Wednesday, July 5, 2017

History-making woman

Wow, guys!  We're seeing history being made.

Remember when we visited the Pantheon in Paris and we learned that only two women were buried there?  One being the wife of a baron and the other one being Marie Curie.  I also told you that there was some push from the French public to have more women in there so they were considering moving Simone de Beauvoir from her resting place in the Montparnasse cemetery.  Personally, I don't like that idea because right now, she's buried next to her long-time partner, Jean-Paul Sartre so moving her (but not him) would mean they wouldn't be together anymore.  I just think they should be together.

Anyways, Simone Veil passed away last week and after the public voicing their opinion, President Macron just announced that she will be buried in the Pantheon. So another woman is going in the Pantheon!


A Holocaust survivor, Veil later became a lawyer and politician is best known for her fight to legalize abortion.  The law passed became known as "la loi Veil", named after her.  She was also elected member of the illustrious Académie Française in 2008.

Pretty cool stuff.

CORRECTION/UPDATE: There are two other women, Germaine Tillion and Genevieve de Gaulle-Anthonioz, both Resistance fighters during WW2, that were buried symbolically (soil from their gravesite) in the Pantheon in 2014 but their actual remains are elsewhere.

Friday, June 30, 2017

Back in CLE

One last group photo after arriving back in Cleveland:


Paris, tu nous manques déjà!

Perfumes, a princess and pasta!

Sighhhh. Today was our last full day and I think we made it a good one. We headed out about 8am this morning toward Èze and took a tour of Fragonard, a perfume factory. We learned what all it takes to make a high-quality perfume, including tons and tons of flowers to get one liter of essential oil. We also learned that usually high-quality, "real" perfumes have a symphony of head notes, heart notes and base notes so they may have up to nine or ten different scents to make up one beautiful perfume. 



After Fragonard, we went just a few more miles along the Corniche to get to Monaco. There, we saw the changing of the guards at the palace (well, except for us short people - we saw mostly helmets and tops of guns). Then we had some free time to explore the streets and visit the cathedral where Princess Grace Kelly is buried.





Then we went another few miles and crossed the Italian border and went a little farther to Sanremo, Italy which was such a treat. We had opted to wait for Italy for lunch so we could have some of their world-famous pasta or pizza. Then after a quick walking tour of the old town with its narrow, cobbled streets, we had some free time to shop or eat gelato.


At 6pm, we drove about 1 1/2 hours back to our hotel for dinner. After dinner, some of us walked down to the beach that was about a 15-minute walk from our hotel and lo and behold: sand! (Not rocks like in Nice.) We played in the water until about 10pm and then trekked home to repack and reorganize for tomorrow's air travel. 



So we've had a wonderful time. We've seen a lot, we've learned a lot and we have lots of stories to tell you. So thanks for following the blog for this year's installment. Thanks especially to the parents that allowed your children to travel with me on this trip. You cannot even begin to imagine what they've experienced and it means the world to me that you've entrusted your babies to me and my other chaperones to travel this far without you. 

From Paris to the plage!

We got up early this morning to catch our train to Nice. There was a slight snag with the bus driver but we still made it on time. Our train left at 9:21 and we caught our first glimpses of the Mediterranean by noon or so when we neared Marseille. It took us until 3pm to arrive in Nice because they made a few stops along the way. So arriving in Nice, we packed the bus and we went by bus just a little way to the Promenade des Anglais along the water. 

After a quick walking tour of the old town, we split up for some free time. Because it is Sunday, a lot of the major stores weren't open but many little shops in the old section were. But who am I kidding? Those kids wanted to go swimming! So many of them enjoyed the water and a few climbed to the look-out point over the Baie des Anges. We all met back up at 8pm to catch our bus back to our hotel just west of Cannes for a late dinner.

So now we have one more full day in France and we are excited for what's planned, possibly including more swim time!

Last full day in Paris

Since this was our last full day in Paris and it was just going to be our group, we had a day packed full of activities. We started out at Musée d'Orsay where we got to see lots of Impressionist paintings and sculptures dating from between 1848 and 1914, including lots by Monet, Degas, Renoir and Van Gogh. Of course, the kids were on an bear hunt for Pompon's "Ours Blanc" because I tell them about it when we learn about Paris in French I. 






