famous (by Swiss standards) photographer was born here.

He studied in Kreuzlingen and Zürich and would later teach in Steckborn and Frauenfeld.

He would later sell his photographs to magazines and newspapers.

In 1937, Baumgartner met the Berlingen artist Adolf Dietrich who would feature in many of Baumgartner’s future photographs.

Adolf Dietrich.jpg

Above: Adolf Dietrich (1877 – 1957)

Baumgartner travelled and photographed Paris, Italy, the Balkans, southern France, North Africa and the Sahara, Croatia and the Dalmatian Coast, Burgundy, Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Finland, the US, Mexico, Belgium and Germany.

He also visited Bombay, Colombo, Saigon, Hong Kong and Yokohama.

He even photographed his spa visits in Davos.

Der Chronist mit der Kamera | Journal21

Above: Hans Baumgartner (1911 – 1996)

Altnau attracted the likes of composer-poetess Olga Diener (1890 – 1963).

Born in St. Gallen, Olga lived in Altnau from 1933 to 1943.

Diener, Olga Nachlass Olga Diener

Above: Olga Diener

In a letter to Hans Reinhart in June 1934, Hermann Hesse wrote about Olga’s work:

“I like Olga’s dreams very much.

I also love many of her pictures and their rhythms, but I see them enclosed in a glasshouse that separates her and her poems from the world.

That miracle must come about in poetry, that one speaks his own language and his pictures, be it only associative, that others can understand – that distinguishes the dream from poetry.

Olga’s verses are, for me at least, far too much dream and far too little poetry.

She has her personal secret language not being able to approximate the general language in such a way that the sender and recipient correspond to each other.

So I am privately a genuine friend of Olga’s and her books, but as a writer I am not able to classify them.

Hermann Hesse 2.jpg

Above: Hermann Hesse (1877 – 1962)

Besides Hesse, of the visitors Olga Diener had in her Altnau home, of interest is fellow poet Hans Reinhart (1880 – 1963).

Reinhart came from a Winterthur trading family, which allowed him the opportunity to lead a financially independent poet’s life.

During a spa stay in Karlovy Vary in the late summer of 1889, Reinhart read Hans Christian Andersen‘s fairy tales for the first time.

Andersen in 1869

Above: Hans Christian Andersen (1805 – 1875)

They deeply impressed Reinhart and he later transformed them into stage plays.

After his secondary studies, “Müggli” studied philosophy, psychology, German, art, theatre and music history in Heidelberg, Berlin, Zürich, Paris, Leipzig and Munich.

After completing his studies, he met Rudolf Steiner for the first time in 1905, whom he recognized as a spiritual teacher.

Reinhart later helped Steiner build the first Goetheanum and made friends with other anthroposophists.

In 1941 Reinhart brought his friend Alfred Mombert and his sister from the French internment camp Gurs to Winterthur.

Reinhart Hans, 1880-1963, Dichter - Winterthur Glossar

Above: Hans Reinhart (1880 – 1963)

Another of Olga’s Altnau guests was writer / poet Emanuel von Bodman (1874 – 1946).

Bodman lived in Kreuzlingen as a child and attended high school in Konstanz.

After studying in Zürich, Munich and Berlin, he chose Switzerland’s Gottlieben as his adopted home.

His home, like Olga’s, was the meeting point for many artists, including the famous Rainer Maria Rilke and Hermann Hesse.

Bodman wrote several dramas, short stories and hundreds of poems.

He was seen as a poet, storyteller and playwright in the neo-romantic, neo-classical tradition.

Emanuel von Bodman - Liebesgedichte und Biographie

Above: Emanuel von Bodman

I write about these members of a long-departed Dead Poets Society, whose works we have not read and might never read, to inspire us.

If writers, poets, artists and musicians can come from Here and their works be loved (at least in their times) then perhaps we too can rise above our humblest of origins and find such luck to inspire others.

Dead poets society.jpg

All of these wordsmiths and miracle scribes seem, without exception, all thick and heavy with each other.

And herein lies my weakness.

By temperament, I am more like the Americans Charles Bukowski and Eric Hoffer than I am like those one might call the litterati.

Charles Bukowski smoking.jpg

Above: Charles Bukowski (1920 – 1994)

Eric Hoffer in 1967, in the Oval Office, visiting President Lyndon Baines Johnson

Above: Eric Hoffer (1898 – 1983)

But there is the Internet – a potential tool I have yet to master.

Visualization of Internet routing paths

Above: Visualization of Internet routing paths

Today, hardly anyone knows the poet Olga Diener.

It almost seems as if her existence was as unreal as the tone of her poems.

She was once a very real phenomenon on Lake Constance where she had her permanent residence during the 1930s.

She had an exchange of letters with Hermann Hesse.

The poets Hans Reinhart and Emanuel von Bodman were among the guests at her annual anniversary celebrations (4 January) by candlelight.

Pin by Rine Ling on bokeh art photography | Candles photography ...

Otherwise she avoided the company of people with their too many disappointments and losses.

Her house “Belrepeire“, which she had planned herself, was a little bit away from the village.

Belrepeire” is the name of a city in Wolfram von Eschenbach’s poem “Parzival“.

Above: Statue of Wolfram von Eschenbach (1160 – 1220), Abenburg Castle, Bavaria, Germany

The poet was under the spell of the Grail myth.

Above: The Holy Grail depicted on a stained glass window at Quimper Cathedral, France

Olga found in the silence of her seclusion, the voice of her poems, which bore fairytale titles like “The Golden Castle” or “The White Deer“.

In this mystery game, a character named Blaniseflur sings the verses:

All the gardens have woken up. 

Dew fell from the stars and

Venus Maria walked through them with her light feet. 

Now flowers breathe the sky

And the Earth fulfills the dream

Received from spring night.

How a blackbird sings! 

The longing carries the swans

Swinging across the lake. 

The sun rises red from the water.

Light is everything.

Sunrise on the Lake Constance | Bodensee, in German. Konstan… | Flickr

The images Olga saw on long walks on the shores of the Lake, as she would have said, condensed into dreamlike structures, the form of which was often difficult to understand.

Even Hans Rheinhart, who made the only attempt for decades to critically appreciate Olga in the Bodenseebuch (the Book of Lake Constance) in 1935, did not understand her “private secret language“.

jahrgaenge 1935 - ZVAB

Olga was actually a musician.

For her there was no creative difference between writing and composing.

How musical her language was can immediately be heard when her poetry is read out loud.

Her words are full of sound relationships far beyond the usual measure, which Hesse described:

In your newer verses there is often such a beautiful sound.”

Music notes set musical note treble clef Vector Image

Olga wrote notes like other people speak words.

In the guestbook of Julie and Jakobus Weidenmann, she immortalized herself with a song instead of verses.

She was often a guest at the Weidenmanns.

Julie shared Olga’s natural mystical worldview, which was coloured Christian, while Olga tended to esotericism.

Julie’s first volume of poems is entitled Tree Songs, while Olga wrote a cycle called Rose Songs in Altnau.

Jakobus Weidenmann – Personenlexikon BL

Above: Jakobus and Julie Weidenmann

The seventh poem of Olga’s cycle contains her lyrical confession:

Leave me in the innermost garden

Faithfully my roses wait:

Fertilize, cut, bind,

Cut hands from thorns.

The blooming light, awake moonlight

Enter the flower goblets.

The winds pull gently over it,

And rain roars in some nights.

I am earthbound like her

And once again disappeared.

Unlike Olga, Golo Mann (1909 – 1994) was anything but a mystic.

As the son of Thomas Mann, Golo belonged to one of the most famous literary families in the world.

Not only his father, but also his uncle Heinrich and his siblings Erika, Klaus, Monika, Elisabeth and Michael worked as writers.

Writing was in Golo’s blood.

Above: Golo Mann (1909 – 1994)

This does not mean that writing was always easy for him.

On the contrary, like all of Thomas Mann’s children, Golo was overshadowed by his father and did not feel privileged to be the son of a Nobel laureate in literature.

Golo saw himself primarily as a historian and thus distinguished himself from the novelist who was his father.

Above: Thomas Mann (1875 – 1955)

Nevertheless, Golo used a thoroughly literary approach to history.

Two of his books are titled History and Stories and Historiography as Literature.

The fact that Golo cultivated a narrative style that earned him condescending reviews and the derisive ridicule of fellow historians, but this did not stop the general public from enthusiastically reading his books.

Deutsche Geschichte des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts - Golo Mann ...

Golo Mann’s first bestseller was largely created in Thurgau.

Again and again Golo retired to Altnau for several weeks in the Zur Krone Inn, for the first time in summer 1949.

His memories of Lake Constance were published in 1984 in the anthology Mein Bodensee: Liebeserklärung an eine Landschaft (My Lake Constance: Declaration of Love for a Landscape), under the title “Mit wehmütigen Vergnügen” (with wistful pleasure).

There he writes about the Krone:

There was an inn on the ground floor, the owner’s family had set up an apartment on the first floor, and on the second floor a few small rooms connected by a forecourt were available to friends of the Pfisters, the bookseller Emil Oprecht and his wife Emmi.

Thanks to my friend Emmi, they became my asylum, my work and retirement home.

Emmi and Emil Oprecht belonged to the circle of friends of Julie and Jakobus Weidenmann in Kesswil.

The Oprecht home in Zürich was a meeting point for all opponents of the Hitler regime during the war.

Ziviler Ungehorsam gegen Hitler: Wie Emil und Emmie Oprecht auch ...

Above: Emil and Emmi Oprecht

Europa Verlag (Europa Publishing) was committed to the same democratic and social spirit as that of the Weidenmann guests in the 1920s, including Golo’s siblings Erika and Klaus.

Above: Erika Mann (1905 – 1969) and Klaus Mann (1906 – 1949)

Golo’s father was good friends with Emil Oprecht and published the magazine Mass und Wert (Measure and Value) together with Konrad Falke (1880 – 1942).

