Today's top stories

Posted on 11th May 2012 in The monuments of world


Urban climber Alain Robert, known as “the French Spiderman”, has scaled his country’s tallest building.

Having climbed more than 100 skyscrapers and monuments across the world, Robert set his sights on the 231-metre (758-feet) First Tower at La Defence district in Courbevoie on the outskirts of Paris.

French urban climber Alain Robert, known as 'Spiderman', climbing up the 231 meter high (758 feet) First Tower French urban climber Alain Robert, known as ‘Spiderman’, climbing up the 231 meter high (758 feet) First Tower Credit: AP Photo/Michel Euler

Office workers gazed out of their windows in disbelief as the 49-year-old went past on his way to the top, using only his bare hands and climbing shoes.

After a brief stop at the 21st floor, Robert ascended the remaining 29 storeys to add another building to his death-defying achievements.

French urban climber Alain Robert, known as 'Spiderman', climbing up the 231 meter high (758 feet) First Tower French urban climber Alain Robert, known as ‘Spiderman’, climbing up the 231 meter high (758 feet) First Tower Credit: AP Photo/Michel Euler

This is attracting a lot to people. We are in a world where people are not daring a lot. They are daring in front of their TV, they sit and watch Bruce Willis and ‘Mission Impossible’, then they turn off the TV and go back in front of their computer. I won’t put the whole world on trial, but there is a lot of people living their dreams by proxy.

– Alain Robert French urban climber Alain Robert, known as 'Spiderman', speaks to reporters after climbing up the 231 meter high (758 feet) First Tower French urban climber Alain Robert, known as ‘Spiderman’, speaks to reporters after climbing up the 231 meter high (758 feet) First Tower Credit: AP Photo/Michel Euler

The Frenchman’s previous conquests include New York’s Empire State building, the Sydney Opera House and the Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur.

Robert has often been arrested after reaching the summit of some of the world’s most iconic structures.

But this time there were no police to greet him, as he was granted prior clearance to climb from the skyscraper’s owner.

Are we not missing the boat?

Posted on 10th May 2012 in The monuments of world

Are we not missing the boat?

EDITOR

We learnt with disbelief yesterday that the world boxing title fight that was to be the first of its kind to be staged on Botswana soil has been postponed indefinitely for lack of funds.

It boggles the mind how an event that would surely signal many firsts for Botswana – including featuring a Motswana fighter – can be treated with such levity. This world title fight would offer a rare opportunity to unfurl the banner of Botswana on the world stage, forever leveraging branding the country for all that it stands for.

Its postponement comes at a time when the National Museum and Monuments wants to list the Okavango Delta as a World Heritage Site and has invited stakeholders – including journalists – for consultations to that end. 

It also comes against the background of a clamour to brand Gaborone as a Diamond City, flowing from Botswana being the world’s leading diamond producer, which in turn is linked to the programme to make Gaborone the main global centre for trade in diamonds.  And what are they thinking at Brand Botswana, that parastatal outfit whose mandate is inherent in its name? Why should they accept that feigning bankruptcy cannot be challenged?   

We need not detail the spinoff effects of the televised boxing event on attracting visitors to our wildlife resources that make our country a veritable Edenic Park and the heightened concern of conservationists for the preservation and multiplication of species under threat.

We thus find it difficult to abide the postponement of the unparalleled event because the fact is that inspite of the recent recession and the widespread poverty of its people, Botswana is flush with cash, some of which is earmarked for branding the country and marketing its tourism value. We say nothing about the P200 million in the Alcohol Levy Fund that seems to function as a pool for misappropriation.

To postpone an occasion to maximise benefit to the nation by tapping slightly into this fund and others and pretending to be broke defies logic. To avoid what is literally a golden opportunity when we responded with uncustomary alacrity when Hollywood came to Botswana a few years ago is hard to understand. Of course, the Scotsman of Mma Ramotswe fame and the filming of his works has put Botswana on a pedestal, but there is no doubting that promoters of pugilistic events – especially boxing – take the lead in calling the world to attention.

Surely Botswana Tourism is doing well with the Toyota 1,000 Desert Race, but embracing Scud Missile Promotions for what would shine the greatest limelight on Botswana would have been a milestone public-private partnership development.

