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Paul woz here two/too

Friday, September 18th, 2009

Athens, Greece

Is it plagiarism when you write an email to someone and then publish it on your blog?
I think not, if it is your own work!

Dear Dad (known on this blog as Grandpa),
I’m sitting here struggling to find words to put today into a blogpost. It was one of those full-to-overflowing days that refuse to be captured in print.
I can’t even get sidetracked with looking for your musings for the day!
Just writing about catching a tram this morning would make a complete post (what a saga!!!)

 

…while it could include a commentary on the traffic of Athens (my oh my, and we think we have a traffic problem in Auckland – we don’t have narrow roads with nowhere to widen them or cars double parking in front of NO PARKING signs or so many cars that only half are allowed in the city on any given day or the zippy manouvres we became familiar with in Italy or thousands of yellow taxis)….a tram-saga-only piece would miss out the Acropolis, the Parthenon….

 

….the amazing brand-spanking new museum (more on that later), Hadrian’s Arch, the statues and myriad of temples….

 

….the bare marble Mars Hill, the first Olympic Games, the other wonderful old buildings, the shopping streets, all the people who stopped us to enquire of our family (just like Asia again, only these ones also asked how old we are and commented on my non-motherly figure and our obviously abundant finances, and clasped our hands in congratulations!)
It would miss out the pressing crowd at the top of the Acropolis, people from all over the world, but mainly loud Americans.

It would miss out the conversation with a Polish artist on the side of the street, the conversation in a travel agent about cruising to the islands, the contemplations about how poor my Classical Studies teacher was – she never even mentioned that the place where the plays we studied were performed was still sitting here in Athens to be seen, she never even showed us a picture, she never made the connection between the Greek vases we had to rote learn the names of and Aristophanes’ The Birds and The Clouds – they were two different subjects as far as her teaching went. 

 

It would miss the excavations that continue to this day and Mboy7’s suddenly inspired desire to be an archaeologist and sift through rocks for a living.

It would miss out Paul’s life in Athens, his understandable dismay at the range of gods available to call on, his speaking to philosophers at the hill now more famously known as a large American church.

 

It would miss out the view of the capital stretching a full circle around us, sprawling out to the horizon at every point of the compass. Take a look at this photo and imagine yourself turning a complete circle – this is what you would see the whole way round, this city of over 3 million people, all seemingly living in sparkling white apartments:

 

It would miss out the turtles we saw wandering around, the thunderstorm mid-afternoon and all the black men suddenly, miraculously trading their sunnies-for-sale for umbrellas-for-sale (You need umbrella – no we don’t need a dozen umbrellas thankyouverymuch), it would miss the whistle-blowing police so reminiscent of Bangkok, the leather sandals and embroidered shirts for sale, the pompom-ed slippers and creative t-shirts (finally some tourist t-shirts that actually look wearable).

 

It would miss the hour spent riding through the suburbs……street after street after street of high-ish-rise apartment blocks, all with balconies and wide wide awnings, most with table-cloth-covered wrought iron or wicker tables and chairs, and the profusion of green green green everywhere under the smog. Actually it might not miss that, because that was from the tram.

And now, I can leave Grandpa’s email (which has actually been highly embellished – if you are a reader but not Grandpa, please don’t wonder why you don’t get such full letters from us and if you’re Grandpa, please don’t think you’re getting old and doddery, because you don’t remember us saying half of this in your email – we didn’t!!)….for now I know what I’m going to write about today.

The Acropolis Museum.
Opened only a couple of months ago, it is an expansive building that beckons you through it, through dim wide passages in the depths of the building and up into bright light-filled spaces at the top – just like climbing the Acropolis. In fact, when you get to the top, there’s a replica Parthenon of sorts – the columns are plain steel, but there is the right number of them and inserted between are the friezes and statues, some castings and some originals, with explanatory notes about them. Artefacts from the area line your journey upwards; jars painstakingly pieced back together, fragments arranged creatively with  illustrations of how they probably once appeared, all sorts of statues; a horse with the back missing (somewhat humourously described as “Horse without rider”), gods and goddesses, naked men in various poses, semi-naked women with flowing robes, so gently draped, that you expect to see them ripple in the slightest breeze, despite being made from marble. Metal columns support some statues; others stand atop huge slabs of glistening white marble. Not only are your eyes drawn upwards, but they search downwards too. The entire building is sited over excavations, and much of the floor is made of glass so that you can peer down wells and along paved paths and look through doorways below your feet. Even three floors up, the floor is glass and you can see all the way down the atrium to the foundations, a hint of which you had received at the approach to the museum, where the excavations are left entirely open to view:

The sheer number of lamps, jars, cooking pots, bowls, jugs, toys, spindles, figurines and urns, displayed both in cabinets and under the floor, is staggering and leaves you with no doubt that a LOT of people once lived here!
As if this were not enough, there is also a continuously-playing documentary about the history and reconstruction of the Parthenon (playing alternately in Greek and English). If anyone were planning a visit without employing the services of a guide, it would make a fine introduction to the site, well worth seeing BEFORE tramping up the short, but fairly steep rocky climb to the Real Thing.

So that’s just the museum…and not even everything – I have failed to mention the seats shaped like urns and courtyard garden – imagine how long a post this would be if we told everything that happened this full day.