It is ultimately thanks to these diverse relationships that Golo Mann put his Deutsche Geschichte des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts (German History of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries) in paper in 1956 and 1957, primarily in Altnau.

The success of this book made it possible for Golo Mann, who had gone into American exile like his father, to finally return to Europe.

It looked like nothing stood in the way of his academic career.

When his appointment to the University of Frankfurt did not come about, Golo retired from teaching and lived from then on a freelance writer in his parents’ home in Kilchberg on Lake Zürich and in Berzona in Canton Ticino, where fellow writers Alfred Andersch (1914 – 1980) and Max Frisch were his neighbours.

Above: Max Frisch (1911 – 1981)

In Kilchberg, Berzona, and again in Altnau, Golo wrote his opus magnum, Wallenstein – Sein Leben erzählt von Golo Mann (Wallenstein: His Life Told by Golo Mann).

Telling history was completely frowned upon by academic historians in 1971, the year this monumental biography was published, but Golo didn’t care nor did the thousands of his readers.

Wallenstein“ (Golo Mann) – Buch gebraucht kaufen – A02lgtja01ZZ4

Despite hostility from university critics, Golo was awarded two honorary doctorates, in France and England, but not in the German-speaking world.

In addition, he was awarded a number of literary prizes for his books: the Schiller Prize, the Lessner Ring, the Georg Büchner Prize, the Goethe Prize and the Bodensee Literature Prize.

Große Kreisstadt Überlingen: Bodensee-Literaturpreis

The last will have particularly pleased him, because the Lake smiled at the beginning of his literary fame.

(For more on the entire Thomas Mann family, please see Canada Slim and the Family of Mann in my other blog, The Chronicles of Canada Slimhttps://canadaslim.wordpress.com)

The Lake seemed to be smiling at the beginning of our journey as we left Highway #13 in the direction of Sommeri.

Summery Sommeri Summary

The word ‘plague’ had just been uttered for the first time….

Everybody knows that pestilences have a way of recurring in the world.

Yet somehow we find it hard to believe in ones that crash down on our heads from a blue sky.

There have been as many plagues as wars in history.

Yet always plagues and wars take people equally by surprise.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Above: The plague, Marseille, France, 1720, Michel Serré

Sommeri (population: 591) is first mentioned in 905 as Sumbrinaro.

Between 1474 and 1798, the villages of Niedersommeri and Obersommeri formed a court of the PrinceAbbot of St. Gall.

In 1474 the Church of St. Mauritius was dedicated.

It was renovated to its current appearance in the first half of the 15th century.

After the Protestant Reformation reached Sommeri in 1528, the church became a shared church for both faiths in 1534.

Originally the major economic activities in Sommeri were predominantly grain production and forestry.

Wappen von Sommeri

Above: Coat-of-arms of Sommeri

It was nearly obliterated by the Black Death in 1629.

In the second half of the 19th century, fruit production, hay production, cattle and dairy farming were added.

A cheese factory was opened in 1852.

In the last third of the 20th century, some industrial plants moved into the villages, especially embroidery and furniture manufacturing.

At the beginning of the 21st century there were companies in the HVAC industry, precision engineering and manufacturing school furniture in Sommeri.

Sommeri

Above: Sommeri, Canton Thurgau, Switzerland

To be frank, there is no reason to linger in Sommeri, except to say that it was the birthplace of the writer Maria Dutli-Rutlishauser (1903 – 1995) of whom I have previously written.

Alt- Steckborn

Above: Maria Dutli-Rutlishauser

(For more on Maria, please see Canada Slim and the Immunity Wall of this blog.)

Onwards.

From Sommeri, Google Maps leads her hapless wanderers onwards to Langrickenbach.

Google Maps Logo.svg

Query:

How contrive not to waste time?

Answer:

By being fully aware of it all the while.

Ways in which this can be done:

By spending one’s days on an uneasy chair in a dentist’s waiting room, by remaining on one’s balcony all Sunday afternoon, by listening to lectures in a language one doesn’t know, by travelling by the longest and least convenient train routes, and, of course, standing all the way, by queuing at the box office of theatres and then not booking a seat. 

And so forth.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Longing for Langrickenbach

Langrickenbach (population: 1,291) was first mentioned in 889 as “Rihchinbahc“.

It is a place for crops and fruit, cattle breeding and dairy farming, general goods, timber and cattle trading.

Again, not much to see.

Hit the road.

Above: Langrickenbach, Canton Thurgau

Watching cows and calves playing, grooming one another or being assertive, takes on a whole new dimension if you know that those taking part are siblings, cousins, friends or sworn enemies.

If you know animals as individuals you notice how often older brothers are kind to younger ones, how sisters seek or avoid each other’s company, and which families always get together at night to sleep and which never do so.

Cows are as varied as people.

They can be highly intelligent or slow to understand, friendly, considerate, aggressive, docile, inventive, dull, proud or shy.

All these characteristics are present in a large enough herd.”

(Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows)

The Secret Life of Cows: Amazon.co.uk: Young, Rosamund ...

The Birwinken Bulletin

Makes me think of Bullwinkle, the cartoon moose and his squirrel friend Rocky.

No moose or squirrels spotted.

Above from left to right: Rocky, Bullwinkle, and Captain Peter “Wrongway” Peachfuzz

Birwinken (population: 1,319) was first mentioned in 822 as “Wirinchova“.

In the 19th century, the village economy added animal husbandry….

Cattle feedlot

(My wife is an animal?)

….to the traditional agriculture and fruit growing.

In 1878, a weaving firm and three embroidery factories provided 165 jobs.

However the decline of the textile industry in the 20th century and the village’s remoteness from Anywhere led to high levels of emigration.

As a result, the village never developed much industry and has remained a farmer’s hamlet.

In 1990, for example, 63% of the population worked in agriculture.

Birwinken

Above: Birwinken, Canton Thurgau

It was only a matter of lucidly recognizing what had to be recognized, of dispelling extraneous shadows and doing what needed to be done….

There lay certitude.

There, in the daily round.

All the rest hung on mere threads and trivial contingencies.

You couldn’t waste your time on it.

The thing was to do your job as it should be done.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

The Doctor Luke Fildes crop.jpg

Above: The Doctor, Luke Fildes, 1891

What is an extremely interesting product of the village is native son Stefan Keller (b. 1958), a writer, journalist and historian.

Rotpunktverlag

Above: Stefan Keller

Keller is best known for:

  • Die Rückkehr: Joseph Springs Geschichte (The Return: Joseph Spring’s Story)

The Berlin youth Joseph Sprung was chased through half of Europe by the Nazis.

He lived in Brussels, Montpellier and Bordeaux with false papers and worked as an interpreter without being recognized.

He survived invasions and rail disasters, but never kissed a girl when he fell into the hands of the Swiss border authorities in November 1943.

At the age of 16, the fugitive was handed over to the Gestapo by the Swiss border guards and denounced as a Jew.

He was transferred to the Auschwitz concentration camp via the Drancy collective warehouse near Paris.

Sixty years later, Joseph Sprung returned to Switzerland.

Today his name is Joseph Spring, he lives in Australia and demands the justice he deserves.

He accused the Swiss government of aiding and abetting genocide.

In a sensational trial, the Swiss federal court decided in 2000 that the extradition of a Jewish youth to the National Socialists can no longer be judged.

Joseph Spring had at least asked for symbolic reparation.

In November 2003, he returned to Switzerland to tell his story:

The story of a survivor who sued an entire country, went through a process to demand justice, lost it, and still has the last word.

Die Rückkehr: Joseph Springs Geschichte (Hörbuch-Download): Amazon ...

  • Die Zeit der Fabriken (The Age of Factories)

The worker Emil Baumann was already dead when his former superior Hippolyt Saurer died unexpectedly.

The whole of Arbon mourned the truck manufacturer Saurer.

At that time, almost all of Arbon mourned Baumann, for whom the workers in Saurer’s factory were responsible for his death.

Emil Baumann died shortly after an argument with his boss Saurer.

It is 1935 when everything starts with two deaths.

The young lathe operator Emil Baumann dies from suicide because his master harasses him and because he cannot cope with the new working conditions.

The college immediately went on strike.

Then the entrepreneur and engineer Hippolyt Saurer dies.

He choked on his own blood after an tonsil operation.

Based on the death of these two men, Stefan Keller tells the story of a small town in eastern Switzerland, its conflicts, triumphs and defeats.

The city of Arbon on the Swiss shore of Lake Constance is ruled by the “Reds” (by the Social Democrats, the left).

The Adolph Saurer AG factory was and still is legendary for its (military) trucks.

Above: Memorial to Franz, Adolph und Hippolyt Saurer, Arbon

Arbon is an example of many places in Switzerland:

The time of the factories is also a history of the Swiss industry and workers’ movement.

Starting with the motor carriages of the Wilhelminian era to the Saurer gasification trucks of the National Socialists, from the big strikes after 1918 to the dismantling of almost all jobs in the 1990s and from the resistance of an editor against censors in the Second World War to the union’s «fight against» against foreign colleagues.

Die Zeit der Fabriken: Amazon.de: Stefan Keller: Bücher

  • Grüningers Fall (The Grüninger Case)

A historical report about the St. Gallen police captain Paul Grüninger, who in the 1930s, according to his conscience and not in accordance with the law, saved the lives of numerous Jews.

The facts:

In 1938/1939, Grüninger saved the lives of hundreds, if not thousands, of Austrian, Jewish refugees by providing them with the wrong papers and thus enabling them to enter Switzerland legally.

He was suspended from duty due to breach of official duties and falsification of documents.

He was severely fined for his conduct and sentenced to prison.

The book aims to make it clear that today it was not Grüninger who would have to sit on the dock, but the inhumane refugee policy of the Swiss government during the Nazi era.

