Budapest – Europe Day 12

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

Today is the last day of May and our last day in Budapest; it is also the first time in our lives that I or Caroline have visited a synagogue. Not only is it our first synagogue, but it was once the largest on Earth until a copy of it that is larger was built in New York, so we are at the second-largest synagogue on our planet. Welcome to the Dohány Street Synagogue.

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

The sections of the pews are identified by individual languages that determine the tongue a tour will be conducted in. Sit down in the appropriate area and someone will come by and introduce you to the history of the synagogue, followed by a brief tour of the grounds so you better understand the role of the synagogue in Budapest and that of the Jewish people in Budapest. So one of the things you’ll learn is why the organ sits behind the Torah Ark (the altar in Christian churches) or how this synagogue differs from traditional synagogues due to Budapest’s Jewish population trying to better integrate into the community back in the 1850s. It is unusual for a synagogue to even have an organ, and famous composers Franz Liszt and Camille Saint-Saens played the original instrument that was installed in 1859 and replaced in the 1960s.

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

Male visitors must wear a kippah to enter the synagogue, and both sexes are expected to wear appropriate clothing (paper kippots and covers for bare shoulders are offered at the entrance). During our short visit, I don’t feel like I learned much of anything about the faith or ceremonies held here and think it would be nice to have a more detailed encounter to fill some of the gaps in my ignorance of Jewish religious practices.

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

I couldn’t find a great angle to get an overview of the synagogue in its entirety. This was probably due to our approach, and then by the time we were leaving, I was in too bad of an emotional situation to go hunting for a better image, so at least as far as my blog is concerned, this is the best I’ve got.

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

Our visit to the synagogue turned out to be a hugely emotional experience for both of us as the connectivity of people in general, and the quick trauma suffered by the Jews of Budapest was made clear, along with the living conditions of those who were able to endure. From the ghetto to the mass graves of people who witnessed firsthand the rage of intolerance, the picture painted is all too clear of where our nationalist hate-filled ugly selves can bring humanity.

I couldn’t just stand here and listen dispassionately as the stolen happiness of these people was laid bare; I wept. I am free to visit and pass through with the luxury of experiencing a fullness of life that was extinguished for 600,000 Hungarian Jews, 2,281 of them buried mostly anonymously at my feet.

Unfortunately, I will probably lose this heavy emotional burden of shame over the next hours as, once again; I’m proven to be of little consequence to the conscience of humanity, who rarely relate to the suffering of others beyond their immediate families and friends.

It’s peculiar how I’ve found these outpourings of emotions in the most beautiful and the most tragic of places on our Earth. How does one adequately convey to others what it is like to be consumed by such powerful emotions that are beyond personal suffering or from witnessing such majestic beauty that seems to be related?

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

Placards in the garden commemorate the Jewish victims buried here that were identified; others who lived here and died elsewhere are memorialized by signs on the back wall.

Meatology Budapest, Hungary

It was nearly an hour of walking around and talking about impressions and emotions before we were finally able to merge back into a state of normal. I’d read about Meatology prior to the trip, and this was a “must visit” restaurant and while we attempted to get a table last night, we were denied as they were booked solid. Upon arriving at this tiny location we understood why there are not many more than a dozen tables here. My New York Strip steak was nearly perfect though I wasn’t able to try their ribeye as the table before us bought the remaining stock. Caroline opted for rabbit for the second time on this vacation and it too was fantastic.

Controversial monument about World War II in Budapest, Hungary

This very controversial monument was erected in the middle of the night to avoid protests from people in and out of the Jewish community who felt the portrayal absolved the Hungarian people at the time of World War II from the atrocities they willfully committed, by in some say inferring that they too were victims of the powerful Nazi regime.

Soviet War Memorial in Budapest, Hungary

Liberty Square and the monument to the Soviet Liberation of Hungary following World War II. Ironically, it was back in 1956 that the Soviets effectively invaded Hungary to squash a revolution to oust the Marxist-Leninist government.

Caroline Wise at 1001Fonal in Budapest, Hungary

If it’s Thursday, May 31st, this must be 1001Fonal, which translates to 1001 yarns. Caroline’s main contribution to trip planning is to find the most important aspect of her desire to shop in exotic and foreign cities: the yarn store. There is no need to goad her into a big bright smile and say cheese after entering one of these shops; her excitement begins as we first get sight of the place.

Yarn from 1001Fonal in Budapest, Hungary

The skein of yarn on the left in purple, blue, red, orange, and pink is destined to become my Budapest socks. As for the rest of the yarn and where Caroline intends to use it, I have no idea. Maybe she’ll add a note here as she begins to tackle the effort to edit my run-on sentences, poor grammar, and stuff that even I have problems figuring out what I’d originally wanted to say when I’m putting down a flow of thought unencumbered with much critical thinking. Like just now? Just kidding, sweetheart! I only have some vague ideas about what I’m going to do with my fibery loot. Probably scarves, but whether they will be sprang braided, knitted, or woven, I can’t yet say. – C.

Levendula Kézműves Fagylaltozó in Budapest, Hungary

It’s hot and humid. We have shopped and celebrated yarn purchases and had a great lunch. Earlier, we wept and were dragged into the miasma of a dark history. It is now time for ice cream because nothing soothes the frazzled and excited traveler quite like ice cream does. We are at Levendula Kézműves Fagylaltozó, which translates into Lavender Artisan Ice Cream, believe it or not. You should ask me what’s in that cup. Well, I’ll tell you, it’s sour cherry and sea buckthorn, strawberry ginger, and Tokaji Aszu wine flavor

This statue of Ferenc Rákóczi stands in Kossuth Lajos Square near Parliament. As the Prince of the Estates Confederated for Liberty of the Kingdom of Hungary, Ferenc fought for a war of national liberation from the Habsburgs and is considered a hero here in Hungary. The article over at Wikipedia about him is quite interesting should you be interested.

