Category Archives: Travel

Penn Alumni Travel: Cruising the Dalmatian Coast

Author: Professor David Wallace, Penn Department of English

Our Penn Alumni Travel group met up at Venice on Friday June 21st to sail down the Adriatic, along the Dalmatian coast, and to visit the beautiful seaside cities of Croatia, mostly, and Montenegro. Our vessel was L’Austral, a French ship based in Marseilles with French officers—and a French chef, French baker, and French pastry maker. Following the mandatory lifeboat drill, we set sail at 6:30 PM, when the colors of Venice, lit by western light slanting across the lagoon, are at their most beautiful.

Beautiful Venice.

Beautiful Venice

After dinner, we were able to observe the sun setting magnificently into the ocean behind us, reassuring proof that we were heading due west.

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I gave the first of the lectures offered on this cruise, calling it “On Heading East Out of Venice. ” Attendance at this and all other lectures during the week was remarkably high; our highly-educated alums were clearly thirsty for knowledge, and keen to open discussions that carried on all week. One very timely question was: how do the people of Croatia feel about joining the European Union next week? We resolved to try and find out by asking as many questions of our guides, and the people we met, as possible. Another question: What is at stake in the term “Dalmatian coast’?” Italians have long mixed with Slavs in this region, and many of them clearly believed, up to World War II, that “Dalmatia” should properly be seen as part of a greater Italian, once Roman, Empire. I thus talked of the ways in which this coastal strip had long been fought for between rival powers, and that its location midway between the empires of Rome and Constantinople, western Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Christianity, made this inevitable. So, although more recent conflicts involving Croatia, Serbia, and Bosnia continue to grab the headlines, the medieval coastal cities that we were to explore, I suggested, will be marked by signs of more ancient struggles.

The weather during this trip was beautiful; warm but not oppressively so, with a gentle wind and just one thunderstorm late in the week. The water was so calm that you had little sense of motion: indeed, sometimes you needed to look out of the window to realize that the boat was actually in motion.  But the passing landscapes were so beautiful it was always a good idea to check.

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We sometimes docked in harbors and sometimes dropped anchor offshore; small boats or “tenders” moved us easily to the quayside. The coastal colors of the houses were stunning, especially when set against clear blue skies.

Our first port of call was Split, where two of our Penn alums had a most happy rendezvous: Eric and Katherine Gall met up with their son, Dan. Eric, a distinguished physician, works full time (after retirement!) in Tuscon, Arizona. Katherine is Croatian, and their son Dan has settled in Split and married a local girl while working for a Human Rights organization. Dan joined us for the visit to the marvelous Meštrović museum, and the family made plans to meet up after the cruise.

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The Galls meet up in Split.

At Split, we explored the remains of the vast palace of the Roman Emperor Diocletian, which faces the harbor. Diocletian spared no expense in building this palace, using the lustrous white stone from the island of Brač, and importing marble from Greece and Italy, and columns and sphinxes from Egypt. Some 3,000 people lived here in some 220 buildings; there were 16 rectangular guard towers. Diocletian was born locally of parents who may have been slaves, and he worked his way up through the Roman military. He ruled as Roman emperor for twenty-one years, but decided to return to his native Dalmatia for his retirement. He was one of the few Emperors of the third and fourth centuries to die of natural causes, and the first in the history of the Empire to retire voluntarily; and he retired to Split.

Diocletian was a notorious persecutor and torturer of Christians: in Serbian mythology he is remembered not as Diocletian but as Dukljan, the adversary of God. Christianity did make progress in Dalmatia, and in c. 347 CE one of the most influential figures in Christian history was born there. This was St Jerome, who was to translate the Bible into Latin in a form, the Vulgate, that was to be standard for Christendom for a thousand years, and for Roman Catholics even longer.  The Roman and Roman Catholic status of Split thus seemed very strongly established as we walked among the ruins of Diocletian’s palace.

The ruins of Diocletian's palace.

The ruins of Diocletian’s palace.

But Slavic claims to the locality were made firmly evident by a giant modern statue, located strategically right by the Golden Gate of Diocletian’s palace. The toe of this huge statue, we discovered, is well worn, because rubbing it brings good luck.

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The figure represented below is Gregor Ninski: he’s holding a book with one hand, and making a defiant gesture with the other. He was a bishop who conducted Catholic church services in the Croatian language, rather than in Latin, following an Assembly in the year 926.

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The earlier Croats had accepted the authority of the Byzantine empire, governed from Constantinople, but under Charlemagne, who was crowned Holy Roman Emperor at Rome in 800, they were intensively exposed to Roman Catholic Christianity; there were mass baptisms in the ninth century. Croatia today is still predominantly Roman Catholic (88 %); 4.4% of Croatians are Serbian Orthodox, with 5.2% unaffiliated.

