I’ll close my eyes,
No, I won’t see
The love you don’t feel,
When you’re holding me
Morning will come,
And I’ll do what’s right
I’ll close my eyes,
No, I won’t see
The love you don’t feel,
When you’re holding me
Morning will come,
And I’ll do what’s right
Academic-wise, CETS wasn’t a requirement per se – not for my major (psychology), not for my minor (history and film studies). I first heard about CETS in a history class in late 2013, when a student who went on the trip in summer 2013 came in and gave a presentation on her experiences. It was meant to attract applicants, and it worked. I scrambled together and submitted an application within a week. I hadn’t looked back since.
The program introduction said clearly CETS would be an interdisciplinary program – geography, history, and music. I know history and music quite well, but not so much geography. Honestly, though, a major reason I wanted to go on CETS was this one class I took last summer, Memory and Commemoration in Europe. It was one of the hardest history course I ever took, but the most interesting of all. The course was about how to learn history, what angle to look at, what questions to ask when facing a piece of history. A bulk of the course content was related to Central Europe, and when I heard about CETS, I knew it was the study abroad program for me (okay, more like study, study abroad). Memory and commemoration fascinate me to no end, and CETS only enriched it for me. For instance, while on the trip (in Berlin, I believe), my history professor and I agreed to disagree that we have differing ideas about the design and significance of some of the memorials we’d seen. I’m partial for abstract designs, he for concrete, “direct” ones. That is one conversation that’ll always stay with me.
Perhaps the most striking lesson from CETS occurred in a form of a question. “What about home?” Do we commemorate this/that? If not, why? What does this/that statue mean? Why is it there? CETS taught me to keep asking questions, regardless of whether I have the answers right there and then. At the moment, I think I’m still in the “question” stage of things, but soon, I’ll like to move on to the “answer” stage, to start answering my own questions. Who doesn’t like having answers to their own questions?
Personal-wise, CETS was the longest period I spent with the same group of people. Intense human contact for 4 weeks in a row had its ups and downs (more of which, I’m not sure). The photo below shows all of us, minus two professors. Why this group photo, then? For reasons I don’t intend on going into here, this particular photo (that’s Budapest in the background, btw) sums up my personal growth. It reminds me that when you’re in a group, group needs take precedence over individual needs, period. I have a sudden urge to make that a life motto.
I want to keep traveling. Exploring. Seeing. My last souvenir purchase in Kraków was a postcard saying “Getting lost helps you find yourself”.
Getting lost helps. But to find myself yourself? Plan for a detour in between. Or two. Or fifty.
(It just hit me that my “CETS song” is called Budapest. Just like the photo’s background. I don’t believe in coincidence.)
Picture references
UWEC CETS. (2014, June 22). Retrieved from https://twitter.com/UWEC_CETS/status/480697283965886464/photo/1
In the spring preparatory class (HIST 280), the history faculty on CETS structured his lessons on the five major cities by giving it a character: Berlin – capital city of empire, Prague – city of the absurd, Vienna – city of the neurotic, Budapest – city of rebellion, and Kraków – city of no fear. It sounded somewhat funny at that time, but when we were finally there taking in those cities in person, the descriptions weren’t funny anymore. In fact, they helped – at least for me – to orient myself to wherever I was. Especially in Prague and Vienna. I remember vividly my first impression of Prague was one of puzzlement; the area the State Opera House was at was not at all an area one expects to find an opera house. In Vienna, all the buildings and streets were clean and looked brand new that it was hard to imagine the place having been through WWII at all.
Another key thing from HIST 280 that came in handy when we were in Central Europe was all the lectures and exercises on music, specifically, opera. I’d never attended an opera prior to CETS (ended up attending four on the trip), and even now, I won’t call myself an opera lover either. Anyhow, my point is that knowing about musical styles, tempo, rhythm, form, tonality, and yes, the history behind each type of music, helped me to further appreciate the performances we watched in Central Europe. Cabaret, opera (of course!), jazz, church/organ music, folk dance, and klezmer – they would’ve meant far less without what we learnt in HIST 280.
Captivating Geography
The contrast between Kazimierz (Old Jewish Quarter) and Podgórze (where the Nazi Kraków Ghetto was at). Kazimierz was where Kraków’s Jewish population used to be prior to WWII. After Poland was invaded, residents in Kazimierz were rounded up and forced to relocate to the newly established Kraków Ghetto at the Podgórze district across the Vistula River.