Shoes on the Danube Promenade

Shoes on the Danube Bank is a memorial for the people who were shot on the banks of the Danube by Arrow Cross fascists during World War II. Victims were brought to the river’s edge in the winter of 1944-45, told to take off their shoes and turn to face their executioner. They were then shot and fell or were thrown into the ice-cold waters of the Danube and carried away. Thousands of mostly Jewish Hungarians met their fate here. There are about 30 pairs of iron shoes, all different and worn-looking, anchored to the river bank. Some have been adorned with ribbons; there are some candles. While this is a popular memorial to photograph and many people are around us, our minds are immediately drawn back into the grief we felt earlier, and we spend a few minutes catching up to return to the day.

Tram in Budapest, Hungary

Was this the tram we took to our next stop? No, but a tram, any tram, should have been an option because before the day is done, our feet will be finished. Instead, we continued our walking adventure so we’d have maximum flexibility to stop, look, learn, or taste our way through Budapest.

Great Market Hall in Budapest, Hungary

We’re at the Central Market Hall, where one would expect to find an abundance of paprika as Hungary is well known for it. The Central Market opened back in 1897, but by 1991 needed some major renovations that were completed by 1994 and took the market back to its pre-World War II glory.

Central Market Hall in Budapest, Hungary

Next to paprika, there is more smoked meat and sausage in the market than someone could consume in a year. The variety of all goods, including a shop that specializes in various fruit strudels, is fantastic. If we lived in Budapest, I would be a daily customer. How I wish we Americans had a greater demand for quality food than the low-quality, high-calorie crap that is mostly on offer across our land. Sure, there are pockets of connoisseurs, but those are mostly among high-earners who’ve acquired a taste for the finer things in life.

Caroline Wise at a cafe in Budapest, Hungary

We are on vacation, and a mid-afternoon treat and coffee feel absolutely normal. Hopefully, with all this walking we are also working some of our calories off. In any case, there will be enough time when we get home to deal with any lingering guilt of gluttony.

Budapest, Hungary

Out of the central part of Budapest, we are heading to a local graveyard.

Budapest, Hungary

There’s no particular grave we are interested in. After all of the hustle and bustle of crowded shopping districts, some peace and quiet in a lush setting sounded appealing.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

We arrived at the Fiume Road Cemetery after searching for the only entrance we could find.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

From Marilyn Monroe in California to the Kennedys in Arlington and various cemeteries around northern Europe, this is the furthest east I’ve traveled to visit a graveyard. The Fiume Road Cemetery shows up on a number of people’s recommendations as a place to visit in Budapest, so I put it on the list in case we had time. Obviously, we did.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

A monumental tribute to Lajos Kossuth, who was Governor-President of the Kingdom of Hungary during the 1848 revolution against the Habsburgs. If this rings a bell, it was earlier in the day that we were passing a statue of Ferenc Rákóczi who also played a large role in the revolution.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

With only 90 minutes to explore the cemetery before they locked the gate, we did not have enough time to visit much more than a small fraction of this tranquil location set within the expanse of Budapest. There’s a lot of historical references here that neither Caroline nor I have a clue about. So I’ll wonder out loud here, “What is the Hungarian fascination with lions?” – I’m going to wager that lions, as kings of beasts, represent majesty and power. The internet also says that lions used to be on the crest of Hungarian kings. C.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

A small unkempt mausoleum holds the remains of this person named Miklós, maybe two people, as the name shows up twice, but I don’t know. Whomever this was, they warranted a beautiful, if neglected, final resting place in the heart of Budapest.

Sunset in Budapest, Hungary

The sun was getting pretty low in the sky as we found the exit and headed in another direction from which we came to potentially see something we’d not seen on the way to this side of town.

Sunset in Budapest, Hungary

Getting closer to the main downtown district, we started looking for something to eat that wouldn’t have us walking across the city looking for that perfect meal. We were tired and ready to call it quits for the day.

Dinner in Budapest, Hungary

There it was dragging us into the small shop where I was delivered the largest plate of döner Kabab I’ve ever had. Caroline opted for falafel, and once we were done, we hobbled back to our apartment, satisfied that with the time we had allocated to seeing Budapest, we had done all we could and were happy with our stay. Tomorrow we drive to one of the main seats of power of the House of Habsburg and will learn more about their large role in the Holy Roman Empire.

Budapest – Europe Day 11

Budapest, Hungary

We have a list of sights we intend to visit while in Budapest, and initially, we are foregoing looking at it and are just venturing out to see what we stumble upon. Wouldn’t you know that a church would show up so quickly? Churches are easy targets, to be honest, as they are visual focal points easily seen from various vantage points across a city. Knowing that a large Gothic or Baroque building is just over there lets you assume that there are probably some other interesting things to see in its immediate vicinity. Believe it or not, we are not going into that church just yet.

Budapest, Hungary

Breakfast was calling from “A Table” over on Arany János Utca, and we answered by grabbing a couple of americanos and a hot breakfast Hungarian style. The tip for this place proved worthwhile, though most of the visitors were speaking English. Next time we visit, we need to discover where the locals go. It seems that it’s mostly Americans who use TripAdvisor.

Budapest, Hungary

Back to that church, we held off on visiting. St. Stephen’s Basilica is named after King Stephen (Istvan in Hungarian), who lived between 975 and 1038 and was the first king of Hungary. It’s a relatively new building, having replaced a theater that stood on the site back in the 18th century. The consecration of St. Stephen’s was in 1905. After another photo, I’ll take you into the church, but pay special attention to that center dome, as there is a narrow circular stairway that is well worth your investment to crawl up. But first, I give you the following.

