Archive for the ‘Culture’ Category

Robert Bolt’s Man

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Possibly the best scene in the play.

MARGARET: Father, that man’s bad.

MORE: There is no law against that.

ROPER: There is! God’s law!

MORE: Then God can arrest him.

ROPER: Sophistication upon sophistication!

MORE: No, sheer simplicity. The law, Roper, the law. I know what’s legal and not what’s right. And I’ll stick to what’s legal.

ROPER: Then you set Man’s law above God’s!

MORE: No far below; but let me draw your attention to a fact — I’m not God. The currents and eddies of right and wrong, which you find such plain-sailing, I can’t navigate, I’m no voyager. But in the thickets of the law, oh there I’m a forester. I doubt if there is a man alive who could follow me there, thank God….(He says this to himself.)

ALICE (exasperated, pointing after RICH): While you talk, he’s gone!

MORE: And go he should if he was the devil himself until he broke the law!

ROPER: So now you ‘d give the Devil benefit of law!

MORE: Yes. What would you do? Cut a great road through the law to get after the Devil?

ROPER: I’d cut down every law in England to do that!

MORE(roused and excited): Oh? (Advances on ROPER.) And when the last law was down, and the Devil turned round on you — where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? (Leaves him.) This country’s planted thick with laws from coast to coast — Man’s laws, not God’s — and if you cut them down — and you’re just the man to do it — d’you really think you could stand upright in the winds that would blow then? (Quietly.) Yes, I’d give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety’s sake.

I’d heard of the title, A Man for all Seasons, but had really wanted to read it after Christopher Hitchens (slightly mis-)quoted the passage above in one of the best defenses of free speech that I’ve heard. I was surprised that I hadn’t posted it here. Well, enjoy:

Mayan lessons

Monday, April 13th, 2009

Before we went to Mexico, I was fairly well prepared not to see much of the actual country. Granted, it wouldn’t be too difficult to escape the confines of the all-inclusive resort, but still, the main purpose of the trip was to meet the family. We did make plans for a day’s outing, split into two groups. The hard-core culture fans (my father’s partner, Gudrun, and I) went to the ancient city of Coba and then on to the port city of Tulum, while the rest (brother Björn, brother-in-law Ívar, his son Benedikt and Gudruns son Robert) also went to Coba (but on a separate tour) but then on to fly around on ziplines and swim in a cenote.

The last bit I truly envy them of. Most of the Yucatán peninsula is rather poor of natural resources and the ground pretty much just a slab of limestone with surprisingly little topsoil after all this time. Limestone is soluble which probably accounts for how flat the landscape is, since water seeps straight down into the ground until it hits firmer ground and forms long underground rivers. Rather than carve out the surface, these rivers therefore form underground caves which trees must stretch their roots into. These are called cenotes in Mayan language. Fig-trees are not only exceptionally good at finding these cenotes but often crack the top of these caves making them accessible.

The water in the cenotes is so clean that one can see the bottom tens of meters below the surface. In the exposed cenotes, an ecosystem furthermore helps keep them clean. Catfish in these cenotes live of droppings from bats that live in these caves and collect fruit outside. What happens to the fish, I don’t know.

Still, I’m not sure I would have traded traded Victor for that. Victor was our guide for the day. A Mexican who lived in Germany for seven years (and spoke brilliant German; was even cracking jokes all day long), studied Mayan archeology, brought home a German wife who bore him a child in Maya land where they now live. While not a Mayan himself he was extremely passionate about sharing their story, culture … and lessons.

His first point was that the Mayans never disappeared. While their grand cities were deserted and their civilisation of thousands of years largely discontinued, the people are still here. And will be. Long after the multi-ethnic communities that now add to the community of the Yucatán peninsula will be washed away by the tides of time, the Mayans, he assured us, would still remain. That was their nature; to prevail.