Catholics will know that Roman Catholics had to wait a long time to hear mass celebrated in their own, native languages: until the 1960s, in fact, and Vatican II. So this was a precocious bid by Gregory of Nin to let Croatians have their own liturgical language, and of course, Rome did not approve. Gregor also wanted to weaken ties with Rome, to establish a church governed chiefly by local Croatian bishops, and to make the archbishopric of Split the effective center of religious authority. He celebrated mass in the local language, and also advocated married clergy and opposed the Roman alphabet, preferring the use of Glagolica, the local script (the term comes from the verb glagoliti, which means ‘to speak’).

Glagolitic script is first associated with the saints Cyril and Methodius from the Greek city of Thessaloniki. They were sent south by the Emperor of Byzantium in 862 to make converts to Greek Orthodox Christianity among Slavs. Some of their followers traveled further, into Dalmatian and Croatia—where their script, Glagolitic, was adopted and slightly modified. It was this script that Gregory of Nin wanted to substitute for the usual Latin of the Roman Catholic church. What’s amazing is that eventually this was allowed to happen: not in Gregory’s lifetime, but 300 years later. It was in the year 1248 that Pope Innocent IV gave the Croats of southern Dalmatia the unique privilege of using their own preferred script and liturgical language for the Roman Catholic rite—and eventually, this privilege spread right along the coast. Some of the Glagolitic missals or liturgical books were even produced in Rome. This is something that the papacy really did not allow anywhere else before Vatican II, in the 1960s. This is why Gregory of Nin is revered as a pro-typical nationalist leader of the Croatian people.

I think, then, that the placing of that statue of Gregory of Nin by the Golden Gate of Diocletian’s palace, at Split, was a piece of genius. It says, yes, the heritage of Rome forms a vital part of our identity, and we are pleased to acknowledge our local Roman emperor, who grew up right here. But we are also Catholic Slavs who won the right, long before any other nation in Roman Catholic Europe, to worship on our own terms, in our own language: we have written our own history in our own language in a script that we invented.

We had thus seen and learned a great deal on our first full day. We were very happy to gather as a group of Penn alums for cocktails in the beautiful evening light, after visiting Kotar, and then to have dinner together.

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Penn Alumni with faculty host Professor David Wallace.

Our explorations  at Split helped us make sense of everything seen later in the cruise. The further south we sailed, we realized, the more Mediterranean and easy-going things felt, and the more observantly religious. Locals along the way told us that, yes, they might well cheer for the Croatian football team (which had recently beaten Serbia), but that life along the Dalmatian coast was very different from that in Zagreb, the capital. And since these coastal towns are back by very high, almost impenetrable mountains their life really did unfold along the coast. Thus to visit these beautiful small cities by boat was really the only way to travel, the only way to make sense of them, to experience them as people had for thousands of years.

The southernmost point of our voyage brought us to Kotor, Montenegro, a beautiful and ancient city in a proudly independent land. The cathedral of St. Tryphon is a beautiful Romanesque space, with gold-winged angels.

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Gold-winged angel in the cathedral of St. Tryphon.

Steps lead from the edge of the city upwards to a fortress, from which the flag of Montenegro proudly flies.

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It was possible to look down from this great height and spot our boat in the bay, tiny in the distance.

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View of Kotor, Montenegro.

We arrived at Dubrovnik, for many centuries known as Ragusa, late on the same evening: it was possible to go ashore and explore the city by night. I went ashore with Penn alum (and west Philadelphia native) Bob Tollen, and his wife, Bryn Mawr alumna, Ellen. The polished marble of the streets was illuminated by the streetlights, giving the romantic effect of water. We made the formal tour the following day.

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At some of our stops the locals told us of rather panicked preparations for EU membership: such as the cutting down of woodland and the planting of vines, before the EU forbade or put a quota on wine production. On the journey back west, between coastal towns, there was a remarkably informative “village meeting,” in which three locals spoke of recent history and speculated on the future. It was noticeable that the older two speakers were nervous about joining the EU, but the youngest of them, a teacher, seemed more optimistic; and his pupils, too, he said, were more excited than alarmed. Croatians are clearly worried about losing measures of protection for their traditional industries, such as shipbuilding. But the clearest demonstration of entrepreneurial spirit was shown by young girls at Rovinj, our last port of call, who were selling spectacular sea shells they had collected themselves; they must have been about eight years old.

All the Penn alums showed great loyalty in coming to my last lecture—given at 9:15 PM, after the captain’s farewell banquet. I tried to help us imagine what it might mean to approach Venice as travelers from the past, hoping for the right wind, knowing that if we made it back we would achieve great prestige in our communities: for not all travelers who headed east from Venice were expected to return, and those who intended to sail had to settle their affairs before leaving home. I proposed the music used by  Viscont in his film of Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice as appropriate for heralding our arrival: the adagio from Mahler’s fifth symphony.  And I ended with a collective pop quiz on everything learned over the last week, in lectures and from local guides.  I threatened to have the captain turn the boat around should the alums flunk this test, but they passed with flying colors.  The weather finally turned cloudy and cooler, but we arrived safely and our marvelous journey along the Dalmatian coast was at an end. When stories about Croatia began appearing the following week, as it joined the European Union on July 1st, we all felt able to empathize with its hopes and fears. And we know that, whatever the future holds, they are blessed with coastal towns of ancient pedigree and stunning beauty: even washing on a clothes line looks poetic:

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[Penn Alumni Travel will be heading back to the Dalmatian Coast and the Adriatic Sea next year. Click here for more information about our Adriatic Antiquities cruise (June 26-July 9, 2014) with Classics Professor Ralph Rosen. Professor David Wallace will also be joining us next year as a faculty host on the tour, In the Wake of the Vikings (June 13-21, 2014).]

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Penn Alumni Travel: Italian Inspirations

Author: Professor Michael Gamer, Penn Department of English

All roads may lead to Rome, but ours this spring instead took that ancient city as our starting point — perhaps because the Penn Alumni Travel Italian Inspirations tour went not by land but by sea. After an overnight stay amidst Romans celebrating independence day (the Festa della Liberazione), we took the train to Civitavecchia and boarded the Riviera, operated by Oceania cruise lines. This was no Carnival Cruise. The Riviera was medium-sized and elegant, its passengers primarily alumni groups like our own.

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Of the twenty-two schools represented on the cruise, only Penn and UCLA sent host professors, which made our groups (at times) objects of envy — at least so my co-travelers were kind enough to tell me ;-). Joking aside, I will say that, as a lecturer, I have never spoken to such large groups before. The ship’s main auditorium seated six to seven hundred people, and while speaking about the Grand Tour and its history I found fewer empty seats than I anticipated.

Indeed, in our way we were doing our own Grand Tour. Although at a much faster pace (seven days instead of seven or even seventeen months) and taking a somewhat different route from those taken by travelers 200-400 years ago. Rather than beginning in Milan and heading south before circling back to Venice, our tour engaged in something closer to Lord Byron’s travels of 1809-10, when all of Europe was either at war or under the dominion of Napoleon Bonaparte. Byron, therefore, was forced to do most of his traveling by sea, hopping around the Mediterranean from port to port, gathering antiquities and swimming whenever possible. He was engaging in a time-honored tradition by doing so; since the ancient Phoenicians, the Mediterranean has been southern Europe’s freeway, traveling by sea always an easier proposition than traveling by land.

In our case, we headed from Rome south to Sorrento, where some of us saw Mount Vesuvius and others Pompeii before sampling the local limoncello and watching the sun set over Capri. By the time we awakened the next morning, we were nearing Taormina on the island of Sicily, home of that other great Italian volcano, Mount Etna, pictured here in the background of Taormina’s beautiful amphitheater:

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Some of you reading this post will have traveled by cruise ship before. I had not — and there is something magical about waking up to find yourself in a new place. In our case, days three and four found us arrived at the islands of Zakynthos and Corfu, respectively, followed in the course of the week by the stunning cities of Dubrovnik and Venice, where we disembarked for good. Though I have traveled many times in Italy, these Greek and Croatian stops were entirely new to me, and a real pleasure. They possess a color palate unlike Italy, something at once stripped down and sparkling. There is something at once stark and beautiful about the coastline and buildings, the contrast of blue water next to white cliffs and houses.

Zakynthos 1

Zakynthos 2

Of course, nothing quite ever can prepare you for Venice, whether you’ve been there a hundred times or never. After six days of superb touring, that final day we all scattered to wander this wonderful city on our own. Some of us to San Marco; others to the Accademia, the Guggenheim, and other museums; and still others just wandering the narrow calle, trying to get lost. And, so far as I know, none of us quite felt moved enough to copy Byron’s exploit of swimming through the canals.

Venice

I will confess, though, that for me all roads did end up leading back to Rome: after saying goodbye to my fellow Penn Alumni Travelers I spent a few days there, soaking up the sun, revisiting old sites and taking in new ones. I can hardly wait to return in October 2014 — this time touring overland with the Flavors of Tuscany tour in October 2014. Hope to see you there!

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Penn Alumni Travel: Southwest National Parks

Author: Howard S. Freedlander, C‘67

A first-time trip to the Southwest National Parks with Penn Alumni Travel scored an A+ for my wife Liz and me. We came away, like so many others, simply awed by the natural wonders that daily greeted us and our group of 24 fellow travelers.

Portrait of the Author on his tour of the Southwest National Parks

Portrait of the Author on his tour of the Southwest National Parks

The sights and vantage points were overpowering at times—beginning with the incredible Grand Canyon and ending with the scenic, people-friendly Zion National Park. Liz and I discovered quickly that nothing we saw and experienced had any reference point to anything we knew on the East Coast. Certainly not the flat, waterway-dominated Eastern Shore of Maryland, where we live.

Never having gone on an organized tour, we were very impressed with Orbridge, the Seattle-based tour operator mainly serving alumni groups. I was amused when Derek Lundgren, the tour director, deliberately commented about Penn versus Penn State—and the wide difference between the two, as quickly asserted by me; he got the reaction he wanted. He was superb in communicating clearly and often with our group as we traveled from one site to another on a comfortable bus (or “coach” in tour talk).

