February

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February was named after the Latin term februum, which means purification

Historical names for February include the Anglo-Saxon terms Solmonath (mud month) and Kale-monath (named for cabbage) as well as Charlemagne’s designation Hornung. In Finnish, the month is called helmikuu, meaning “month of the pearl”; when snow melts on tree branches, it forms droplets, and as these freeze again, they are like pearls of ice.

I may be biased, but I love the Finnish name. The cabbage name tickled me as purple as the red cabbage I’d scanned the other day!

February is the also the month of Valentines (though we ignore it) and some years Leap Day. Many famous folk have February birthdays. Today is the 200th birthday of both Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin, imagine that, born exactly the same day and year!

And last but not least, yesterday, February 11th was my (not-so-famous) birthday. I took pleasure in the mostly sunny day, the snowdrops that are finally (a month late) blooming in my garden, and in our walkabout and delicious dinner on Granville Island. To come later is my husband’s birthday, so it’s a great month!

P.S. Unrelated, but here’s a music video to make you smile: The Mom Song, with thanks to Viides Rooli.

cease the fighting

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Pablo Picasso: Guernica 1937 (from artquotes.net)

I rarely write about politics and wars here yet I must say that I’ve been unable to put out of my mind the humanitarian disaster in Gaza. Mainstream and alternative media are full of varying opinions, understanding and sometimes truthfulness. I struggle to understand the complex history and struggles of the region with some compassion for all sides. I’m helped in the task by looking at artists who portrayed war, learning about artist activists and of course, reading many eloquent and well-informed bloggers. Through some of them I’ve learned of some petitions for peace that I have then signed, even as I wonder if it will help. One voice, many voices…what’s that quote I’m trying to recall?

As many know, some of the most famous art about the horrors of war are Picasso’s Guernica, Goya’s Disasters of War, and works by several German Expressionist artists such as Otto Dix and Max Beckmann…. even Käthe Kollwitz who lived through two world wars. There are of course many contemporary artists who speak up against war through their work and activism such as the Artists for Peace in Vancouver.

I could not begin to list all the many bloggers I’ve read who have written well on this subject, so I’ll limit my short list of articles that moved me the most to a few by those who are Canadian or live in Canada.

1. Beth Adams of Cassandra Pages, an American writer living in Montreal, wrote this most eloquent and heart-wrenching post Every One Precious.

2. Taina Maki Chahal of northshorewoman, a Finnish-Canadian PhD student and university lecturer living in Thunder Bay, writes on a variety of subjects such as Finnish culture and First Nations and Sami issues. Now she has been writing passionately and knowledgeably every day about the Gaza crisis. Do check out all her articles, for starters I recommend war is a friend of binarisms (an eye-opener for me) and Canadian government votes against human rights. This latter includes a plea to write an objection to Harper and the party leaders.

3. Naomi Klein, a well-known Canadian, award-winning journalist, syndicated columnist, author and speaker wrote this very powerful message: Israel: Boycott, Divest, Sanction.

4. Alison of Creekside, a Canadian political blogger living on Bowen Island near Vancouver, also writes a lot on the subject, such as Gaza: “an eye for an eyelash”, another thought-provoking article. She includes the Amnesty petition which I hope you will all sign.

Speaking of petitions, here’s another via care2

Last but not least and not Canadian is today’s article in Finland’s Helsingin Sanomat, Destroying ghettoes in Gaza by Olli Kivinen. For me, he seems to summarize clearly and briefly the major issues on both sides, concluding with this:

One dimension was offered by the Israeli Ambassador to Helsinki, who asked in a television news interview how Finns would feel if rockets were fired into our cities.

It is difficult to answer that question, because Finland does not occupy any foreign territory, and has not created a ghetto of a million and a half people next to it, where people live in extreme misery, and which is bombarded, and isolated from land, sea, and air, and where even now people are dying not only of bombs and bullets, but also as a result of a shortage of medicines, difficulties experienced by hospitals, and of weakness caused by cold and a shortage of food.

In the past, ghettoes were places where Jews were oppressed and annihilated.

Added later: the Gaza Call For Peace Petition organized by the Canadian Voice of Women for Peace (VOW)

Even later: I almost forgot the excellent Avaaz.org and their petition. Please sign and share with friends and family.

Added Jan.16th, 2006: Beth’s post today has more reading for us in the links to some excellent articles.

locked doors

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Yesterday at the old shipyards in Steveston, BC (more details to come later).

Sept 10th update: see next post.

Much later: more from the Old Britannia Shipyard here:
artifacts
walls
if walls could speak

an English-Finnish dictionary

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an immigrant’s tool, an almost-bible, a book of days
a history of heartache, homesickness, hope and a new home

UPDATE Feb.28, 2011: this has also been published in qarrtsiluni’s translation issue

on the pier

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Being in the area yesterday evening, my husband and I sauntered over to see the 700 foot long Burrard Dry Dock Pier, just east of Lonsdale Quay in North Vancouver.