The book was made into a film in 1997 based on a screenplay by Stefan Keller and directed by Richard Dindo with Keller’s expert advice.

Grüningers Fall

  • Maria Theresia Wilhelm: Spurlos verschwunden (Maria Theresia Wilhelm: Disappeared without a trace)

In the mid-1930s Maria Theresia Wilhelm met the Swiss mountain farmer and gamekeeper Ulrich Gantenbein, who subsequently left his first wife.

From the beginning Maria and Ulrich’s marriage suffered from official regulations.

Ulrich is admitted to a psychiatric clinic shortly after their marriage.

Maria is barely tolerated by the neighbourhood.

Eventually she too comes to a psychiatric clinic and there experiences inhumane therapy methods from today’s perspective.

Her seven children are torn away, placed in orphanages and put to work.

Maria is finally released in June 1960.

On the way to buy shoes, she disappears without a trace….

Maria Theresia Wilhelm - spurlos verschwunden - Stefan Keller ...

Rieux asked Grand if he was doing extra work for the Municipality.

Grand said No.

He was working on his own account.

“Really?”, Rieux said, to keep the conversation going.

“And are you getting on well with it?”

“Considering I’ve been at it for years, it would be surprising if I wasn’t.

Though, in one sense, there hasn’t been much progress.”

“May one know” – the doctor halted – “what it is that you’re engaged on?”

Grand put a hand up to his hat and tugged it down upon his big, protruding ears, then murmured some half-inaudible remark from which Rieux seemed to gather that Grand’s work was connected with “the growth of a personality”.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Bürglen Bound

Next town Google leads us to is Bürglen (population: 3,841), first mentioned in 1282 as “Burgelon“.

Even though the village was fortified around 1300, it was never considered a city, due to the decline of its owner, the Baron of Sax-Hohensax, and from other neighbouring villages.

After the disastrous fire of 1528, the villagers went into debt for the reconstruction of Bürglen.

To help pay off their debt, in 1540 they granted the nobility rights to St. Gallen.

Under St. Gallen, Bürglen lost most of its autonomy.

St. Gallen appointed the bailiff and the chairman of the Lower Court, promoted the settlement of its citizens to form a local elite and change the succession order of inheritances.

Despite this, the local farmers enjoyed a certain independence.

In the 17th century, they promoted the expansion of the Castle as well as the creation of new businesses.

This relative prosperity was followed in the 18th century by a government practice that hindered the formation of viable village government and led to general impoverishment.

Reformierte Kirche und Schloss Bürglen

Above: Bürglen, Canton Thurgau

Power mattered more than people.

A problem eternal and universal.

Worth seeing is the Bürgeln Castle, the old quarter and the Reformed Church.

Above: Bürglen Castle

Of notable personalities connected to Bürgeln, it was home to artists Gottlieb Bion (1804 – 1876), Fritz Gilsi (1878 – 1961) and Jacques Schedler (1927 – 1989) as well as the writer Elisabeth Binder (b. 1951).

I haven’t read Ms. Binder’s work as yet, but the titles sound appealing…..

  • Der Nachtblaue (The Night Blue)
  • Sommergeschicht (Summer Story)
  • Orfeo
  • Der Wintergast (The Winter Guest)
  • Ein kleiner und kleiner werdender Reiter: Spurren einer Kindheit (A rider getting smaller and smaller: Traces of a childhood)

Above: Elisabeth Binder

Ever south and east the long and winding road continues….

The long and winding road.png

Cottard was a silent, secretive man, with something about him that made Grand think of a wild boar.

His bedroom, meals at a cheap restaurant, some rather mysterious comings and goings . these were the sum of Cottard’s days.

He described himself as a traveller in wines and spirits.

Now and again he was visited by two or three men, presumably customers.

Sometimes in the evening he would go to a cinema across the way.

In this connection Grand mentioned a detail he had noticed – that Cottard seemed to have a preference for gangster films.

But the thing that had struck him most about the man was his aloofness, not to say his mistrust of everyone he met.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Nighthawks by Edward Hopper 1942.jpg

Above: Nighthawks, Edward Hopper, 1942

Few Words for Wuppenau

Wuppenau (population: 1,111) was first mentioned in 820 as “Wabbinauwa” and is primarily an agricultural community.

Wuppenau

Above: Wuppenau, Canton Thurgau

(It is funny how so many of the original names seem similar to those of the Original Peoples of the Americas.

Or akin to something Elmer Fudd might say about wascally wabbits.)

ElmerFudd.gif

….and that’s all I have to say about that.

Film poster with a white background and a park bench (facing away from the viewer) near the bottom. A man wearing a white suit is sitting on the right side of the bench and is looking to his left while resting his hands on both sides of him on the bench. A suitcase is sitting on the ground, and the man is wearing tennis shoes. At the top left of the image is the film's tagline and title and at the bottom is the release date and production credits.

We are now in Canton St. Gallen and the city of Wil (pronounced “ville”).

Wappen von Wil

Above: Coat of arms of Wil, Canton St. Gallen

The Word Pump and the Swan Song of Wil

“I have the same idea with all my books: an attempt to come close to the core of reality, the structure of reality, as opposed to the merely superficial. 

The realistic novel is remote from art. 

A novel should heighten life, should give one an illuminating experience. 

It shouldn’t set out what you know already. 

I just muddle away at it. 

One gets flashes here and there, which help. 

I am not a philosopher or an intellectual. 

Practically anything I have done of any worth I feel I have done through my intuition, not my mind.”  (Patrick White)

There are times in a man’s life when he simply must ask for assistance and my trying to convey to you an accurate mental image of Wil may require the services of an expert.

Above: Wil Castle

Ask Fred.

Fred Mast, excuse me, Professor Dr. Mast.

Born and raised in Wil, Fred is a full professor at the University of Bern, specialized in mental imagery, sensory motor processing and visual perception.

Perhaps he is one of the few folks who can truly answer the question:

Do you see what I see?

Über uns: Prof. Dr. Fred Mast - Kognitive Psychologie, Wahrnehmung ...

Above: Dr. Fred Mast

I mean, Fred should know, he has been educated and worked at universities esteemable, such as Zürich, the Federal Institute of Technology (ETHZ)(Switzerland’s equivalent to MIT), Harvard, MIT, Lausanne and Bern.

Some of his published papers suggest he does know what he is talking about:

  • Visual mental imagery interferes with allocentric orientation judgments
  • Visual mental images can be ambiguous
  • Mental images: always present, never there

Black Mamba oder die Macht der Imagination: Wie unser Gehirn die ...

Thanks, Dr. Fred, for demystifying the fuzzification.

Let me say for the record that as a place to visit I have always liked Wil….

But as a place to work….not as much.

Wil (population: 23,955), today the 3rd biggest city in Canton St. Gallen, was founded around 1200 and was handed over by the Counts of Toggenburg to the Abbey of St. Gallen in 1226.

(Look, Ma!  Look at what I founded!)

Disputes between the Abbey and Habsburg King Rudolf I (1218 – 1291) led to the destruction of Wil in 1292.

(If Rudolf couldn’t have Wil, then no one will?)

Above: Statue of Rudolf I, Speyer Cathederal, Germany

Wil was again besieged in the Old Zürich War in 1445 and yet again in the Toggenburg War in 1712.

On 1 January 2013, Susanne Hartmann became the first female mayor, not only of Wil-Bronschhofen, but in the entire canton of St. Gallen.

Hartmann announced her candidacy in April 2012.

Despite all forecasts the result of the elections was a landslide victory for Susanne Hartmann.

Despite (or perhaps because) the bus being driven by a woman, Will carries on.

Susanne Hartmann :: CVP Kanton St. Gallen

Above: Her Honour Wil Mayor Susanne Hartmann

In addition to many small and medium-sized enterprises, Wil is also home to a number of large, some international, industrial firms, including Stihl, Larag, Camion Transport, Brändle, Heimgartner Fahnen, Schmolz & Bickenbach, Kindlemann….

So it stands to reason that a city of industry may attract schools to teach those in these industries.

Such was the Wil school (now defunct) where I taught.

It was, what we in the business of freelance teaching refer to as a “cowboy school“, an institution more interested in the school’s acquisition of money than in the students’ acquisition of an education.

It was one of those schools where parents sent their children who lacked either the capacity or the desire to learn.

A paid education in all senses of the word.

It was a nightmare to teach there.

Blackboard Jungle (1955 poster).jpg

The students, best defined as juvenile deliquents or little criminal bastards, would not do their assignments, stay off their damn phones, bring their textbooks to class, listen in class or stop talking to one another.

The worst of them brought out the worst in me, so it was to everyone’s mutual relief when we parted company.

Above: Student – Teacher Monument, Rostock, Germany

As for the city of Wil itself, putting aside my feelings towards my ex-employer now extinct, there is much that is positive to relate.

Wil is considered to be the best preserved city in Eastern Switzerland and best seen from afar standing atop the Stadtweiher (a hill with a pond overlooking Wil) overlooking the silhouette of the old quarter.

The pedestrian promenade from Schwanenkreisel (Swan Circle) towards the old quarter is the place where most of the shops are, including a farmer’s market every Saturday.

On 8 July 2006, the 37-metre high Wiler Tower was inaugurated on the Hofberg (the mountain above Wil).

It is a wooden structure with a double spiral staircase and three X supports.

It is worth the climb for the view, if not for the exercise.

Around 180 kilometres of hiking trails are signposted around Wil.

The almost 33 kilometres long Wilerrundweg (Wil Circle Path)….

(Safer than a cycle path?)

….was established in 2013.

Kussbänkli: Kantonsrat Sennhauser hat es hergestellt – und ...

Above: The Kissing Bench

The 87-kilometre Toggenburger Höhenweg (high road) starts in Wil and leads to Wildhaus via Mühlrüti, Atzmännig and Arvenbüel.