The fact that this initiative is driven by a Motswana promoter featuring a Motswana boxer for staging in Botswana should surely mean something to the Government Enclave where the fight should have commanded the support of Parliament and Cabinet alike.  However, it is not too late to revisit the matter in order to get things right. Let us do so because being landlocked does not mean we should always miss the boat.

                                                                Today’s thought
               “Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off your goal.”

                                                               - Henry Ford (1863-1947)

True story behind Huangyan Island dispute in South China Sea

Posted on 10th May 2012 in The monuments of world

The controversy over a tiny island in the South China Sea has intensified, making it the most serious standoff between China and the Philippines in the sea in recent years.

In early April, the Philippines sent a warship to harass 12 Chinese fishing vessels which sailed into the waters of Huangyan Island to shelter from bad weather.

According to media reports, the Philippines has also notified China on its readiness to raise the issue of the sovereignty of Huangyan Island to international arbitration. In addition, it tried to rename the island and remove the signs and monuments related to China.

WHO IS THE TROUBLEMAKER

Huangyan Island, a group of reefs and islets about 550 sea miles away from the Hainan Island in south China, has long provided a perfect shelter for fishing ships from nearby islands and the mainland of China.

“For many generations we have fished in this water,” said Ke Weixiu, a fisherman and native from the port of Tanmen in Hainan.

However, since the 1990s, Chinese fishermen have repeatedly been harassed by Philippine warships.

According to the fishery department under the Ministry of Agriculture, four Chinese fishing boats were intercepted by the Philippine navy in the waters around the island from January to March in 1998 and 51 fishermen on board were detained for about six months.

In May 1999, a Chinese fishing boat was rammed by a Philippine warship and sunk, according to the ministry.

From 2000 to 2011, at least 32 fishing ships, with 439 fishermen on board, were chased, robbed or detained by the Philippine navy.

The latest event occurred in April. Xu Detan, captain of one of the 12 fishing ships harassed, has not recovered from the shocking encounter with the Philippine navy even three weeks after returning home.

“A Philippine warship blocked our entry to the lagoon where we docked our ships,” Xu recalled. “We had no choice but to wait inside as they were armed.”

On April 10, nine Philippine soldiers, on a inflatable, boarded Xu’s ship with seven of them carrying rifles.

“They turned off the radio and satellite positioning system on my ship, searched the whole ship and took pictures while the 16 members of the crew, including me, were standing on the deck under the hot sun for four hours.”

Two Chinese Marine Surveillance ships conducting routine patrols in the area later came to the fishermen’s rescue and helped Xu and his colleagues return home safely.

“Usually a fishing trip will take 50 days but this time we were forced to cut it short to 25 days,” he said.

PHILIPPINES’ TERRITORIAL CLAIM IS UNTENABLE

Until 1997, the Philippines never disputed China’s jurisdiction and development of the island. But recently the Philippines has played tricks and triggered disturbances, as well as claiming the island as theirs.

The Philippines says it is the nearest country to Huangyan Island, so it claims the island belongs to it on this premise.

“This theory based on geographic distance for territorial sovereignty has absolutely no basis in international law and judicial practice,” according to Zhang Haiwen, deputy director of China Institute for Marine Affairs under State Oceanic Administration.

“There is no such principle in international law that determines territorial ownership by geographic distance,” Zhang said, noting that many countries around the world have territories which are far away from their mainland and much closer to other countries.

“For example, the British Channel Islands are less than 12 nautical miles off the French coastline at their closest proximity. Some French territorial islands stretch across the Atlantic, lie close to the Canadian coastline in north America and even in the Pacific. But none of these islands have territorial disputes due to geographic distance,” said Zhang.

“The world map would be totally redrawn if the Philippines’ theory was upheld,” Zhang said.

The Philippines claims that Huangyan Island is in the country’s 200-nautical miles-wide Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and says its claim is in line with the United Nations Convention on the Law Of the Sea (UNCLOS).

Liu Feng, a researcher with National Institute for South China Sea Studies, said that the UNCLOS has neither the articles to change a country’s land territory, nor does it have the authority to allow a country to take another country’s territory by the right of the EEZ and the continental shelf.

The Philippines claims that the United States controlled Huangyan Island, thus it has inherited the island’s sovereignty and jurisdiction from the U.S. military.

“U.S. forces in the Philippines used Huangyan Island as a shooting range, but the U.S. has never claimed sovereignty over the island. How could the Philippines inherit it? It’s ridiculous,” said Zhang Haiwen.