Of the two, we visited Podgórze first, as it was also where the Schindler’s Factory Museum was at. The area looked rundown, relatively dirtier, not much development taking place. We also located the remnant of a ghetto wall. Meanwhile, Kazimierz is now the center of Kraków’s nightlife. Upscale restaurants, bars, and cafes, all interwoven with synagogues, cemeteries, Jewish restaurants (the famous Klezmer house is here!). Kazimiers has been gentrified over the years, is what it is. While we were there, it did not at all give out a mournful atmosphere (having its residents forcefully relocated!).
I liked the contrast, because it wasn’t something that can easily be captured in books or photographs.
Top Academic Experience
“Top” not as in “fun”, but as in “significant”: Auschwitz-Birkenau (Figures 1-3).
Set my camera to monochrome the entire time we were there because that place saw so many lives perished that any remaining colour should also be drained, if not already drained. Won’t say I’m stricken by the visit. Conversely, it felt ironic. Maybe. There were all these tourists (us included) arriving (excitedly?) to Auschwitz-Birkenau, ready to tour the most notorious site in Nazi history. Back then, non-Aryans arrived at this camp expecting a completely different reality. Do the visitors today also arrive there with expectations? What is there to expect, though, besides death and pain and suffering?
I was a visitor. But I don’t have an answer to my own question.
Top Extra-curricular Experience
Kościuszki Mound (Figure 4) – “a symbol, a Monument of National Remembrance, and also the best viewing point in Kraków” (from the info board onsite). Completed in 1823, the Mound was built using soils from battlefields of the 1794 Kościuszki Uprising, and from battlegrounds where Kościuszki fought on during the American Revolutionary War (from the info board onsite). Very unusual commemorative site, that’s for sure. And it felt pretty special, too, to be there, much like it did at Bílá Hora in Prague. Needless to say, the view was also breathtaking (Figure 5).
Eating Tips!
Walk along Grodzka street (the one that leads you from Rynek Głowny to Wawel Castle). On the right, there’s a self-service type of restaurant serving Polish cuisine. Not a fancy place, but good food (Figure 6), and relatively cheap, too. Try it out if you’re there!
Picture references
Author’s own. [Figures 1-6]
Captivating Geography
Szentendre (Figures 1-3), a small riverside town near Budapest, was a picturesque area. Very quaint (much like Dürnstein in Wachau Valley), Szentendre has become a top attraction for locals and tourists alike. The 50-minute train ride from Budapest to Szentendre was … not the most comfortable (tip: if you do get motion sick, remember to pack a few extra plastic bags/ziplocks), but the view at Szentendre more or less made up for it.
Famous for craftworks, you’ll have no problem finding souvenirs, though, do keep in mind that this place is an established tourist hotspot now, so souvenirs do tend to be a little pricier. If you enjoy strolling along the river, head over to the fringe of the town. Good for an afternoon walk, or simply to sit and bask in the view and sunshine.
Top Academic Experience
Terror Museum (Figure 4), hands down. As I’ve mentioned in previous entries, I’m not a hugeee fan of museums. What, then, made this one stand out?
Situated along Andrassy ut., the building known as the Terror Museum today used to be the party headquarters of the Hungarian Nazis. In other words, that building had witnessed countless acts of torture and barbarism and terror. The museum presents the years 1945-56 under the Hungarian collaborationist government. As one enters the main exhibit, there is a building-high panel titled “Victims”, showing faces of people terrorized under the collaborationist government. At the bottom of the panel is a small pool of water, and one sees the reflection of the panel in the water. It felt, to me, as if it was saying that no matter how many victims are known and identified, no real number can be attained (hence, the reflection, showing “more” faces than there really were) because terror and fear doesn’t stop at death. They linger behind, affecting family, friends, acquaintances; they permeate life.
Top Extra-curricular Experience
One of the evenings, I was out with a professor and two other students to Heroes’ Square and its environs. Near the embassy area was a monument to the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. Basically, it was a large structure consisting of steel columns, from rusty to shiny ones (Figures 5-7).
The design was fascinating.
It also made absolutely no sense.