Paul woz here

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Corinth, Greece

 

That the Bible is merely a myth or a collection of stories is a fallacy dispelled when you walk the streets of Ancient Corinth. Here the writings, given the due they deserve, are accepted as historical fact along with other ancient manuscripts.

Paul left Athens and went to Corinth. There he met a Jew called Aquila, a native of Pontus, who had recently come from Italy with his wife Priscilla, because Claudius had ordered all Jews to leave Rome. Paul went to see them, and because he was a tentmaker as they were, he stayed and worked with them.”

The exile is a readily accepted fact, documented in places other than the Bile that so often is viewed with suspicion. It is also known that the Roman Corinth, rebuilt under Julius Caesar in 44BC (having been destroyed by the Romans a century earlier) was mainly filled with Jews and freed slaves. The Biblical account stacks up.

Despite being here after the heat of high summer, the temperature is still in excess of thirty degrees. You can see how tentmakers could eek out a living here; even today you could support yourself sewing canvas. Outside the cafes are expansive umbrellas. Hanging above every shopfront is shade-providing awning. It is not difficult to imagine awnings protruding from the rows of shops in the excavated archaeological site. You can almost hear the sheep and goats bleating, chickens squawking. You can almost smell the fresh catch from the sea brought up the hill to be sold. You can visualise urn-carrying women taking shelter under the trees as they chat on their way to the fountain.

 

Why would we doubt the Scriptures when it is so easy to see their reality?

We stand right at the spot where Paul was brought before Gallio.

 

We read:

While Gallio was proconsul of Achaia, the Jews of Corinth made a united attack on Paul.”

We imagine Gallio at the top of the steps, Paul perhaps at the bottom, surrounded by the crowd. We wonder if anyone looked up to the Acrocorinth. We wonder how much of Aphrodite’s temple remained back then.

Just as Paul was about to speak, Gallio [spoke to the crowd] and drove them off.”

Did they go up towards the Temple of Apollo? Built in 550BC, it was still functioning when Paul was there around the AD50s, but was later destroyed by earthquake – only seven of the Doric columns remain, the sole reminder of one of the oldest temples in Greece.

Or did they head north past what is now known as Temple E, The Temple to Octavio?

Or did they storm down the main street past the Fount of Peirene?

Here’s where historical fact blends into legend. Was the fountain made when Pegasos stomped his hoof upon being bridled by Bolerothon? Or did it appear when, distraught at her son’s death, Peirene dissolved into tears?
Contemplating the options along with the four large reservoirs that stored the water, the columned colonnade, the chapel and cemetery that stood atop the spring in later centuries, we leave the blazing sun and take refuge in the cool of the museum. Artefacts discovered in the course of excavation are on display, the oldest we find dating back to 900BC. It’s a pot, intricate, well made, finely painted and incredibly well preserved. We ooh and aah and are wowed, but the hordes of tourists who have arrived prevent us from getting a good long look in the cabinets. Because we’ve allowed ourselves a whole day at this site, we can retreat to the vans for lunch and reading before returning to the site, journals in hand, later on when the crowds have been zapped away in flash busses to Athens.


wandering around the town away from the tourist spots,
we find a four-language inscription of part of the letter Paul wrote to the church here

 

living on paper

Sunday, September 13th, 2009
Same beach south of Patra, Greece If we felt like we were in a fairy tale in Germany….and preparing for medieval battles with the kings and queens of England….and swimming round bowls of pasta in Italy with place names that ... [Continue reading this entry]

neapolitan christmas

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009
Battipaglia, Italy As a child, neapolitan meant icecream to me. Chocolate, strawberry, vanilla. Of course, it is also “of naples”. And today that’s where we went.

 

We only spent a couple of hours in the historic town ... [Continue reading this entry]

when in Rome….

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009
….let your imagination run wild.

I scurry from shadow to shadow, snatching what cool I can, evading the fierce rays beaming down from the eternally blue canopy. I wait in line at one of the ... [Continue reading this entry]

rundown ’talian towns

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009
Certaldo, Italy While not wanting to be hasty in passing judgement, the general impression we have of Italy so far is that it is a bit rundown – apart from relatively isolated instances of painted facades, mosaics or painted tiles ... [Continue reading this entry]

in search of shade

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009
by Rach hovering just above the coast near Narbonne, looking out at the Mediterranean Sea It doesn’t seem that long ago that we were desperately in search of sun. Today we, with the rest of the population in the south, looked ... [Continue reading this entry]

a warwick, a warwick!!

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009
by a tired, too-lazy-to-write Rach (a picture is worth a thousand words, so here's a few million!) Stratford-Upon-Avon, England It’s the Disneyland of British Castles and Just As Much Fun. We were there when the portcullis was raised in the morning and ... [Continue reading this entry]

another day, another (unexpected) castle

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009
by Rach back at the couchsurfer’s lane in Stratford-Upon-Avon, England You wake up almost at today’s destination coz you travelled so much further than planned yesterday. All the same, there are a few miles to cover and just for a change, ... [Continue reading this entry]

from wet-n-windy to windermere

Saturday, July 18th, 2009
by Rach somewhere in The Lake District, England “No need to go any further, chaps, let’s build ourselves a wall right here,” declared Hadrian one wet and windy day. No history book will tell you this, but I reckon he had ... [Continue reading this entry]