After a few hours there, we stopped by Cluny, leftovers from a Roman bath dating from the 3rd century, walked by the Sorbonne and ended up at the Pantheon. Most of us toured the Pantheon where we got the see the tombs of Pierre and Marie Curie, Alexandre Dumas, Louis Braille and Victor Hugo.



We then had some time to grab lunch and I took the students that have already read The Little Prince to the official boutique for the book for a special shopping trip. After lunch, we met up and spent some time in the Luxembourg Gardens. And the we left the Left Bank and headed to the Opera Garnier, to either see the opera house or do some shopping or maybe a little of both. I actually ran into a teacher friend that I traveled with in 2011 (unplanned) and a former student from my yearbook-advisor days (planned).


Jardins du Luxembourg:


Opera Garnier:




Then off to dinner in Montmartre and then we returned to the area by Sacre-Cœur for a little more last-minute shopping or just soaking in the sites. Then we moseyed our way through side streets and passed the café where Amélie works in the movie. And then we got to see the Moulin Rouge too. Now we're back at the hotel and repacking or reorganizing for our train to Nice tomorrow. See you then!






Kings and capital

This morning, we had a bit of a late start due to our bus driver's 12-hour limit so we finally got going about 10am. We drove straight from Beuzeville to Versailles where we had extended time in the gardens to do some exploring. Most of our group had a 3:10 booking and we finally entered the palace just after that with a local tour guide. We saw the famed Hall of Mirrors, the chapel and the king and queen's bedrooms (separate). Then at 4:30, we got on the bus again to drive back into Paris for dinner at Flam's where they served flammekueche, a traditional Alsatian flatbread pizza of sorts. Not exactly that but it's hard to explain.





After dinner, we climbed the stairs to the top of the Arc de Triomphe at the end of the Champs-Elysées... I lost count after 200 and something. It was quite the hike but the views were amazing, especially since the sun was low in the sky and starting to set. Afterwards, we had more time to shop on the Champs-Elysées before meeting at 9:30pm to head back to the hotel. Upon our arrival, we cleaned out the bus and got our suitcases since we will no longer be with Stéphane, our bus driver for this past week. And so now the groups that we've been with all week go separate ways: one goes home, the other stays but has different plans than us. We have one more full day in Paris so let's get some sleep so we can enjoy it!

Battle on the beach


We headed out on the road about 8am this morning to start our day covering sites linked to World War Two. It was cool, overcast and breezy today which was the total opposite of what we've experienced since we arrived last Saturday. We had a little bit of bus time before we arrived at the Omaha landing beaches. Some of us took time to gather a little sand or stick our feet in the water while others just contemplated the events that took place there in 1944.  After knocking the sand off our shoes, we headed to Pointe du Hoc, where the U.S. Rangers landed as part of the operations. We were able to walk between huge craters left from bombings and look out over the cliffs that just help us to realize and understand the difficulty of the task the Americans had to successfully take over that land from the Germans. Then we stopped at the American cemetery to pay our respects to 9,387 Americans buried there and to the 1,557 whose final resting places are unknown and whose names are inscribed in the Garden of the Missing.

Omaha Beach:


















Pointe du Hoc: 




American Cemetery:





We then took a lunch break in Arromanches, where we able to see concrete blocks still out in the water as part of the artificial bridges or mulberries that the Allies used to get supplies from England to the troops - everything from tanks, gasoline, ammunition and food. 

After lunch, we drove to the Caen Peace Memorial and Museum to see artifacts and history from the eras before, during and after the Battle of Normandy, including a short film with footage from wartime.


Then we were able to make a stop in Honfleur, which was not on the original itinerary. We got to spend some free time exploring this cute little town on the mouth of the Seine. It is home to the oldest wooden church in Europe and the only wooden church in France. Then about 7:45, we headed off to our hotel for the night in Beuzeville. It's again kind of in the middle of nowhere so the kids are still bonding, playing games and hanging out. It's still light outside at 10pm so we are taking advantage of the long days.

Honfleur: its wooden church and its harbor