My regular English blog is here.
Every SWF-picture published here is shot with my trusty Google Pixel 4a smartphone and unedited, unless stated otherwise.
For more Skywatch Friday photo's from around the globe, please check http://skyley.blogspot.com/
It's been a while (nine years?) and I miss the Skywatch community. In the meantime I started weekly posting a short story or a poem. "So why not do both?" I asked myself. And here I am.
How 're all you lovelies doing in your parts of the world?
Today I'm taking you on a tour of Amsterdam/ Not extremely hard to do since it's where I live. Compared to other capitals Amsterdam is relatively small with less than a million inhabitants and you can walk from one end to the other in under three hours. Good luck doing that with Mexico City, Chicago or Guangzhou!
You're in luck because this morning I had an appointment in a part of the city where I don't often come. Around Weesperzijde.
All around Amsterdam you can spot ornaments on bridges.
Now an eventlocation, this once was the building for all things diamond trade in Amsterdam. Not needed after most diamond traders had left. And not out of free will. More on that later in this tour:On the Amsterdam streets you can also find quite a lot of modern art. No, not the grey thing in the foreground; that's the top of a larger underground waste container than can hold dozens of full standard garbage bags
The Jewist Name Monument. Always impressive to realize murdered people are individuals, not unlike you and I.
Amsterdam once housed a thriving Jewish community. First came the Sefardic Jews (from an ancienct word meaning something like 'From Spanish origin'. The word 'Sefardic', not 'Jews'). Who were not welcome the first few generations.
And later proved that's a natural response to strangers coming to 'your' town when the Ashkenazi Jews came, descendants of people from south-Russia/Turkey that had converted to Judaism somewhere around 840 and were prosecuted all over Europe. Where they were welcomed 'as long as you bring money to the table, everyone is welcome in Amsterdam!', as the first tourist wrote in his journal in 17 something. If you happen to know the name of this Italian merchant and/or under what title his journal was published? Please!
Most of my readers will know why we don't see that many Jews (Sefardic nor Ashkenazi) anymore. Unfortunately the Jews who survived the Holocaust were not welcome back anywhere in Europe and thus deported to the Middle East. With well documented results, not taught by and to every group.
A church in or near what an occupying group called 'Judenviertel' is the Mozes and Aaronchurch, only since fairly recently a Roman Catholic church again.:
The next three pictures are taken off or from a bridge called Blauwbrug (Blue Bridge. Taken from the colour it once had?) over the Amstel RiverHome again I enjoyed some down time at the waterfront on this lovely spring day:
Nah. Probably just a subcontracter who's making adjustments to a home after the tennents moved out, so the housing company sold it for a quick buck to a foreign investment company, that's putting in a new kitchen, will wait for six months and sell the place with some €100,000 net profit to yet another investment company and currently over 10,000 Amsterdam appartments are standing empty because no normal person can afford them, investments companies can't find other investment companies to invest in the pyramid scheme that's called 'housing market' and one day we will all be homeless and a handful of multibillionaires are the proud owners of millions of empty appartment buildings. Yeah!
How soon do we forget
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Enough sillyness, time to get serious:
In high school I wrote this circle poem (circle? Yes: the first and last line are identical. Is there an oficial word for that form of poetry? Let me know!) to help people remember under no circumstance a people should be displaced, oppressed and even killed, just because of who they (supposedly even) are:
How soon do we forget
our dreams, our hopes, our passions.
When we were young, we had them all
our dreams, our hopes, our passions.
How soon do we forget
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Want to read (more of) my short stories? My author page: Terrence Weijnschenk at Amazon
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Beautiful photos. The bit about Jews not being welcome back in Europe after WWII is disturbing.
BeantwoordenVerwijderenThank you. Having Jewish as well as Arab friends I've always been very interested in the conflict and can imagine being displaced just because of your heritage. No group of people ever deserves that faith.
VerwijderenYour writing style is fluent and dynamic, guiding the reader through your story with ease. While I was aware of the early foundation plans for Israel in the late 19th century, I am surprised to learn that Jewish people were not welcome back in Europe after WWII.
BeantwoordenVerwijderenThank you for your lovely words! Not many people are taught that after the Holocaust, the surviving Jews were literally put on transport to the Middle East by the Allies. As if they hadn't suffered enough already.
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