Showing posts with label quirky belgium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quirky belgium. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Fear and loathing in Belgium

“Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re gonna get.” – Forrest Gump




Here's an assortment of half-thoughts, snap reactions, and other unfortunate consequences following the November 13 Paris attacks.
  • The police sirens started on Saturday, the day after the Paris attacks. We could hear them from our house all weekend, and every day since, wailing in the distance.
  • Texted a friend in Paris who wrote back: “All is ok. Fortunately, kids don’t let us go out at night. Crazy. War is war.”
  • Lots of talk of war.
  • Watched all the major TV news stations – BBC, CNN, Canvas – but only found out about the attack in Beirut through Facebook.
  • Went to work on Monday. There too, sirens all day. 
  • Tuesday, Nov.17: the New York Times called Molenbeek a “working class Brussels neighborhood.” That’s one way to describe it.
  • Hello Belgian army! Guys with machine guns are patrolling Brussels North Station. I wonder what they are thinking about. How do they stay alert all day? Do they get coffee breaks? What if they get an itchy trigger finger? All unanswered questions, but I was glad they were there.
  • “Don’t be a slave to your empathy.” - A muslim commentator on Flemish TV when asked about the refugee situation in Belgium, and whether he thought radical muslims were also entering the country. 
  • In the elevator at work I saw a guy who said he had to go home because his daughter was sick. She wasn’t really sick, he said, but she was scared. She’s 11.
  • More sirens.
  • My dad loves Molenbeek. I used to live 5 minutes walk from there and whenever my dad would come visit he’d always do his grocery shopping in Molenbeek. He especially liked the fruit, dates, nuts, and Turkish delights. “If I lived here,” he told me one time, “I’d do all my shopping in Molenbeek.”
  • What happened in Paris is still very fresh, and there’s a nervous sense that Brussels is next. Still lots of talk of war, which is interesting as I’m now reading the book “What Terrorists Want,” by Louise Richardson, a terrorism expert and Vice-Chancellor at Oxford University, and I’m on the chapter “Why the War On Terror Can Never Be Won.”
  • Taking the train into Brussels everyday. Not as carefree as usual. Maybe it’s just my over-active imagination.
  • The War On Terror Can Never Be Won because: “If victory means making the United States invulnerable to terrorist attack, we are never, ever going to be victorious. Here’s why casting a conflict in terms of a war one cannot win is a big mistake. By dispatching an operative into any Starbucks, subway station, or shopping mall in the country and blowing it up, a terrorist group could demonstrate that the most powerful country in the history of the world has not been able to beat it. This is making it too easy for the terrorists…The ultimate goal of any war must be to deny the adversary what it is that he wants. Terrorists want to be considered at war with us, so to concede this to them is to grant them what they want, instead of doing our utmost to deny them what they want.”
  • J'aime the fact that the French are protesting against fear by going to the cafés.
  • I’m torn about going to war. Iraq was a big mistake. Afghanistan only slightly better. Would it turn out better if it weren’t just America’s war? How can we fight radicalism without creating more of it? I don’t know, but we need to do something.
  • “You get used to terrorism.” – French author Michel Houellebecq
  • Friday, Nov. 20: NYT now referring to Molenbeek as “Jihad Central.” A bit harsh, I thought, but I’m also so glad we didn’t buy that apartment we looked at there. It was a cool space, but the neighborhood
  • Friday night, I went for a few drinks in Brussels after work. Hm, where can we go and not get shot? That’s my over-active imagination talking again, right? Three Duvels later I had forgotten all about any threat. There was an army truck parked in front of Central Station, but you know, whatever.
  • “You get used to terrorism.”
  • Late Friday night, the terror alert dial in Brussels turned from 3 to 4 – the maximum level. An unspecified “immanent and severe” threat was cited. More specifically, one of the Paris attackers was sighted in the area and thought to be wearing explosives.
  • So much for protesting fear. Brussels cafés, shops, restaurants and metros closed all weekend. Better safe than tipsy. Sorry, sorry.
  • #BrusselsLockDown blows up on Twitter. 
  • The lockdown continues into Monday. Schools closed now too. Working from home until further notice.
  • Read another article this week with this eerie line: “The Islamic State has come to be known around the world by names like ISIS and ISIL. But in Raqqa (Syria), residents began calling it Al Tanzeem: The Organization.”
  • Cancelled my trip to London. Cancelled my trip to Paris. 
  • Concert in Brussels cancelled. Now it’s personal!
  • People keep saying, “Be safe.” I know what they mean, but what are we supposed to do?
  • Tuesday: I got an email from the director of the school where I take evening classes for French. It said that there was a bomb scare at the school today. Classes cancelled.
  • Got a text from another friend: “I am working from home at the mo. I am however travelling to London tomorrow to see the kids. It is crazy stuff but I think people are overreacting a bit! We’re giving these idiots exactly what they want…Chaos and & fear…”