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According to this History of the Pier,
The newly refurbished Burrard Dry Dock Pier and St. Roch Dock are a tribute to the City’s shipbuilding history. The Burrard Dry Dock Pier and St. Roch Dock, which were built in 1940 for the wartime shipbuilding effort, once extended much further into Burrard Inlet. The piers, which were recently refurbished as part of the City’s Pier Development project, officially opened on April 23, 2005.

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It’s been sad to see our shipbuilding industry in decline and then to have much of this area handed over to developers of high end condominium towers and a hotel, with some space set aside for a future maritime museum. The pier area is the only completed public space yet, lying in front of the active construction holes and cranes. Very pleasant it is in how it’s been refurbished incorporating the rail tracks of the original drydock and with many metal shipbuilding details. We found it a quiet and relaxing spot for watching the waterfront activity, though quiet on a Sunday except for the sudden actions of the tugboats (photo by him) coming and going as freighters began moving in with the tide just as we were leaving. I don’t know why it’s taken us over three years to go see this even though we are often in this area, maybe because it is so hidden behind the construction site.

We were quite inspired to take many photos in the golden evening light, so look out for more!

Happy 141st!

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It’s Canada Day today. Despite all the hoopla, crowds and fireworks everywhere, we’re just enjoying the holiday around home, puttering about and trying to keep cool in a heat wave. This thoughtful Canada Day meditation, written by a Canadian blogger in northern Ontario, really says it all for me. (Thanks Peter!)

lines of age

   
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The lines on the rock are like the lines on the face of an elder.
What events have created them?
Where have these rocks come from?
What tumultuous journeys have they suffered?
How old are they?
   

time traveller

MLRfishfossil.jpga couple of my photos of Hornby Island petroglyphs were included in a book called In Search of Ancient British Columbia.

A while back, in one of those wonderful connections that blogging rewards us with, I received an email by one of the authors of that book, Heidi Henderson. We had an interesting conversation and I learned that she lives right here in Vancouver and also has a blog Archea, Musings in Natural History. Over a period of several days, I read through it all, finding it quite fascinating and making me recall a visit to the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Alberta where I was more excited by the beauty of the fossil collection than by the dinosaur specimens. The image above is one of many I took at that museum.

And Heidi herself sounds fascinating, being a passionate time traveller, amateur paleontologist and head of the Vancouver Paleontological Society and The British Columbia Paleontological Alliance. Her articles are well researched with cited sources; the stories about the group’s fossil hunting trips around BC and Washington made for enjoyable reading and almost tempt me to join some of their outings!

I wish we could see more and larger photos of these fabulous finds on the blog. The ever-changing slide shows near the bottom of the main page are an interesting supplement and another journey.

geologic journey

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Spotting a seemingly insignificant looking rock like this one now sends me wondering about its history, its journey through millions of years. Thanks to the powerful series Geologic Journey, my view of our world, especially of Canada and part of North America, has been profoundly enlarged.

Some weeks ago, happening to turn on CBC TV, we caught the last episode The Atlantic Coast, one part of which documents:

The rocks in the glowing cliffs in Nova Scotia once nestled beside Africa, as part of the super-continent Pangea. Millions of years ago, crocodiles and dinosaurs wandered here and today paleontologists come to unearth their remains.

The beaches and cliffs here are an unlikely home to the world’s largest collection of fossils from the Triassic/Jurassic period. They are virtually brimming with dinosaur skulls, teeth and jaws.

We were so amazed and awed by it that we wanted to see the rest of the series so I promptly ordered the DVD set. This five-part documentary series, shot in high-definition, delves into the geological history that has shaped the mythic Canadian landscape, offering a wide and compelling range of scientific, amateur enthusiast and narrative perspectives that enlighten the ways in which our land is shaped. It’s extremely well done, very dramatic with all the powerful visual and scientific techniques available today, not at all boring and dry. The website offers quite a bit of information and preview clips of each episode, so if this subject interests, do have a browse. Highly recommended!

immigrants’ journeys

Not too long ago I wrote about an historical photo exhibition of British Columbia’s Finnish settlers. How interesting then to find an article on the weekend about the story of one Finnish family’s experience immigrating and settling here! I recognized one or two of the photos (there are several in the print version) that was also in the exhibition.

This is just one of many moving personal histories in a series called An immigrant’s journey: 150 years of newcomers to B.C.** which is being published by The Vancouver Sun as part of a celebration of our province’s 150th anniversary of joining the Confederation, the sixth province to do so. And a celebration of our diversity.

Amongst the history articles, Stephen Hume, my favourite writer in the Sun, has written a monumental series on explorer Simon Fraser**. I see the website also has some videos that look very interesting that I must look at. It’s wonderful to have it all together here, congratulations to the Sun for this!

UPDATE April 28, 2008: I just learned about this exhibition on the same theme: Free Spirit: Stories of You, Me and BC** is a major feature exhibition at the Royal BC Museum in Victoria, BC’s capital. We’ll have to see this the next time we go visit!
** links have since expired and have been removed