Interesting stuff, eh? I was very happy with his guidance. He was fairly level-headed, portrayed the Mayans as normal humans and didn’t waste much (if any) time on academic things like naming architectural styles but rather tried to give us insight into Mayan life. By a large look-out structure built by one of the many great Mayan roads (trade made the Mayans rich, there not being much in th way of natural resources) he broke open a container of seeds revealing inside a dozen or so seeds covered with a fine dark-red substance which the Mayans used for dyeing and their women for colouring their lips. Then from the ground he picked a small flower, asked for a cigarette and with the embers heated the pink petals, turning them blue. These were examples of the scarce resources available to the Mayans, and an example of their great empire that they could gather them in sufficient number to dye clothes and colour their buildings, such as the top of the tower above us.

He also gave us some chewing-gum. Not the derivative of the Japanese synthetic, sweetened latex gum, but the original Mayan gum made from tree sap. It’s mostly tasteless, the consistency pretty much the same as real (i.e. fake) gum, but lasted for hours without becoming stale. Useful too, as I used it to mend the crappy sunglasses I bought in the souveneir shop (where we stopped for a toilet break, “this is not a shopping trip, with me” said Victor) to save my eyes from the sun. Only before dinner when we stopped at this beautiful white beach for lunch did I toss the gum away, happy in the knowledge that it would decompose sooner than the plastic bag in which it went…

On the way from Coba to Tulum, Victor decided to give us a break from his lecture, but urged us to ask if we had any questions. A couple did, and after that he retreated to the front alongside the driver. Curious as I am, but lacking the courage and concrete questions, I asked Gudrun if she reckoned I could just go up to him and ask him a few things. She figured it would be OK, so I did.

We had a nice chat where he explained the rought history of the Mayans, how they migrated along the coast from modern day Guatemala, set up their cities but regularly had to abandon them for various reasons, which often had something to do with failing crops from drought or soil over-use (I’m sure there is a technical term for that).

The ground deplete of metals or hard enough rocks, the Mayans were never a great military nation and the aristocracy gained their power through knowledge and faith, which at the time were one and the same. The shape of the Mayan towers (or “pyramids”) was influenced by the reverence of the time of year when the sun, at noon, stands straight avbove and one can stand on one’s own shadow. At that time, the towers don’t cast a shadow and rain is near.

With this ability to predict the coming of rain, the scientist-priests claimed to speak to, and on behalf of, the gods, demanded a (human) offering to the gods and received rain in return. The Mayans, however, were never tied to a city and often migrated from place to place. When the rain failed to come, they lost faith in their masters’ ability to speak to the gods or concluded that the gods had abandoned the city, and thus sought a new place as well.

As we started discussing the downfall and it’s causes, Victor offered a piece of his own theory; one that has a relevant lesson for our day as well. He figured that while individual cities ran their course and others were built, the ultimate end of that era came when there was a split in the scientist-priest community. The one arm stuck to astronomical observations and math, while the other became convinced of their theology themselves. Ignoring science as a tool for understanding nature they weren’t prepared for changes in climate and vegetation. Large scale deforestation shifted and modified the seasons and no amount of offerings could resist that tide.

Stuck in the framwork of their religion, the ruling class turned to force to discipline the masses, but the Mayan’s weren’t used to loyalty to people or force, and the military had no effective weapons to beat them into submission, so the last great cities of stone were abandoned for villages of huts.

Thus was the end of the ancient Mayan civilisation, but the people still exist today — they are the shorter, rounder Mexicans with almond-shaped eyes, betraying their Asian origin — as do their stories.

The People’s Republic of China

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

This morning, Yuri and I headed out to Kansai International Airport, or Kanku as it is regularly known (short for Kansai Kokusei Kuko — 関西国際空港). After breakfast we said our farewells and I headed off to my Cathay Pacific flight to Hong Kong.

After landing in Hong Kong, I took an airport limousine to Shenzhen airport where I’m sitting right now, waiting for my flight to Hangzhou (杭州). I’ve only been in China for half a day, but it’s still a really interesting experience. People are loud, rude, rushed and traffic is chaos.

Feels like Iceland ;-)

Cherry blossoms

Friday, April 4th, 2008

They’re out!