Saturday, April 11, 2015

The Royal Greenhouses of Laeken

Quirky Belgium

The Royal Greenhouses of Laeken are open to the public for three weeks this year from April 17 to May 8

"It’s good to be the King!" And that’s true for the King of Belgium too whose role nowadays is purely symbolic – although symbolic of what, I’m not sure.


Harmony? Unity? Decadence? 

You could argue that a King or a Queen has no place in a democracy, but that would be to miss the point. Today's Kings and Queens, stripped of any real powers, are like hedges: pieces of decoration put on the side to stand there and look pretty.

And no place better captures the hedge-like harmony, unity, and decadence of the Belgian monarchy than the Royal Greenhouses of Laeken, (Dutch: Koninklijke Serres van LakenFrench: Serres Royales de Laeken), next to the royal family’s residence on the outskirts of Brussels.

Off limits to the public for most of the year, the Royal Greenhouses open their doors for three weeks each spring to we the people. If you’ve not been, I highly recommend a visit. Not only will you see an amazing collection of exotic flowers and plants, but it's worth going just to see the fantastically bulbous metal and glass buildings designed in the 1870s by Alphonse Balat, mentor to the other great Belgian architect of the Art Nouveau era, Victor Horta.

This year you can check out the Royal Greenhouses starting Friday, April 17 until May 8. 

Find out more here.









Saturday, January 24, 2015

The coolest place you’ve never heard of: Three things I love about Mechelen

The tower of Saint Rombouts Cathedral in Mechelen

London. Paris. Amsterdam. Brussels. Bangkok. New York. These are some of the world’s greatest cities and some of my favorite destinations too – each an undeniably awesome center of culture amazing in its own right. 

But my favorite city – the one I’m always happy to come back to – is my home town of Mechelen, Belgium. 

What, you mean you’ve never heard of it? 

Mechelen is a small city of about 80,000 people in the Dutch-speaking region of Belgium, a quick twenty minute train ride from both Brussels and Antwerp. Before I moved to Europe more than a decade ago, I had never heard of Mechelen either. But now I’m proud to call myself a Mechelaar

While it might not be that big, Mechelen has a perfect mix of young and old, traditional and trendy, and local and global influences, making it uniquely dynamic and charming at the same time.

You don’t have to just take my word for it though. I hit the streets to find out what other people like most about Mechelen too. So without further ado, let me introduce you:


This is me, John 
Age: 34 
Occupation: Marketing by day, Blogger by night 
Place of origin: Alliance, Ohio (USA) 

What I love about Mechelen

1.) It’s got the best beer in the world. No joke - the local brew, Gouden Carolus, won the World’s Best Dark Beer prize in 2012. 

2.) Its many independent coffee bars. Yes, this is one of the few places on earth where you won't find a Starbucks on every corner.

3.) And last but not least, it’s home to some of the friendliest people I've ever met...


Myriam “De Bellemadam” (The Bell Lady) 
Age: 60 
Occupation: Town crier; retired caregiver 
Place of origin: Mechelen born & raised

What I love about Mechelen

1.) Everything! Its many monuments, beautiful buildings, Town Hall, the Bontanique park, the Big and Small Beguinages, … 

2.) The people (Mechelaars). They can be shy at first, but once you get to know them they are friends for life. 

3.) Its long and proud history that goes back for centuries and centuries. 



Jens 
Age: 30 
Occupation: Hairdresser 
Place of origin: Hamme, Belgium 

What I love about Mechelen

1.) There are a lot of cultural activities organized throughout the year and many beautiful historical buildings. 