After the trip, I looked it up and found that the design actually contributed to a debate in 2006 prior to its unveiling for the 50th anniversary of the Revolution. The “assembly of rusting steel columns [is] intended to symbolise demonstrators coming together in a crowd and which finally merge into wedge-shaped steel blade” (Rennie, 2006). Built by the then-Socialist government, and laid out on the spot where a Stalin statue was removed in the Revolution, the monument was criticized by former fighters, now on the political Right.
“They wanted a traditional heroic sculpture, depicting people. For them, the steel posts look like the gallows used to hand hundreds after the revolution … Nobody doubts the monument stand-off is about politics, not art. It is pitting veteran against veteran, and dividing the generations.” -David Rennie (“Hungarians See Red Over 1956 Monument, 2006)
I thought the design was fascinating. Turns out, the story behind it is even more fascinating. A whole new level of generational gap!
Eating Tips!
Andrassy ut. may be the major commercial street in Budapest, but that doesn’t mean it’s impossible to find good, affordable food there. Head over to Kantin, a relatively small restaurant with menus that (I think) change daily. I believe it cost me about 3000Ft (~14USD) for a 3-course meal, tip included. Their goulash (Figure 8) was one of the best soups I had on the entire trip. The inside was cozy, not cluttered at all. Strongly recommended! 🙂
Content references
Rennie, D. (2006, July 29). Hungarians see red over 1956 monument. The Telegraph. Retrieved from http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1525120/Hungarians-see-red-over-1956-monument.html
Picture references
Author’s own. [Figures 1-8]
Captivating Geography
I was captivated by Figure 1. An amusement park? Yes, I was captivated by an amusement park in Vienna. The Prater (more precisely, the Würstelprater) used to be an imperial hunting ground during the time of the Austrian empire. As such, access was limited to the elite and powerful only. Today, however, the place is open to just about anyone. Furthermore, each ride/game at the Prater is operated by individual businesses, not a giant corporation. As the geography group (whose presentation was how I came to know these details about the Prater) put it, the fact that small, individual businesses instead of one big boss run the amusement park exemplifies the idea of opening up the space “for the people”. Very neat system.
Top Academic Experience
Before the trip, I had my reservations towards getting on a bike, mostly because, well, I slammed my face the last time I tried getting on one. Anyhow, whatever reservations I had went out the window as we biked out to and through Wachau Valley (Figures 2-3). Listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, this place was more than spectacular. Perhaps because up to that point, we’d been spending all our time in big cities and old town squares and churches and museums that seeing the (natural) landscape in Wachau Valley was. simply. breathtaking. I’d never seen vineyards ever before!
No better place to truly take in the beauty of the Danube.
Top Extra-curricular Experience
Gasometers! To get there, hop on the U3 in the direction of Simmering.
The Gasometers (Figure 4) are four former gas tanks, used to store coal gas for the city’s consumption. When the city switched over from coal gas to natural gas, the tanks went out of commission. Instead of demolishing them, the Gasometers today are used as commercial and residential space.
While the structures were impressive on its own, the best part of that afternoon was stumbling upon a FIFA World Cup card trading meet (Figures 5-6) inside one of the gasometers. Young and old, so many were there, busy trading and checking off their checklist. Managed to get a sister-and-brother pair to explain to me how exactly the meet worked: One starts off with a pack of 5-6 cards (bought from convenience stores), and works their way up to a full collection of more than 600. The most valuable cards are the special edition ones, denoted by the shiny surfaces. To think of it, Austria isn’t even in the tournament this year, yet so many locals were geeking out over the cards. Football? Definitely part of Austrian identity, if the meet is of any indication!
Eating Tips!
At the Strozzigasse stop on Tram 46, there is a Vietnamese restaurant called Nguyen’s Noodle House (if memory serves). If you’re looking for a taste of something not European during your stay in Vienna, they have really good pho and lunch sets!
Picture references
Author’s own. [Figures 1-6]
Captivating Geography
According to Lonely Planet’s Central Europe guide, “among Czechs, Moravia’s capital has a dull rep: a likeable place where not much actually happens” (2013, p. 138). I’d say the description matches what I saw in the two nights we were in Brno.
