Tuesday, October 5, 2010

In Ruins: My Day in Pompeii


Some excursions are better than others.  Pompeii wasn’t one of those.  The 8 hour bus ride and the perhaps a tad longish 5 hour tour was a little overkill.  My expectations were probably a little high based on my memory of the Magic Treehouse version of Pompeii that I read in 4th grade.  I still think that costumed guides and some Williamsburg-like stuff would make Pompeii more fun.  However, it was an interesting experience to walk along the city’s ancient streets and imagine the people who once lived there. 

The City of Pompeii is not just a town or a village—it’s a city and it takes quite a while to walk all over it.  Even in our marathon tour we didn’t cover all the ends of the city.  
In 79 AD, Mount Vesusvius erupted, covering the town in a layer of volcanic ash.  In 1599 it was excavated and Pompeii was discovered.  Even today Mount Vesusvius looms in the background, reminding vistors of its power and force. 

When the people of Pompeii died in the eruption, their bodies decomposed under the volcanic rock.  When Pompeii was excavated, the rocks were molds of their bodies and you can see the plaster casts of the citizens of Pompeii today.  The figures are frozen in time, in different positions, some surrendering, some trying to protect themselves from the inevitable.  The figures definitely make Pompeii more real.
Another thing that makes Pompeii more like a town than a collection of ruins is the ancient graffiti of politicans campaigning for office who would write their names in frescoes on the walls of the city.  Funny but effective!
Ancient Winery
Ancient Bakery


We also saw the ancient Theater, bakery, and site of the world’s oldest profession, as our professor put it. 
Pompeii is also interesting because it has become a refuge for dogs and there is a pet adoption program at Pompeii.  It was nice to see dogs running around and enjoying themselves.  They were all very friendly and begged for food. 
Kathryn + Cane

The last thing we saw at Pompeii was the (dun dun dun dah!)  Villa of Mysteries.  What’s the mystery, you ask?  Don’t get too excited—it’s not the World’s Biggest Ball of Twine.  It’s a room with some frescoes of a mysterious subject matter. 
Mysterious Frescoes

Despite the long day, Pompeii was definitely worth seeing-- it was interesting and informative.
So Happy To Be Done

Brother Sun, Sister Moon: Assisi Retreat


This weekend Anne, Kathryn, and I signed up for the Assisi retreat through Notre Dame.  It was only 25 euros so we figured we couldn’t go wrong by signing up and we were right.  Even though we were the only JCU notre dame kids (everyone else was a Notre Dame architecture major), we had fun getting to know new people and I enjoyed spending some time with old friends in the architechture program.    
Assisi is a beautiful medieval town on top of big hill that gives it beautiful views of the Italian countryside. 

The Monday after the retreat happened to be the Feast of St. Francis so the town was beginning to buzz with excitement.  Franciscans from all over the world flocked to Assisi to celebrate. 
Saturday morning our train left bright and early from Termini station.  By 9:30 we were in Assisi and took a bus up the hill that Assisi sits on top of. 

We stayed at a retreat center called Casa Elisabetta, for St. Elizabeth of Hungary.  The retreat center was a welcome change from hostels—it was so clean, the beds were made, and we got free breakfast, lunch, and dinner.  The meals were definitely the best part of the retreat center (not the retreat itself though, haha).  We had full course sit down lunch and dinner, with a prima piatti of pasta, a secondo of meat and vegetables, and a salad and a desert and great Umbrian wine. 
Santa Chiara
San Francesco

When we had got settled in, we were given some time to explore Assisi before the scheduled activities began so we went to a cafè called la Laterna and got great pizzas and then shopped around.
Our retreat began with a prayer and then we toured the Basilica di San Francesco.  Our tour guide really made St. Francis and the basilica come alive.  He explained the Frescoes by Giotto in the basilica and the specific plan and relationships between the three different levels of frescoes which depicted Genesis, the life of Christ, and the Life of Saint Francis.  The Basilica is also where Saint Francis is buried so we were able to tour the crypt chapel.  When St. Francis died, he was so popular that his followers were afraid his body would be taken by people who wanted relics so they buried him under enormous stone slabs.  Through the years, neighboring Perugia pillaged Assisi and Napoleon took some artifacts from all over Italy and people began to wonder if the body of Saint Francis had been taken too.  In the late 1800s, the tomb was opened and Saint Francis was still there.  A crypt chapel was dug under the tomb into the rock of the mountain so people could get closer to Saint Francis.  Our guide told us he loved Saint Francis because he was so human.  For example, Saint Francis called everything brother and sister, like Sister Moon and Brother Soon.  Because the body in a sense carries the soul, he called his body Brother Ass, because donkeys carry things.  When he was dying, he said, “I think I may have been too hard on Brother Ass”.  He also wrote to his good friend, a noble woman and told her he was dying and asked her to make his favorite almond cookie.  It was also interesting to learn how influential and important Saint Claire was to Saint Francis and to the development of the Franciscan order.  She was not just a follower, but a source of direction for Saint Francis.  She was also supposedly tougher than he was about fasting. 
Our next stop was the Basilica of Santa Chiara.  The two basilicas face each other, bookending the town.  Her basilica was built with beautiful bands of white and pink stone.  Her crypt can also be seen so we went downstairs.  Her body was thought to be incorruptible but this is not the case.  Her skeleton is covered in a layer of wax to give the appearance of flesh because the caretakers were concerned a skeleton might frighten some visitors.  The basilica also houses relics of Saint Francis and Saint Claire, like the robes she wore and made or the shoes she made Saint Francis and the sox he wore to cover up his stigmata and the poultice she made to ease his pain. 
Giotto's fresco of Saint Francis renouncing his father