Toggenburger Höhenweg - Ferienregion Toggenburg - Ostschweiz

The Thurweg passes near Wil at Schwarzenbach (black creek), following the Thur River from Wildhaus to Rüdlingen where it meets the Rhine River in Canton Schaffhausen.

Thurweg von Stein nach Ebnat- Kappel - MeinToggenburg.ch

Worth seeing in Wil are the Maria Hilf Wallfahrtskirche (Mary of Charity Pilgrim Church), the Abbey Castle, the St. Katarina Dominican and the Capuchin Cloisters, the Courthouse, Ruddenzburg (Ruddenz Castle), St. Niklaus and St. Peter Catholic Churches, the old Guardhouse, the City Archive, the Schnetztor gate, the City Museum (open on weekends from 2 to 5 pm), the psychiatric clinic (ask, in vain, for Dr. Fred) and the former Hurlimann tractor factory.

Wil has the Challer Theatre, the Kunsthalle (art hall), the Tonhalle (concert hall) and the Remise (for more modern music), but excepting these cultural remnants the young generally don’t party here if they can get away to Zürich.

The room was in almost complete darkness.

Outside, the street was growing noisier and a sort of murmur of relief greeted the moment when all the street lamps lit up, all together.

Rieux went out on to the balcony and Cottard followed him.

From the outlying districts – as happens every evening in our town – a gentle breeze wafted a murmur of voices, smells of roasting meat, a gay perfumed tide of freedom sounding on its ways, as the streets filled up with noisy young people released from shops and offices.

Nightfall with its deep remote baying of unseen ships, the rumour rising from the sea and the happy tumult of the crowd – that first hour of darkness which in the past had always had a special charm for Rieux – seemed today charged with menace, because of all he knew.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Mediterranean side – Oran

Above: Oran, Algeria

Of the many famous people native to Wil, noteworthy (by Swiss standards) are the filmmaker Max Peter Ammann (b. 1929) and the TV star Kurt Felix (1941 – 2012).

LESE-THEATER-STÜCK VON MAX PETER AMMANN IM HOF ZU WIL – wil24.ch

Above: Max Peter Ammann

Kurt Felix

Above: “When I must go, I will leave a happy man.

Daniel Imhof (b. 1977), the Swiss son of a Smithers (British Columbia) bush pilot, is a retired footballer from Canada’s national soccer team and now resides in Wil.

Canada Soccer

I think to myself:

I have finally gotten so impossible and unpleasant that they will really have to do something to make me better….

They have no idea what a bottomless pit of misery I am….

They do not know that this is not some practice fire drill meant to prepare them for the real inferno, because the real thing is happening right now.

All the bells say:

Too late.

It’s much too late and I’m so sure that they are still not listening.

(Elizabeth Wurtzel, Prozac Nation)

ProzacNationBook.jpg

Of human interest is the story of Wil native, the opera singer Anna Sutter (1871 – 1910).

Her brief affair with royal Württemberg court conductor Aloys Obrist proved to be fatal.

After she ended their two-year relationship in 1909, Obrist entered her Stuttgart apartment on 29 June 1910 and killed her with two pistol shots before taking his own life.

Sadly, Anna is best remembered for how she died than for how she lived.

Cows are individuals, as are sheep, pigs and hens, and, I dare say, all the creatures on the planet however unnoticed, unstudied or unsung.

Certainly, few would dispute that this is true of cats and dogs and horses.

When we have had occasion to treat a farm animal as a pet, because of illness, accident or bereavement, it has exhibited great intelligence, a huge capacity for affection and an ability to fit in with an unusual routine.

Perhaps everything boils down to the amount of time spent with any one animal – and perhaps that is true of humans too.

(Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows)

CH cow 2 cropped.jpg

Also worth mentioning is the writer René Oberholzer (b. 1963), who has been teaching in Wil (in a non-cowboy school it is hoped) since 1987.

He began writing poetry in 1986 and prose in 1991.

(I must confess my rural roots and prejudices appear when I find myself asking:

Do real men write (or even read) poetry?

I believe they do, but whether the fine folks in Argenteuil County in Canada feel that way is debatable.)

Shakespeare.jpg

Above: William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)

Oberholzer founded the Höhenhöhe (higher heights) writers group in 1991.

As founding can be addictive, the following year he then founded the literary experimental group Die Wortpumpe (the Word Pump) together with his colleagues (co-conspirators?) Aglaja Veteranyi and Gabriele Leist.

He is a member of several author associations.

His work has been mainly published in anthologies, literary and online magazines.

He is best known for:

  • Wenn sein Herz nicht mehr geht, dann repariert man es und gibt es den Kühen weiter: 39 schwarze Geschichten (When his heart stops beating, repair it and give it to the cows: 39 dark tales)
  • Ich drehe den Hals um – Gedichte (I turn my stiff neck: Poems)
  • Die Liebe würde an einem Dienstag erfunden (Love was invented on a Tuesday)
  • Kein Grund zur Beunruhigung – Geschichten (No reason to panic: Stories)

Die Liebe wurde an einem Dienstag erfunden: 120 Geschichten | René ...

As my wife and I are married (no reason to panic) and it was a Thursday (as love only visits Wil on Tuesdays), we faithfully follow fatalistic Google Maps, and continue on to….

Why is it that one can look at a lion or a planet or an owl or at someone’s finger as long as one pleases, but looking into the eyes of another person is, if prolonged past a second, a perilous affair?

(Walker Percy)

Percy in 1987

Above: Walker Percy (1916 – 1990)

Restful Rickenbach

Rickenbach (population: 2,774), first mentioned in 754 as “Richinbach“.

After the end of the crop rotation system in the 19th century livestock and dairy farming became the major sources of income.

A mill, built in the 13th century, was expanded in 1919 to become Eberle Mills, which operated until 2000.

The Eschmann Bell Foundry existed until 1972.

After the construction of the A1 motorway and the growth of Wil, by 1990 the population of Rickenbach had doubled.

Langrickenbach

Above: Rickenbach

A bridged Lütisburg

When a war breaks out people say:

It’s too stupid.  It can’t last long.”

But though a war may well be ‘too stupid’, that doesn’t prevent its lasting.

Stupidity has a knack of getting its way.

As we should see if we were not always so much wrapped in ourselves.

In this respect our townsfolk were like everybody else, wrapped up in themselves.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Duns cup helps with concentration

Lütisburg (population: 1,576), though smaller than Rickenbach, is far more interesting to the casual visitor.

It is first mentioned on 1214 as “Luitinsburch“.

Wappen von Lütisburg

Above: Lütisburg coat of arms

The Castle, built in 1078 by the Abbey of St. Gallen, was abandoned by the Abbey a short time later, but due to the Castle’s strategically important location, it became the headquarters of the Counts of Toggenburg from the 13th to the 15th centuries.

After the Abbey acquired the County of Toggenburg in 1468, the Castle served as a bailiwick.

In the 19th century, alongside agriculture, ironworks, copper hammering and manufacturing dominated.

The train station has existed since 1870.

Above: Lütisburg, 1700

Lütisburg’s townscape is characterized by bridges and footbridges, including the Letzi Bridge (1853), the Guggenloch Railway Viaduct (1870) and the “new” Thur Bridge (1997).

The covered wooden bridge (1790) over the Thur River, on the cantonal road to Flawil, was used for car traffic until 1997.

Upon the wooden Letzi Bridge, the hiking trail to Ganterschwil crosses the Neckar River.

The nearby hamlet of Winzenburg with its Winzenberger Höhe (heights) (836 m) is a popular destination with local lovers of landscape.

B&B Winzenberg (Schweiz Lütisburg) - Booking.com

Lütisburg’s claim to fame, beside its bridges, lies with the two brothers Germann….

War of any kind is abhorrent. 

Remember that since the end of World War II, over 40 million people have been killed by conventional weapons. 

So, if we should succeed in averting nuclear war, we must not let ourselves be sold the alternative of conventional weapons for killing our fellow man. 

We must cure ourselves of the habit of war.

(Patrick White)

Modern warfare: Into the Jaws of Death, 1944

Kilian Germann (1485 – 1530) was the son of Johannes Germann, the Chief bailiff of Lütisburg, and brother of the mercenary leader (and later bailiff) Hans Germann (also known as the Batzenhammer) and Gallus Germann (also chief bailiff of Lütisburg).

Kilian was governor in Roschach (1523 – 1528) and in Wil (1528 -1529).

In 1529, Kilian was elected to be the next Prince-Abbot of St. Gallen in Rapperswil.

After his confirmation by Pope Clement VII (1478 – 1534), Kilian was also proposed for this position to Emperor Charles V (1500 – 1558) who confirmed him in February 1530.

Above: Coat of arms of Kilian Germann

But life often thwarts the best-laid plans….

What I am interested in is the relationship between the blundering human being and God.

I belong to no church, but I have a religious faith.

It is an attempt to express that, among other things, that I try to do.

Whether he confesses to being religious or not, everyone has a religious faith of a kind.

I myself am a blundering human being with a belief in God who made us and we got out of hand, a kind of Frankenstein monster.

Everyone can make mistakes, including God.

I believe that God does intervene.

I think there is a Divine Power, a Creator, who has an influence on human beings if they are willing to be open to Him.

(Patrick White)

Michelangelo - Creation of Adam (cropped).jpg

Above: Creation of Adam, Michelangelo, Sistine Chapel, Vatican City

Prince-Abbot Kilian fled to Meersburg (on the German side of Lake Constance) in 1529 after the outbreak of the First Kappel War.

From February 1530, Kilian lived at Wolfurt Castle near Bregenz (on the Austrian part of Lake Constance).

Above: Wolfurt Castle

In exile, Kilian nonetheless cultivated his social network with the southern German nobility in order to secure political pressure on the reformed movement on the Prince-Abbot’s lands, which did not escape the attention of his enemy, the reformer Vadian.

