Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Finland, Tuuri, The Country Village Shop


This is a blog about compassionate travel. In my opinion being compassionate and dedicated is also fun. According to research, people who work to enhance the wellbeing and health of others live longer and are happier.

Sometimes people should just visit palaces that make them feel good. In many countries, there are such places where people plan to go to spend a day just for the experience of it.

One experience in Finland you should not miss is a visit to the world's largest country village shop. I can just imagine what is on the people's mind when planning their trip to this particular store.

It is a real shopping extravagance. Even for an experienced world traveler who has seen the largest department stores packed with customers, visiting Tuuri in July can be an overwhelming experience.

It seems that most of Finland, half of Russia, Sweden and many other European countries are represented there on any one day. The restaurant lunch production alone is a huge undertaking.

I was told that the buffet alone serves well over 1000 lunches on any day during the summer season. It is cheap, easy and delicious. They even have the most wonderful vegetarian variation to the buffet. I was so impressed.

The only thing that resembles country living in this place is the entrance to shop where you
walk through the old stone barn to the shopping street. The restaurant is also situated in the
old barn. It is very atmospheric. Otherwise the store is dedicated to kitsch.

The castle looking front of the building is a hotel and the food market. The other part of the huge store is the department store where you can buy anything and everything.

The enormous lucky horse shoe resembles the original horse shoe that was situated on the original door. The Finnish word 'Tuuri' means 'luck' in English. It is the name of the Village where the shop is situated.

The shop was originally founded by the brothers Keskinen. Vesa Keskinen, a son of one the original brothers, who is the Managing
Director loves Disney's Donald Duck. This dedication is reflected in his business attitude. Even his house next door resembles the Duckburg building design.

The owners are really astute business people. There is a railway hotel, a free caravan park, where the customers can park their mobile homes and a lot of free circus and tivoli businesses on the side. You can find markets on every corner.The whole village shares the customer base. Everyone prospers.

One should perhaps think of the whole place as a circus. It probably needs a few days to experience the whole thing.
We only had a fee hours, but I am sure that when next time is Finland, we'll be back. If nothing else, we definitely want to see what new extravagance has been created while we were away.







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Sunday, July 17, 2011

Finland, Peräseinäjoki, Migration Museum, the Australian Cane Cutters' Barrack from Queensland


















If you ever travel to Seinäjoki area in Finland, you can find a fascinating location to visit in the form of the Migration Museum in Peräseinäjoki, just a few kilometers from the city.

A location is a logical place for a Migration Museum in Finland as most of the early emigration to America was from this part of Finland. Many people left the country to earn a better living in America or South America.

However, about 40% of the migrants returned to Finland. Many emigrated several times in hopes for a better life. My own great grandfather went to America five times to work at the mines before settling back to Finland for good.

They contributed to the Finnish economy by building houses and starting small businesses around this region. With them, they brought new entrepreneurial ideas and technology. Seinäjoki and it's surroundings became very prosperous because of emigration.

The Migration Museum is a work in process and it is currently situated in a few places around Peräseinäjoki. Most of the collected items are in the city centre.

However, the most interesting part to me are the buildings that have been moved from some of the regions where Finnish people have emigrated to over the last two hundred years.

We visited two of them: the house that John G. Annala built with his 'American money' and what was of the most interest to me, the Cane Cutters' Barrack that was donated from the North of Queensland in Australia.

I had been following the progress of this Barrack and it's journey to Finland as I have friends up North and know something of the history of the Finnish migrants at Tully-Ingham region.

The Tully Finnish Society is the oldest of the Finnish Associations in Australia. I have heard a lot of interesting stories about the Finnish cane cutters there. Apparently they were there in large numbers in the early 20th Century. There were well over 100 of them at any one time during the early years.

The project of dismantling a Barrack from Ingham and donating it to the Finnish Migration Museum has been a complicated process. Due to the size of the building and a lot of bureaucracy, it took several years for it to be sent to Finland. Mikko Hietikko, the current representative of the Asian-Pacific Finnish Societies did a lot of work before the project was completed.

However, here it is! As a result of compassionate and dedicated people from far North of Queensland, the Migration Museum in Finland can display an original Australian building that holds a lot of memories for many generations of Finns in Australia and Finland.