First of all, Brno was far from what one would imagine to find in Europe, at least from a foreigner’s perspective. A fellow student debated on taking photos of this city to show to their parents because it just didn’t look European. Meanwhile, I kept thinking, “this is like Kajang Town”, where I spent most of my time growing up. In other words, Brno reminded me of home. Relatively dirtier streets (we arrived from Prague), street vendors at the underground tunnel connecting Tesco and the shopping mall, the whole “not much happening”, provincial feel.
Nevertheless, Brno has its share of cultures and attractions: Old Town Hall, Náměsti Svobody, Brno Underground, Vila Tugendhat, Mendel Museum, Museum of Romani Culture, and Janacek Museum. Brno definitely isn’t on the usual tourist path (few people spoke English here), and I’m almost certain I wouldn’t have even heard of it if not for CETS. So, to see the things we saw (especially Museum of Romani Culture and Mendel Museum; see below) there was indeed interesting.
Top Academic Experience
I’m not a hugeeee fan of museums, but the Museum of Romani Culture was very well done, in my opinion. It is the only museum to date dedicated entirely to the Roma people and culture. I know very little about Roma people, and most of what I know is under the heading of “Nazi persecution”. My favourite part of the museum was the very first exhibition room, which explained the ties between Romas and Indians (and I learnt that the two are actually similar in many ways; for example, the Romani’s cultural flag is actually based off on India’s national flag). The room has mirror ceilings, floors, and walls (Figure 1), giving the illusion of an infinity space. We were told by our tour guide that the illusion is deliberately done as a metaphor for how it is virtually impossible to pinpoint exactly where and when Romani history started and ends. One of the most powerful metaphors I know to date.
Top Extra-curricular Experience
Mendel Museum! Mendel who, you said? Mendel, as in Gregor Mendel (Figure 2-3), the Augustinian monk whose work became the basis of modern genetics. Located inside the Abbey of St. Thomas, the Mendel Museum tells the life story of Mendel. Did you know he tried to cross-breed bees before moving on to pea plants (because bees had too many genes, making it impossible to establish crossing patterns)? Did you also know he studied the weather?! Outside the Abbey, we saw Mendel’s famous pea plants (Figure 4). I’m no biologist, but that day was an incredible opportunity and experience – it was us literally going back to where we came from.
Eating Tips!
Locate the Plague Column at Old Town, then walk up the small slope. On the shop row on the right, there’s a Czech restaurant serving excellent dishes (Figure 5). Good service, too!
Content references
Lonely Planet. (2013). Central Europe. China: Lonely Planet Publications Pty Ltd.
Picture references
Author’s own. [Figures 1-5]
Captivating Geography
This one goes to – nope, not another Holocaust memorial – Bílá Hora, an area on the outskirts of Prague. To get there, hop on Tram 22, and go all the way to the terminus, Bílá Hora. Tip: Check the terminus name before hopping on; at random times, the trams terminate earlier than what it says on the map.
Bílá Hora (“White Mountain”), was where the historic Battle of White Mountain took place. It remains one of the most significant event in Czech history even after more than 350 years:
“The date of the battle was November 8th, 1620. The setting: a small, normally quiet hillside, just outside of Prague. But, the day would see a disappointingly one-sided affair, a battle that took less than two hours to lose by the Czech nobility. Defeated were the Protestants of the Bohemian Estates’ army, vanquished by Austrian Imperial and Catholic forces. In a sense, the battle was an overture. The first military clash of many in the complex many-phased and multifaceted conflict that would sweep and divide Europe: the Thirty Years’ War … The players, the conflict, the event from which the kingdom of Bohemia never recovered …” -Jan Velinger (“The Battle of White Mountain”, 2003)
In short, it was at the Battle of White Mountain that the Bohemian period in Czech lands ended. No one could possibly guess this turbulent story only by seeing Bílá Hora today (Figures 1-2). Today, it screams serenity and beauty, far from what used to go on at this very hillside (ie. bloodbath, war, death).
It’s quite a distance from the city centre, and the area today is largely residential. It isn’t mentioned in Lonely Planet’s Central Europe guide, but I think Bílá Hora is worth a visit for anyone planning to visit Prague. Pretty neat experience to be at a place so dear to the people of this country.