Above: Vadian statue, St. Gallen

In 1530, Kilian represented the Abbey of St. Gallen at the Council of Basel.

In July, he visited the Augsburg Reichstag (government).

It looked like Kilian’s fading star was beginning to shine once more.

That same year of his visits to Basel and Augsburg, returning to Bregenz after a visit to the Earl of Montfort, Kilian drowned when his horse fell into the Bregenz Ach (stream).

He was buried in the Mehrerau Monastery near Bregenz.

Abtei Mehrerau – Blick vom Gebhardsberg

Discipline is the soul of an army.

It makes small numbers formidable, procures success to the weak and success to all.

(George Washington)

Gilbert Stuart Williamstown Portrait of George Washington.jpg

Above: George Washington (1730 – 1799)

Hans Germann (1500 – 1550), Kilian’s younger brother, was an officer in the service of the French Crown for many years.

After returning home, Hans supported his brother Kilian during the turmoil of the Reformation.

Contemporaries described Hans as “a firm, brave, but rough, frivolous journeyman, who had sold many of his fellow countrymen to France for boring gold.”

Above: Coat of arms of Captain Hans Germann, Kreuzenstein Castle, Austria

I guess we find both sinners and saints in every family and in every community.

The socially disadvantaged of Ganterschwil

In my books I have lifted bits from various religions in trying to come to a better understanding.

I have made use of religious themes and symbols.

Now, as the world becomes more pagan, one has to lead people in the same direction in a different way.

(Patrick White)

Down the road (so to speak) is the village of Ganterschwil (population: 1,186).

It is first mentioned in 779 as “Cantrichesuilare“.

(Try saying that five times fast….)

Pfarrkirche von Ganterschwil

Above:  Parish church, Ganterschwil, Canton St. Gallen

Grain and oats were grown and processed in three mills here.

From the 18th century, contract weaving became important.

Small textile factories developed from family businesses.

In the 19th century, the livestock and dairy indutries replaced grain cultivation.

After the crash in the textile industry in 1918, only smaller companies could be built.

In 2000, around half of the working population was employed in the service sector.

Wappen von Ganterschwil

Above: Coat of arms of Ganterschwil

The Home for Socially Disadvantaged Children, founded in 1913 by Reformer Pastor Alfred Lauchener, developed into the Centre for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Sonnenhof.

Klinik Sonnenhof Ganterschwil

Above: Centre for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Sonnenhof, Ganterschwil

In Ganterschwil, there are many small businesses that offer jobs.

The best-known is the Berlinger Company, which was active in tape production.

Today it plays a leading role in the production of doping control systems, in the form of counterfeit-proof sample glasses.

Temperature Monitoring / Doping Control Equipment- Berlinger & Co. AG

In the parish church there are frescoes from the Middle Ages discovered and restored in 1941 and now under the protection of the Swiss Confederation.

Ganterschwil is a place difficult to define.

Is it the past?

The future?

What is it now?

The Beautiful Minds of Lichtensteig

Lichtensteig (population: 1,870) is first mentioned in 1228 and was founded by the Counts of Toggenburg as “Liehtunsteige“.

A market is mentioned in 1374 and the right to hold markets was confirmed in 1400.

A letter of privileges issued by the Lords of Raron (1439) confirms the existence of 12 burghers and the appointment of judges by the burghers and the Lords.

After the acquisition of the Toggenburg by St. Gallen Abbey in 1468, Lichtensteig became the seat of the Abbot’s reeve.

The council declared Lichtensteig’s support for the Reformation in 1528.

The sole church at this time was shared by both Reformed and Catholic believers, while their schools were kept separate until 1868.

Lichtensteig’s importance as a market town increased in the 19th century with the development of the textile home working industry in the Toggenburg.

In the early 20th century, there were six yearly markets and a weekly livestock market.

Lichtensteig’s connection to the railroad dates to 1870.

Lichtensteig

Above: Lichtensteig, Canton St. Gallen

I don’t quite know how to say this politely, so I will say it directly.

It seems the further south one travels in Deutschschweiz, the smarter people seem to be.

Thurgau is blood, sweat, tears and toil.

Thurgau is always in the middle of things, between two places but belonging to neither.

Wars of religion and between nations have been fought here for centuries.

Tourists do not linger in Thurgau but traverse it en route to places deemed more interesting.

This is farm country, a land of labour and pragmatism, where poets party in private homes but never parade themselves in political protest processions.

Coat of arms of Kanton Thurgau

Above: Coat of arms of Canton Thurgau

St. Gallen, both city and canton especially the City itself, bears the scent of incense, the stains on a faithful shroud, the remnants of religious rule.

Coat of arms of Kanton St. Gallen

Above: Coat of arms of Canton St. Gallen

St. Gallen is reminiscent of (Giovanni Bocaccio’s Decameron) Ceppello of Prato, who after a lifetime of evil, hoodwinks a holy friar with a deathbed confession and comes to be venerated as St. Ciappelletto, except in reverse with the holy friar hoodwinking the world into venerating it as holier than it could have been.

Decameron, The (unabridged) – Naxos AudioBooks

Granted that the St. Gallen Abbey Library is truly worthy of its UNESCO designation as “an outstanding example of a large Carolingian monastery and was, since the 8th century until its secularisation in 1805, one of the most important cultural centres in Europe”.

The library collection is the oldest in Switzerland, and one of earliest and most important monastic libraries in the world.

The library holds almost 160,000 volumes, with most available for public use.

In addition to older printed books, the collection includes 1,650 incunabula (books printed before 1500), and 2,100 manuscripts dating back to the 8th through 15th centuries – among the most notable of the latter are items of Irish, Carolingian, and Ottonian production.

These codices are held inside glass cases, each of which is topped by a carved cherub offering a visual clue as to the contents of the shelves below – for instance, the case of astronomy-related materials bears a cherub observing the books through a telescope.

Books published before 1900 are to be read in a special reading room.

The manuscript B of the Nibelungenlied (The Song of the Nibelungs, an epic poem written around 1200, the first heroic epic put into writing in Germany, helping to found a larger genre of written heroic poetry) is kept here.

Above: St. Gallen Abbey Library

Granted that the University of St. Gallen (“from insight to impact“) is, according to international rankings,  considered among the world’s leading business schools.

University of St. Gallen logo english.svg

But, my view of the city of St. Gallen is coloured by my experience, which has meant a working man’s life split between teaching at private schools similar to the cowboy outfit of Wil and formerly working as a Starbucks barista.

Neither side seems reflective of St. Gallen’s intellectual potential.

Above: Old houses, St. Gallen

(To be fair, people don’t actually hate places.

They hate their experiences of places.)

The two half-cantons of Appenzell Innerrhoden and Appenzell Ausserrhoden have, over time, perhaps without justification, become the butt of many a joke from the rest of Switzerland when one seeks a place to label as backwards.

Coat of arms of Appenzell

Above: Coat of arms of the half-cantons of Appenzell

To be fair to the comedians, Appenzell still has elections where folks line up in the town square to cast their votes by raising their arms to show their assent and it was the last place in the nation to give women the right to vote.

Farmers still lead their cattle in great processions through towns to Alpine pastures in springtime and back again when winter threatens.

As one travels from Thurgau south towards Ticino one senses a change in spirit.

Swiss cantons

Already we have encountered a village that fostered the growth of a Pulitzer Prize-deserving journalist and we have traversed towns of castles and artists, of epic tales and bridges over troubled waters.

But it is here in Lichtensteig where the air becomes rarified, where farmers think and plowmen wax poetic.

The time has come when scientific truth must cease to be the property of the few, when it must be woven into the common life of the world.” (Louis Agassiz)

Louis Agassiz H6.jpg

Above: Louis Agassiz (1807 – 1873)

Jost Bürgi (1552 – 1632) is probably the kind of man Agassiz had in mind.

Lichtensteiger Bürgi was a Swiss clockmaker, a maker of astronomical instruments and a mathematician.

Although an autodidact (he taught himself), Bürgi was already during his lifetime considered one of the most excellent mechanical engineers of his generation (think of a Da Vinci or an Edison).

Bürgi’s employer, William IV (1532 – 1592), the Landgrave of Hesse-Kessel, in a letter to Tycho Brahe (1542 – 1601)(Denmark’s greatest astronomer) praised Bürgi as “a second Archimedes” (287 – 212 BC).

The lunar crater Byrgius (the Latin form of Bürgi) is named in this Lichtensteiger’s honour.

Above: Portrait of Jost Bürgi

Another thinking man from Lichtensteig was Augustine Reding (1625 – 1692), a Benedictine, the Prince-Abbot of Einsiedeln Abbey and a respected theological writer.

At Einsiedeln, Reding organized the construction of the Abbey’s choir, confessional and the Chapel of St. Magdalena.

In 1675, Einsiedeln took charge of the college at Bellinzona, which was conducted by the monks of the Abbey until their suppression in 1852.

Reding watched carefully over discipline of Abbey affairs and insisted on a thorough intellectual training of his monks.

Above: Einsiedeln Cloister, Canton Schwyz

Lichtenberger Johann Ulrich Giezendanner (1686 – 1738) learned the profession of goldsmithing in Toggenburg.

Through his parish priest Niklaus Scherrer and his friend August Hermann Francke in Halle, Giezendanner began to practice pietism.

Giezendanner was banished from Toggenburg on suspicion of pietism, because he threatened the authorities with the criminal judgment of God.

His threats led to an investigation by a pietist commission set up by the Council, in which the secular side had the majority.

As a result, Giezendanner was expelled without a trial in 1710.

And so he went to Zürich.

In 1714, Giezendanner began studying theology at the University of Marburg, heard lectures from Johann Heinrich Hottinger (1681 – 1750) and worked as a teacher in the Marburg orphanage.

