Category Archives: Kai

“We hold these truths to be self evident…”

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“My first wish… is to see the whole world at peace, and its inhabitants as one band of brothers, striving  who should contribute most to the happiness of mankind.”  

George Washington, 1785

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“We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain–that this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom–and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.”

Abraham Lincoln, Gettysburg

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“If we are to have peace on earth, our loyalties must become ecumenical rather than sectional.  Our loyalties must transcend our race, our tribe, our class, and our nation; and this means we must develop a world perspective.”   

Martin Luther King, Jr. 1957

photo (105)Through Congressman Jim McDermott’s staff assistant Haig Hovsepian we received a family tour of our nation’s Capitol and got to see democracy in action.  Haig was a stellar host, spiriting us through tunnels and security checks and giving us the inside scoop on some of the Capitol’s more intriguing historical legends.

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photo (101)A special treat was our meeting with Ramon Zertuche, Staff Director for the House Foreign Affairs Western Hemisphere Subcommittee, who showed us the Foreign Affairs hearing room and talked about his role; a role similar to one which Chris’ sister, Deb Hauger, had when she worked for House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Lee Hamilton in the early 1990’s.

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Standing with a seated Rose Parks in the Congressional Sculpture Hall

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Under the main Capitol dome, with fellow and sister citizens from around the country

 

 

The Colosseum (post by Kai)

We met Liz across from the Colosseum

We met Liz across from the Colosseum

Today we went to the Colosseum in Rome with our family tour guide Liz, who is an architect originally from the US but now living in Rome.  The Colosseum is an amphitheater, like others we’ve seen in Arles, France, and Pompeii, only bigger–it’s the biggest one in the Roman Empire.  It got its name from the huge statue of Nero (Colossus) that Nero ordered be made in his own honor (yeah, he was kind of stuck-up).  He wanted to be venerated as the Sun god.  The statue  was 30 meters in height and was called the Colossus. The location around the statue gradually took on the name “Colosseum” (area around the Colossus) and when the statue was moved the name stuck and was applied to the Colosseum.

The Colosseum was built around the same time as the Judean wars and the destruction of Jerusalem, and captives from those wars actually were the slave labor that built the Colosseum.

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Some animal bones found in the arena

We went inside the Colosseumand learned about the gladiators who fought there in the arena.  They had a training area close by and a tunnel that went from that training area to the arena.  They got their name from the kind of short sword they would use in the arena, which was called a gladius.  Also we learned that special gladiators fought with animals, and we even saw some of the bones that have been found from those animals, including skulls of horse, bear, and bones from ostriches, leopards, lions, wild boars, and deer.  (They also found some chicken bones, but I think that was probably leftovers from somebody’s lunch.)

Liz explains the underground staging mechanism used for spectacles at the Colosseum

Liz explains the underground staging mechanism used for spectacles at the Colosseum

Gladiators were forced to perform, as they were slaves, and they had sponsors.  If they survived long enough they might win their freedom, but there was no guarantee.  Also, if somebody desperately needed money to support their family, they could be a gladiator for a period of time and if they survived, could get some money for doing it.  There were some women gladiators and they fought with midget men gladiators.

If you were a middle level status person in Rome, you would be seated in the middle section.  If you were a really good friend of the emperor, you’d get a special section up front, with cushions, catered food, and music.  (Kind of like the club section at Seahawks and Sounders games today.)  Women and girls were seated at the very top.  At a certain age boys could sit with their fathers.

Inside view of Colosseum, with the wooden floor and special animal pens and staging underneath

Inside view of Colosseum, with the wooden floor and special animal pens and staging underneath

The arena games were very violent and gory and thousands of people and animals lost their lives over the years.  The tradition started as part of the funeral practices that occurred in ancient Rome.  After a number of years that turned into a public spectacle for entertainment.  As many as 50,000 to 80,000 people could be seated.

The Colosseum is still used today, but for a very different purpose .  Once a year on Good Friday the Pope leads a service there of the stations of the cross.

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If you go to Rome I recommend going to the Colosseum.  And IF you go, I can recommend an awesome GELATERIA nearby.  (A gelateria is a place that serves gelato–the Italian version of ice cream–which I always find refreshing on a hot summer’s day.)

 

 

 

Bella Italia (by Kai and Naomi)

We’ve made it tophoto (40) Italy!  And are truly enjoying the incredible dulce vita of Tuscany.  We’re staying at the agriturismo working farm of Alberto and Roberta Bennati outside of Castiglion Fiorantino.

Kai: I’ve noticed lots of encounters with most drivers in Italy are a bit dangerous.  This was especially true in Florence (Firenze).  But where we’re living is nice and quiet.  Our hosts own 12 horses, one donkey (assino), one cow which is going to have a calf in 6-7 days, chickens, rabbits, pigs, and sheep.  They also have two nice dogs; Dado is my favorite, and I love to scratch his back and tummy.

Naomi:  They also have a kitty.  I really liked our horsey ride today.  I rode on Amour, Kai rode on Armando, and Mommy rode on My Lady.  It was my first time riding a horse all alone by myself.

Kai:  The horse ride was quite nice, though at times Armando stopped to eat some grass.  But I got used to getting him going again, and one time I nearly got to galloping.

There’s a really nice soccer field and a natural, spring fed pool, which does occasionally attract frogs.  At first I didn’t quite want to go in, but after I saw other kids going in it, I said, “Hey, I want to go swimming!”

Naomi:  The water is very cold.  I can’t reach the bottom.

 

Celebrating Castle Montecchio's 1st 1,000 years

Celebrating Castle Montecchio’s 1st 1,000 years

Kai:  We got to go to a really, really cool castle (Castello di Montecchio) that someone actually lives in (learn more about it HERE).  You can see it from the farm.  We met a woman named Xenia who’s making a film about the castle.  She gave us a tour.  The castle is marking its 1,000 year birthday this year.