“All the Philippine rhetoric is untenable in terms of international law,” said Liu Feng. “So the Philippines wants to take the initiative to stir things up by sending warships to harass Chinese fishermen in Huangyan Island waters and escalate tensions.”

The world's largest chess piece is unveiled in St. Louis

Posted on 7th May 2012 in The monuments of world

ST. LOUIS • It’s 14.5 feet high, weighs 2,280 pounds and is yet another example of the seemingly unlimited financial resources to make St. Louis the country’s chess capital.

Now you can add the “World’s Largest Chess Piece” to the list of St. Louis monuments.

The king piece sits on a platform, a permanent fixture in the Central West End.

It’s the latest effort of the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of St. Louis to promote chess in the city, and was unveiled just after 9 a.m. on Monday.

“This piece serves as a monument to the chess culture we are creating in St. Louis,” said Mike Wilmering, spokesman for the club.

It’s also an unabashed public relations move. Still, it’s hard not to smile at the ambition behind it.

Despite its size, the piece took less than a month and a half to build — thanks to R. G. Ross Construction, a local company that formed the piece in a secret location in the Gravois Bluffs shopping center.

“We had this idea,” Wilmering said. “We were thinking: where are we going to put this?”

The patio in front of the World Chess Hall of Fame, just across the street from the chess club, seemed like the perfect place.

The announcement about the piece was timed to promote the 2012 U.S. Chess Championships, which begin on Tuesday and have been hosted by the club since 2009.

The piece, Wilmering said, has already been certified by the Guiness World Records as the largest in the world. The previous record-holder is in Sweden and was built by Mats Allanson in 2003. Allanson’s piece is also a king, but a mere 13.1 feet high, according to the Guiness website.

Wilmering said he and members of Weber Shandwick, the Chess Club’s public relations firm,  came up with the idea in March.

R. G. Ross Construction used an enlarged three-dimensional image of a king piece as a model. The company documented the construction with time lapse photography.

“This would be a great piece to have on the Discovery Channel someday,” said Vince Mannino, president of R. G. Ross. “This is by far the most unique project we have ever done.”

The world record is the latest in a host of moves the club has made the past few years. It brought the U.S. Chess Championships to St. Louis in 2009; inspired the country’s top-ranked player, Hikura Nakamura, to move to here; and prompted Chess Hall of Fame to relocate to St. Louis from Miami.

None of that would have been possible without retired businessman and philanthropist Rex Sinquefield, who financed the chess club, which opened in 2008.

The club is considered one of the swankiest in the country and some chess experts have called Sinquefield the most significant benefactor of chess in America.

“I don’t know what we are going to do next year,” Wilmering said.

Hillary Clinton arrives in India to breathe life into ties

Posted on 6th May 2012 in The monuments of world

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton landed in Kolkata on Sunday on a 3-day India visit.

KOLKATA: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton landed in India on Sunday with hopes of reinvigorating a relationship seen as losing steam despite efforts to bring the world’s two largest democracies closer.

Clinton will be wading into a row over Iran, which is sending a trade delegation this week to New Delhi despite US threats to slap sanctions on countries that buy the Islamic republic’s oil.

Clinton’s final stop on a three-nation tour follows a tense visit to China defusing a crisis over a dissident and a stop in Bangladesh where she urged the country’s polarised politicians to unite in the push for development.

The veteran politician arrived in Kolkata, where she will tour monuments and meet citizens in her latest bid to use her personal popularity as a diplomatic tool.

Clinton said that she saw ample progress in relations with India, pointing to rising trade and cooperation in areas from education to clean energy.

“I think it’s like any relationship — there is progress in some areas that we are very heartened by, and there is more work to be done,” Clinton told reporters before her arrival.

“But that’s the commitment that we make when we say to another country, we want to be your partner,” she said.

The United States and India, which had uneasy relations during the Cold War, started to reconcile in the late 1990s under former president Bill Clinton and reached a milestone when his successor George W. Bush championed a deal that ended India’s decades of isolation over its nuclear programme.

But champions of the relationship have begun to voice disappointment, with US businesses upset that India’s parliament has not passed legislation they seek to enter the nuclear and retail sectors.