Sarah, Yumi and I went to Senjuin (千手院; thousand hand courtyard) temple to see the old cherry tree. Apparently today is the best day for it so there were so many people visiting and enjoying the blossoms.

I decided to incorporate the trip into a morning run so I arrived there sweaty and a bit under-dressed for the occation. No-one seemed to mind, though. I was hoping to catch an early train to work this morning so that I could make a stop at Tamayu (玉湯) to take a walk along the cherry tree lined stream that runs through the town.

It’s a bit late now and I wanted to drop by the office to pick up a few things, but I’ll try to make it even if it’s only very briefly.

Public baths

Friday, February 29th, 2008

After work this past Monday I went with Yumi and Sarah to an onsen (温泉; lit. warm spring) in Izumo (出雲). The onsen is a sento (銭湯; lit. money warm-water), a Japanese public bath, but with water from a natural hot spring. Often translated as “hot-spring”, I don’t find this to quite properly convey the meaning of the concept. Coming from Iceland (another country richly blessed with a similar resource) I know hot springs as just that; a place where hot water comes out of the ground. While the Icelandic do like relaxing in warm water (as is evident by the presence of at least one hot tub in every swimming pool) and an actual hot spring is special in that it is right out there in the rough nature, the Japanese experience is quite different.

The hallmark of the Japanese onsen is natural water. There lies some magic in it for which tourists will travel great distances and pay a premium price. Famous places such as the near-by Tamayu (玉湯) are lined with Japanese traditional hotels (旅館, ryokan; lit. traveller’s house/hall) which offer an all-round experience starting at about ¥15,000 (ca. 10.000 Icelandic crowns, 100 Euro or 150 Canadian Dollars).

Some say the magic is in the minerals and the benefits are numerous, but somewhat vague. I’ve been told that one stays warm longer after soaking in a tub of natural hot-spring water, than normal tap-water. While the sceptic in me protested, I decided that not knowing is an acceptable price for the mystery.

Unlike the natural hot-springs in Iceland, the Japanese are (with seemingly few exceptions) not that natural — at least not the way I understand the term.Tamaikan onsen Quite opposite the Icelandic concept of nature being pure only if untouched, the Japanese seem to have little problem with constructed nature. Trees are shaped and propped up and gardens thoroughly maintained according to a very human aestetic. So while an onsen may be extremely pretty, those made out to look natural don’t really match what I’d call a natural onsen.

The facilities offered might tempt one to call the onsen a spa. I had a very interesting chat with some Japanese and foreigner friends about what made the onsen so special. Stephen, an Australian who’s lived in Japan for the longest time, offered a very interesting view of the onsen with which most seemed to agree. For him (if I can remember this correctly), a large part of the attraction was in the ritual of bathing.

And there I think he has a point. More than a spa, I think there is value in the actual act of bathing and relaxing.Tamaikan onsen showers Many visitors to the onsen seem to have a developed way of going about in the onsen. I once went to this really old onsen in Onomichi (尾道; lit. tail/ridge road, probably meaning narrow road) where I saw one of the regulars, a man of respectable age, step out of the pool, strech and then scrub his body with soap for over half an hour (he even had a little brush which he used to clean between his toes and under nails).

I may very well be overinterpreting everything in some unfulfilled way of wanting to inflate the significance of these experiences and find some spiritualism and tradition that fit my Occidental misconceptions and steriotypes of the Orient. I certainly don’t mean to imply that people specifically visit the onsen for the purpose of carrying out some well conceived ritual. Rather, I find it interesting and appealing, this notion of a communal place for bathing and relaxation.

Perhaps it also tickles my romantic streak to connect it to the famed public baths at the Roman thermae. Whatever the reason, I do like the baths and will probably try to go a few times while it’s cold enough to easily justify it.

The pictures in this post were actually not taken at the Izumo onsen, but rather in Tamayu (also mentioned) where I went at new-year’s

Back in … temporarily, at least

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

The last few days have been a bit frustrating. I’ve been going to the International Center almost every day to check my email.