The building was completed in 2010.It forms a part of fascinating history of Finnish and Scandinavian emigration to Australia and Pacifica. It is well worth a visit.


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Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Visiting UK and the Ancient Roman Town of Calleva Atrebatum in Silchester, Hampshire

The previous posting told of my visit to Italy last year. There I got to experience the 'ancient tour'. I got my picture taken in front of the Flavian Amphitheatre or the Colosseum and I got to experience of how it felt like walking on an ancient Roman gobble road. However, I did not learn much about the Roman life in ancient times. There simply was not time for that.

Coincidentally, soon after, I travelled to the United Kingdom and found myself in Silchester in Hampshire taking part in a Roman festival.

The festival was organised by the Silchester Roman Society. It was held on an open day of the archeological excavations that have been conducted there in order to unearth the secrets of the ancient Roman town of Calleva Atrebatum. Besides of being introduced to ancient Roman life, especially the army life, the visitors to the festival got to inspect the archeological excavation site.

The Roman festival exhibited Roman solders with their full artillery, including a wooden machine that would throw rocks/oranges far over the field. There was a row of leather tents showing shops, midwife's equipments, an ancient medicine practicer's tent where a solder's leg was being ambulated and other exhibits of Roman daily living. Roman army practices were exhibited. They were conducted in Latin and quite educational to watch.

Afterwards the audience could meet the solders and examine their costumes and other equipment. We were told that the leather tents, such as the Romans had were very expensive to make today.

The existence of an ancient town of Calleva Atrebatum in Silchester has certainly given a lot of inspiration to ordinary people who witness the town being excavated, layer by layer, year after year, in their neighborhood.

It is slowly being uncovered as a project by the University of Reading archeology department's 'Town Life Project'. This summer it will be the 15th year that the dig has been there.

Every summer for a about a month the students come to excavate yet another layer of a part of the town. The purpose of the excavation project is to trace the life of the town from its time before the Roman conquest to the 4th and 5th Centuries when it was abandoned. The aim is to find the reason for the abandonment and uncover someting new about the life in ancient Britain.

A couple of years ago the excavation had already reached the Iron Age town that lay beneath the Roman town.

It was exciting seeing the dig and witnessing the work done by the students. It was also interesting to listen to the stories about the ancient life in the town.

It was there before the Romans conquered Britannia and clearly shows the process of Romanisation of the town. There are a few speculations of why the town was abandoned. However, this abandonment has left a possibility for the modern archeology to uncover some important secrets of the life in ancient times.

For the compassionate world traveler, Calleva Atrebatum is an ideal destination. Sharing the knowledge learned from the 'Town Life Project' gives us insights to the people and their world long gone. This year I am hoping to revisit the place with my daughter.

If you happen to be there in July and August, it is a worthwhile place to see.

Here is a link to a very informative article about the Calleva Atrebatum
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ancient/archaeology/city_dead_01.shtml

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Sunday, July 3, 2011

Italy, Rome - Flavian Amphitheatre or the Colosseum.

What Does Compassion Have To Do With It?