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Naomi:  Yesterday we went to Cortona, and had two flavors of gelato with two round cookies sticking up like Mickey Mouse ears.  The city is built on a hill, and we hiked to the top of the steep streets and could see for miles across the great valley (Val di Chiana).

Tonight we’re helping to make pizza with Roberta.

photo (41)Ciao for now!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Durham Cathedral a la Legos (by Kai)

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In Durham, we went to worship at the Durham Cathedral with our friend Penny. The cloisters here (that’s the place where monks hung out when it was a monastery many, many years ago) were one of the places where a Harry Potter scene was filmed.

 

 

P1080961After the service we went to the gift shop area and found out that a huge scale model of the cathedral was being built out of Legos!

Dad paid two pounds (British money) and Naomi and I each got to add a Lego brick to one of the towers.  When it’s completed, it will contain 350,000 pieces.  As of right now there are 68,000 in place.

 

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Sculpting in Concord

Checking out the work of D.C. French

Checking out the work of D.C. French

We went to the Concord Museum following worship today.  The main exhibit was about the work of Daniel Chester French.  We saw all the models he did, including the Lincoln Memorial and the Minuteman.  He had a real interest in birds and we saw an owl, a dove, and other examples.  He was really good at sculpting wings.  We also saw a drawing he made when he was five years old of a bird, possibly a quail.  He wrote “Danny French wrote this bird.”

 

P1020228Naomi and I also got to work with a sculptor named Linda Sweeny.  We worked with sculpting clay.  She asked us to make something we really like, and so I first made a double decker fountain.  We put water in the fountain to test it out.  The fountain held the water!  I also made a bowl with a knife, fork, and spoon, because I like food.  I left the fountain there but brought the bowl and things home.

For his sculpture of Lincoln, D.C. French used a life cast of one of Lincoln's hands, but substituted a cast of one of his own hands for the other.  Can you guess which one?
Can you tell which hand belongs to Lincoln and which belongs to Daniel Chester French?

 

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We learned that Daniel Chester French had access to a true impression of Lincoln’s hands.  One of the hands was clenched and the other was not.  French didn’t like the clenched hand and so for the Lincoln Memorial he made a model of his own hand not clenched.  So on the Lincoln Memorial the right hand is Lincoln’s hand (from the impression), but the left hand is Daniel Chester French’s hand!

Visit to Walden Pond

Kai meets a new friend, Henry David Thoreau.  Replica cabin in background.

Kai meets a new friend, Henry David Thoreau. Replica cabin in background.

Inside the replica cabin
Inside the replica cabin
Walden Pond

Walden Pond

Stone marking the original cabin site
Stone marking the original cabin site

Today we traveled to Walden Pond (which is not really a pond but actually a small lake, but they call it that because in England they call lakes “ponds” and this is NEW England).  Walden Pond was made famous by Henry David Thoreau, who lived there in a one room cabin for two years, two months and two days, starting on the 4th of July, 1845.  During his stay he kept a journal writing down everything he witnessed and learned from nature.

When we first arrived, we saw a replica of his one room cabin.  Inside was a wood stove, a bed low to the ground, and a writing desk with a guest journal in which I signed my name.  Right by the cabin was a statue of Thoreau, which was exactly my height.  Across the road was the Pond, and we started walking around it.  The total distance was one and one-half miles, and it took us a little over two hours in the snow and ice.  The Pond was frozen, and we saw an ice fisherman out on it, using an auger to make holes.  As we walked the perimeter, we heard a low rumbling, gurgling sound like when you turn over a five gallon jug into a water dispenser and it goes “blub, glub, blub.”  It was like the lake was talking to us.

About 2/3rds of the way around, we found the original cabin site, which was discovered on November 11, 1945.  There was also a quote from Thoreau, which I read to our family.

“I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life.  And to see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.” 

After our hike, we stopped by the gift stop, and my Dad picked up a book for me, entitled:  A Mind with Wings, The Story of Henry David Thoreau, by Gerald and Loretta Hausman.  I can’t wait to finish reading it!

American Revolution

Beneath the Minuteman statue sculpted by Daniel Chester French

Today we went to the North Bridge in Concord.  This is the place where the American Revolution started, when British troops fired at the Concord Militiamen on April 19, 1775.  After the British soldiers fired, the leader of the Militia said, “For God’s sake fire!”  To the Militiamen’s surprise, the most powerful army in the world (at that time) turned and ran away.  Overnight the word was spread that arms and volunteers were needed, and within a few days, 20,000 Militiamen answered the call and surrounded Boston.  The statue I’m standing next to with my sister Naomi is called “The Minuteman,” and stands at the edge of the North Bridge over the Concord River.  It was sculpted for the 100th anniversary of that battle by Daniel Chester French, age 23, a young man from Concord, who would go on to sculpt the Lincoln Memorial statue in Washington DC.

 

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Minutemen return fire against British regulars at the North Bridge

Learning the factors that ignited the American Revolution.

Learning the factors that ignited the American Revolution.

Hey guys, Kai here

Kai 2I can’t believe we’re actually going!  I’m very excited for the trip and I can’t wait to see the Eiffel Tower–at night!–not to mention all the ancient castles.  I’m going to try picking up Italian, and I’m looking forward to eating the original pizza!  I’m really going to have fun biking, especially in the Loire Valley in France.  I’ll have my own camera along and so you can check back in now and then for new photos and comments.  If I manage to spot Nessie (AKA the Loch Ness Monster) on our way through northern Scotland, I’ll be sure to post the picture right here!

Ciao for now!