Last Tuesday, Michie, on her way from a successful interview with JTB in Hiroshima City (広島市; hiroshima-shi), dropped by for a visit. Since she had no pressing business in Fukuyama (福山市; fukuyama-shi) she ended up extending her stay past the weekend to catch the Matsue Drum Festival (鼕行列; do-gyoretsu) that took place today.

The festival was really interesting. The city is divided into small towns (from the merger of which the city was formed) and most of these participate in the festival by joining a long parade from Matsue Castle (松江城; matsue-jo) with drums on carts, pulled by children and pounded on by townsmen.

True to my nature, I took over two hundred pictures of the festivities. Granted, I’ve hardly done any weeding of the bad ones.

So, arriving back home, I went to the nearby shopping mall, bought a lamp (much needed!) and some groceries while Michie prepared rice and heated up yesterday’s dinner. As I got home and waited for the rice to be ready, I deceided to prepare myself mentally for deceiding on my computer problems.

I’d gone to Deo-deo to see how much it would cost to have the fan replaced. Well, since Shimane has no Lenovo dealer, the machine would have to be shipped out of prefecture and the repair cost would be around 50.000 yen (or higher, if there would be any problems). Great. That pretty much set me on simply buying a new one. But which one.

Well, the choice is currently between the newer model of my trusty Thinkpad X31 and the spiffy, ultra-portable Sony Vaio TZ. The new Thinkpad X61 has been improved in just about every way, except the screen resolution … which I’ve always found rather small. The Vaio is overall smaller, but the screen is very bright and has a higher resolution (about 20% more pixels horizontally) arranged in a wide-aspect ratio (WXGA – 1280×800px). There are more differences that complicate the choice further.

To prepare myself mentally, I figured I’d do well to take out old Palantir from the closet where he’s been resting and just play around with the keyboard and imagining what the different screens would feel like.

Well, for the heck of it, I hit the power button, the boot screen appeared and then the error, messag… What! It passed the hardware test and the boot loader started loading the Linux kernel. In five minutes I was logged on to MSN and was surfing the Internet!

I’m not sure how long this will last. Whether the fan error was a physical problem with the fan which will break and leave my CPU to fry, or just a glich of some kind that I’ll be able get around by resting (cooling?) the machine (or just not shutting it down — which I rarely do).

Either way, hopefully I might now be able to look for flights to Iceland for the holidays, for flights to Hong Kong and read a bit more about the various computer options.

The art of war

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

I’ve been getting up all too late so far this week. It really cuts down on my productivity having only a little bit of time left over after breakfast and shower before having to head out to work on the 14:32 train. Well, today I can catch the 15:44, so that makes it a bit easier.

Last weekend was pretty nice, enterprising wise, and really enjoyable. Karaoke after work on Saturday and a barbeque in Izumo on Sunday. The highlight, however, was on Monday.

Monday was National Physical Education day. A pretty crappy day for some, I bet. For Sarah and me, however, it had some pretty cool things in store. The Budokan (武道館; martial arts hall) in Matsue had deceided to invite foreigners to try out a few Japanese martial arts.

We started early in the morning with kyudo (弓道; Japanese archery, lit. the way of the bow) and this was the part that I was most interested in. When we got there there were already people practicing. Like with most Japanese martial arts, there is much formality and shooting the target is hardly the highest importance. Their every move was practiced in the right order. They would enter the firing platform in groups of four, bow, walk up to their spot, sit down and in procession, set up the first arrow, stand up, look up the bow, then down, then to the target, raise the bow, draw it, release, lower the bow and sit down, repeat once the turn was theirs again, then walk off the platform, bowing once more to the little shrine at the head of the room.

Soon enough all the participants were here, six in all. We were welcomed by one of the elderly gentlemen before being shown the basics of kyudo bow-handling (they didn’t really bother with most of the formalities but would add some as we progressed a bit). We were given gloves and bows and practiced drawing the bow. Once we’d gotten those basics, we were given practice arrows for release practice, shooting into bundles of straw at close range and low tension.