Because Giezendanner preached on his own initiative in Marburg, he was expelled from the state of Hesse.

Logo

After a short stay in Heidelberg, he returned to eastern Switzerland and began to hold secret meetings in Bottinghoffen near Scherzingen, less than 10 klicks (Canadian for kilometres) from my Landschlacht driveway.

Above: Bottighofen Harbour

As a representative of the radical pietism in German-speaking Switzerland, he returned to Zürich until he was expelled from there for his preaching.

On 29 June 1716, Giezendanner’s most memorable sermon of inspiration was given at the country estate of Johann Kaspar Schneeberger in Engstringen (just outside Zürich), in which Giezendanner said:

Hear now, my word, you stupid sticky clods of earth, where is your lie?

And so, hear, hear, heads of this place, you enter as gods and lords, but what kind of god you have for your rule, is it not with you all that you bring your belly to God?

With great arrogance to exclaim sins on the streets, when you walk on the streets, sin will take place and all of you will find it.

Unterengstringen, im Vordergrund das Kloster Fahr

Above: Engstringen, Canton Zürich

Unable to win friends and influence people in Switzerland, Giezendanner emigrated to America in 1734, working as a goldsmith in Charleston.

In 1736, he founded the first church of Toggenburger, Rhine Valley and Appenzell pietists in South Carolina’s Orangeburg County.

Above: Historic houses, Charleston, South Carolina, USA

It is a pity that those trained in the uncertainties of faith couldn’t be made responsible for the training of those who lead nations.

Perhaps a rigorous examination of our leaders’ intellectual and moral training might prevent the rise of demagogues and populists whose only qualification for power is their desire to dominate others.

Another man whose mind was a beautiful thing to behold was Max Rychner.

Max Rychner (1897 – 1965) was a writer, journalist, translator and literary critic.

Hannah Arendt (1906 – 1975), widely considered to be one of the most important political philosophers of the 20th century, called Rychner “one of the most educated and subtle figures in the intellectual life of the era“.

Rychner is considered, among other things, to be the discoverer of the poet Paul Celan (1920 – 1970), the publisher of the memoirs of Walter Benjamin (1892 – 1940), the editor-translator of philosopher-poet Paul Valéry (1871 – 1945), as well as being himself a poet, novelist and essayist.

Rychner is best known for:

  • Freundeswort (Word of a friend)
  • Die Ersten: Ein Epyllion (The first: an epyllion)(not sure what an epyllion is)
  • Unter anderem zur europäischen Literatur zwischen zwei Weltkriegen (On European literature between two world wars)
  • Arachne
  • Bedelte und testierte Welt (Affirmed and certified world)

Bei mir laufen Fäden zusammen - Max Rychner | Wallstein Verlag

According to Wikipedia, Rycher’s “method of literary admiration, based on hermeneutic models, raised formal aesthetic criteria far beyond questions of content and meaning.”

I have no idea of what that means, but it sure sounds impressive.

An incomplete sphere made of large, white, jigsaw puzzle pieces. Each puzzle piece contains one glyph from a different writing system, with each glyph written in black.

Wikivoyage (German version only) recommends Lichtensteig for:

  • the alleys and houses in the old quarter of the town

  • the Toggenburger Museum (Sundays 1 – 5 pm)

  • Fredy’s Mechanical Music Museum (last weekend of the months April to December at 3 pm / guided tours only / five-person minimum / CHF 14 per person)

Fredy's Mechanical Music Museum | Switzerland Tourism

  • Erlebniswelt Toggenburg (Adventure World Toggenburg)(Wednesdays and weekends: 1030 to 1630)

(It’s a small world, after all.)

Erlebniswelt Toggenburg - BESUCHER

  • Various sports facilities, including a climbing wall and an outdoor pool
  • the Thurweg which wends through the town

Datei:Thurweg..jpg

  • Jazz Days, with international jazz greats, annually

Jazztage Lichtensteig | Erlebnisregion Ostschweiz & Bodensee

Travel as a Political Act

Now you may be wondering why I bother telling you all of this, explaining in painful prose what lies beneath the surface of places.

Travel guide writer Rick Steves said it best:

Travel connects people with people.

It helps us fit more comfortably and compatibly into a shrinking world.

It inspires creative new solutions to persistent problems facing our nation.

We can’t understand our world without experiencing it.

There is more to travel than good-value hotels, great art and tasty cuisine.

Travel as a political act means the Traveller can have the time of his life and come home smarter – with a better understanding of the interconnectedness of today’s world and just how we fit in.”

Travel as a Political Act (Rick Steves): Steves, Rick ...

Steves sees the travel writer of the 21st century like a court jester of the Middle Ages.

Rick Steves cropped.jpg

Above: Rick Steves

While thought of as a comedian, the jester was in a unique position to tell truth to power without being punished.

Back then, kings were absolute rulers – detached from the lives of their subjects.

The court jester’s job was to mix it up with people that the King would never meet.

The jester would play in the gutter with the riffraff.

Then, having fingered the gritty pulse of society, the true lifeblood of the Kingdom, the jester would come back into the court and tell the King the truth.

Above: “Keying Up” – The Court Jester, by William Merritt Chase, 1875.

Your Highness, the people are angered by the cost of mead. 

They are offended by the Queen’s parties. 

The Pope has more influence than you. 

Everybody is reading the heretics’ pamphlets. 

Your stutter is the butt of many rude jokes.

Is there not a parallel here between America and this Kingdom?

Comedians like Seth Meyers, Stephen Colbert and Trevor Noah are listened to more by the average American than the actual news these comedians parody.

For these jesters of 21st century television know the pulse of the nation far more accurately than do the mandarins of power in Washington.

Seth Meyers by Gage Skidmore.jpg

Above: Seth Meyers

Stephen Colbert December 2019.jpg

Above: Stephen Colbert

Trevor Noah 2017.jpg

Above: Trevor Noah

Trump is the butt of many rude jokes, because he deserves to be.

Trump has leaders from around the world openly laughing at him at ...

Meyers, Colbert and Noah are graffiti writers on the walls of sacred institutions, watching rich riffraff ride roughshod over the rest of those whose sole hopes from the gutter is that their only direction from their perspective is up.

File:Who Watches the Watchmen.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

In the Kingdom, the King did not kill the jester.

In order to rule more wisely, the King needed the jester’s insights.

In America, the President would love to kill his critics.

He is not interested in ruling wisely, only perpetually.

Official Keep America Great 45th President Hat – Trump Make ...

Many of today’s elected leaders have no better connection with real people (especially beyond their borders) than those divinely ordained monarchs did centuries ago.

Any Traveller, including your humble blogger and you my patient readers, can play jester in your own communities.

Sometimes a jackass won’t move unless a gesturing mosquito is biting its behind.

Mosquito 2007-2.jpg

Consider countries like El Salvador (where people don’t dream of having two cars in every garage) or Denmark (where they pay high taxes with high expectations and are satisfied doing so) or Iran (where many compromise their freedom for their fidelity to their faith).

Travellers can bring back valuable insights and, just like those insights were needed in the Middle Ages, this understanding is desperately needed in our age of anxiety.

Ideally, travel broadens our perspectives personally, culturally and politically.

Suddenly, the palette with which we paint the parameters of our personalities has more colour, more vibrancy.

We realize that there are exciting alternatives to the social and community norms that our less-travelled neighbours may never consider.

It is like discovering there are other delicacies off the menu, that there is more than one genre of music available on the radio, that there is an upstairs alcove above the library yet to be discovered, that you haven’t yet tasted all 31 flavours.

1970s Baskin Robbins 31 Flavors Ice Cream logo

That there are more things in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy.

I will never be against tourists who travel to escape their workaday lives and simply wish to relax in as uncomplicated a fashion as humanly possible.

Sometimes this is needed.

Kokomo song cover.jpg

No, I am referring to Travellers who travel with a purpose on purpose.

People who try to connect with other people.

People who take history seriously.

Yesterday’s history informs today’s news, which becomes all our tomorrows.

Those with a knowledge (or at least a curiosity) of history can understand current events in a broader context and respond to them more thoughtfully.

As you travel, opportunities to enjoy history are everywhere.

Work on cultivating a general grasp of the sweep of history and you will be able to infuse your travels with more meaning.

Even if, in this time of corona, our travels are local.

Above: History by Frederick Dielman (1896)

I digress.

The Warriors of Wattwil

The long and winding road leads us to Wattwil (population: 8,740), first documented in 897 as “Wattinurlare” (which sounds exotic but only means “Watto’s village“).

Wattwil Gesamtansicht Yburg.jpg

Above: Wattwil, Canton St. Gallen

Around 1230, Heinrich von Iberg had Iberg Castle built here.

It was destroyed during the Appenzell Wars (1401 – 1429) and rebuilt.

It served as the seat of the bailiffs until 1805.

Above: Iberg Castle, Wattwil

In 1468, the entire Toggenburg County (the last Toggenburg Count, Friedrich VII died without heirs) was bought by St. Gallen Abbey.

The Pfaffenweise (place of assembly) (today a cemetery) served as a community and war gathering point and as a place to demonstrate hommage to the Prince-Abbots of St. Gallen.

Above: Wattwil station

In 1529, Pastor Mauriz Miles from Lichtensteig introduced the Reformation to Wattwil.

The population, which supported the religious innovations by a large majority, was able to prevail against the Catholic abbots.

Catholic Services were only reintroduced in 1593.

The Wattwil church was used by both faiths until a new Catholic church was built in 1968.

Above: Wattwil Reformed Church

Above: Wattwil Catholic Church

In 1621, the Capuchin Convent of St. Mary the Angel was built on the slope called the Wenkenürti (I have no idea what this translates to.) after a devastating fire at their previous location on Pfanneregg (a hill where the Vitaparcours – think “outdoor gym path” – is practiced).

