In Central Europe, at least in Slovakia, people and organizations sponsor formal balls instead of Mardi Gras parties as Lent approaches. The ples sponsored by the Evanjelicke Lyceum took place on March 5. In former years, American teachers have been asked to perform something; fortunately for us, this year the planners went for an all-student program, including everything from a string quartet to reggae dancers. Great! We did have to dress up, though. The table decorations were lovely, the company was exhilarating, and (best of all) with one notable exception (the Blue Danube), other people did the dancing!
Schonbrunn, from the Glorieta |
They went off to Poland, and we went home. They came to Bratislava the Thursday after, and got a flavor of how we live, complete with staying in the flat, going to choir practice that night and going to school the next morning where they visited classes and toured the library. We ate, went around the city some, and then took in a philharmonic concert complete with a pre-concert potluck. The next day we went by train to Trencin, and got to tour the castle as well as the town. On Sunday after church, we ate (again) and toured the city some more, including the Bratislava Castle. Bratislava, then Posony or Pressburg, depending on whether you came from Hungary or Austria, became the capital of the Austro-Hungarian empire when the Turks conquered Budapest in the middle of the sixteenth century, and remained the capital until nearly the end of the eighteenth century, even though Budapest was taken back from the Turks a hundred years earlier. I guess it was a shorter ride from Vienna, where the rulers really wanted to be. The castle appears in the distance in this post's very first picture, and we had our group picture taken there, too, thanks to a handy gorillapod and trash bin!
Back at school, Paula's having students give a glimpse of Slovakia for her "Slovakia, My Homeland" unit. While they can be very cynical about the country, they can also be very proud of what's here--enough that the presentations are very good and lasting twice as long as Paula predicted! One student wore her grandmother's traditional costume for her presentation, and then brought it back the next day for Paula to put on!
So, who knows what next. Spring is sprung, we're getting lots of good ideas about what to see, we're involved with things here.... Such problems! More to follow....
That picture of Mom in the traditional costume reminds me of Cristina in the bunad. She looks just a comfortable :-).
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