India has bristled at a US law that would impose sanctions on banks from countries that buy oil from Iran due to concerns over Iran’s contested nuclear programme.

Only EU nations and Japan have so far been given exemptions to the law which starts on June 28.

India has been reducing oil imports from Iran, but is highly dependent on foreign energy and has historically enjoyed friendly relations with Tehran.

TP Sreenivasan, a former Indian ambassador to the United Nations, said that expectations for the US-India relationship had not been met but that Clinton had the advantage of being considered a friend of New Delhi.

The visit “comes at a useful time as there is a certain amount of strain in relations that needs to be rectified,” he said.

“The relationship has lost momentum partly because… both are preoccupied with their own internal problems,” he said.

C. Raja Mohan, a fellow at the Observer Research Foundation, said that India and the United States had the same objectives in Iran and would likely want to “keep their differences to manageable limits.”

“Contrary to what one might think, the relations are reasonably on track in terms of their engagement. The US is in election mode; India has its own problems,” Mohan said.

Experts noted that the United States made little fuss last month when India tested its nuclear-capable Agni V missile, which can reach across China.

“Now the US views India as a strategic partner with growing economic and political clout that will contribute to promoting security and stability in Asia,” said a paper by Lisa Curtis and Baker Spring, of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative US think tank.

India has recently worked to repair relations with historic enemy Pakistan, removing one potential headache for the United States whose own relations with Islamabad have been in crisis since last year’s killing of Osama bin Laden.

Lonely Planet's guide to Poland

Posted on 5th May 2012 in The monuments of world

Medieval Teutonic Castle over Nogat river at sunset. Picture: Witold Skrypczak/ Lonely Planet Source: National Features

Sunset on Baltic Sea beach in Swinoujscie at Uznam Island. Picture: Witold Skrypczak/ Lonely Planet Source: National Features

POLAND wears its charms lightly, but venture into its heart and you’ll find medieval cities, fairytale castles and untouched wilderness, served with an invigorating shot of vodka.

–  A thousand years

Poland’s roots go back to the turn of the first millennium, leaving 1000 years of twists and turns and kings and castles to explore.

History buffs of the World War II vintage are well served. Tragically, Poland found itself in the middle of that epic fight, and monuments and museums dedicated to its battles and to Poland’s remarkable survival can be seen everywhere.

There’s a growing appreciation, too, of the country’s rich Jewish heritage. Beyond the deeply affecting Holocaust memorials, synagogues are being sensitively restored, and former Jewish centres, such as Lodz and Lublin, have set up heritage trails so you can trace this history at your own pace. 

– Castles to log cabins

The former royal capital of Krakow is a living lab of architecture over the ages. Its nearly perfectly preserved Gothic core proudly wears overlays of Renaissance, Baroque and Art Nouveau, a record of tastes that evolved over the centuries.

Fabulous medieval castles and evocative ruins dot hilltops elsewhere in the country, and the fantastic red-brick fortresses of the Teutonic Knights stand proudly in the north along the Vistula.

At the other extreme, simple but finely crafted wooden churches hide amid the Carpathian hills, and the ample skills of the country’s highlanders are on display at the region’s many skansens (open-air ethnographic museums). 

– Heart-warming food

If you’re partial to good home cooking, the way your grandmother used to make it, you’ve come to the right place. Polish food is based largely on local ingredients such as pork, cabbage, mushroom, beetroot and onion, combined simply and honed to perfection.

Regional specialities such as duck, goose, herring and even bison keep things from getting dull.

As for sweets, it’s hard to imagine a more accommodating destination. Cream cakes, apple strudel, pancakes, fruit-filled dumplings and a special national mania for lody (ice cream) may have you skipping the main course and jumping straight to dessert. 

– Fresh-air pursuits

Away from the big cities, much of Poland feels remote and unspoiled. While large swathes are flat, the southern border is lined with low mountains that invite days of solitude.

Marked hiking paths criss-cross the country, taking you through dense forest, along broad rivers and through mountain passes. Much of the northeast is covered by interlinked lakes and waterways that are ideal for kayaking and canoeing no experience necessary.

– Top experiences

* Stately Krakow

A unique atmosphere wafts through the attractive streets and squares of this former royal capital, with its heady blend of history and harmonious architecture.

From the vast Rynek Glowny, Europe’s largest medieval market square, to the magnificent Wawel Castle on a hill above the Old Town, every part of the city is fascinating.

