01 January 2010

4. - 1 January 2010: Dessie to Lalibela

Early start up the mountain on our way to Beta Estifanos monastery. On the way we stop at a few stunning view points. Some wrecks of tanks from the recent civil wars litter the side of the road.Some ladies in colorful clothes climb up the slope going somewhere, could not be a starker contrast with the massive rusty hulk pointing its gun barrel to the sky.


31 December 2009

3. - 31 DEC: Addis Abeba to Dessie

Early start from Addis and we hit the road with our van. The road out of the city is in pretty good shape, brand new asphalt just built by the Chinese in exchange for concessione to extract raw materials. I can see some Chinese team leaders directing the work of Ethiopian workers at several road contruction sites. Looks like this is the first time since the Italian occupation someone is doing something to the roads.

30 December 2009

2. - 30 DEC: Arrival in Addis Ababa

We land on time at the impressive airport of Addis Abeba (the New Flower) and our first worry is to buy a visa. There is a pretty disciplined line at the visa office and we get processed pretty efficiently. Once out of the airport our bus takes us to our hotel. Check-in and off we go to explore the city!

29 December 2009

1. - 29 DEC 2009: flight from Rome to Addis Ababa, start of trip to Ethiopia

I meet my travel companions in Rome, at Fiumicino airport. People who come from different parts of the country, different backgrounds, different expectations. We are going to experience Ethiopia together over the next few weeks...The group leader is Stefano, a professional photographer, a colleague tour leader. It is going to be my first "serious" trip with a digital SRL, and this is a "photo tour" I am a bit uneasy at the thought of having no film with me for the first time, let's see if I can learn something!

28 December 2009

Itinerary of trip to Ethiopia, 29 Dec 2009 - 11 January 2010

 




View Ethiopia 2009-2010 in a larger map



Trip to Ethiopia, 2009-2010

click on an itinerary or a date to go to the related post
Day
Date
Itinerary
Night
Km
hrs
1
Airplane
0
0
2
Addis
25
2
3
Dessiè
390
8
4
Lalibela
300
5
5
Lalibela
0
0
6
Mek’ele
335
7
7
Adigrat
120
2
8
Axum
130
3
9
Axum
15
1
10
Gondar
355
6
11
Bahir Dar
180
3
12
Bahir Dar
40
2
13
Addis Ababa
550
7
14
Airplane
20
2
15
12 Jan
Arrival in Europe
Home!
0
0


total

2,460
48





27 December 2009

Recensione: Seta, di Alessandro Baricco, ****

Sinossi

La Francia, i viaggi per mare, il profumo dei gelsi a Lavilledieu, i treni a vapore, la voce di Hélène. Hervé Joncour continuò a raccontare la sua vita, come mai, nella sua vita, aveva fatto. "Questo non è un romanzo. E neppure un racconto. Questa è una storia. Inizia con un uomo che attraversa il mondo, e finisce con un lago che se ne sta lì, in una giornata di vento. L'uomo si chiama Hervé Joncour. Il lago non si sa."

Recensione

Un libro che racconta con una serie infinita di viaggi, intrapresi per affari ma trasformatisi in un disperato inseguimento dell'amore. O forse di un infatuamento. Si può veramente amare una persona che non si conosce?

Il libro fornisce anche un quadro interessante del Giappone che si apre gradualmente al mondo durante la seconda metà del XIX secolo, con la restaurazione violenta dell'impero centralizzato e l'apertura dei commerci internazionali.

Un finale tragico ma, forse, istruttivo per ciascuno di noi. Anche se forse l'insegnamento non sarà uguale per tutti. Ma tutti dovremo riflettere sull'amore, sull'infatuazione, sulla responsabilità, sulle priorità fondamentali della nostra vita insomma.

La prosa di Baricco corre veloce come il protagonista nella steppa, io ho finito il libro in poche ore.

Poi ho visto anche il film che pure consiglio ma di cui al momento non vedo disponibilità di DVD o BD.

Di Alessandro Baricco ho recensito "Novecento" su questo blog.



10 December 2009

Recensione: Etiopia, di Massimo Bocale e Piera Barchetti, ***

Sinossi
La guida, scritta con lo stile degli "appunti di viaggio", fornisce tutta una serie di itinerari e percorsi, anche in trekking, che si snodano dal nord al sud del paese. Precise cartine, notizie pratiche e informazioni dettagliate aiutano il viaggiatore nel muoversi liberamente dalla valle dell'Omo alla Dancalia, dalle regioni dei popoli Mursi e Surma a quelle degli Hammer e Afar. Bellissime fotografie accompagnano il testo in modo da rendere la lettura piacevole e maggiormente interessante.

