Not
so easy to write a blog when most of the time I am alone in my
apartment. What do I do? Occasional bursts of studying Dutch! Quite
frequent reading of War and Peace by Tolstoy, bought for
post-operative therapy almost as a joke and a delight to discover
that I don't want to put it down! Tolstoy is verbose, dwells rather
too lingeringly on War, and on Freemasonry, and has lengthy
Leo Tolstoy |
discursive deliberations on various facets of the period and subjects which
interest him, BUT his narrative is compelling and his
characterisation, superb. Unbelievably, after five weeks with only
four of those weeks in his company and I am around halfway
through the 1360+ pages, and painlessly too. More than that; I really
enjoy his prose.
Nazi Brown-shirts in 1933 enforcing a boycott of Jewish stores |
by the state which intermittently pulled back
on its worst excesses as these negatively influenced everyday
commerce. The author, David Cesarini, died during the publication
process of this book but he has left a work of profound scholarship on, and insight
into, what he called his 'reappraisal' of Hitler's Final Solution.
Timeless Jan Van Eyckplein |
Saturday,
with friend and neighbour Michele, to buy a newspaper and to drink
coffee and chat, not at Blackbird, in Jan Van Eyckplein, which had no
room for us, but at the coffee place nearby. This proved to be first class
and we sat long and discussed much on various topics including the UK
Referendum which originally seemed to me to be an unnecessary sop to
Cameron's right wing and which is backfiring anyway as the
Conservative Party tears itself apart in increasingly bitter
recriminations. It is such a gamble; the UK cannot afford the
possibility of a quasi-economic wasteland if it casts itself off the
moorings of the E.U. But I know so many people who really believe it
is worthwhile going it alone because of the bureaucracy and because
it actually believes that immigration is a) bad and b) Brexit will
reduce numbers. Madness to put at risk a reasonably successful
economy. It is amusing anyway, to hear commentators in favour of
Brexit, like the boss of Witherspoon's, on Radio Four this morning,
stumbling as he tried to find explicit examples of the alleged
bureaucracy. There will be some but they do not seem as universal as
the popular mythology suggests and so what? Remaining within the EU
means fighting for change from a stronger position within, instead of
waving, powerless, from outside.
And
so, via continuing physiotherapy, to Tuesday's funeral for a certain
friend's untimely death. There was a slight air of bewilderment that
it was her funeral anyway, this healthy, lively 80 year old who
cheerfully rode her bike everywhere and seemed to have lots of
energy. A small crowd gathered at the Brugge Crematorium which is a
most tranquil and green place to end one's journey. The service, put
together by her three daughters, was really a sweet loop of memories
from the family with several short apt readings by friends which
would have been greatly enjoyed by the subject of the tributes!
Afterwards, in her light-filled house, there was talk and laughter
with the food and wine and an enchanting eight year old grandson
'handing round' plates and glasses in an impressively mature way. The
best thing I heard was the slight boast of the home-schooled young
man, that he had thirty three friends.
The
funeral and wake afterwards, followed the three hour appearance of my
much-missed cleaning girl, not seen since early March and hugely
welcome. Thus, Tuesday was a particularly special day for the
Physically Challenged One. And Wednesday even better; for an Xray
then a final examination by the surgeon who gave me the go ahead to
try to walk as much as possible. The final flourish was to board the
No 13 bus to town and walk what seemed the endless distance from near
the Stadtheater on Vlamingstraat home. I took the precaution of
telling the driver when I would want to get off and asked him to give
me plenty of time with the crutches! He did; the Bruggean bus drivers
are marvellous!
Since
then, out to lunch on Thursday at Trium on Academiestraat nearby and
quite a long walk to the Biekorf, the Library to read The Times. An
hour's rest and off across the square to the Oud Huis Amsterdam to meet
some of the Thursday English group; always a real pleasure. This was
a Busy Day for anyone physically-challenged!