The Convent is an excellently preserved complex with a highly baroque church.

Sadly, the Sisters left the monastery in 2010.

Above: St. Mary the Angel Convent

In the 17th century, St. Gallen Abbey wanted to expand the road known as Karrenweg via Rickenpass, in order to ensure a better connection between St. Gallen and Catholic Central Switzerland.

The majority of the Reformed Wattwil populace refused to work on it or contribute to it, tirggering the Toggenburg Turmoil (1699 – 1712), which led to the Second Villmerger War of 1712.

The road was only realized in 1786.

Wattwil’s traditional linen weaving mill was replaced by a cotton factory in 1750.

In the 19th century, more than a dozen companies started operating in the town.

In 1881, the Toggenburg weaving school was founded, from which the Swiss Textile Technical School later emerged.

The spirit of intelligence, the thirst for knowledge, the expression of wisdom can also be found in Wattwil.

Ulrich Bräker (1735 – 1798) was an autodidact, writer and diarist, known for his autobiography, widely received at the time as the voice of an unspoiled “natural man” of the lower classes, based on the title which Bräker became known “der arme Mann im Toggenburg” (the poor man of Toggenburg).

Bräker was born the oldest of eight siblings.

Above: Bräker’s birth house in Näppis near Wattwil

Bräker was educated in literacy and basic arithmetic during ten weeks each winter, working as a goatherd for the rest of the year.

In 1754, the family moved to Wattwil, where Bräker worked various jobs.

In 1755, he entered the service of a Prussian recruiting officer.

Against Bräker’s wishes, he was pressed into military duty in the 13th infantry regiment of the Prussian army in 1756, but he managed to escape later that same year in the midst of the Battle of Lobositz.

War Ensign of Prussia (1816).svg

Above: War flag of Prussia

Returning to his native Toggenburg, Bräker married Salome Ambühl (1735 – 1822) of Wattwil in 1761 and had several children.

Bräker built a house “auf der Hochsteig” (on the high slope) outside of Wattwil and traded in cotton for the local home industry.

Above: Bräker’s house auf der Hochsteig, contemporary drawing (c. 1794; the house was destroyed in 1836)

He began writing a diary.

Der arme Mann im Tockenburg - Ulrich Bräker - Buch kaufen | Ex Libris

Bräker’s writing talent was discovered by local writer and intellectual Johann Ludwig Ambühl.

Bräker published some texts in Ambühl’s Brieftasche aus den Alpen (Letter Bag from the Alps).

Bräker’s writing is based on the pietistic outlook and reflects familiarity with the Bible as well as a keen observation of nature and an enthusiastic interest in the translated works of Shakespeare.

9781166984809: Die Brieftasche Aus Den Alpen (1780) (German ...

Bräker’s diary is a touching human document containing Lebensweisheit (pearls of pure pramatic wisdom).

Sämtliche Schriften, 5 Bde., Bd.1, Tagebücher 1768-1778: Amazon.de ...

Bräker lived to see, and was perturbed by, the French invasion of Switzerland in the spring of 1798.

He died in September that same year.

Johann Ludwig Ambühl (1750 – 1800) was a civil servant and a writer – much like my aforementioned Canadian friend at the beginning of this post.

Ambühl was the son of the schoolmaster of Wattwil, Hans Jacob Ambühl (1699 – 1773).

At the age of 23, Johann became his father’s successor in 1733, for he had helped Hans, increasingly blind, with seven hours of instruction every day since he was 12.

In his free time, Johann mainly devoted himself to studying geometry, music, reading, drawing and collecting natural objects.

In Wattwil, Ambühl was considered a Stölzling (nerd), because of his always strict and serious appearance in public.

9781120610225: Die Brieftasche Aus Den Alpen (1780) (German ...

In 1783, on the recommendation of Gregorius Grob, Ambühl was hired as a court master by the rich Rheineck merchant Jacob Laurenz Custer.

In this function, he accompanied one of his students to Strasbourg in 1786, to Geneva (1788 – 1789) and in 1790 on a study trip through Italy.

The majority of Ambühl’s literary work consists of plays of extremely patriotic content.

It was like sawdust, the unhappiness.

It infiltrated everything.

Everything was a problem, everything made her cry….but it was so hard to say exactly what the problem was in the first place.” 

(Melanie Thernstrom, The Dead Girl)

The Dead Girl by Melanie Thernstrom

Hans Adolf Pestalozzi (1929 – 2004) was a social critic of late 20th century capitalism, which eventually led to his becoming a bestselling author.

Hans A Pestalozzi - Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia

Born in Zürich, Pestalozzi, after his studies at the University of St. Gallen, started working for Migros.

Logo

In the 1960s he built up the Gottlieb Duttweiler Institut, a think tank named ater the Migros founder, in Rüschlikon (on Lake Zürich).

The Institute was established to investigate the range of possible shortcomings and negative effects of capitalism, in particular within Western consumer society, so that they could be combated more effectively.

Pestalozzi fulfilled that task very thoroughly, too thoroughly, especially in his lectures, so much so that in 1977 he was fired by Migros.

Rather than looking for a new job, he became a freelance writer and self-proclaimed “autonomous agitator” who sided with the fledging European youth, peace and ecological movements.

He preached “positive subversion” and tried to convince people that using their own intelligence was the right thing to do.

HANS A. PESTALOZZI | Autor, Positiv

Above: Pestalozzi (centre), After us the future, from positive subversion (left) and Off the trees of the apes (right)

Moreover, Pestalozzi demanded a guaranteed minimum income for everybody.

Pestalozzi died a recluse by suicide in his home near Wattwil.

Einsamer Tod eines wirtschaftskritischen Managers

Wikivoyage recommends the Cloister, the Castle and the Kubli Church in Wattwil.

The current Wikivoyage logo

The Wattwil area is great for hiking and mountain biking.

And somewhere down the highway….

The Afterglow of Ebnat- Kappel

Perhaps the easiest way of making a town’s acquaintance is to ascertain how the people in it work, how they love and how they die. 

In our little town (is this, one wonders, an effect of the climate?) all three are done on much the same lines, with the same feverish yet casual air. 

The truth is that everyone is bored and devotes himself to cultivating habits.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

The Plague (1992 film).jpg

Ebnat-Kappel (population: 5,031) was first mentioned in 1218 as “Capelle“.

On 26 July 1854, a fire almost completely destroyed the village.

In 1847, Johann Gerhard Oncken founded the first Swiss Baptist church here in E-K.

Ebnat-Kappel Vilagxo kun preghejo 611.jpg

People visit Ebnat-Kappel primarily to ski or to follow the 60-kilometre Thurweg.

Worth viewing are:

  • the Reformed Church in the centre of Ebnat along with the church hall with its front tower

  • the Steinfels House (a Gothic building with Baroque decor)

  • the Ackerhaus (built for Albert Edelmann who donated the house to serve as the local museum)

Museum Hauskultur Toggenburg Ackerhaus, Ebnat-Kappel

  • Typical wooden Toggenburg houses preserved in nearby Eich

Bäuerliches Toggenburger Haus in Ebnat-Kappel Foto & Bild ...

  • the Felsenstein House in Kappel with Gothic windows and cross-vaulted rooms
  • the willow wood figures near the station depicting a chapel and an unicorn

Wappen von Ebnat-Kappel

Above: Coat of arms of Ebnat – Kappel

  • the Sinnepark (a sensory park) just south of the village

Der Sinnepark - Verkehrsverein Ebnat-Kappel

Above: Ebnat-Kappel station

Notable people of Ebnat-Kappel are:

  • Albert Edelmann (1886 – 1963) was a teacher, painter and sponsor of local folk and cultural assets.

His Ackerhaus museum shows objects of Toggenburg culture from four centuries.

In addition to household items and equipment from the Toggenburg, the collection contains rural paintings, pictures by Babeli Giezendammer and other painters, seven house organs and neck zithers.

By the end of the 19th century, the neck zither game in Toggenburg was forgotten.

Thanks to Edelmann this tradition was revived.

There is a room dedicated to the Biedermeier period (1815 – 1848) in Toggenburg.

Edelmann’s former studio shows his CV and his work.

While the Museum offers encounters with the past, the culture of Now is everpresent.

Above: Albert Edelmann

I enjoy decoration. 

By accumulating this mass of detail you throw light on things in a longer sense. 

In the long run it all adds up. 

It creates a texture – how shall I put it – a background, a period, which makes everything you write that much more convincing. 

Of course, all artists are terrible egoists. 

Unconsciously you are largely writing about yourself. 

I could never write anything factual. 

I only have confidence in myself when I am another character. 

All the characters in my books are myself, but they are a kind of disguise.

(Patrick White)

  • Babeli Giezendanner (1831 – 1905) was a painter, representative of Appenzeller / Toggenburger peasant painting.

She was born the third of nine children.

In 1861, she married master shoemaker Ulrich Remisegger.

In 1873, he died in an accident.

As a widow with three children, Babeli supported her family through weaving, drawing and painting.

In 1904, she moved to the Hemberg poorhouse and lived there until she died in her 74th year.

Possibly all art flowers more readily in silence. 

Certainly the state of simplicity and humility is the only desirable one for artist or for man. 

While to reach it may be impossible, to attempt to do so is imperative.

(Patrick White)

Babeli Giezendanner learned to draw from her father, which meant that she had a good knowledge of perspective drawing that characterizes her work.

Furthermore, she worked temporarily in Lichtensteig for the lithographer Johan Georg Schmied.

Stylistic relationships to the work of the Swiss peasant painter Johannes Müller from Stein (AR) can be proven.

He may have been one of her role models.

The artist’s oeuvre is diverse and extensive, the inventory includes around 100 works.

They include the depiction of houses and villages, alpine lifts and cattle shows.

She created numerous livery paintings and memorial sheets for birth, baptism, wedding and death.