Recensione
La guida è indubbiamente un bel libro, carta di qualità e rilegatura resistente. Molto informativo sugli aspetti culturali, è provvisto anche di ricche schede su argomenti specifici. Buone anche se non proprio entusiasmanti le fotografie, molte in bianco e nero ed alcune a colori. Non so perché ma spesso le foto sono inserite in parti del volume diverse da quelle dei soggetti rappresentati, il che crea un po' di confusione.

La guida è a metà la classica guida con le informazioni che uno si aspetta, e per metà racconto di viaggio dell'autore che ci riferisce esperienze ed aneddoti dei suoi viaggi.

Tutto sommato un bel libro da legger prima di partire piuttosto che da portarsi in viaggio, come spesso per le Polaris.

30 November 2009

Film Review: Leçon Siberienne (Siberian Lesson) by Wojciech Staron, ****

Synopsis
Malgorzata et Wojciech décident de quitter Varsovie pour aller vivre à 7000 kilomètres, en Sibérie, à côté du lac Baïkal. Magorzata va enseigner le polonais aux descendants de ses compatriotes exilés. Une fois arrivés sur place, ils découvrent une Sibérie irréelle peuplée de personnages extraordinaires. Pendant l'hiver, par -40°, le lac Baïkal gelé est ouvert à la circulation automobile. Les voitures sautent par dessus de grandes brèches dans la glace. Un jour, une fête est organisée par les populations qui vivent sur le lac gelé... C'est une Russie parfois terrible, souvent drôle et toujours surprenante que nous font découvrir ces deux jeunes Polonais dans ce film émouvant qui se transforme peu à peu en journal intime de leur histoire d'amour sibérienne.

FILM IS IN POLISH WITH FRENCH SUBTITLES

Review
A moving story of a Polish couple who spend a year in Siberia amongst Russians of Polish origins who want to rebuild their ties to their ancient homeland. She teaches Polish and he shoots this movie! The couple receives a very warm welcome in the icy tundra and are moved to tears when the time comes to leave Siberia and return to Poland. A great story of the ties that bind these two nations. This is half autobiographic love story and half documentary on the problems of post-Soviet Russia.

That they travel by train adds to the drama of the enormous distance that separates the Poles of Siberia from their ancestral land.

27 November 2009

Film review: Carnet d’un combattant kurde, by Stefano Savona, ****

Synopsis
Akif left Germany to join up with the PPK guerrilla fighters. His diary records the doubts, dreams and political discussions that the fighters share as they march through the mountains, and in the meetings where the women criticise male prejudices.

You can watch a trailer of the movie here.


Review
Stefano Savona proposes a unique opportunity to look at the Kurdish fighter groups from inside. We see how they train, eat, sleep, study and organize their society on the run. While one may feel some sympathy for young idealists trying to gain a homeland for their nation, I was rather appalled at how the commanders both indoctrinate these fighthers and send them to a hopeless death against the Turkish army.

Buy it on Amazon.fr, or Amazon.co.uk in both English and French.






La versione italiana è disponibile qui.

20 November 2009

Film review: Opium, Afghanistan's Other War (2008), by Florence Gavage and Hossein Sadre, *****

Synopsis
Due to prolonged war and internal strife, Afghanistan has been devastated. The justice, health, education, welfare, communications and transport systems have suffered badly. The harvesting of poppies and the increase in the drug trade is now a major problem. Afghanistan is responsible for more than 85% of the world’s opium. UNODC (UN Office on Drugs and Crime) believes that although the systems are being implemented to tackle the problem, the production of opium is on the rise. The drugs trade is a major source of income and enables the Taliban, warlords and drug barons to maintain control of large parts of the country. As the most profitable cash crop, it also benefits poor farmers, and until there are viable alternatives, the poppies will continue to flourish. The confluence of myriad forces including the ongoing insurgency by the Taliban, the ubiquitous drug trade and a still-weak central government continue to hamper efforts at reconstruction and development. Today, the Afghan people are embarking on yet another long and arduous journey - this time on the road to recovery. Will they succeed ?

You can view this documentary on Youtube, thanks to the kind permission of the authors. See Part 1/2 here:


And Part 2/2 here:

18 November 2009

Film Review: Kurdish Yezidis (2009) by Florence Gavage, *****


Synopsis
According to ancient legend, in the beginning God created a white pearl and a bird. He then created seven angels including Melek Taus, the peacock angel whom he made the greatest of them all. To make land, He threw Lalish into the water which made it solid. And so the seven Angels went ashore at Lalish.  These people, the Yezidis, believe that they were the very first inhabitants on earth when the world was created. Yezidism is one of the most unusual and unknown religions on earth. It has survived during the centuries despite its status as an unrecognized religion under Islamic rule, and through many onslaughts against its Kurdish followers. 

Review
This is a unique documentary on a little known people. The director has done thorough research and has traveled not only to Iraq to document the life of contemporary Yezidis, but also to various countries to meet Yezidi diaspora.

You can view Part 1/2 here:



You can vew Part 2/2 here:

15 November 2009

Concert: Sacrificium, by Cecilia Bartoli, *****

Today I went to listen to Cecilia Bartoli at the Brussels Bozar. One of the most powerful voices on the planet. This project is about XVIII century music written for "castrati", young males who were castrated before puberty to keep their voices from maturing into full male voices.

A stunning performance, she can not just sing but enthrall the crowd to with her flamboyant personality. She was clearly having fun! I was lucky enough to find a ticket close enough to her to feel my bones vibrate at her seemingly endless warble. Her technical virtuosity is almost painful to hear, one keeps wondering how she can keep going so long, so powerfully and so well without breathing. The concert hall was shaking. She sounds supernatural. Maybe she is. I think "Eyebags" put it very well here in this blog.

14 November 2009

Film review: The Last Assyrians, by Robert Alaux, ****

For six years Robert Alaux researched and wrote this documentary. It is the first film that tells the complete history of the Assyrian Chaldean Syriac people. History overlooks how they suffered from massacres, hunger and starvation during the1915 genocide; and the international community has not protected these people in their homeland after decades of mass exodus.

Despite their pain and suffering this indigenous Christian community, including the Diaspora, seek justice, peace, prosperity, security, and solidarity in the Middle East. From their ancient beginning in Mesopotamia to their present existence in the Middle East and around the world, the story of the last people to speak Aramaic, the language of Jesus. I wish to thank Faito Doc Festival for having shown this movie to me and Robert Alaux for having presented it in Brussels.

This is a passionate accunt of the plight of an ancient people and a significant diaspora who can't really hope to have their own state but have been fighting to preserve their identity.

You can watch a trailer of this movie here. 

DVD available in English et en français. Contact the director here.



13 November 2009

Film review: Quantum of Solace (2008), by Marc Forster, ***

Synopsis

Daniel Craig returns as Ian Fleming's most famous creation in Quantum of Solace, the first film in the James Bond series to follow directly on from the previous entry. Continuing where Casino Royale concluded, Quantum of Solace finds Bond on a perilous mission to uncover the truth behind the betrayal of his beloved Vesper, while keeping one step ahead of M (Judi Dench – Mrs Henderson Presents, Shakespeare In Love), the CIA and a shadowy organisation fronted by the diabolical Dominic Greene (Mathieu Amalric – The Diving Bell And The Butterfly, Marie Antoinette).

Recensione film: Dallo Zolfo al Carbone (2008), di Luca Vullo, *****

Sinossi

La storia e le sofferenze degli emigranti siciliani in Belgio che il giovane regista Luca Vullo ha voluto raccontare in Dallo zolfo al carbone, documentario di 53 minuti che prende spunto dal Patto Italo-Belga del 1946, accordo firmato dal primo Presidente della Repubblica Luigi Einaudi che con questa astuta mossa assicurava non solo un lavoro certo ai tanti disoccupati italiani, e nella fattispecie meridionali, ma anche una sicura fornitura energetica all’Italia in tempi di crisi post-bellica. La realtà dei fatti, quello che veramente è significato accettare quell’accordo, ci viene raccontata dalla viva voce, a volte rotta dalla commozione, a volte sorprendentemente energica, dei veri protagonisti della vicenda, coloro i quali nel dopoguerra erano bambini o ragazzetti e che, pane duro e coraggio, sono saliti su un treno e hanno raggiunto quelle preziose miniere di carbone.