Budapest, Hungary

The stonework directly in front of the church could easily be overlooked as you gawk at the imposing building in front of you and race to the door to start learning of the history and opulence contained within, but you should stop to admire this beautiful piece of art. Anywhere else, this would be a centerpiece within a lobby or otherwise drab city hall; here in Budapest, it is but one tiny part of a 360-degree view that is embedded with details out of a mandala.

Budapest, Hungary

These next 14 images are going to go into some of the details that caught my eye. I shot a lot more than this, but most are of poor quality, and while there are more than a few more that I consider worthy, this is already going to be too many images for some readers. Then again, I’m not writing this blog for visitors; it is here for the sole purpose of serving my wife and me. For those of you who might endure my blathering on and on endlessly about my interpretation of things or are simply happy to see what a person can accomplish on a single day in Budapest (though we have roughly three days here in the city), I invite you to indulge with me, and maybe you too can delight in the extraordinary lines, arches, decorations, columns, and rich, warm light this church bathes in.

Budapest, Hungary

I present the altar. Just one of the columns on the left or right of the altar would turn one of those local fairly plain churches into a destination that those of the Catholic faith would make a pilgrimage to. So I’m projecting here, and maybe they wouldn’t, but obviously, it would draw Caroline and me in. I’d like to note that Caroline has a preference for Gothic churches and finds some of the gaudier Baroque churches to be too flamboyant and ostentatious. As for me, I love them all and would love nothing more than to visit all the major cathedrals and basilicas of Europe, South and North America, and anywhere else people have invested hundreds of years to build such monuments.

Budapest, Hungary

This is the main dome over the nave and not your only view of it.

Budapest, Hungary

The dark warmth and glow here are magnified by the contrast of dark woods and marble embellished with gold and lines that pull light and distribute shadows in the most seductive ways. If I had to guess, I might venture to think that the clergy doesn’t want visitors to associate seductiveness with the church but rather solemn reverence for God while visiting. Maybe they could also be happy knowing that visitors find such pleasure in these houses of worship.

Budapest, Hungary

A closer look at the altar and the world within the larger world within the universal one we all inhabit can be seen represented here. The metaphor of one looking out over another who looks over the many is a poetic notion that, in a romantic view under the best of circumstances, seems too oft corrupted by our base human nature wanting self-aggrandizement. This embracing of power seizes the alpha animal, allowing his position as an apex predator to initially, with benevolence, guide a people. The flocking or pack mentality of his followers is easily abused when the senses of the leader are drawn into the luxury that accompanies the opulence of privilege. When the wealth of knowledge and wisdom begins to replace the narrow-mindedness of the adolescent ego, we start to ascend to greater things and higher potential. Sadly, this cannot be fully understood by the young, and even among those who are becoming older, many will fail to find the truth of conviction and purpose while they can still enjoy its magnificence.

Budapest, Hungary

This idea of looking up and to the heavens for our source of life and guiding light, while relatively simple, is a complex interpretation of looking to the sky for the sun that grows our food and the clouds that deliver freshwater to grow our crops. We as a species (except for us atheists) look to God to grow us spiritually and imbue us with life while nourishing our souls on our journey of transformation from nothing to life, to death, to rebirth. The genius of early humanity to translate the cycle of life into one of the spiritual, intellectual processes is brilliant in its own right, though hypocrisy has tainted the potential of its message to engage me at an appreciable level beyond my recognition of its mechanical functionality as a primitive control engine to breed complacency and blind faith.

Budapest, Hungary

Still, we must look up and within. Not just into the heavens and a godlike figure, we must also look within and find the greatness of what we postulate in the essence of god within ourselves. Our philosophers for the past couple of hundred years have been trying to show us the way to self-fulfillment, but in times of uncertainty, we look to the strong man instead of the strength we can find within; this is the work of fear or through the eyes of the church maybe this is the root of evil.

Budapest, Hungary

And he said unto them, “Let there be music,” and the organ pumped out the jams. The language of music is not the tyranny of thought and words; it is the elixir that stirs the body into movement and the mind into the trance of ecstasy. Johann Sebastian Bach was lucky enough and alive at a time that allowed him to celebrate bringing Europeans further into the Enlightenment by unifying their souls in songs of celebration, loss, mourning, and creation. To hear the organ resonate with the choir, bringing the angelic voice of innocence to the bellowing of the Earth being tamed by humanity, is maybe a kind of early mind control that allowed the people of this earlier age to stand before their own naked potential.

Budapest, Hungary

Are your eyes able to see all the details at once? Is your mind able to catalog the myriad of meanings engraved, etched, and presented to your senses in a moment? Can you learn the lessons of life in a year, twenty, or even fifty years? All of our lives, we search for meaning in the little and big things our minds and bodies are able to encounter, and still, we are left with more questions than answers as to what it all might mean. There is a part of me that feels that the building of the church itself is a large question looming all around us that asks us to see the outside as the monolithic object that draws us in to start looking within. And when we understand this larger purpose of finding beauty and meaning in the tiniest of details, maybe we can start to understand that is in part the tiny details of who we are, what we eat, the words we make from letters that only represent tiny sound fragments that find meaning when strung together much like a life brought to fruition in the stringing together of millions of tiny events and circumstances that create the individual within the larger system. Just as the church is a building for finding spirituality, maybe the container of the human is the building where we are supposed to find culture and, ultimately, enlightenment.

Budapest, Hungary

Look into the shadows, for though you cannot see, there is no reason to believe there is nothing there. Light in the darkness illuminates a reality you didn’t know existed prior to you seeing it. This is part of the basis of both religion and enlightenment: look within your mind and look within your heart to find the power of the intellect of us people or your obedience to a God because your mind cannot fathom the breadth that knowledge can bestow upon you.