That evening, we had time to meet with an American Franciscan living in Assisi.  He explained the three orders of Franciscans: Observants, Conventuals, and Cappucins.  Their history is long and complex but today the three orders live basically the same way.  In the past the Observants were more contemplative and monastic while the Conventuals traveled and preached.  Observants wear a gray habit, conventuals were a brown or black (some switched to black so they wouldn’t be persecuted by Napoleon) and capuucins have a hood but no cape.  All three orders wear a cross on a rope with three knots, which represent their Rule of obedience, simplicity, an poverty. 

On Sunday, we went to Mass at the Ermeo or Hermitage of Saint Francis, nestled in the mountains.  Our presider was a Cardinal from Africa who was retired in Assisi.  The Mass was beautiful and we were able to explore the hermitage afterwards and wander through the forest paths that Saint Francis once did. 
Later that day we went to the Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli.  The actual church is the size of our apartment kitchen but a giant basilica has been built around it.  The original church was where Saint Francis died and although he told his followers never to own anything, he begged them to never give up this church because he loved it so much.  There were a million Franciscans and poor claires in the church getting ready to attend the vigil mass for Saint Francis’ feast day.  It was neat to see their excitement. 
Our retreat director, Darrell, was a really nice man and gave us all Franciscan crosses at the end of our retreat. 


It was, as usual, an amazing weekend experience and it was really great that Notre Dame organized a trip because I probably wouldn’t have gone to Assisi otherwise and I would have missed out on a beautiful adventure.  Below are two of Saint Francis’ most famous prayers. 
Canticle of the Creatures
Most High, all-powerful, good Lord,
all praise is yours, all glory, all honor,
and all blessing.
To you, alone, Most High, do they belong.
No mortal lips are worthy to pronounce your name.
All praise be yours, my Lord,
through all you have made,
and first my lord Brother Sun, who brings the day;
and through whom you give us light.
How beautiful is he, how radiant in all his splendor;
Of you, Most High, he bears the likeness.
All Praise be yours, my Lord, through Sister Moon
and the stars; in the heavens you have made them,
bright, and precious, and fair.
All praise be yours, my Lord,
through Brothers wind and air, and fair and stormy,
all the weather's moods,
by which you cherish all that you have made.
All praise be yours, my Lord, through Sister Water,
so useful, humble, precious and pure.
All praise be yours, my Lord, through Brother Fire,
through whom you brighten up the night.
How beautiful is he, how cheerful!
Full of power and strength.
All praise be yours, my Lord, through our Sister
Mother Earth, who sustains us and governs us,
and produces various fruits with colored flowers
and herbs.
All praise be yours, my Lord,
through those who grant pardon for love of you;
through those who endure sickness and trial.
Happy are those who endure in peace,
By You, Most High, they will be crowned.
All praise be yours, my Lord, through Sister Death,
From whose embrace no mortal can escape.
Woe to those who die in mortal sin!
Happy those she finds doing your will!
The second death can do them no harm.
Praise and bless my Lord, and give him thanks
And serve him with great humility.
Prayer of St. Francis
Lord, make me an instrument of your peace;
where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon:
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope
where there is darkness, light
where there is sadness, joy
O Divine Master,
grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console;
to be understood, as to understand;
to be loved, as to love;
for it is in giving that we receive,
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are born to Eternal Life.
Amen.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Venetian Adventure

Me and Jamie on a Gondola

Masks.