2.) It’s really gezellig (cosy).

3.) People still stop and talk to each other on the street and there’s a more personal feel than you have in bigger cities. 



Roos 
Age: 23 
Occupation: Food service industry 
Place of origin: Sint-Katelijne Waver, Belgium

What I love about Mechelen 

1.) It has nice restaurants. Den Beer on the Grote Markt and De Tien Gheboden on the Woolemarkt are my favorites. 

2.) The Vismarkt is a good place to meet friends and have a drink on the weekend. 

3.) The shopping street (Bruul) where you can find anything you need. 



Frans 
Age: 87 
Occupation: Retired butcher 
Place of origin: Boortmeerbeek, Belgium 

What I love about Mechelen 

1.) The beautiful old buildings, like the Town Hall and Saint Rombouts Cathedral. 

2.) Taking walks along the IJzerleen. 

3.) The new public swimming pool at the Nekkerhal.






Brice 
Age: 29 
Occupation: Student (Business Management) 
Place of origin: Cameroon 

What I love about Mechelen 

1.) The city center is nice. Always a lot of people around, nice cafés, and good places to hang out with friends. 

2.) Near the train station there’s a nice café with good music where I like to go with my brother. I forget the name though! 

3.) The football team, KV Mechelen. I go to a lot of games because my brother plays on the team. 



Annemarie 
Age: 70 
Occupation: Retired primary school teacher 
Place of origin: West-Flanders, Belgium

What I love about Mechelen 

1.) It’s a safe city and the police are nice. It’s also evolving in a good way thanks to the work of the mayor. 

2.) The train connection is very good to Brussels, Antwerp or anywhere else you want to go. 

3.) It’s a kid-friendly city with a lot of fun things to do for families like the Technopolis Science Center, Planckendael Zoo, the Toy Museum, … 

There’s a lot more to love about Mechelen, so let me know what’s on your list in the comments. And if you’ve never been, give me a shout when you do and I’ll show you around!

-----
I wrote this post as my entry in the Accor Hotels ‘A Tale of Three Cities’ contest. Find out more here.


Monday, December 8, 2014

Zwarte Piet: friend or foe?

Quirky Belgium


The Travelled Monkey - Zwarte Piet
Zwarte Piet (Black Pete) is Saint Nicolas's helper. Traditionally, boys and girls in Belgium and Holland put their shoe by the chimney on the eve of December 6. If you've been good, Saint Nicolas will bring you a present, which Zwarte Piet delivers by going down the chimney and putting it in your shoe.  Photos by John Weaver

A staple character in a harmless holiday tradition or an anachronistic hangover from Belgium's and Holland’s colonial pasts? Innocent symbol fun or thinly disguised racism? 

Zwarte Piet: friend or foe?

Sunday, September 14, 2014

The story of the Moon Extinguishers

Quirky Belgium

The Travelled Monkey - Supermoon
The perigee moon, or "supermoon," can seem as much as 12 percent bigger and 30 percent brighter than the average full moon.  Photo by John Weaver

Did the Man In The Moon seem like he was a little bit closer this week?

If so, that’s because this week’s full moon was the last of three “supermoons” to light up this summer’s sky. 


Monday, July 14, 2014

Leuven in Scène

Quirky Belgium


The Travelled Monkey - Leuven in Scene
Photos by John Weaver


Leuven in Scène is one of my favorite things in Belgium. It's a street theater festival that takes place every 3 years or so (I can't quite figure out their schedule). 

Friday, May 23, 2014

Europe’s new poster children

Quirky Belgium

The Travelled Monkey - Europe's new poster children

Woman carrying a child past a wall designated for campaign posters. Belgians go to the polls this Sunday to vote in federal and European elections, in which anti-immigrant and anti-European Union far-right parties are expected to make gains. Photos by John Weaver

“Uw stok achter de deur,” or “Your stick behind the door,” goes the campaign slogan of the Flemish far-right party Vlaams Belang. Replace the word “stick” with “baseball bat” and you have a pretty good idea of what the party stands for – protecting their property (read: Flanders) from intruders (read: foreigners) using the blunt instrument of populist rhetoric.



