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I was on a visit to Munich a few months ago for the ISCA conference,
followed by a personal visit to the Netherlands. Munich is a very nice
city, with excellent public transportation. I took a walking tour (which turned into a drinking tour, because we
got rained upon, so we sat in a biergarten and the guide showed
us pictures of the places we were supposed to see instead). An authentic
biergarten is apparently one with chestnut trees. The bright part
of the rain was that Munich showed off its range of lovely colourful
umbrellas, so I bought three of them.
I've been to Germany a few times before and every time I think of making a
list of the German words which appear frequently, to avoid confusion
(for example, is taffelwasser tap-water or table-water ?) However, I did not
manage to create that list this time either. I found early on that my little Oxford
German<->English dictionary was virtually useless for deciphering
posted instructions or menu cards.
I visited the Dachau concentration camp memorial (remembering the word
gedenkstatte, for memorial), which was quite similar to the
Sakhsenhausen camp near Berlin. Not just the
camp, but also the surroundings: a half-hour train ride away from a major
city; a train station with just a few tracks; a 10 minute bus ride
through desolate streets so quiet that they make it difficult to imagine
the goings-on of the time. Dachau has a few standing barracks, the gravelly
roll-call square, a cemetery, and so on. It also has a rather
chilling gas chamber, which was not used. A documentary film shows
Goebbels on video.
The Munich metro system is, as usual, superb; Marienplatz is the center
of action, and one emerges from the metro station right into the platz.
For the first few days, I was either narrowly making or narrowing
missing the sliding doors, so I couldn't help remembering the Gwynneth
Paltrow movie each time. The Munich central station looks impressive,
especially with a parked fleet of Deutsche Bahn's classy red-and-white
and white-and-red trains. By the way, there is a gap, but no mind the
gap.
I had time to kill on the last day of the conference, so I went to a
German show of an opera (La Traviata) - the singing was quite good, but
I did not have enough time to stay till the end, and I had a cough
which was probably disturbing others, so I chose to leave early. It was
a lovely auditorium in Gartner Platz, but at 16 euros, I had a cheap
seat, the kind where one has to peer between people's heads to get a
glimpse of three quarters of the stage. The overnight train from Munich
to Utrecht was slow, but comfortable; and, these days, one can always
while away time mindlessly pushing buttons to check if one's mobile
phone has coverage in strange lands.
The Netherlands:
First, a few words of Dutch needed by the traveller: Dutch is almost
phonetic, except that 'v' is pronounced as 'f', 'j' as 'y', 'g' as a
throaty 'gh', ij as "aa-e", and tt as a soft t. Weg=way a la rue or
strasse, von=of (William von Orange), voor=for, geen=prohibited,
uur=hour, nieuwe=new, plein=platz, dienst=office, hypothek=realtor, te
huur=rent, etc. English however is well understood, making this one of
the easiest European countries for English-speakers to travel in. It's
hard to think of another country of 15 million people which has had as
much impact as the Netherlands. A third of the Netherlands
is below sea level (hence the name), and large parts of the
countryside are given to what is obviously a highly
mechanized culture of farming - I rarely saw anyone working in the
fields. The public transportation is again excellent, with an elaborate
system of trams supplementing NS, the Dutch railways. A strip of 10
(strippenkarte) is the thing to buy, but you've to be careful about punching the
right number of slots for your destination - ticket checking is very frequent. Rail coaches
made by Alsthom appear to be popular. There are lots of cyclists on the streets.
Amsterdam is a fun city, known best for its canals and museums. I'm not
an art buff, but I was impressed by the 17th century paintings in the
(genuinely) world-famous Rijks museum, so I decided to visit the
impressionists museum next. This turned out to be a disaster -
van Gogh's potatoes left me stone cold.
We drove across most of the country one afternoon to visit the open-air Zuiderzee folk-museum, not unlike the Dakshina Chitra
we have here in South India. It was amusing to see a real semaphore here -
this is what Djikstra must have had in mind. I also noticed large signs
saying P and V (and also S) posted over railway tracks, though I'm not sure
what exactly they mean.
The Netherlands has lots of Chiniz-Indisch (Chinese-Indonesian) restaurants,
since Indonesia was a Dutch colony until 1945. Indian
restaurants appear to be rather expensive (15 euros for a meal ?!) A highlight
is the falafel place just outside Amsterdam Central - it's immediately on the right
after crossing the canal.
There was a nice bookstore in Amsterdam where I managed to pick up the
2003 Let's Go Europe for just 6 euros, and an excellent
"Holland Handbook" for the expatriate posted to the Netherlands. I wish someone
would produce a book like this for India. |

Furnaces at Dachau concentration camp

Marienplatz

With Maurice Wilkes

Amsterdam - a miniature mock-up

A semaphore at the Zuiderzee museum
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