Friday, August 11, 2006

Some City in Europe Says You Have Rights

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Taken two years prior, during a 2004 trip to Geneva for the World Trade Center global assembly, the carousel is still a child magnet when we tour old city Geneva in Summer 2006.


The line “some city in Europe says you have rights” comes from a US version of a British show called, simply, The Office. The city in question, Geneva, has a long history of reform and progress, first as one of three recursive epicenters for the Protestant Reformation and now as the home of UN European operations and many NGOs (Non Governmental Organizations).

While most of my time in Geneva has been for business, including World Trade Center and brainstorming sessions for FP7 – a European Union multi-disciplinary research program that I’ve been involved with off and on via IDIAP and AMI – today was a family sightseeing day, showing the rest of the family what my two oldest children and I had found when we spent a morning here on the day we came to see the
Tour de France.

We rode the train from Sion to GVA – Aéroport International de Genéve – to meet my sister-in-law who was coming over for a brief visit. We then dropped the bags at the central train station, stopped by the market for meal supplies and headed across the footbridge to visit the old city.

We passed through one of the gates of the old city, dropped postcards in La Post, made our way past the InterDiscount (which previously delighted my son with four floors of electronics and demo video game consoles!) and the carousel. After a brief stop to fill the water bottles at a fountain next to the Dante Alighieri room – imagine finding a
société pour la diffusion de la langue et de la culture italienne in the heart of a French Swiss bastion straddling the border with France! – we finally climbed the steps to Rue Jean-Calvin.

Those of you who know me probably also know I have been influenced in my adult life by the Reformed teachings of Luther, Calvin and Knox. While I’m not keen to see the way these men are almost deified in Reformed circles (wasn’t that part of the issue the reformers had with the mother church as they broke away from Roman Catholicism?) it was still breathtaking to see the place where Calvin lived during his sojourn in Geneva.

His stop in Geneva in 1536, after fleeing Paris and religious persecution, was intended to be brief. The school he founded and pulpit he filled at St. Pierre Cathedral, however, ended up having a profound impact on the Scots Reformers such as John Knox and established Geneva as a city of refuge and international thought.

This day we rounded the corner on Rue Jean-Calvin and headed up to St. Pierre, where the north tower of the three-naved basilica offers a unique view over the city and lake and where a small playground is tucked away behind the imposing church. After a bit of merry-go-round and see-saw fun, we entered St. Pierre – and witnessed the Ugly American first hand.

She was at the information table near the front of the church, close by to where Calvin and others would ascend the pulpit to preach. We were waiting patiently behind her, to ask about the WC, as the children had been on the train for several hours.

She apparently thought she wanted a series of souvenir postcards and a book. What she really wanted was a free history lesson, in English, but when the attendant wouldn’t pay her enough attention and turned to help the next in line, she grabbed a handful of postcards, shoving one in his face.

“Who are these men?” she demanded. He, with a weary look, started to give her the names: Calvin, Farel, de Béze . . .

This litany was apparently too much; she then snatched up a book and said she could read all about them in there, and asked to purchase the book and the postcards. He replied the book was a reference and not for sale, as a label on the book clearly showed in several languages, which annoyed her more. He suggested helpfully that she could get the book in one of several bookstores in town and then told her the purchase price of the postcards.

She pulled out two bags – one with Swiss Francs, the other with Euros – from her purse and opened the Euros bag. I should have said something right then, but living for so many years in the South, politeness (and fascination at the growing comedy of errors) won the moment.

She counted the Euro coins aloud and then handed him the stack of coins.  When he handed her back the postcards and a stack of coins that were higher than the stack she’d given him, though, she looked thoroughly confused.

Hoping to be helpful, and noting she sounded like she was a New Yorker, I explained in US English the reason for the second stack of coins: he was providing her change in Swiss Francs for her purchase in Euros, and Euros were worth much more per unit than Francs. His mouth twitched in a slight wry smile, a French Swiss equivalent to our wink and a nod.

“All the money is the same over here, and I can’t tell it apart,” she blurted to me as a pained expression passed over his face and his lips narrowed.  “Why don’t they just use dollars – or at least the same money across all of Europe?”

A question to be pondered and debated, for sure, at the UN compound a few kilometers away, but not to be answered in haste by an American visiting a country whose independent streak is more than double his own country’s length of existence.

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Friday, July 21, 2006

Tour de France -- In a Flash

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The peloton has moved on, and the drivers of the trailing chase cars are anxious to keep up with it. Yet they cannot pass the lone rider bringing up the rear of the Tour de France’s first day out of the mountains.


As a teenager who rode extensively, often 25 miles every few days, I was enthralled by Greg LeMond and other Tour de France legends. Watching the video shots of French families alongside the road, eating lunch and cheering on the breakaway group, the peleton and the stragglers, I tried to imagine what it would be like to stand there and cheer for hours.

It came as quite a surprise, then, in late July 2006, to find myself within a 2 hour train ride from a stage of the Tour de France. The two oldest kids and I rode the train from Sion to Geneva, arriving early enough see the tour in
St. Julien, just across the border from Geneva via bus.

How long did it take for the breakaway, peloton and lone straggler to pass us? 26 seconds.

Well worth the trip.

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Monday, February 13, 2006

UN CAFFÉ. AMERICANO? NO, ESPRESSO.

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A classic cup of espresso, known to the Italians simply as caffé, but to an American attempting to master even a small part of this beautiful language, a lesson in sounding real enough to order without saying the word.


A project in Turin, or Torino, depending on where you are from, affords an opportunity to be a key part of an Italian architectural, design and integration team. Well, at least until the concepts reach critical mass; with apologies, everyone else switches to Italian, and then the real work commences. For the rest of the team, it was a welcome relief not to have to think in one language and speak in another; for me, an effort in trying to keep up with not only the words I knew, but the words I needed to know to remain a contributor to the conversation. Am I there yet? By no means. Am I trying? Absolutely.

And the project progresses . . . at least until lunchtime.

Then it’s off to the local trattoria for
bosco e mare, a harvest of shrimp, mussels, baby octopi and various other seafoods on linguini. Work is not discussed, although the stray Blackberry may momentarily bring a set of eyes away from the table and into intense focus; but the spell is broken by calls all around for caffé and discussions of where exactly Tennessee is in relation to Texas or Washington, DC, or Orlando. Work will come soon enough; we’re on sacred time, sacred enough to hear the greetings just before lunch change from buon giorno to buon appetito. Un caffé?

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Passion Lives Here. Live Olympic.

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Skis as Fries for McDonalds; “Passion Lives Here”; “Live Olympic” from Coca-Cola; these are the sites and sounds of the Torino Winter Olympic Games in February 2006.


Torino hosts the Winter Olympic Games this month. I am here on a different mission, though: assess the technology integration challenges for a new training facility in a building on Via Septembre XX – a building steeped in the history of a unified Italy. 20 September 1870 was the day a cannonade of three hours breached the Aurelian Walls, allowing Italian sharpshooters to enter Rome, which was soon annexed to the Kingdom of Italy.

Born 100 years later, I learn this history as I move throughout a city crowded with revelers. My client and close friend, Matt Taylor, sends me to Torino at the height of the Olympic Games. Given three days’ notice, this means staying in Milan – about two hours away via train – I only slightly protest. When Matt calls, the project is always challenging personally and professionally rewarding. Plus, having lived in Lake Placid just before the Miracle on Ice – the 1980 Winter Olympics US-USSR hockey match – I’m drawn to the Olympic spectacle and spirit. So I go . . .

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