Top Academic Experience
The day we took a day trip out to Lidice, a village located 30 minutes by bus from Prague, was one of the most memorable day on CETS. The village today is actually relatively new; it was built near the site where the “old” Lidice used to be. “Old” Lidice? Yeap. The original village of Lidice was wiped clean (read: massacred) by German Nazis after the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich in Prague in 1942 by a group of Czechoslovak soldiers. The destruction of Lidice was intended as a lesson, a warning to then-Czechoslovakia that resistance towards the Nazis would only end in bad terms. Very few villagers survived the massacre. Today, the site of the “old” Lidice is a large memorial to the village’s destruction. (Figures 3-6).
Many of us were shock to learn about Lidice. This name isn’t a common sight in general history courses, unlike Auschwitz and Treblinka. Lidice – little known, yet the brutality that took place there was just as outrageous.
Top Extra-curricular Experience
The day we went out to Lidice, I went out for a night stroll with a fellow student and a professor. Prague is just beautiful at night (Figures 7-8), but the highlight that night was when we chanced upon a street exhibition, “Winton’s Trains” (Figure 9), near Charles Bridge. “Winton” here refers to Sir Nicholas Winton, a British stockbroker responsible for saving 669 children (mostly Jewish) from facing death at Nazis’ hands (Howard, 2014). Those children were refugees who arrived in Prague following the Nazi invasion of Sudetenland in 1938 (Howard, 2014). Fresh off of visiting Lidice in the morning, this exhibition was a reminder that the flipside of brutality is humanity.
Eating Tips!
There is a restaurant 2-3 blocks away from Hotel Lublanska (where we stayed) that serves Czech food (Figure 10). Good food, and reasonably priced. Highly recommend their garlic soup. Again, I don’t recall the restaurant’s name. It has a courtyard, if that helps (err, probably not, because most places seem to have a courtyard 😦 )
Content references
Howard, E. (2014, May 20). Sir nicholas winton: 105th birthday party for man who saved 669 children from the Nazis. The Guardian. Retrieved from http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/may/20/nicholas-winton-birthday-man-saved-children-nazis
Velinger, J. (2003, June 11). The battle of white mountain. Radio Prague. Retrieved from http://www.radio.cz/en/section/czechs/the-battle-of-white-mountain
Picture references
Author’s own. [Figures 1-10]
Captivating Geography
Holocaust Memorial (Figures 2-3). Consisting of metal chairs arranged in a grid pattern, the Memorial sits on where a community synagogue used to be until it was destroyed by the Nazis in 1938. For my Berlin entry, under “Captivating Geography” is also another Holocaust Memorial, but that one was a stark contrast compared to this one in Leipzig. In Berlin, people stood and/or sat on the concrete slabs; here in Leipzig, none of the chairs was occupied, in fact, we were the only ones there that afternoon. The location itself explains the contrast: in Berlin it was simply a piece of land huge enough to house 2000+ concrete slabs, whereas in Leipzig it was a land where Jewish cultural life actually occurred. Maybe that’s why the Memorial is treated as less formal (sacred?) in Berlin than it is in Leipzig.
Top Academic Experience
Organ concert at Thomaskirche (Figures 4-5)! Our first evening in Leipzig, we attended a free organ concert in St. Thomas Church (Thomaskirche), the church where J.S. Bach worked as a Kapellmeister and where his remains are currently located. My second time hearing a pipe organ live, and it was beautiful. The church was beautiful (look at the ceiling! Figure 6), the music even better. We were there early, and by the time the concert began at 8pm, the church was filled with people – and to think that it was a Monday night. What other proof does one need to call Leipzig a musical city?
Top Extra-curricular Experience
We were only there for two nights, so didn’t do much extra-curricular exploring. I did, however, go out the second night for a walk with a professor and another student. It really was nothing more than a stroll, but it was still nice because the point was to see the city at night (Figures 7-9). Compared to the day, at night it was quiet, calm, not much happening, no bustling on the market square. Suggestion: wherever you visit, go out at night; you’re guaranteed to find something new and/or different.
Eating Tips!
Not many to choose from (again, because we were only there a short while), but I suggest trying out the many tapas bar available. The one we went to was good (Figure 10), unfortunately, I didn’t note the place name. What I did note (mainly because it was hard to miss) was the place had a cow fountain/mini pool inside.
Picture references
Author’s own. [Figures 1-10]