Saturday, May 3, 2014

Diversity's many faces

Quirky Belgium

The Travelled Monkey - Diversity's many faces
This year Mechelen celebrates 50 years of diversity. Various (multi-)cultural events are being staged around the town, including this collage on the post office. It is part of the FACE-IT project, depicting over 120 people from different origins that call Mechelen home. Photo by John Weaver

 
Today, half of all the children in Mechelen that are 11 years old and younger come from an immigrant background. That means either themselves, their parents, or their grandparents were born in another country. With 128 different nationalities represented in this town of about 82,000, it’s worth asking what that means for one’s identity?




Saturday, April 26, 2014

Street Heroes

Quirky Belgium

The Travelled Monkey - Street heroes
Street Heroes is an urban football tournament where the name of the game is to nutmeg your opponent.
Photo by John Weaver

The fancy footwork on display at the Belgian Street Heroes tournament isn’t just about showing off. The name of the game is to panna, or “nutmeg,” your opponent. In other words, you have to get the ball between their legs. 


Saturday, April 12, 2014

Urban meadow

Quirky Belgium

The Travelled Monkey - Urban meadow
Boerderij van het Maximiliaanpark Photos by John Weaver

Leave the city without leaving the city! This little farm, 
the Boerderij van het Maximiliaanpark (Ferme du Parc Maximilien), is right in the center of Brussels and a real hidden treasure in an otherwise urban jungle of cars and concrete. 


Saturday, April 5, 2014

Humo’s Rock Rally 2014

Quirky Belgium

The Travelled Monkey - Humo Rock Rally 2014
Humo Rock Rally, Hazy Hands Photos by John Weaver

10 bands, 3 songs each, a packed crowd – the battle was on for 25,000 euros and the chance to become the next big thing last Sunday at the Humo Rock Rally, Belgium’s ultimate battle of the bands competition. 


Tuesday, March 25, 2014

What’s in a name?

Quirky Belgium

You don't see this every day…

The Travelled Monkey - what's in a name?
Les Noirauds, or Darkies, have been collecting money for children in need since 1876. Photo by John Weaver

Politically correct? No, but that’s not their thing. For more than 130 years, Les Noirauds, or Darkies, have been collecting money for disadvantaged children and children with special needs.


Saturday, March 22, 2014

Celebrating Iranian new year in Belgium

Quirky Belgium

The Nowruz, or Persian New Year, festival includes jumping over fire while singing the traditional song Zardi-ye man az to, sorkhi-ye to az man, which literally translates to "My yellowness is yours, your redness is mine," with the figurative message "My pain/sickness for you (the fire), your strength (health) for me." The fire is believed to burn out all the fear (yellowness) in their spirit in preparation for the new year. Photos by John Weaver


Around the world, here in the Northern hemisphere at least, we celebrate the start of spring this week. And with spring comes optimism, or at least a looking forward to warmer, greener, longer days.

But for Iranians it’s even more than that – it’s Nowruz, the Persian New Year. 



Thursday, March 13, 2014

29 classic Flemish expressions

Quirky Belgium

By the Belgian painter Constant Permeke

For the past couple of weeks I've been sitting on my friends' heads, asking them to come up with their favorite expressions in Flemish. The monkey is coming out the sleeve now, as here is what I've compiled.


Saturday, March 1, 2014

Haverwerf, Mechelen

Quirky Belgium

The Travelled Monkey - Haverwerf, Mechelen
Haverwerf, Mechelen  Photo by John Weaver

Mechelen was once a hub for the grain trade in Flanders. These three beautiful houses from the 1500’s and 1600’s sit on the Haverwerf (Oat Yard), where boats carrying grain on the Dijle river tied up when they arrived in Mechelen. 

About the houses...

Friday, February 14, 2014

I HEART Brussels – really?

Quirky Belgium

The Travelled Monkey - I HEART Brussels
Photo by John Weaver

It’s Valentine’s Day but Brussels hasn’t exactly been feeling the love lately as anti-European Union sentiment keeps heating up ahead of EU elections in May. 

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Let's talk about Sax

Quirky Belgium

The Travelled Monkey - Lets talk about Sax
Adolphe Sax, inventor of the saxophone, died this week 120 years ago in 1894. Sax was born in Dinant, Belgium in 1814 and later moved to Paris where he patented the first saxophone in 1846. 
Photo by John Weaver