Budapest, Hungary

The window allowing you to look out also lets light in, and the candle that burns, destroying itself in the process, illuminates our environment, allowing us to see where the light of the window cannot reach. Deep within the closed spaces of ourselves, we find the greatest darkness and the place that religion and philosophy have been begging us to explore with the help of their light, showing us a path. Maybe I’m lost in metaphors as I write this from almost 11,000 meters in the sky (36,000 feet) on our flight back home, but this idea of the candle destroying itself strikes me in the way that we humans also burn through our own energy source ultimately destroying ourselves on our journey to bring light to others. If we are complacent, allowing others to light the way, how will we find within ourselves the things we do not realize are integral to becoming a greater self?

Budapest, Hungary

Within this church is a side chapel, and within it is a box, and within it is another box, a reliquary that holds something else. Something the church finds precious and valuable is there for all to see, though none of us can touch it or see it in its entirety; it is the right hand of King Stephen. We are only allowed to catch a glimpse of his hand, and even then, we are denied to view or examine it on a cellular or molecular level. The onion skin’s layers are many, but never do we get to the ultimate possession of knowledge that allows us to know it all; we are forever in ignorance of universal knowledge. We are only people visiting the artifacts of our ancestors, and rarely, if ever, do we truly understand where we have been or where we are going.

Budapest, Hungary

We look deeper as time goes by. We do not enter the center, the top, or in the depths of our world. We must move through the door and choose our path, and while we might see what we think is the big picture, we soon realize we haven’t seen much at all until we gather nearer to the source of what created the larger image. From the door, we could not read the text or interpret the panels, nor could we move from the door into the inner domain of the sacristy, which is usually beyond our reach anyway. The lesson for humanity is writ large within the physical constructs of the church in a symbolic representation that is beyond the clergy. The priest only exists in a fraction of the time that the church and its ideas are representing. The priest is here as a caretaker and person to welcome you for you to find your way in a universe that does not come with GPS or a road map to show you a way on your journey.

Budapest, Hungary

Again, we explore the seductive lines on the edges of what our eye first sees, but beyond that lie greater questions that beg for answers. We cannot find our lives in the confines of the television or in the instant gratification of sending our friends a photo on Instagram. Curves of the body may entice us, but they are only a small part of the story. What does the smile tell us? What does the scent allude to? Where do the connections and passages lead to? These questions are not just about the church or religion; they are about human will, relationships, intellect, and emotional well-being. Shelter is only found within, and the hearth will grow cold when we fail to fuel it. This is true about the essence of us people, too; what are you fueling yourself with? Hopefully not strictly junk.

Budapest, Hungary

Now we go up instead of within, and here we find not the top as we might have expected, but the top as it is with still another layer above us. On this side of the dome, I cannot imagine what might be on the other side had I not previously been below it. Even though I have seen the dome from below it’s difficult to not place the art and ornament in its proper place that is just on the other side of this structure. I do not know how sturdy this is, how thick it is, or how much it might weigh, but I do believe that what I think is on the other side is actually there. This is my Schroedinger’s cat as found in a church.

Budapest, Hungary

So I look up, and now I see the top, or do I? I do not, not even close. It is too dark and obscured at the top to see what is up in the scaffolding. I do understand that the stairs lead to another passage that would take me to the cupola and surrounding me would be a roof clad in copper, but I’m not allowed. Above the cupola is a base where a golden cross is mounted. It’s time to step into the sky. Before I do, I realize my assumptions are wrong because the cupola must be sitting above the bell tower. A few more steps and my investment in walking up all these stairs might deliver some answers.

Budapest, Hungary

My first step into this new world and perspective is not met with proof of a bell tower but with a view of the world as I’ve never seen it before. How many other perceptions of reality exist out there within the many buildings and people who move between them?

Budapest, Hungary

Another view and another unfathomable multitude of potentials waiting to become realities.

Budapest, Hungary

This angle produces yet more options and outcomes. Should I now aloft myself to the International Space Station how might my understanding shift yet again?

Budapest, Hungary

The bell towers turn out to be in the left and right smaller domed towers. Funny how it’s hard to perceive all angles of a potential reality before you’ve stepped into them.

John Wise and Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

How do I know I’ve been to these places and been able to consider the things that have coursed through my mind and lodged themselves in my memories? I have this image that proves that Caroline and I have been in the presence of the top of the exterior of a church in Budapest, and yet I cannot accept the images and icons of organized religion as similar proofs. Seems that my perspective is biased and possibly flawed; I’ll have to keep on trying to light the shadows within my mind in my continuing search for answers.

Budapest, Hungary

Like magic or by the elevator, we are transported to the adjacent south tower where the treasury is located. And as you’d expect, it houses a collection of treasures.

Budapest, Hungary

From clothing to trinkets, goblets, and religious artifacts that this particular church holds dear.

Budapest, Hungary

Some placards explain many of the objects, such as when they were created, by whom, when, and of what materials. I pass them by to allow some mystery to continue to exist. Who knows, maybe someday I’ll return and still have something more to learn.

Budapest, Hungary

The death mask of Cardinal Mindszenty. During World War II, he was imprisoned by the pro-Nazi Arrow Cross Party, who were responsible for horrible atrocities not only against the Cardinal but the local Jewish population too; more on that later. Opposing communism, he was tortured and given a life sentence after the war in 1949. After serving eight years during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, he was freed and lived in the United States embassy for 15 years until he was allowed to leave Hungary. He died in exile in 1975 in Vienna, Austria.

Budapest, Hungary

How many cultural references are in this image? What is the history of each line, symbol, and material? This wasn’t just made one day from ideas and forms unique to the artist; the person was drawing upon the histories of generations that preceded his own craftsmanship.