For commemorative albums, she painted pictures and wrote poems.

The painting of umbrellas and dials of clocks has been handed down in the vernacular, but cannot be proven.

Today, many of her paintings and drawings are exhibited in the Toggenburg Museum in Lichtensteig and in the Museum Ackerhus in Ebnat-Kappel.

Very early in my life it was too late.

(Marguerite Duras, The Lover)

OnFiction: Marguerite Duras The Lover

I start to get the feeling that something is really wrong.

Like all the drugs put together – the lithium, the Prozac, the desipramine and the Desyrel that I take to sleep at night – can no longer combat whatever it is that was wrong with me in the first place. 

I feel like a defective model, like I came off the assembly line flat-out f….d and my parents should have taken me back for repairs before the warranty ran out. 

But that was so long ago.

I start to think there really is no cure for depression, that happiness is an ongoing battle, and I wonder if it isn’t one I’ll have to fight for as long as I live. 

I wonder if it’s worth it.

I start to feel like I can’t maintain the facade any longer, that I may just start to show through. 

And I wish I knew what was wrong.

Maybe something about how stupid my whole life is.

I don’t know.

(Elizabeth Wurzel, Prozac Nation)

Prozac Nation film.jpg

  • Guido Looser (1892 – 1937) was a writer.

Looser attended high school in Zürich and then studied history, German and geography at universities in Zürich and Berlin.

He then worked as a teacher in Zürich.

From 1922, he suffered increasingly from depression which led to long hospital stays in Kreuzlingen and Oetiwil.

In 1937, Looser committed suicide, given the impossibility of continuing to fund adequate hospitalization.

Guido Looser

Looser wrote novels, essays and poems, strongly influenced by his psychological suffering and revolving around illness, melancholy and death.

Looser is known for:

  • Nachglanz (Afterglow)
  • Josuas Hingabe (Joshua’s dedication)
  • Die Würde (Dignity)
  • Nur nie jemandem sagen, wohin man reist (Just never tell anyone where you are going)

Nur nie jemandem sagen, wohin man reist. Prosa - Guido Looser ...

“You only live twice: once when you are born and once when you look death in the face.”

(Ian Fleming)

Above: Ian Fleming (1908 – 1964)

Bridges over troubled waters

Bridge Over Troubled Water single.jpg

When I think of all the things he did because he loved me – what people visit on each other out of something like love. 

It is enough for all the world’s woe. 

You don’t need hate to have a perfectly miserable time.

(Richard Bausch, Mr. Field’s Daughter)

Mr. Field's Daughter: Bausch, Richard: 9780671640514: Amazon.com ...

Stein (population: 1,429) has a few sites worth viewing:

In the village centre, the 18th century church and the Appenzeller Folklore Museum with, among other things, looms and embroidery machines from the 19th century.

Wappen von Stein

Above: Coat of arms, Stein, Canton Appenzell

Between the hamlet of Störgel and the St. Gallen suburb of Haggen lies the Haggen Bridge, the highest pedestrian footbridge in Europe, which spans the 355-metre wide gorge of the Sitter at a height of 99 metres.

The structure called “Ganggelibrugg” (wobbly bridge) was actually planned for traffic between Stein and St. Gallen, but due to serious structural defects it could never be handed over to its intended purpose.

For a long time it was the most used bridge for suicide in Switzerland.

Since 2010, the bridge has been secured with nets that help prevent such tragedies.

Nearby are the Kubelbrücke (the Talking Bridge, a covered wooden bridge over the Urnäsch River in the hamlet of Kubel), the Abtebrücke (the Abbey Bridge, a covered wooden bridge over the River Sitter in the hamlet of Kubel, built by the St. Gallen Monastery) and the Hüsli covered wooden bridges across the Sitter and the Wattbach beneath the Ganggelibrugg in the hamlets of Blatten and Zweibruggen.

Also worth visiting in Stein is the Appenzeller Show Dairy, where you can watch the production of Appenzeller cheese.

(Open: 0900 – 1800 / Guided tours: Wednesday and Sundays, 1400 and 1700)

Everybody is interested (or should be) in Switzerland.

No other country in Europe offers a richer return to the Traveller for his time and effort.

To revisit Switzerland is for the old to renew one’s youth, while for the young it is to gain a lifelong sense of the inspiring grandeurs of this wonderworld.

Above: The Matterhorn

The Traveller goes to Switzerland chiefly to look at mountains, the Swiss Alps are as effectively displayed as the treasures in a well-arranged museum, but the mountains are not the only things in Switzerland.

There are the towns and cities and the people, those admirable Swiss people, who have made their land in many respects the model country of the world.

Above: Lake Lucerne, view from Pilatus

(If you are not sure about this, just ask the Swiss.)

Coat of arms of Switzerland

The sad thing is that while Switzerland may be the playground of Europe, it is not the playground of the Swiss.

Switzerland is their workshop, where they toil at many industries and practice many useful arts of which the outside world knows little.

The world knows of music boxes, cheese and watches and that the Swiss are born hotel keepers with comfort and courtesy as their watchwords.

Non-Swiss tend to dismiss Switzerland as an irrelevance in the broader sweep of European history.

Because the country is peaceful today, the assumption is that it has always been somehow inherently tranquil, but this is an illusion.

Until the middle of the 19th century, Switzerland was the most unstable country in Europe.

The Alpine calm of today came at the price of a millennium of war.

The Swiss may no longer be an offensive force, but they are defensively armed to the teeth.

The Reformation, which began in Germany in the early 16th century, was sparked in Switzerland by a native of the next town down the road….

Above: Map of the Old Swiss Confederacy 1536 showing the religious division

Within a few days I will go to the Papal Legate [Pucci], and if he shall open a conversation on the subject as he did before, I will urge him to warn the Pope not to issue an excommunication [against Luther], for which I think would be greatly against him [the Pope].

For if it be issued I believe the Germans will equally despise the Pope and the excommunication.

But do you be of good cheer, for our day will not lack those who will teach Christ faithfully, and who will give up their lives for Him willingly, even though among men their names shall not be in good repute after this life…

So far as I am concerned I look for all evil from all of them: I mean both ecclesiastics and laymen.

I beseech Christ for this one thing only, that He will enable me to endure all things courageously, and that He break me as a potter’s vessel or make me strong, as it pleased Him.

If I be excommunicated I shall think of the learned and holy Hilary, who was exiled from France to Africa, and of Lucius, who though driven from his seat at Rome returned again with great honour.

Not that I compare myself with them: for as they were better than I so they suffered what was a greater ignominy.

And yet if it were good to flourish I would rejoice to suffer insult for the name of Christ.

But let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.

Lately I have read scarcely any thing of Luther’s, but what I have seen of his hitherto does not seem to me to stray from gospel teaching.

You know – if you remember – that what I have always spoken of in terms of the highest commendation in him is that he supports his position with authoritative witness.”

(Huldrych Zwingli)

Ulrich-Zwingli-1.jpg

Above: Portrait of Ulrich Zwingli (1484 – 1531)

Swiss city after city overthrew ecclesiastical overlords in favour of the new Protestantism, with city authorities gaining new power over the countryside in the process.

Zwingli’s attempts in 1531 to reorganize the Confederation under the urban leadership of Zürich and Bern led to armed conflict and the eventual loss of his life in battle.

The Reformation continued to spread, with Geneva – at the time not Swiss – emerging as a major centre for Protestantism, thanks to the zealotry of French priest and Reformer Jean Calvin.

Increasingly the Catholic cantons nurtured an inferiority complex towards the Protestant cities, which held a grip on political authority.

Above: Religious division of the Old Confederacy during the 17th and 18th century

Only shared economic interests keep the Swiss Confederation together.

I have mentioned the textile industry as crucial to the towns we passed through, for it was textiles, among other industries, where merchants in the cities (generally Protestant) supplied raw materials to peasants in the countryside (generally Catholic) who worked up finished products and returned them for trading on.

Wildhaus (population: 1,205) is first mentioned in 1344 as “Wildenhuss“.

In addition to tourism, agriculture and forestry from the economic focus.

The birthplace of the Reformer Huldrych Zwingli, built in 1449, is one of the oldest wooden houses in Switzerland.

(For more on Zwingli and travels following his life, please see:

Canada Slim… 

  • and the Road to Reformation
  • and the Wild Child of Toggenburg
  • and the Thundering Hollows
  • and the Battle for Switzerland’s Soul
  • and the Monks of the Dark Forest
  • and the Battlefield Brotherhood
  • and the Lakeside Pilgrimage

….of my other blog, The Chronicles of Canada Slim at https://canadaslim.wordpress.com.)

Wildhaus is both a summer and winter sports resort.

Two chair lifts and several ski lifts lead to the Gamsalp and the Gamserrugg.

The Obertoggenburg and the Churfirsten ski area, which Wildhaus operated together with Unterwasser and Alt St. Johann until separated by the Cablecar Conflict of 2019.

The 87-kilometre Toggenburger Höhenweg begins in Wildhaus and ends in Will, as does the 60-kilometre long Thurweg.

Wildhaus SG

Above: Wildhaus, Canton St. Gallen

Wildhaus is a place my wife and I have together and apart have repeatedly visited.

I have followed both the Höhenweg and the Thurweg from start to finish.

We have driven to and through Wildhaus.

On this trip we do not tarry but continue swiftly onwards.

Coat of arms of Wildhaus

Above: Coat of arms of Wildhaus

What follows is a place so seductive that an afternoon seems to stand still….

(To be continued….)

Wildhaus SG

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Wikiquote / Wikivoyage / Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron / Albert Camus, The Plague / Humphrey Carpenter, The Inklings / Albert M. Debrunner, Literaturführer Thurgau / Rick Steves, Travel as a Political Act / Elizabeth Wurzel, Prozac Nation / Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows