Montag, 22. April 2013

Finally, it‘s spring again :)



http://www.graztourismus.at

As I was abroad last summer semester, it‘s the first spring for me in Graz again in a year. Don‘t get me wrong I am more than grateful that I got the opportunity to go abroad and get to know a new culture, live another life and cut my teeth by doing so. Wouldn‘t want to miss a second of it. I can only recommend spending some time abroad, because it‘s a whole new experience. Okay, I could go on ages just telling about my time in Spain, but that‘s not what I am writing this blog entry about. The point is, that because of my semester abroad I missed the most beautiful time in Graz: spring. If I‘m honest, the other seasons (fall and winter) are just horrible and summer doesn‘t count, as we don‘t have classes. There is nothing better  here than spring. It is starting to get warm again, the color of the grass changes from disgustingly brown to "England-in-spring-green" and you can use your leisure time to relax in the "Stadtpark" or in the park "Herz-Jesu". It‘s just awesome ;)

Sonntag, 14. April 2013

The Shoes on the Danube Promenade...


During the easter break I spent a couple of days in Budapest. In the course of my sightseeing “marathon“ I also came across the shoes lined up along the Danube bank. These 60 iron shoes represent the shoes from the jews that were killed during the Second World War (1944/45) by fascist Arrow Cross militiamen. They were ordered to take off their shoes, as shoes were valuable belongings at that time, before being shot at the edge of the river, where their bodies fell into the water were drifted away. The monument consists out of iron, but it looks very realistic. You have to look twice until you can tell that they are not real. 
“The Shoes on the Danube Promenade“ was completed on April 16th 2005 by the sculptor Gyula Pauer and the film-director Can Togay. The monument is located on the Pest side  of the Danube Promenade, about 300 metres south of the Hungarian Parliament and the Hungarian Academy of Science.