Add to that the former Jewish district of Kazimierz and its scintillating nightlife (and then contrast it with the communist-era concrete structures of Nowa Huta) and it’s easy to see why Krakow is an unmissable destination. 

Wroclaw

Throughout its turbulent history, this city on the Odra River the former German city of Breslau has taken everything invaders could throw at it, and survived.

Badly damaged in World War II, it was artfully rebuilt around its beautiful main square, with an intriguing complex of buildings at its centre. Another attraction is the Panorama of Raclawice, a vast, 19th-century painting hung about the walls of a circular building.

Beyond historical gems, Wroclaw has a vibrant nightlife, with plenty of dining and drinking options on the narrow streets of its lively Old Town. 

Great Masurian Lakes

Sip a cocktail on the deck of a luxury yacht, take a dip, or don a lifejacket, grab your paddle and slide off into a watery adventure on one of the interconnected lakes that make up this mecca for Polish sailing and water-sports fans.

Away from the water, head for one of the region’s buzzing resorts, where the slap and jangle of masts competes with the clinking of glasses and the murmur of boat talk.

In winter, when the lakes freeze over, cross-country skis replace water skis on the steel-hard surface. 

Baltic beaches

The season may be brief and the sea one of Europe’s nippiest, but if you’re looking for a dose of sand, there are few better destinations than the Baltic’s cream-white beaches.

Many people come for the strands along one of the many coastal resorts, be it hedonistic Darlowko, genteel Swinoujscie or the spa town of Kolobrzeg. 

 Malbork Castle

Medieval monster mother ship of the Teutonic order, Gothic blockbuster Malbork Castle is a mountain of bricks held together by a lake of mortar. It was home to the all-powerful order’s grand master and later to visiting Polish monarchs.

They have all now left the stage of history, but not even the shells of World War II could dismantle this baby. If you came to Poland to see castles, this is what you came to see; catch it just before dusk when the sunlight colours the bricks kiln-crimson. 

Folk architecture

If the word skansen, referring to an open-air museum of folk architecture, isn’t a regular part of your vocabulary yet, it will be after your trip to Poland.

These great gardens of log cabins and timbered chalets make for a wonderful ramble. You’ll find what’s reputed to be the country’s biggest skansen in Sanok, in the Carpathians, but there are open-air museums around the country.

You’ll find remnants of old wooden churches and other buildings sprinkled throughout the mountains. 

This is an edited extract from Lonely Planet Poland (7th edition) by Mark Baker. Lonely Planet 2012. Published this month, $41.99, lonelyplanet.com

P5M set aside for Ifugao rice terraces repairs

Posted on 4th May 2012 in The monuments of world
Published : Saturday, May 05, 2012 00:00
Article Views : 53
Written by : JAMES KONSTANTIN GALVEZ REPORTER

The Department of Environment and    Natural Resources (DENR) has committed P5 million for the restoration of the world-renowned Rice Terraces of the Philippines in Ifugao province.

Environment Secretary Ramon Paje said that the amount was part of the memorandum of agreement to provide assistance to the local government of Ifugao in rehabilitating the terraces, particularly in Batad which has been assessed by experts as the most damaged.

“The DENR appreciates the natural and cultural heritage that the rice terraces bear, and we are one with the provincial government and the rest of the Filipino people in recognizing the need to reverse the deterioration of this heritage site, especially those areas that were damaged by typhoons,” Paje said.

Recently, the DENR signed a MOA with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) National Commission of the Philippines (NatCom) represented by its Secretary-General Dr. Virginia Miralao; and the provincial government of Ifugao, represented by its Governor Eugene Balitang.

Under the MOA, the UNESCO NatCom is identified as a “go-between” in the disbursement of the fund to the province of Ifugao, and shall submit to the DENR project documentation and other liquidation reports.

In return, the provincial government, as project implementer, will come up with a work and financial plan that will require the regular submission of reports and other documents showing the details on how the amount was utilized. It will also be primarily responsible for the mobilization of other parties in the rehabilitation work “by utilizing to the best extent possible indigenous methods and techniques.”

The DENR chief said that the restoration process would be undertaken until the end of this year, which would include the repair and rehabilitation of damaged terrace walls, irrigation canals and other facilities.