Everyone having had a number of goes, we finally got a taste of the real stuff. They gave us a walk through the whole routine, with setting up the arrow and a few other details, brought out a target and gave us proper arrows. We took our turns each, but we only had time for two shots each before handing in our bows and gloves. Finally someone from the Budokan thanked us for our participation today, we all bowed and that was it.

I hadn’t had breakfast so Sarah and I split up and I had some lunch at Sukiya before biking down to the main Budokan building. It seemed to be only Sarah and me for the last two budo — which I thought was kind of sad, but at the same time really nice because we got a whole lot more attention that way.

The kendo (剣道, way of the sword) master was a pleasant man with next to no English, but very eager to depart his knowledge to us foreigners. We went through a few moves and learnt the three basic attack points; man (head), kita (forearms) and dou (sides). I hadn’t been too keen on this (a bit rigid and doesn’t have the grace of some of the other budo), but the teacher made it very interesting.

The last on the agenda was naginata (薙刀; halbeard). Traditionally a womens’ (or peasants’) weapon it is not as popular as some of the more famous budo, which made me sort of interested in it. It was fairly closely related to kendo, but had two more attack points; sune (shins) and tsuki(?) (base of the neck). The naginata is swung like a sword, but the length allows for a wider grip and switching of hands.

The only stain on the day was when my camera flash wouldn’t stick down. On my way down, I dropped by Deodeo where I bought the camera and asked to have it repaired. When I asked the guy when I’d get it back, I first thought he said “on the tenth” (Monday was the eighth), but when I got the receipt, it turned out to be “in ten days”. I considered taking the camera home to download the pictures from the day, but figured that then I probly wouldn’t hand in the camera until later and I really want to have it for the drum festival on the 21st. So, I just took the memory chip. I might drop by SATY and get the thing on a CD depending on the price.

Racially profiled

Friday, October 5th, 2007

AUDIO: 32000 Hz, 2 ch, s16le, 32.0 kbit/3.12% (ratio: 4000->128000)
So, yesterday afternoon, I’m biking past the Matsue train station when a young man comes up to me and asks if I’m a foreigner. I notice that he’s one of about six guys standing there and at first I reckon they’re just going to ask for directions or something (no idea why they would grab me). Well, he draws out his police badge and I think to myself: “Great. Again.”

So, a couple of months back (the beginning of August I think) I was stopped by these two guys. I recognised them as immigration officials from their hand gestures. “Hand gestures?”, you ask. Well, they’d already been to Cleave’s shop/bar and the demonstration he gave us of the officials’ well rehearsed badge flip-open matched these guys that I met perfectly.

Like the couple had done back then, these six asked me for my foreigner registration card. Knowing that I wasn’t allowed to refuse, I took it out of my bag and as I showed them the card, asked them why they wanted to see it. They said something I didn’t understand and one blurted out “police rule”.

As they took my card and wrote down my information, I asked the young officer who had approached me for his name. I reckoned that was the only thing I could do. After they had my information, they thanked me, I thanked them and biked on.

So, one might think that it wasn’t really only a very mild nuisance that only took a few minutes. Granted, it did only take a couple of minutes. I will admit, though, that I’m really frustrated at the incident. It feels like they thought I was more likely to be a criminal because I looked foreign.

This isn’t just bad luck or a new policy and many foreigners (well, those that look foreign) have been asked for their documents. Japan has for a long time had laws requiring foreigners to have identification cards on them at all time, and laws that allow police officers to see those cards. Searching the Internet I found a page that said Japanese law requires reasonable suspicion of a crime. Other legislation, however, denies foreigners the right to refuse showing documents.

So foreigners are protected from arbitrary checks — but cannot use that protection. Great.

Aside from how being offended by such checks, there are two things that bother me about this whole thing. Firstly, while most Japanese are extremely hospitable, kind and willing to reach out, their representatives in government seem to be xenophobic racists (look up Tokyo governor Ishihara). Secondly, the quintessential case of racial profiling is the interment of Japanese-Americans during the second world war.