Last year I visited Rome. I spent more than a week in a conference confined inside a hotel with not many opportunities for sightseeing. It was my first time in Rome, so I wanted to at least to get to know something.
One day we sneaked out for shopping and I got to see some of the Rome’s centre around the main railway station. On another afternoon we could choose a tour. I chose the ‘Ancient Tour’ as I have always been fascinated by the history of the Roman Empire. We got to see the Capitol Hill and take a picture of the ancient Rome. But most of all I wanted a picture of myself in front of the Flavian Amphitheatre or the Colosseum.
I have read a lot about the fascinating history of the Amphitheatre. It has been described in many fictional and non-fictional books I’ve liked. For me like for many others this site represents the Ancient Rome at its glory but to be included in this blog it needs a compassionate angle. Can that be found thinking that over the centuries so many lives, people, animals and sea creatures have been lost there?
The ancient tour as such was not so successful. The ancient Rome is in ruins. How much can a tourist with not much money or time be expected to learn from that? Besides, according to the tour guide it is only in recent times, due to tourism that it has been cleared out as a tourist attraction. For less than a century ago, it served as a cow pad.
Well, it certainly does not, for an accidental traveler look much from afar. In the end it seems to be in the sole hands of the tour guide to inspire tourists on a three hour tour to actually get interested on what they see.
The word that was working for the tour guides to hook the imagination of the tourist of today was ‘recycling’. According to our tour guide the ancient Romans were into it in a big way: “Just look at the wall structures where we can witness many different layers and styles as the buildings are built and rebuilt over the centuries. It can be detected from the use of the materials.” Cool!
The story of the Flavian Amphitheatre in accordance to our tour guide’s popularised and maybe slightly sidelining the historical facts goes like this:
You know the evil emperor Nero (Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus, born Dec. 15, 37 ce, Antium, Latium—died June 9, 68, Rome). He was known for his personal debaucheries and extravagances.  He raised this huge sculpture (30m high), made of cold (in actual fact it was of bronze) to glorify himself as a God.  People were blinded by it.
 Can you imagine what it would have looked liked to the spectators, blazing in the Sun, throwing light all around? It was the original colosseum.
After Nero came Vespasian (69AD). He was a people’s man and he wanted to give something back to the people. He built the amphitheatre to entertain them as people enjoyed live battles. In time it got to be known as the Colosseum because of the sculpture.
The amphitheatre was completed by Titus, Vespasian’s son and opened for public as a sacrifice to gods with huge 100-day long festivities where about 2000 gladiators and 9000 wild animals lost their lives on the first day alone. The structure was completed by Domitian, Vespasian’s younger son in 82AD.
Let’s put this is context.
Vespasian was the general who crushed the Jewish rebellion in the first war between Jews and Romans. After claiming the crown in 69, and with the booty in his disposal, he began to build several public buildings in Rome. The Flavian Amphitheatre was built on the site of the lake in the private gardens Nero had built for his private use. The architecture of the building ‘celebrates’ all the previous Creek and Roman building styles. It had a capacity to seat approximately 40000 of its 50000 places.
The Amphitheatre is a pretty impressive structure, even though it is in ruins and much of it has been affected by earthquakes and recycled to other buildings.  Nero’s sculpture which had been redone to represent gods had been moved from its original place to a place near the theatre has not survived. By the 4th Century the Flavian Amphitheatre building was known as the Colosseum.
How about compassion in action?
I doubt that there was much of it. Compassion in action is highly debatable. Philanthropy had long since been reduced to a ‘philo’, a coin that was given as charity. ‘Giving back to people’ would have been an act of enhancing the power of the Emperor. At the same time, however, giving the public what they really enjoyed at the time, which was blood and gore, could have contributed to more peaceful living in Rome itself, at least while everybody were occupied in being entertained.  So, some good could have resulted from it. A human life was not worth much and animal life much less.
However, even if they had prepared every one of the 9000 dead animals and used all the hives in production of tents and other products, there would still not have been enough meat to feed all the spectators, gladiators, entertainers and slaves. There still would have had to been more brought in. Even if the Romans protein intake was less than ours today, feeding 50000-70000 people a day would have been a gruesome business.

It is said in much of the historical writings that Roman’s especially liked live battles which would be fought to death and even though there was a change that they would spare some brave gladiator that was highly unlikely.
Putting my speculations into the modern context, it seems debatable that we have really changed a lot even though the body count might be on TV and violent movies, which a high percentage of people enjoy. The meat production to feed the people of today is still a gruesome business even though we do not witness the slaughter on everyday bases as entertainment.
To me The Flavian Amphitheatre in Rome represents the mixed messages our history teaches us and still, next time when I will visit Rome I aim to spend more time there, even pay my way inside to see more of it.
I am sure I will travel to Italy once more and then two books I received as gifts from the conference I attended will be very useful in my search of places of compassion in action in Rome. They are:
Monachesi, Claudio (2010). Theosophical Excursions in Rome. Edizioni Teosofiche Italiane and
Barcaro, Marzia & Brunetti, Mario (2010). Another Rome. Edizioni Theosofiche Italiane
Besides, there is a lot of information on the Flavian Amphitheatre on internet but I used among others these sources: