A minha Lista de blogues

domingo, 15 de dezembro de 2013

Checkpoint Charlie




The Berlin Wall was a symbol of the Cold War and separation of Germany and Berlin. After World War II the city of Berlin was divided into four sectors: The American, British and French sectors were part of the west, while the Soviet was part of the communist sector in the East.




Checkpoint Charlie on Friedrichstrasse was the only allowed point to enter East Berlin. 




I visited Berlin in 1983 and that was the place where I saw my East German friends for the last time. It was very shocking to see only very old people crossing the border. They were the only East Germans allowed to visit their families, from whom they were separated in 1961. Only tourists with a visa, diplomats and military personnel could cross the border.








Today Checkpoint Charlie is only a tourist attraction. 










People will be disappointed about the Berlin Wall because only a few sections of it still exist. 














The first time I saw a part of it, after the wall was dismantled, was in the USA, in the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.



The border between East and West Berlin has been opened since 1989 and many people go daily from one part of the city into the other. However the best paces for shopping and entertainment are still in the former West Berlin.

   
During the last Christmas holidays it was my first opportunity to say: Hooray for the Unification!

sábado, 14 de dezembro de 2013

It´s beginning to....

...look a lot like Christmas










The Nativity Scene

Victorian Christmas Trees

Welcome Winter

The Christmas Broadcast

A Árvore de Natal

O Primeiro Postal de Natal

O Pai Natal

Curiosidades de Natal

Deacon Brodie





"William Brodie was one of the inspirations for Robert Louis Stevenson's Jekyll and Hyde. Born in 1741 Brodie was a deacon of the Guild of Wrights. By day, he was a respectable citizen, a member of the town council but by night, he consorted with lowlife; gambling and drinking. His dark side meant he had to take to burglary to pay his gambling debts, leading to his hanging in 1788."

In the Royal Mile, Edinburgh, you can find a pub named after Deacon Brodie.





Edinburgh, December 2013

quinta-feira, 12 de dezembro de 2013

Pope Francis: Person of the Year 2013




Pope Francis was selected as Time Magazine's 2013 Person of the Year, the third pontiff to win the American magazine's yearly honour since its start in 1927 (Pope John XXIII, in 1962, and Pope John Paul II, in 1994, were also named Person of the Year).


World figures such as Mahatma Gandhi, Winston Churchill, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Martin Luther King Jr and more recently Barack Obama won the title, too.

I think Time magazine got it right. Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Buenos Aires was largely unknown to the world before his election as Pope, but since he first appeared on the balcony of Saint Peter’s Basilica on March 13, he has captivated the world. Pope Francis is a man who in the last year has been transforming the Catholic church by focusing on the inequalities brought about by poverty.

In one of his many touching quotes, he asks:

“How can it be that it is not a news item when an elderly homeless person dies of exposure, but it is news when the stock market loses two points?”

Pope Francis continues to make headlines for statements that seem more tolerant and accepting than those of his predecessors. Recently he opened the door of the Church to gays:

"If someone is gay and seeks the Lord with good will, who am I to judge?"

He is humble and committed to cut the frivolous spending of the Church and the Vatican Bank - rather than living in a sumptuous apartment Pope Francis resides in a modest Vatican guest house.






POPE FRANCIS THROUGH THE YEARS



WHO AM I TO JUDGE?

quarta-feira, 11 de dezembro de 2013

Nadir Afonso has died at 93


" The artist does not produce any work while work does not produce fulfilment in the artist."

Nadir Afonso
in Colecção Arte Contemporânea. Nadir Afonso. Bertrand 1986


Portuguese painter, architect and philosopher, Nadir Afonso (Chaves, December 4, 1920 - Cascais, December 11, 2013) has died at the age of 93.

After completing secondary school in Chaves, Nadir Afonso moved to Porto, in 1938, to enrol in the Painting course at the Porto School of Fine Arts, but was then convinced to forget about Painting and choose Architecture instead, as it was more prestigious. However, he never lost his love for painting. Nadir continued to paint and in 1965 he abandoned architecture to dedicate himself fully to Painting.

Nadir's works are part of important museums in Portugal and abroad, namely in Lisbon, Porto, Amarante, Rio de Janeiro, S. Paulo, Budapest, Paris (Centre Georges Pompidou), Berlin and Wurzburg.


segunda-feira, 9 de dezembro de 2013

Bullying não é brincadeira


Uma professora quis ensinar à sua turma os efeitos do bullying.

Deu a todos os alunos uma folha de papel e disse-lhes para a amachucarem, a deitarem para o chão e a pisarem.

Resumindo, podiam estragar a folha o mais possível, mas não rasgá-la.

As crianças entusiasmadas fizeram o melhor para amachucarem a folha, tanto quanto possível.

A seguir, a professora pediu-lhes para apanharem a folha e abri-la, novamente, com cuidado sem a rasgar. Deviam endireitá-la com muito cuidado. Chamou-lhes a atenção para observarem como as folhas estavam sujas e cheias de marcas. Depois, disse-lhes para pedirem desculpa ao papel, enquanto o endireitavam. Os alunos passaram e voltaram a passar as mãos para alisarem o papel, porém a folha mostrava-se incapaz de regressar ao seu estado original - os vincos estavam bem marcados.

A professora pediu então para que olhassem bem para os vincos e as marcas no papel. E lembrou-lhes: aquelas marcas NUNCA mais iriam desaparecer, mesmo que tentassem repará-las.

É isto o que acontece com as crianças diferentes ou as mais tímidas ou ainda as mais fracas, que são humilhadas, assediadas e constantemente gozadas por outras crianças, afirmou a professora.

Podes pedir desculpa, podes tentar mostrar o teu arrependimento, contudo, as marcas, essas… ficam para sempre.



O bullying não é brincadeira. Estraga mais do que nós podemos imaginar!




sexta-feira, 6 de dezembro de 2013

Morreu Nelson Mandela




A morte de Mandela foi anunciada esta noite pelo presidente da África do Sul, Jacob Zuma, em conferência de imprensa.

Lê: Nelson Mandela

domingo, 1 de dezembro de 2013

quarta-feira, 27 de novembro de 2013

Thanksgiving


Thanksgiving Day in the USA is celebrated tomorrow. It is followed by Black Friday, the beginning of Christmas shopping season with  shops opening very early for many promotional sales.

Read the Thanksgiving story here!

Now answer about Thanksgiving.

Happy Thanksgiving Day!

sábado, 23 de novembro de 2013

National Hello Day




Can you believe there is actually a day for saying hello?

National Hello Day began in 1973 to promote peace between Egypt and Israel. On November 21, 2013, the 40th annual World Hello Day was commemorated. To participate you only had to greet ten people.



Read here a short history of Hello.

quarta-feira, 20 de novembro de 2013

Pyjama day


Today is pyjama day. When I was living in the USA there was a day at school, in which students were supposed to wear their pyjamas. I never understood the reason and thought it was rather silly. However I´ve recently learned that we are also commemorating this day in Portugal and that it symbolizes the children who have no family and therefore no one to comfort them. While I still find wearing a pyjama outside the bedroom odd, I recognize the importance of remembering those less fortunate than us.

terça-feira, 19 de novembro de 2013

Sweden 2-3 Portugal


Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images

Photograph: Mario Cruz/EPA

Photograph: Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images


Do you know today is World Toilet Day?





Can you imagine not having a toilet?

While a vast majority of the world's population has access to mobile phones, one third -some 2.5 billion people do not have access to adequate sanitation, the United Nations said. The consequences on human health, dignity and security, the environment, and social and economic development are dramatic: each year, more than 800,000 children under 5 die from diarrhea, many due to poor sanitation.

To address these issues, the “Sanitation for All” Resolution was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in July 2013, designating 19 November as World Toilet Day.




https://www.un.org/en/events/toiletday/

domingo, 17 de novembro de 2013

Stilton, please.



When people think about British food they think about traditional food like fish and chips or take away food like Cornish pastries.

They often forget Britain is the home of Stilton cheese, the king of English cheese.

Stilton takes its name from the village of the same name in Cambridgeshire where it was first made and sold. 

Stilton has its own Certification Trade Mark and is a EU protected name cheese that by law can only be made in the three counties of Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire.

- it must be made from locally produced milk that has been pasteurised before use
- it can only be made in a cylindrical shape
- it must be allowed to form its own coat or crust
- it must never be pressed and 
- it must have the magical blue veins radiating from the centre of the cheese

It takes 136 pints milk (78 litres) to make one 17 lb (8kg) Stilton cheese

Over 1 million Stilton cheeses are made each year

Don´t!


sábado, 16 de novembro de 2013

Hannah Arendt- the film


The story is about the controversy around Hannah Arendt’s articles for The New Yorker magazine about “Eichmann in Jerusalem,” the trial of the Nazi war criminal . It is a biographical film spoken in German and English (Hannah Arendt became an American citizen after fleeing Camp Gurs in the German occupied France).



The film depicts other prominent intellectuals, including philosopher Heidegger, but it is not an intellectual film. Hannah´s happy marriage to Heinrich Blücher and her friendship with Mary McCarthy are very important in the way the story is presented. 


The film glorifies thinking, making it appropriate for students dealing with philosophy for the first time this year.



The film is on in Lisbon at Medeias King.

The Capitol Christmas Tree




The Capitol Christmas Tree is making its journey from Washington state to Washington D.C. You can follow its progress http://www.trackthetree.com/



2012 Christmas tree


60th anniversary conference




To celebrate 60 years of teaching and teacher training, International House is hosting a special conference online on 29 and 30 November 2013.

http://ihworld.com/60conference/register

Portugal vs. Sweden play-off

(AP Photo/Armando Franca) The Associated Press

Cristiano Ronaldo scored with a diving header eight minutes from the end to give Portugal a 1-0 win in the first leg of a World Cup play-off against Sweden in Lisbon.

terça-feira, 12 de novembro de 2013

America´s tallest building



New York City is home to America’s tallest building. 

One World Trade Center is officially taller than the Willis Tower in Chicago, which had been the tallest building in the country since it was completed — and named the Sears Tower — in 1974.

One World Trade Center, which will debut in 2014, is still under construction. However, a majority of the structure is complete. It has 94 floors above ground , five floors below and 71 elevators with a top speed of 10.16 meters per second.








The Empire State Building  was named after New York, "The Empire State".This skyscraper was the world´s tallest building for 40 years, until the completion of the World Trade Center (Twin Towers) 1n 1970.


The Chrysler Building was completed in 1930. It was briefly the tallest building in the world until the Empire State Building opened in 1931.


The Woolworth Building, which was completed in 1913, was the tallest building in the world until the Chrysler in 1930. One of the curious things about this building is that it was paid in cash.


The Flatiron Building is a 22- storeyed limestone structure resembling an iron. In 1902 it was one of the first skyscrapers.



Reference:


More about New York:
















segunda-feira, 11 de novembro de 2013

Saint Martin


San Martín y el mendigo (1597-1600) by El Greco

Saint Martin was born in Hungary, educated in Italy and became a Christian in France, where he was bishop of Tours. St. Martin was the uncle of Saint Patrick, the great apostle of Ireland. He died in the year 397 and his feast day is November 11. 

Saint Martin is best known for the story of using his military sword to cut his cloak in two, to give half to a beggar dressed only in rags in the depth of winter.

My sister and I at São Martinho Church, Funchal, Madeira
(1883-1918)




domingo, 10 de novembro de 2013