Budapest, Hungary

Whose hands worked the needles of this design? Who spun the silk and other materials that the robe is made from? Did certain materials and dyes come from other corners of the Earth? It’s amazing to me to imagine the magnitude of cultural expression and history that can be embedded in a single piece of cloth and our ability to attempt to give meaning to things that bear our imprint.

Budapest, Hungary

From the animals depicted in Chauvet to the lion’s statues found in many cities around the globe, we humans use fierce beasts, demons, dragons, and gargoyles to ward off our enemies. If only our totems to our aspirations for peace were effective against bullets and explosives.

Budapest, Hungary

We are heading for the stairs that will take us up to Buda Castle. After seeing the Pest side of the city from St. Stephen’s Basilica, it is time to see the Buda side from Matthias Church.

Budapest, Hungary

Down below, we could have taken the funicular, but that would have stolen the midway views as we trudged up the mountain. That’s St. Stephen’s on the other side of the bridge that is crossing the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

There seems to be a joke here that asks, “What happens when two funiculi pass on the side of the mountain?”

Budapest, Hungary

Our second museum of the trip is the Buda Castle History Museum, which is worthy of a visit should you ever find yourself in Budapest. These are royal seals used over the history of the country. Deciding what to photograph in a museum is difficult because essentially everything is of interest, but blog entries shouldn’t have a thousand images accompanying them either. So, I try to choose things that might not always get photographed and that I might later have something to say about. My results are a mixed bag.

Budapest, Hungary

Were there once Danube River dolphins, or are those gills and rabbit ears on those two things facing each other?

Budapest, Hungary

There were dozens of red marble carvings on display; this was qualified as a favorite, so here you go.

Budapest, Hungary

The tiles of a mosaic floor piece in beautiful shape after so many centuries. How many centuries do you ask? I’m not sure, though most everything in the museum seemed to date from about 1500 through the mid-1600s.

Budapest, Hungary

The only thing missing is some antlers.

Budapest, Hungary

Buda Castle from the inside court.

Budapest, Hungary

Oh yeah, antlers.

Budapest, Hungary

Ruins of some sort. (maybe we find out something more about these)

Budapest, Hungary

Changing of the guard. I’m guessing this is the presidential palace, but it felt awkward to ask anyone official-looking here as the police and security in plain clothes didn’t look like they’d enjoy answering tourist questions.

Budapest, Hungary

Matthias Church is about to be explored from top to bottom, but not in that order.

Budapest, Hungary

Before that, we headed over to Fisherman’s Bastion, which, to be honest, I think is more a ploy to collect a few more forints because….

Budapest, Hungary

Other than a slightly nicer view of Parliament and the city on the other side of the river, there’s not much difference in the view than just 10 feet below where we stand.

Budapest, Hungary

We are inside the church and will watch the clock as the tower operates on a schedule and limits on how many people can go up per group.

Budapest, Hungary

There’s a warmth in here with all the dark tones that paint this church with a very different feeling than, say, the Dresden Frauenkirche with its white and gold aesthetic or Magdeburg’s Dom, which is cold, gray, and quite austere. The other day, we were in the ornate Basilica of St. Anthony in Padua, which was relatively bold in its presentation, whereas Matthias Church feels subdued yet just as sophisticated.

Budapest, Hungary

To think that the majority of humanity will never gaze upon or look within these living museums whose purpose is to facilitate prayer, devotion, and ultimately salvation is a strange thought to me, as our churches, mosques, and temples are such integral parts of our lives. The diversity and work that exists upon these walls and the adornments both in and outside the building are testaments to our brilliance in architecting places that inspire our imagination to heights we’ve never witnessed in another species.

Budapest, Hungary

Solemnity comes to the person who walks into a church just as it does when one enters a hospital. We somehow sense the fragile nature of our existence when in places that heal, be it with medicine or spiritual guidance. This formality of dignity might also play a role in how people go about their lives in cultures that place greater importance on the social rules that enforce these behaviors, though this is purely conjectured on my part, coming from a thought-out-loud question.

Budapest, Hungary

From reflection and inspiration, we are feeding the more benevolent side of our natures. Maybe our commercial and social gathering places need a return to such environments that demand respect, quiet, and contemplation. How would writing be affected if it were being done during extended visits to a church as opposed to the coffee shop?

Budapest, Hungary

To sit here in the pulpit and find the words that might come to mind while taking influence from my surroundings sounds like a grand working vacation in its own right. How would one go about seeking permission to be allowed such a task and privilege?

Budapest, Hungary

In an age before movies and television, I could see the church as fulfilling the role of taking a community to another place, much like modern media does today. Here in the church, the worshiper listens to scripture and the gospel while viewing the scenes reflecting passages from the bible, with the air scented in frankincense and colored light streaming in from stained glass, helping create an ancient theater experience featuring god and the apostles as the main cast.

Budapest, Hungary

This is a rare view for me as I cannot recollect many other churches I’ve been able to visit above the nave or apse for a look into the church such as this.

Budapest, Hungary

This is the altar in the sanctuary of Matthias Church. Its scale is somewhat skewed due to our view from above its main body. Some of the altar’s imposing authority, when seen below, is lost; maybe this is why the average visitor or congregation member of a church is seated before the altar in the nave.

Budapest, Hungary

Over the past decade, more work regarding the investigation of how light impacts us emotionally has been undertaken at the professional research level, but still, the field, from what I can find, is in its nascent stage. While early research has shown some effect on how the spectral quality of light affects us, I would like to better understand how this light found in vast, dense places combines with the unique acoustic qualities of the church that amplify or greatly alter the prosody of the sermon to impact our senses and emotional being.

Budapest, Hungary

On a similar note, how do architecture and our internal spaces affect our perceptions and emotions? While a search on the internet has given me a few leads to follow up on, I don’t have the time at this writing to encapsulate what they have to say, so I’m giving my reader and myself a couple of links to read. The first one is from Kashmira Gander and an article she wrote for the Independent out of the United Kingdom titled “How Architecture Uses Space, Light, and Material to Affect Your Mood.” The other article is from Shivangi Vats, published on Medium titled, “Impact of Architecture on Human Psychology….” There’s so much to know about life and so little time to learn about it all.

Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

Up the tower, we go for yet another view of things from a perspective not everyone is willing to try to reach.

Budapest, Hungary

If you’ve never been to a European city on Christmas Day to hear a dozen or more church bells ringing across the landscape, you may not be able to fully appreciate how profound the effect is on us. While the solitary bell is a beautiful sound in its own right, it is the various tones and pitches working in concert, echoing through the streets, that real bells bring that recordings broadcast from modern bell-less towers cannot deliver. Seeing these large bells, it is as though we intuitively understand we are standing before something great. When rung, they will resonate deep within us and seem to strike something primordial.

Budapest, Hungary

We have arrived at the top of Buda. Pest lies across the Danube and Parliament can easily be seen in all of its spectacular glory there on the banks of this historic river.

Budapest, Hungary

Other than the cars below and many of the houses in the distance, it’s a strange thought looking out here from the tower of Matthias Church that the view is much the way it might have looked hundreds of years ago.

Caroline Wise at the Museum of Applied Folk Art in Budapest, Hungary

Another temple of worship we needed to visit, this time it was the Museum of Applied Folk Art. Turns out that this place doubles as the meetup point for a local fiber arts group with somebody’s Baby Wolf loom set up with a length of cloth being made.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

On an adjacent loom was a sample draped over a weaving in progress. I tried to sneak a peek at it but was admonished not to touch a thing by one of the people working at the front door.

Caroline Wise at Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

The loom was a relatively simple two-shaft loom but with some beautiful woodwork that made it into a work of art.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

I must live under a rock, or Caroline doesn’t share all the available information with me regarding loom configurations, as I’ve never seen a two-shaft or a six-shaft loom before.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

Ethnic folk art is what this museum is about, and while there isn’t much on display, what is here is interesting enough to keep our attention. Many of the photos I’ll take here are for Caroline to take inspiration from once we return to America.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

Some of the pieces Caroline could make if only she had time away from knitting all these socks she makes me and that other thing that consumes so much of her time: work.

Döner Kabab in Budapest, Hungary

After we visited the Folk Art Museum, one of the ladies who was doing needlepoint, there told us of a nearby folk art store called Mester Porta just down the street. We did a bit of shopping and then desperately needed something to eat before we started on a long walk to the other side of the river. The lady working at Mester Porta told us of a decent Döner Kebab shop further down the street, and that’s where we headed. Do not attempt to think that a Döner and gyros are the same things if you are in America. Gyros is a poor excuse for something that wants to imitate the amazing Döner but is made in some factory in Chicago and is the exact same weird meat product served from coast to coast, whereas in Europe, each shop owner has their own recipe and meat combination. Sometimes conformity sucks unless it’s In-N-Out Burger.

Budapest, Hungary

We are crossing the Danube on the Margaret Bridge, which was opened in 1876 and is the second oldest bridge here in Budapest. Earlier in the day, we crossed from Pest to Buda on the Széchenyi Chain Bridge which is the oldest bridge here in Budapest and the first that was a permanent crossing of the Danube. The night before, we drove over the Liberty Bridge, coming into the city, and the night shot of Buda Castle was taken while we were crossing Elisabeth Bridge, which means we have now crossed all the major bridges of Budapest. Margaret Bridge is a three-way bridge connected to Margaret Island, and we would have loved to have visited, but we have an appointment at 6:00 p.m. we’ve got to get to, and it feels far away in this heat, humidity, and in-light of the distance we’ve already walked today.

Budapest, Hungary

This is the Néprajzi Múzeum of Ethnography that chronicles life in Hungary and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries. We didn’t visit this time; maybe on a subsequent vacation, we’ll be able to take it in.

Budapest, Hungary

Up close to Parliament, that was sold out during our visit, so better planning would have been required if this had been a must-see. It’s on the list should we ever come back.

John Wise and Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

We arrived at the dock for Dunarama early, which was fortunate for our tired feet, laden bladders, and parched palates. With a half-hour before our departure, we sat on the floating restaurant patio with a couple of bottles of sparkling water and took a well-deserved break. As 6:00 p.m. came around, one of the boatmen approached us to bring us aboard a small speedboat that was about to be our means of travel for a private tour up and down the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

The view from the middle of the Danube is truly a different perspective than all others we’d had today. Initially, we took it slow and leisurely to acquaint ourselves with the sense of being on one of Earth’s most famous rivers. Would Parliament have looked so amazing under rainy skies or perfectly blue skies? From the light clouds and the reflection of Parliament in the river, we had what must be one of the most incredible sights seen on our planet today.

Budapest, Hungary

On the other side of the river, Buda Castle was nearly in silhouette, with the sun getting lower in the west. Our tour company, Dunarama, while not inexpensive, might offer the most unique views of the city and its river banks.

Budapest, Hungary

All of the romance with a blast of outrageous fun comes with a trip on the water. While we were speeding down the Danube, the guys turned up AC/DC’s Thunderstruck and opened up the throttle with some hairpin turns thrown in for added thrills. While Caroline was initially reluctant to add so much sound pollution to the pristine environment, once we were hauling ass, she was all smiles and fist pumps of excitement. We were paying for a 50-minute tour and soon were feeling that it was all too short and that we could easily do it all over again. I don’t believe we could have chosen a more perfect day or time to have taken this extraordinary journey on the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

By 7:00 p.m. we are pulling up to the dock and catching our breaths. We walk to a nearby restaurant that promises an authentic Hungarian meal and take our time to relax and get full. From here, we wander around the city center, taking in all the open shops, people sitting around enjoying a drink, an abundance of Thai Massage joints, and the general feeling of being in a Bohemian wonderland of debauchery and vast history. Budapest is certainly at a crossroads historically, culturally, and economically as the world of Europe is still changing with the global movement of people, capital, and entertainment. We clocked 12.26 miles or just under 20 km of walking across the city today and climbed 77 floors of steps; our feet and heads need an overnight break.

Gorizia to Budapest – Europe Day 10

Gorizia, Italy

Gorizia was a stopover city on the way to Budapest, and as such, we had nothing on the agenda aside from sleep and depart. We weren’t feeling pressed for time, though, so we decided to take a walk around town and see if we can’t find a little charm here. Around the corner from our apartment, we stopped at the first cafe we came across for a cappuccino and a couple of sandwiches to fuel our expedition. Gorizia is definitely not on the tourist map, though it is at an interesting crossroads between Trieste, the Italian Alps, Slovenia, and Venice. Our path took us through a nearby park and while it even had a palazzo this morning’s lighting and skies didn’t make for a very photogenic environment.

Gorizia, Italy

If there is a history to the statue or the barrier wall, it wasn’t going to be known by us. Nothing much is open yet, and the only other people here with us are the groundskeepers.

Gorizia, Italy

I have a thing for signs, abandoned buildings, ruins, and store facades. I suppose the larger truth is that I have a thing for geometry and symbolism, especially when found in my environment. If I lived here in Gorizia (the thought has crossed our minds), this would be a shop that I would find appealing for its inherent funkiness. I don’t even care what they sell; I would be a customer because a place like this lends character to its visitors.

Gorizia, Italy

The remnants of posters dating to Italy’s tumultuous flirting with communist revolutions must certainly be buried on this wall. Political and art actions have been hallmarks of Italy’s history, and while these particular posters don’t really convey much to me, what they do tell me in my interpretation is more important to my imagination than what they might truly represent.

Gorizia, Italy

Is it just me, or is there something a bit Arabic or Near Eastern about this building? Here at the edge of Eastern Europe, there is probably a rich history of melding cultures, but our artificial intelligence-driven augmented reality travel apps are yet to arrive.

Gorizia, Italy

A church comes into view, and now we have a destination and the promise of a hidden treasure.

Gorizia, Italy

It’s neither spectacular nor too plain, so I’ll rank this one as somewhat below average but a bit better than a simple chapel.

Gorizia, Italy

Still, here is an elegance of effort and ambiance that to the inhabitants of Gorizia this church must be a milestone in the history of the town and as a monument to God. What is it about the lines, arches, lighting, and artwork that draws us in? Is it just nostalgia for something I was more familiar with as a child? Or is there a kind of magic to the order of geometry and light that resonates with us humans who are looking for patterns?

Caroline Wise in Gorizia, Italy

While Caroline doesn’t know her way around town, this bronze statue of that dude that is a metal hero to the people of Gorizia, she certainly knows more than his empty head, and so she’s pointing out where the nearest gelato shop is because she’s friendly that way. Okay, enough tongue-in-cheek nonsense; this is Carlo Michelstaedter, who died young, at the age of 23, more than one hundred years ago. Carlo was a philosopher and writer who took his own life.

Gorizia, Italy

I don’t know if it’s the arches or the orange building that is talking to me in this photo; it’s probably the orange. You might then ask, if I like orange so much, what is my problem with Donald Trump? The orange facade adds beauty, the fruit of the orange carries nutrition, the orange of the apricot is sweet and succulent, while my president is the antithesis of beauty, health, and things that are sweet.

Gorizia, Italy

Peeling posters, graffiti, a curving narrow street, and the mystery of what lies beyond the corner all make for an appealing turn and walk down a path of which we do not know where it leads.

Gorizia, Italy

The town square of Piazza Della Vittoria in Gorizia: Tuesday is apparently the wrong day to find a bustling market set up for the gastronomically enhanced photos of the traveler. Just as the piazza is empty today, the lack of sunshine also puts some damper on the appearance of things. I wonder if we had been here on Friday night, if we would have found a busy square full of reverie and vendors hawking their wares the next day?

Gorizia, Italy

Also on the piazza, to the left in the previous image, is the Church of Saint Ignazio, which dates back to 1654. Maybe I should start keeping score of how many churches, doms, basilicas, and chapels we have visited on this trip.

Gorizia, Italy

Reconstruction work on the church ended in 1767, and in 1769, the church was first consecrated by Archbishop of Gorizia Carlo Michele d’Attems. Twenty-three years later, the church was gutted as war broke out between Austria and France. Today, while its original treasures may have been stolen, the place looks amazing to me.

Gorizia, Italy

I can only imagine how difficult and expensive it is to maintain buildings that are centuries old. If all of the apartments are owned by individuals, then they collectively have to come up with the monies to restore their homes, and if they are on fixed incomes that can be costly. If the building is owned by an individual who is renting the units, he must deal with the cost alone, as raising the rent on people who may not have the greatest job prospects can create a situation where the owner won’t have tenants. The good news is that the apartment building we were staying in was either new or freshly renovated, so some investment Euros are going into Gorizia.

Tunnel in Hungary

The speed in this tunnel was a relatively slow 80km per hour (about 50mph), so it was totally safe to drive and take long exposure images until I got one I really liked. We drove into Slovenia in the direction of Ljubljana (Laibach for the German speakers). We are on our way to Budapest, Hungary.

Vransko, Slovenia

We’d been driving long enough that the weather was starting to clear with the promise of blue skies on our horizon. The problem I was having wasn’t the turning weather but my closing eyes. At the next available offramp that looked like we might find coffee and some lunch, we left the highway. We have entered the town of Vransko, Slovenia, and wondered if we might be the first foreign visitors ever.

Vransko, Slovenia

Well, that stupid assumption proved hugely false as this town hosts the Grom Motorcycle Museum, which likely attracts people from many countries. Oh, and that’s a church over there.

At this rate, I will have been to more churches on a single vacation than I have been collectively throughout my entire life. Maybe I need a numeric ranking system to place these churches on a scale of relatively positive impressions.

Caroline Wise in Vransko, Slovenia

We found a place for coffee across the street from Gostilna Slovan for lunch, and while I’m drowsy, I’ll opt to have the coffee after something to eat. In Italy and France, we ran into enough people that spoke German or English, this is our first encounter with staff that speaks Slovenian and no other language Caroline or I are versed in. No problem because the menu is in four languages, and pointing is the universal language of the traveler. By the way, it’s usually pretty easy to identify the local beer as the logo is often part of the signage somewhere in the restaurant or out front.

Vransko, Slovenia

Caroline was the winner of ordering the best dish for this meal (a trend was in the making), a pork cutlet with pineapple and lingonberry with a side of bratkartoffeln (roasted potatoes).

Vransko, Slovenia

Back across the street, we ordered two espressos, and with Caroline having looked up the proper etiquette for drinking coffee in Italy (we became aware that we were noobs to drinking coffee correctly), we stood at the counter to quickly (in about two minutes) drink our espresso. We have now graduated from the basics and will have to move on to mastering when it’s appropriate to drink cappuccino.

Slovenian road side

The road is short across Slovenia as we had decided earlier to try to take in a National Park area in Hungary. If you look closely, you might notice that the crop is corn and that the sky has turned to shades of spectacular. My choice of superlatives is limited by a poor vocabulary while I desperately try to find other succinct words to adequately describe views I find amazing, I come up short and must rely on well-worn words that are often less than spectacular.

Hungarian border with Slovenia

A relic from an older version of Europe: a border crossing station. Now defunct, one can’t help but wonder about the dark atmosphere of oppression during the Cold War when Westerners would cross this border that led into the empire of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

Church from a small village in Hungary

Breaking the rules as we didn’t even attempt to open the door of the next church we stopped at. This one was just for the photograph that demanded to be taken. Because we had a destination in mind before the main destination, we had to keep moving. While distance may not be great between places in Europe, country roads can be winding and languorous, with many slowdowns as we enter the endless string of small towns.

Hungarian country side

If we don’t stop to capture the path, we might forget what we saw along the way.

Hungarian country side

Look to the hilltop, and you will find a castle. If we were spending a week exploring Hungary you can safely wager that we’d be finding the road that would lead us up there. I should also point out that we are now in the National Park, though there hasn’t been a sign officially designating the area as such.

Lake Balaton in Hungary

Lake Balaton. During the heyday of the “Worker,” this was a mecca for many a subsidized vacation to relax by the soothing waters of Lake Balaton. Today, the area is seeing declining visitor numbers as people in the region can opt to visit Mallorca, the Mediterranean, or even Cuba instead of being landlocked behind an Iron Curtain.

Lake Balaton in Hungary

Getting this photo was a risky business; I had to leave Caroline in the running car in the parking lot, which required payment to be there. The problem was that to pay for parking, you couldn’t use Euros because Hungary hadn’t joined the common currency. As we hadn’t exchanged money yet, we were kind of stuck. So Caroline waited while I ran over to the edge of the lake to snap off a panorama and make a silent wish that maybe someday we’d come back and go for a swim or paddle out on the lake.

Hungarian currency the Forint

The trusty search engine let us know that we could exchange money at almost every gas station, and before we knew it, we were rich with thousands of colorful Forints.

Budapest, Hungary

We move into Budapest with efficiency delivered by GPS that directs us on the most direct route to our apartment. Good thing, too, as traffic here is no better than what we found in Frankfurt, Verona, or Bergamo. The shadows are long, and the sun is low in the sky before we can get back out on the street in search of dinner.

Budapest, Hungary

Our dinner was kind of meh; we can’t always pick the winners, and tonight was one of those times. After dinner, though, we were greeted with a sunset that is found in dreams and made up for everything that may have been missing from the culinary introduction to Budapest. To offer more details, I should explain that we wanted the “true” taste of Hungary and opted for a restaurant probably no longer popular with the locals but “authentic” enough to bring business and family visitors for that “real” Hungarian experience complete with live music. Choose carefully, as we did not. The first clue when entering a Hungarian restaurant is: if the place and or the patio is empty, do not eat there.

Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

We continued to explore the city and do some minor window shopping, though we were more intrigued with the hedonistic sense of Bohemian debauchery that seemingly many visitors come to Budapest for. If you want to smoke everywhere, walk around with a beer or bottle of wine, and grab a quick Thai massage, you will instantly know why Budapest is high on many people’s list of great cities to visit. On the other hand, if you are in love with history, this is also a city for you, and tomorrow morning, we will embark on that part of our exploration of this grand city on the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

Before calling it quits for the day, we somehow ended up at nearly the same place we took the sunset photo of the Buda side of the Danube from the Pest side where our apartment is. For those of you who didn’t know, Budapest is the joining of two different cities that straddle the river, which is known here as the Duna. See you tomorrow on day 11 of our 23-day European vacation. Walking stats: 8.29 miles (14.4 km) and climbed 16 floors.