These would all form part of “corrective measures” being undertaken by the Philippine government to have the Rice Terraces of the Philippine Cordilleras removed from the “endangered” status as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Paje said.

The Rice Terraces was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995.

The UNESCO describes the Rice Terraces as “the only monuments in the Philippines that show no evidence of having been influenced by colonial cultures… The history [of the terraces] is intertwined with that of its people, their culture and their traditional practices.”

In 2001, it was inscribed into the “List of Word Heritage in Danger.” Since then, other government agencies and the private sector have been trying to raise funds for its rehabilitation.

In February, the Department of Agriculture (DA) has commenced with its P30-million rehabilitation program for Ifugao Rice Terraces.

Dante Delima, DA assistant secretary and National Rice Program coordinator, said they are now fast-tracking the release of funds to restore the grandeur of the 2000-year-old structure, which represents the country’s rice self-sufficiency goals.

From POW to VIP: Genoa man part of Freedom Honor Flight

Posted on 4th May 2012 in The monuments of world

GENOA — Cliff Armgard weighed only 78 pounds when he was liberated from a prisoner of war camp in Germany on April 2, 1945, months after being captured during the Battle of the Bulge.

Today the spry 86-year-old Genoa resident looks forward to joining other World War II veterans on the Freedom Honor Flight organization’s ninth trip from La Crosse to Washington, D.C.

“I’m excited about it,” Armgard said of the May 12 trip. “I think it’s great what they’re (Freedom Honor Flight) doing. This thing is so well planned out.” It will be unlike the chaos Armgard saw as German tanks surrounded his unit in the Battle of the Bulge. It was the last major offensive by the Nazi army.

Armgard, who was an anti-tank gunner, was captured on Dec. 19, 1944.

“We were so mad,” said Armgard, who was a private first class in the Army’s 106th Division. “We felt like we had failed our country by getting captured.” He had been drafted in December 1943 during his senior year of high school in La Grange, Ill., and after training was sent to Europe in fall 1944.

Armgard and other POWs were herded into railroad boxcars and taken to a prisoner camp near Bad Orb, Germany. One day, Allied airplanes spotted the train, not knowing it was carrying POWs, and bombed it. Some of the prisoners died in the attack.

“We arrived at Bad Orb on Christmas day,” Armgard recalled. The little food the POWs had was bad, and he eventually lost nearly half his body weight.

“We would have soup made out of beet tops,” Armgard said, and occasionally would be treated to barley soup. “They would give us a loaf of bread; six men had to share it.”

The POWs slept on a straw mattress, with no blankets. There were two men in each bunk, and the bunks were stacked three high, Armgard said. The POWs would pick lice off each other.

Armgard and the other POWs didn’t know they were about to be liberated until Allied tanks came crashing into the camp.

“The guards who had treated us halfway decent stayed,” Armgard recalled, and the others fled.

After being freed, Armgard was stationed at Fort Sheridan, Ill., before leaving the Army in 1945.

He and his wife, Rose, were married in 1946 and lived in Chicago suburbs until 1993, when they moved to Genoa. Armgard was a route salesman for a Brookfield, Ill., dry cleaning and carpet cleaning business for 40 years until he retired.

“We used to vacation in the Dells and loved it up here,” he said of the couple’s decision to move to Genoa.

Armgard, whose wife died in June, has three children, seven grandchildren and soon will have 13 great-grandchildren.

He and Rose had traveled to Washington, where they saw the World War II memorial.

He said he waited to apply for the Freedom Honor Flight until other veterans who haven’t seen the memorial could make the trip. Friends and family members encouraged him to apply for one of the upcoming journeys, saying it would be a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

Armgard will be among about 100 veterans on the 162-passenger Freedom Honor Flight jet flight May 12, organization President Bill Hoel said. The airplane also will carry volunteer guardians and a medical crew.

Most of the veterans served in World War II, although a few Korean War veterans will be on the upcoming flight.

Donations fund the chartered jet trips to Washington, where veterans see the National World War II Memorial and other monuments. The 10th trip will be this fall, Hoel said, but the date hasn’t been announced.

The eight previous flights have taken 786 veterans who lived in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa to the nation’s capital. The first flight was in October 2008.

Delray Beach veteran on a quest to honor comrades

Posted on 3rd May 2012 in The monuments of world

BOYNTON BEACH—

Tom Kaiser presided over a World War II veterans award ceremony Thursday like a foreman, chiding folks for talking and scolding the French consul general’s staff for arriving late.