This weekend was Jamie’s birthday weekend and so we decided to take a trip somewhere in Italy to celebrate.  Five of us, me, Jamie, Jenna, Yessenia, and Kathryn, left Thursday and Anne, Lauren, and Stephanie joined us on Saturday.  Our luck with using TrenItalia made the trip a breeze.  We took the bus to Termini and then the Metro to Tiburtini train station to get on the 10:00 (or 22:00) overnight train to Venice.  The train ride was actually pretty fun; the five of us were in a cabin with a nice older Italian gentleman named Ferdinando, who seemed to think he could make us understand Italian if he kept talking to us.  And he did keep talking, about everything from white hair, to love, to Juliard, all night.  But it was fun and we still managed to get some sleep. 
jenna and me on the "runway"
The train rolled into Venice at 5 am and since we couldn’t check into our hostel that early, we walked to Piazza San Marco (Saint Mark’s Square) to watch the sunrise on the Grand Canal.  It was beautiful and quiet, and despite weather forcasts, it didn’t rain during the day on Friday. 
As we walked through the Piazza, these workers in Green (who kept singing “siamo qui", “we are here”) were setting up these table-like things all around.  Naturally, we though these table things were runways (it was fashion week in Milan, why not in Venice?).  This was not the first time we were wrong about something in Italy.
When we had gotten pasteries and cappuccinos, we decided to try to check into our hostel, the lovely Venice Museum.  Once we found it, which was pretty challenging because Venice is definitely not a grid and deadends lead straight into canals, we were greeted by an Australian who looked like he’d just rolled out of bed.  Despite what we’d been told, it was too early to check in so we changed, left our stuff, and started exploring the city. 
Kathryn, me, jamie, and yessenia
Jenna had a great walking tour route we decided to try so we got to see a lot of the city and a ton of churches, which, even though I took pictures of them all, I probably couldn’t say much about except that they were all very beautiful. 
By then the sun had come out and was shining; the water was sparkling, it was warm, and we still had a whole day!  Before we went back to the hostel to crash, we went to the Peggy Gugenheim Museum and saw famous works by Picasso, Dali, Polluck, Ernst, and lots of other modern artists.

Then we went back to the lovely Venice Museum and crashed.  We woke up around 6 and I was so disoriented I thought it was the next day, and I was kind of upset because I thought we’d missed dinner!  But we hadn’t and we found a lovely little restaurant pretty close by.  I had spaghetti carbonara; it was great!  Then we went back to the hostel, showered, watched a dvd on Kathryn’s laptop, and fell asleep. 
Friday night was stormy and Saturday morning evidenced this.  We decided to walk to San Marco and check it out.  We were in for a surprise!  Once again, floods followed us to our destination.  Those table things we thought were runways?  Not runways—elevated sidewalks for when it floods.  Even though it was a little annoying to squeeze onto these sidewalk bridges, it was fun to watch people giggle as they waded through the water in the piazza or laugh as they carried each other.   
Jenna and I went up the Campodoglio Bell Tower.  We saw great views of Venice and Croatia and Slovenia.  It also happened to be 12 noon so we can confirm that the bells work.  After our bell-tower experience, I finally found a mask I liked after looking in every single gift shop (to the dismay of everyone in the group except Yessenia, who also loves window-shopping) and we celebrated my purchase and just being in Venice with bellini, a traditional Venetian drink of champagne and peach flavoring. 

The rest of the day was spent on a gondola and at Palazzo Ducale.  Our gondalier was named Sebastian and he loved to whistle and say, “look at me” and point out different sites, like Marco Polo’s house and Casanova’s house and the site of filming for Angelina Jolie’s new movie, The American. 
The Palazzo Ducale was the home of the Dodge or mayor of Venice and the center of political activity in Venice.  The Palazzo is famous for the Golden Staircase, the Bridge of Sighs…….and many other rooms.
Me and Jamie at Palazzo Ducale
me, jamie, Jenna, and Anne, getting our euros worth


Jamie, Me, Jenna at the Golden Stairs
 For dinner, we went to a cute place nearby called Mama Onesta.  Jenna and I decided to be adventurous and we had a lovely dish called “spaghetti with squid in their ink”.  It was basically pasta with black stuff on it; gross and not great but we can say we ate it!  That night we had to share our room with some strangers at the hostel (not an uncommon experience) but since we weren’t excited about turning in, we all shared a bottle of wine and the hostel didn’t seem so bad afterall. 
Me and Jenna eating Ink Pasta
On Sunday, we went to church at Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari, a beautiful church where the artist Titian is buried.  
Then, we caught our 7-hour-long train and headed home to Rome.  It was a great weekend and we all remember Venice as "the city of magic, music, and water".  
Me and yessenia + masks!

A Funny Thing Happened On the Way to the Forum...


A Funny Thing Happened On the Way to the Forum…
Well, nothing too funny.  But it was cool to spend a class period walking around this ancient center of Rome.  The Forum is located between the Capitoline and Palatine Hills in Rome.  My friend, Jenna, took great notes, which I've copied here so you can read about everything I can't remember.

Temple of Saturn
Saturn was the Italian God of agriculture, considered the most honest god of them all. This temple was built at the beginning of the Republic. Every year there was the festival of Saturn, Saturnalia, which was a city wide festival that lasted up to a week and started on December 17th. Because of the honesty of Saturn, state treasures were stored in this temple.
The Temple of Castor and Pollux
These twins had the same mother but different fathers (Pollux's father was Zeus and Castor's father was mortal). The Romans were fighting the Battle at Lake Regillus (during which Superbus was finally ousted) and two beautiful men appeared, told the Romans they had to fight in the battle on their side, and helped win the battle for the Romans. The temple was built where this announcement was made. King Amykos also wanted to fight Pollux, but Pollux was an excellent boxer and won, subsequently tying Amykos to a tree and taking the water. As what used to be one of the most imposing landmarks in the forum, this temple reflects the spread of the Disoscuri Cult (the cult in which the twins were worshipped) and Rome's increasing dominance among other Latin communities in the Roman Campagna.