Honoring veterans is Kaiser’s single-minded ambition, and he said he wants it done right.

At 84, the Delray Beach resident makes it his full-time job, sometimes fielding several phone calls a day from World War II veterans wondering whether they qualify for France’s highest military honor, the Legion of Honor. So far, nearly 350 have a medal because of him.

“If I get to 1,000, maybe I’ll quit,” Kaiser said.

He raises money to build monuments, designs them himself and leads the Boynton Veterans Council.

“There is nobody like this guy who does as much as he does for veterans,” said Kurt Leuchter, 83, of Boynton Beach.

Leuchter, a Vienna native, escaped the Holocaust to France as a teenager. He hid in the forest, joining a French resistance group. He moved to New York after the war.

Kaiser helped Leuchter prove his service, and he became a knight in the Order of the Legion of Honor in April 2011.

“Everybody has a reason for what they do,” said Kaiser, himself a World War II veteran. “My reason is my brother.”

His brother, Robert W. Kaiser Jr., died inside a submarine in February 1944 at 21. A year earlier, his combat bravery earned him a Navy and Marine Corps Commendation.

When the commendation became a medal, Kaiser fought to get it for his brother posthumously. It took four years. Now he wants to make it easier for others, he said.

“Tom is really the most exceptional man,” said Gaël de Maisonneuve, consul general of France in Miami.

Consuls general across the country present the Legion of Honor to Americans for their part in the iconic battles that liberated France from Nazi occupation.

American veterans who apply for the Legion of Honor, established by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1802, must show discharge papers to prove they were in combat.

“It’s sometimes overwhelming because we have a lot of them,” de Maisonneuve said.

On Thursday in the Boynton Beach Civic Center, he presented 23 medals to men who, 60 years ago, stormed the Normandy beaches or suppressed the German offensive in the Battle of the Bulge, among other campaigns.

Bernard Soberman was in France when he was 19, lugging a 41-pound machine gun through the snow. The winter of 1943 nearly took his hands and feet.

“My mission was to shoot that heavy machine gun and kill as many Germans as I could,” said Soberman, now 87 and living in Boynton Beach. “It’s important that France is acknowledging what we did for them.”

Kaiser realizes he’s racing against the clock. The Legion of Honor is not awarded after death, and about 670 World War II veterans die every day, the Department of Veterans Affairs reports.

“I want all these guys to get that medal,” Kaiser said. “This is what drives me.”

bwolford@tribune.com or 561-243-6602 or Twitter @benwolford

Kurdějov, one of the oldest winegrowing communities in the country

Posted on 2nd May 2012 in The monuments of world

South Moravia is well-known for its wine, which has been produced there at least since thirsty Roman soldiers far from home began doing so in the 2nd century. Move forward a thousand years or so, to the 13th century, and wine trading had become one of the most profitable businesses in the region. Those are the days that our destination for today stretches back to.

KurdějovKurdějov The village of Kurdějov is just a tiny pinprick on the map, about half-way between Brno and Břeclav, and there are just enough inhabitants for each of them to have their own day of the year. But while easy to overlook, Kurdějov is notable for many ancient features, all born of the fact that this is one of the oldest winegrowing communities in the region.

In fact the first time anyone mentioned Kurdějov in writing it was about wine, specifically the sale of vineyards, in 1286. Such was the local wine then valued that the four sons of the local nobleman agreed, around 80 years later, that “all the wine from the hills of Kurdějov be divided into four parts, so that none might be diluted”. To describe the village of those days is Antonie Němečková, a businesswoman and promoter of Moravian wine.

“Kurdějov is one of the oldest vineyard communities it the country, and whichever direction you look in, the hills there used to be covered in vineyards. The village was German-speaking and has more than 1,000 inhabitants. It was an affluent community, and between all the fields there were wine cellars. The fortified church is also a testament to the wealth of the village. The fortifications were erected to protect against the raids of those who wanted to plunder the village.”

There were lots of enemies, to be sure, from Turks and Hungarian rebels to rapacious Swedes. Most of them took the added effort of burning the village down, while the Transylvanian prince Gabriel Bethlen actually took 400 of the villagers as slaves. The people of Kurdějov were ready for the Tartars, at least. During their onslaught the villagers did a great deal of damage to them thanks to the useful presence of a fortified church – today one of the oldest monuments in South Bohemia. The church was here as early as 1350, with the fortifications added later. Miroslav Žemlička, a guide in the church, describes some of its interesting features.

“The bells come from 1456, 1469 and 1606. During the First Republic their value was estimated at half a million crowns, but today they are priceless. The tower adjacent to the church used to be 53 metres. Today its height is 45 metres because previous repairs and other work had to decrease it to keep it from falling over.”

Also part of the fortification is the chapel of All Saints.

“The encroachment of foreign troops or other enemies in the village could be prevented not only from the city walls but also through the crenels, or battlements with arrow slits, on the chapel. Previously the chapel and the church were connected by a bridge. It’s not here today because it collapsed sometime during the 18th century, so the church and the tower can only be reached from the outside.”

Miroslav ŽemličkaMiroslav Žemlička While lovely today, history has taken away some of the once grand features of the tower. Each floor originally had four smaller turrets, the tops of which had green weathercocks and stars. Harder for time to erase is the set of underground tunnels beneath the tower, accessible from the nearby wine bar, where Miroslav Žemlička offers a local speciality – spirit of almond (the neighbouring town of Hustopeče hosts the only almond orchard in the country). It’s a good courage booster for what lies ahead.

“Now I’ll be taking you into the local underground corridors. Among other things they served as a hiding place when the village was attacked. There are 340 metres of tunnels here, and one of them went all the way to the church in Hustopeče. If you go by the road, that’s three kilometres away, but in the 15th century these tunnels were 12 kilometres long. With land changing hands over so many years though, and various waves of settlement, the better part of the corridors did not survive. There is this section and then another in Hustopeče in the cellar of a pub.”

The corridors get narrower and lower and wind around more and more the further one goes. It used to be that neither the church nor the corridors were secured, and Mr Žemlička would visit them as a boy, so he has their every nook well mapped out. Today the area is accessible only on reservation.

“When you go into the corridors the first tunnel on the right is a dead end. At the end is a flight of stairs and beyond them a metal door. That was the original entrance to the cellars. And if you keep going straight then you’ll come to the church, which you will recognise because there are stairs going up that are covered by concrete slabs. That corridor goes up to the altar. We are about 20 metres under the surface now and it get’s quite damp. I’ll light your candles now and you can go inside…”

Though Kurdějov was originally a Czech village – which we know, among other things, because almost all of the recorded correspondence was written in Czech), a strong German influence beginning in the Renaissance overcame the settlement in the centuries to come. By 1921 there were 881 Germans, 19 Czechs and 16 ‘foreigners’ living in 212 homes there. After the Second World War, that situation radically changed. Antonie Němečková, again.

“After the expulsion of the Germans the population here went overnight from 1,000 to two people. So the village was doomed until they began resettling the borders. A lot of the people who received houses here didn’t know how to deal with owning property, they didn’t know how to take care of a house. So when the roof caved in on them they just moved to the next empty house. Gradually almost all the property in the village was destroyed in this way. After the revolution, in 1993, I met a married couple from Austria who were taking a picture of one of the houses, so I invited them to come have a look at what was new in Kurdějov. They had tears in their eyes and said they had been born in that house, not told us not to worry, that they don’t want it back, they had just come to look and see how it was doing.”

Today Kurdějov is far from a backwater. It is a much sought after retreat for private and business gatherings, with tennis courts, hotels and of course vineyards and wine tastings. There are plenty of different wines from different vintners on hand for you to try out, thanks in part to Mrs Němečkova’s business efforts.

“We are promoters of Moravian wine, and the way we decided to do that by building the biggest wine bars. We selected one hundred winemakers and took six wines from each. Then we selected from that, and now we support what we believe are thirty truly excellent winemakers.”

Kurdějov and its surroundings offer a beautiful environment for all kinds of interests, be they historical, sporting, or wine-related, and a visit to the nearby almond orchard in Hustopeče, a botanical rarity, is not to be forgotten. Almonds need a lot more warmth than the Czech Republic would normally offer, and out of what was once tens of thousands of trees only about 800 remain. But the town is determined to hold on to it in spite of the difficulties.

Photo: Zdeňka Kuchyňová

The episode featured today was first broadcast on November 9, 2011.