My impressions, dutifully chronicled daily, provided a focus for me as I observed our nation’s truly incredible national parks, formed and re-reformed over millions of years. Suffice it to say that the force of nature left an indelible mark, enabling me to understand the need to preserve these natural wonders as best as humans can. Credit must go to Orbridge’s Amy Sheppard, assistant tour director, a constant source of geological, flora and fauna information during our nine days in the parks.

We started our adventure from Las Vegas, NV. Apart from the logistical necessity of using Las Vegas as a starting and end point, I think the artificial, hedonistic quality of this gambling mecca provided a start contrast to the solid realness of the Grand Canyon. See the awful before the awesome? Maybe. Standing at Lake Powell Point at sunset, we could marvel at the mélange of colors on the rock formations. If you let your imagination go wild, you could see natural mansions, chimneys and sculptures.

The Las Vegas Strip

The Las Vegas Strip

One of my favorite activities was rafting down the calm, soothing Colorado River, embarking from the Glen Canyon Dam. It seemed unreal to view the red-tinted sandstone walls, ranging in height from 700 to 1,400 feet, wondering about slowly tumbling rock. Construction of the dam in the 1960s was controversial then and still is; while interrupting the normal flow of the Colorado River, it also provides absolutely essential water to Phoenix, AZ and San Diego, CA. The tension between human needs and environmental purity is ever-present, in the West and the East.

The Grand Canyon

The Grand Canyon

Time spent on the Navajo Reservation, visiting the striking Antelope Canyon Slot, the Navajo National Monument and Monument Valley (scene of several John Ford-produced movies featuring the iconic John Wayne), left me wanting to know more about the Navajo culture. Talks by two Navajo Native Americans, a woman and man, prompted me to think about the third-world nature of the living conditions of the reservation. We learned about the tension between the young and the old, the former seeking more economic development on the reservation and the latter determined to preserve the native culture.

Antelope Slot Canyon

Antelope Slot Canyon

In visiting Arches National Park in Utah, I became more aware of the changing environmental terrain as we continued on our Canyonlands tour. Viewing the arches, I realized that years of erosion may demolish the arches we saw, while creating others. I also was struck by the impact of tourism on this part of the United States—I counted three, maybe four tour buses. Yes, we too were “bus” people.

As we learned repeatedly, the Colorado River has played a major role in the area’s geological history, slicing through an uplifted plateau and changing the landscape over millions of years through its power and the sediment it carries. The influence of the Colorado River and its ecological balance, affected by dams, cannot be overstated. Like the Chesapeake Bay in our part of the country, it seems to be the throbbing heartbeat of the West.

My favorite resting place was the Red Cliffs Lodge in Moab, UT. It was just so comfortable and welcoming, offering wonderful views of the cliffs and river.

Our last two stops on our intensive tour were Bryce National Park and Zion National Park. Derek said he saved the best for the last. Perhaps he was right. The fractured cliffs at Bryce were magnificent, offering incomparable views and vantage points for us shutterbugs. The canyon, actually an amphitheater, was wondrous in its carved formations, reminiscent of China’s terra-cotta soldiers.

Bryce National Park

Bryce National Park

Nothing we had seen so far prepared us for Zion National Park, not because of its beauty and grandeur but instead because of its accessibility and people-friendly nature. You had to adjust your expectations and appreciate the slowly moving Virgin River, the wet cliffs and its hanging gardens and the serene walkway along the river. There were no “oohs and ahs” in Zion—simply an opportunity to sample and touch a national park.

Did I say anything about the weather? It was wonderful. And when it was hot, it was not excessively so.

Did I say anything about the group members? They were fun and funny, intelligent and inquisitive. And these well-traveled members seemed to have a similar motivation: after seeing the world, it was time to see a fascinating part of the United States.

Also—I can’t help myself—I discovered two Penn alumni, Marjorie Kitchell, class of 1964, and Dr. Art Brown, class of 1966. Marjorie joined the tour as a Case Western Law School alumna, while Art joined it through Temple, which his wife Debby attended. Another tour member, Dr. Ed Miller, did his internship and residency at the Penn Medical Center. And Liz and Robert Barone were the proud parents of a Penn 1998 graduate.

At our farewell dinner in Las Vegas, Marjorie Kitchell spoke eloquently about democracy and the openness of state and federal parks to all people, regardless of their economic status. She talked not only about the American but foreign visitors as well to the parks which we visited, able to enjoy the vistas and grandeur of the Southwest National Parks.

Marjorie’s message was compelling.

[Penn Alumni Travel will be visiting northern National Parks in 2014–Yellowstone, the Grand Tetons, and Mount Rushmore, among others. To view information about this tour or any of our 2014 destinations, click here. All photos in this blog were taken by Howard Freedlander.]

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Penn Alumni Travel: The Waterways of Holland & Belgium

Author: Professor Simon Richter (Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures)

Seven days below sea level—and we hardly got wet! Fifteen Penn alumni and friends joined me on the M.S. AmaLyra for a river-based tour of the major waterways and a sprinkling of medieval and Golden Age cities and towns of the Netherlands and Belgium. With the exception of a very wet day in Antwerp, the weather gods were unusually kind to us, but not perhaps without exacting a price. What that price was, I’ll reveal at the end of this blog. If you were with me on the tour, you know what I’m talking about.

Penn Alumni at the Keukenhof Gardens

Penn Alumni at the Keukenhof Gardens

One of the points that the tour through the Low Countries drives home is that culture and geography are inextricably linked. So much of the Dutch mentality is based on centuries long experience with the threat of water inundation, the boon of maritime trade, the engineering successes that claimed arable and habitable land from the sea, and the memory of fatal flooding. From a promontory (if you can call it that!) in the city of Nijmegen, we saw where the Waal River, a tributary of the Rhine, has a dangerous crook in it, which invariably leads to flooding in the old part of the city when the river is high. Our guide told us about the Dutch “Room for the River” project, which restores flood plains and creates additional channels in order to ease the annual and increasing threat of high waters. In Zeeland on the artificial island of Neeltje Jans, we saw that impressive monument of engineering, the Eastern Scheldt Storm Surge Barrier, part of the Delta Works. The amazing thing about this barrier is that it only closes in the event of high water associated with a major storm. The fishing industry and the ecology of the delta were not destroyed. In Kinderdijk we went inside a still functioning windmill, one of many arrayed along the dike that enclosed the Alblasserwaard and worked constantly in order to keep the polder dry. In Amsterdam and in Bruges we got onto boats specially designed for tours of the canal networks. In Antwerp we moored right by the old city and in Arnhem we could see “the bridge too far,” where Allied troops died in an attempt to penetrate beyond the Rhine. Water, water everywhere!

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Our Gohagan tour manager was Wim, a tall (who isn’t tall in the Netherlands?!), well read and sardonic individual. He had a knack of interweaving deep cultural and historical insight with quirky confessional accounts about his own occasional bad behavior. In Nijmegen he took a group of Wisconsin alums into a coffee shop to chat with the proprietor and discuss the product! Wim was laidback and very competent—a rare and pleasant combination. As we were shuttled on a bus through a riparian landscape he explained the Dutch culture of tolerance through an allegory of the dikes. There are always two dikes along a river, the summer dike and the winter dike. If the water is behaving it stays within the confines of the summer dike. If it gets unruly it may flow over the summer dike but be held in check by the winter dike. If the range between the summer dikes is lawful behavior, then flowing over into the space between the winter and summer dikes is a matter of tolerance—for recreational drug use, for prostitution, for euthanasia. Not legal, but tolerated up to a point. Cross the winter dike and you have a catastrophe on your hands. Break the law past the limit of what is tolerated and you go to prison.

The Delta Water Works in the Netherlands

The Delta Water Works in the Netherlands

For my part, I was captivated by the raging debate in Dutch society about the song that had been commissioned for the inauguration of the new Dutch king, William Alexander. The Dutch said that the song had been “poldered.” What they meant was this: the Dutch take pride in their level society, where ostentatious wealth and stratified social difference are avoided at all cost. Society is like a polder. People have to work together, without regard for difference, like the pumps and the Delta Works system that keep so much of the Netherlands dry. An unfortunate side effect, however, is that this sometimes means playing to the lowest denominator or being inclusive—of styles of music, means of expression, types of voice and demographic variety—at the cost of aesthetic value. A vocal minority abhorred the song. It sounded like a bad Walt Disney anthem. But William Alexander took the controversy in stride. Like his mother Queen Beatrix before him, he too will be driven around not in a Rolls, a Bentley or a Daimler-Benz. He’ll be satisfied with his Ford.

Is water all we saw? Of course not. I have strong memories of the newly opened Rijksmuseum and the brilliant Dutch master paintings we saw there. The next day we were in the Kröller-Müller Museum, a little known, out of the way gem, with an amazing and large Van Gogh collection. One of the highlights for me was the day we spent in Bruges, an intact medieval city (with more than a thousand buildings constructed during the middle ages). Astonishing cityscapes everyway we looked, celebrity chocolate with funky flavors (fried onion, wasabi, cannabis!), and a lovely luncheon with five of the wonderful Penn alums. The Belgian stew made with the local beer warmed us because, yes, it was cold!

Picturesque Bruges

Picturesque Bruges

And this is where the weather gods come into the picture again. Many of my fellow travelers told me the major reason for joining the tour was to see the tulips in Keukenhof. Normally they would be at their peak. But it had been a cold spring and the flowering bulbs were off by about four weeks. We did see massive beds of lilacs and daffodils and other early bloomers and there were—some consolation—many blooming tulips in the pavilions. I could sense the disappointment, but I have to say that we bore it with equanimity. Back in Amsterdam that afternoon, a number of us joined a group of younger alumni now residing in the Netherlands, members of the Dutch Penn Club, on a rooftop lounge overlooking the city, the harbor and our boat. It was the night before the inauguration and the city was awash in orange, the color of the royal house.

Just beginning to bloom: the gardens in Keukenhof.

Just beginning to bloom: the gardens in Keukenhof.

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My fellow Penn travelers were great companions. I enjoyed many long and substantive conversations about history, culture, ecology and many other topics. We also had a lot of fun. Our redoubtable Wim pulled out a Don MacLean CD as we left the Kröller-Müller Museum and fed it into the bus’s player so that we could hear MacLean’s lament for Vincent.  It took us back to the early 1970s and before long a number of us were singing “Bye, bye, Miss American Pie, took my Chevy to the levee, but the levee was dry.” Not where we were, Mr. MacLean. There wasn’t anything dry.

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(If you’re interested in learning more about Penn Alumni Travel and our 2013/14 tour schedule, please click here.)

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Penn Alumni Travel: Hugging the Coast

Author: Emilie Kretschmar LaRosa

Before I write about Penn Alumni Travel’s latest voyage along Europe’s Atlantic coast, I am excited to announce that the 2014 tour schedule—which includes trips to 6 Continents, 10 seas, and over 40 countries—has just been released. Click here to check out all 24 Penn Alumni Travel trips in 2014. We are already starting to take reservations for Antarctica, India, and the South Pacific. And, if you’re interested in Cuba, please email me at emiliek@upenn.edu to be added to a priority reservation list. We expect this tour to sell fast!

Every Penn Alumni Travel trip is a fantastic learning experience not only for the sights and historical visits, but also for the people you meet while on the tour—guides, local people, and passengers included. On a recent Penn Alumni Travel cruise along Europe’s Atlantic coast—starting from Lisbon, Portugal and ending in Honfleur, France—alumni connected with each other while exploring some of Europe’s coastal civilizations.

We started in Portugal with a quick visit to Lisbon followed by a tour of the town of Porto, home of the famous and eponymous Port wine. After a quick visit to the Palacio de Bolsa, or Stock Exchange, we spent some free-time in the Ribeira, the former harbor quarter of Porto. Beautiful bridges now span the river, one built by Gustav Eiffel and the one pictured below constructed by his student.

Porto bridge constructed by a student of Eiffel.

Porto bridge constructed by a student of Eiffel.

Portugal was followed by two stops in Spain, one to visit Santiago de Compostela and its magnificent gothic cathedral and one to visit Bilbao and the ultra-modern Guggenheim Museum. Both stops highlighted masterpieces of Western architecture separated by over 900 years of history. Santiago de Compostela’s cathedral was begun in 1075 and is, still to this day, the final destination of the legendary pilgrimage route Camino de Santiago (Way of Saint James). The symbol of St. James is a shell and, as we circled around the cathedral, I could identify the many pilgrims finishing their long journey by the shell attached to their pack. The cathedral itself is a great work of architecture and many pilgrimage churches throughout Spain and France copied its design and layout.

Penn alumni with the cathedral.

Penn alumni with the cathedral.

St. James’ shell imbedded in stone pavement.

St. James’ shell imbedded in stone pavement.

To follow Santiago de Compostela and its imposing cathedral with Bilbao and the Guggenheim was a fascinating lesson in architectural history. To compare the old medieval cathedral with the new and shiny Guggenheim is not as impossible as one might think. Both used cutting-edge design and engineering techniques at the time of their construction, both cathedral and museum stand as homages to the creative spirit of man, and both—in my estimation—have an architectural energy that is not found in classical pieces. Santiago de Compostela’s turrets twist and turn with decorative spirals and statues while the Guggenheim’s various wings undulate and twist from a central atrium. Can you see the semblance?

The Guggenheim Museum by Frank Gehry in Bilbao, Spain.

The Guggenheim Museum by Frank Gehry in Bilbao, Spain.

The cathedral at Santiago de Compostela.

The cathedral at Santiago de Compostela.

Our next stops were two Atlantic islands: Belle Ile of France and Guernsey of the United Kingdom. For me, Belle Ile was a wonderful return trip as I had spent a long weekend there as an undergraduate abroad over a decade ago. It was still as charming and belle as I had remembered. Our alumni group toured the island on a small bus before stopping in Le Palais where some lucky passengers (including myself) stumbled across a shop selling Coeur de Beurre (salted butter caramel) delicacies. Belle Ile is also known as an inspiration to artists. A number of famous painters made Belle Ile their home, including Claude Monet, John Peter Russel, Georges Clairin, Matisse, and Vasarely.

Jack, ME’56, and Joan Swope pose by the cliffs of Belle Ile. Jack was also a winner in last year’s travel photo contest!

Jack, ME’56, and Joan Swope pose by the cliffs of Belle Ile. Jack was also a winner in last year’s travel photo contest!

Les Niniches, the store where we found wonderful Coeur de Beurre cookies.

Les Niniches, the store where we found wonderful Coeur de Beurre cookies.

The island of Guernsey was our introduction to World War II history. As the only British territory to be occupied by the Germans during WWII, the island inhabitants remember the war quite vividly, even if it is only through the stories of older family members. German fortifications are scattered along the rugged coast, and one Guernsey islander has dedicated his life to amassing a gigantic collection of occupation memorabilia and artifacts. This collection has now become the German Occupation Museum which our group visited during the island tour.

German Occupation Museum

Guernsey newspaper in the German Occupation Museum

The Normandy beaches concluded our exploration of WWII history. It was perhaps the most anticipated, and certainly the most moving, of all our stops. As a student abroad, I had also visited the D-Day beaches with fellow classmates. The trip then was memorable, but not personal. None of us had experienced war or the effects of war, and WWII was, by then, distant history.

This second visit was very different. Many alumni passengers were veterans themselves, serving in the Korean and Vietnam Wars, and had a very strong and moving connection to these battle sites and the American cemetery. They had experienced war themselves, and knew firsthand the importance of honoring the fallen and those ideals for which they had given their lives. We began the day with a wonderful introductory tour led by a local French woman who had been giving tours for over fifteen years. She could still recount stories told to her by American and British WWII veterans. She also had many stories from her own family and French neighbors who lived through the occupation and surrender of the Germans.

We visited the Pointe du Hoc, Omaha Beach, and the American Cemetery. At the cemetery, we honored the fallen soldiers with a wreath-laying ceremony and then recognized those veterans among our group. It was a wonderful moment of solidarity and connection between generations: a generation that had already passed, a generation represented by our alumni group, and then my own. Sometimes it is nice to know that history can live on in the small gestures of a wreath-laying ceremony or the time spent learning about the importance of a French beach.

Our tour group listens to our local guide recount the military operation at the Pointe du Hoc.

Our tour group listens to our local guide recount the military operation at the Pointe du Hoc.

Barbed wire is commonplace on the Pointe du Hoc.

Barbed wire is commonplace on the Pointe du Hoc.

A Penn alumnus helps lay the wreath at the base of the memorial statue in the American cemetery. 9,387 American soldiers are buried here, most of whom lost their lives in the D-Day landings and ensuing operations.

A Penn alumnus helps lay the wreath at the base of the memorial statue in the American cemetery. 9,387 American soldiers are buried here, most of whom lost their lives in the D-Day landings and ensuing operations.

As always, thank you to the wonderful Penn alumni and friends who joined me on this tour. I hope we meet again and that you have many more wonderful journeys. To view all the pictures from this tour, click here.

A note to interested alumni: We are hosting another tour to the Normandy Beaches next year in honor of the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings. Join us on the Celtic Lands tour (May 28-June 7, 2014) with faculty host Rebecca Bushnell and special speaker David Eisenhower. Contact me for more information (emiliek@upenn.edu or 215-746-7442).

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Across Time and Space: Discovering Morocco with Penn Alumni Travel

Author: Thomas Max Safley, Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania

[To learn more about academic alumni tours with Penn Alumni Travel, visit our website here. To learn more about our November departure to Morocco, click here.]

From 30,000 feet in altitude, the coast of Morocco first showed itself a blue-green landmass under a red sunrise.  I might have been looking at a print by Georgia O’Keefe, so strange and familiar it seemed.  The night had been rough.  The delayed flight from winter-bound JFK and the listless service from the Royal Air Maroc crew drove me to seek refuge in sleep.  I awoke in a very different place.

As our plane descended, the image resolved itself not into O’Keefe’s stark desert, but into the verdant coastal plain outside Casablanca.  Even in February the northwestern tip of Africa showed itself lush.  Planted fields (what crops?) and pastures lapped about walled farmyards and small villages, all white from above.  The airport itself seemed small and primitive, especially in comparison to the international gateway we had departed, but the sun was warm and its light promising.  A very different place.  Just how different I would discover gradually.

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Penn alumni and friends in Morocco with Professor Thomas Max Safley. You can view all the pictures from this tour here.

Through passport-control and baggage-claim, I entered Morocco proper.  Our local guide, Sedik collected our group gradually, and, as I waited for everyone to arrive, I looked about.  The arrivals hall was modern; the ATMs were reassuring; the advertisements were familiar, if cosmopolitan in Arabic, French and English.  But the Moroccans themselves were fascinating.  They were African, Berber, Arab and European, as well as every conceivable mixture.  They spoke Berber, Arabic, French and English, as well as many languages or dialects I could not identify, a truly polyglot country.  Their dress reflected their various preferences and heritages:  men in expensive suits, hip-hop fashion and traditional djellabas; women in dress suits, tights and boots and full burqas.  What had I been expecting?

Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

A modern tour bus conveyed us comfortably, despite jetlag and culture shock, to our first destination, the capital city of Rabat.  It moved along a modern, divided highway.  I could have been anywhere, but the fascinating dissonances continued.  The farms and villages, so clean and white from above, proved to be four-square, flat-roofed, one-story, mud-brick structures of indeterminate color, fading from white into shades of brown, gray and ochre.  More people were moving across the fields on packed-earth paths, afoot or astride burros, than were travelling on the roads in vehicles.  Rest stops offered not only the usual physical comforts, but also spiritual comfort in the form of prayer rooms for Muslim devotion.  And cats everywhere.  They watched us with far more interest than did the Moroccans.

Cat sentry. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

Cat sentry. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

Domestic architecture in Rabat. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

Domestic architecture in Rabat. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

Rabat began to dispel that sense of “anywhere” modern.  True, the city has a large, contemporary district, filled with sleek office and residential buildings, up-scale shops and restaurants.  Our first hotel, La Tour Hassan, was likewise modern, with every comfort Eastern or Western travelers might need or want.  Large, elegant rooms overlooked an enclosed garden filled with palms, flowers and fountains.  Here, I got my first taste of the country’s legendary hospitality—friendly, communicative, accommodating—that would be repeated at every restaurant and hotel throughout the trip.  Yet, that sense of the 21st century could not obscure far older, timeless elements.  The modern district surrounds in a great arc Rabat’s medieval medina and the castellated Kasbah des Oudaias, which contains in turn a royal palace from the 17th century with its Andalusian gardens, there at the point where the Bou Regreg empties into the Atlantic.  Across the river lies Sale, Rabat’s no less ancient sister city, a haunt of Barbary pirates, known into the 19th century as Sale Rovers.  Inland along the river, lies the 11th-century ruin of the necropolis of Chellah, built upon the even more ancient ruin of a 3rd-century Roman settlement, Sala Colonia.  Even in the modern part of Rabat, cocks crew at dawn and the azan, the Islamic call to prayer, taken up by one muezzin after another only a bit less early, at 5:30 AM, until it rang across the city, disturbing my sleep and stalking my dreams.  I had a sense of the Ancient and Middle Ages gradually invading my safely familiar world.

Penn alumni visit the Hassan Tower in Rabat. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

Penn alumni visit the Hassan Tower in Rabat. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

Ruins at Sala Colonia. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69

Ruins at Sala Colonia. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69

Slowly we traveled back in time, via Meknes, imperial city in the 17th century under the Sultan Moulay Ismail, and Volubilis, a Roman border town.  Meknes seems to have risen and fallen with its great and ruthless ruler.  A tale connected to the Bab el Mansour gate, perhaps the town’s finest architectural gem gives us a sense of the Sultan:  When he asked the gates builder, the famous architect, el Mansour, whether he could do better, the honest man felt compelled to answer yes, whereupon the enraged ruler had him executed.  What remains of Moulay Ismail is now mostly ruins, an indication, perhaps, that his people and even his family felt compelled to neglect the memory of a man, whose reign was marked by constant warfare and indiscriminate murder.  The white pillars on either side of the gate were, not surprisingly, given the Sultan’s reputation for mayhem, plundered from the Roman city of Volubilis.  What remains of it stands not far outside Meknes, on the edge of a fertile plain, its pillars like white tree trunks rising from green fields.  Established in the 3rd century BCE as a Carthaginian trading outpost, Volubilis flourished under Roman rule, survived Berber and Arab invasions only to be abandoned in the 11th century.  Today, visitors walk through a field of tumbled stone, noting what has survived centuries of upheaval and neglect:  the extraordinary mosaic floors, the olive mills and the unmistakable bordello.  Even more imposing, however, are the reaching vistas across a barely settled plain and the extraordinary silence that presses in on all sides.  Beautiful and evocative as it is, how could Edith Wharton have described the still very much alive town of Moulay Idriss, seated white on the shoulders of a nearby mountain, the “Sacred City of Morocco,” eponymous resting place of the nation’s 9th-century founder, as “more dead and sucked back into an unintelligible past than any broken architrave of Greece or Rome”?  Cultural prejudices aside, any sense of the modern, shabby or otherwise, does not so much fall away as recede in significance.

Gateway to Meknes. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safely.

Gateway to Meknes. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safely.

In Fez it appears the invader.  Never mind the elegantly remodeled Sofitel Palais Jamai, which is as welcoming as it is comfortable, or the innumerable motorscooters that clog every street and pathway.  Here, the present becomes lost in the past, swallowed up, as if those scooters and the radios blaring Arab rap had always existed side-by-side with the beggars who huddle in their need before the gates of Al Karouine, the oldest university in the world, and with the porters and burros that supply medina and mellah.  Again, the extraordinary hospitality:  I felt always alien—out of place as well as out of time—but never unwelcome.  I recall the brief smile of welcome from a holy man (an imam?) in one of the few madrasahs open to non-believers.  I recall the open curiosity of children passing on the streets.  And I recall people selling, constantly selling, their wares at every shop front and on every street corner.  They came at me with a persistence that might have been annoying—or, in some instances, more annoying—had it not been so good-natured.  Of course, that good nature could go too far.  A rug-seller, intent upon a potential Western buyer, flung a small sample from the upper-story of a riad with the cry, “A flying carpet for Ali Baba!”  It landed on my head.  Had the carpet been larger, I’d have needed a hospital.  A glass of mint tea, well sweetened, restored both his countenance and my humor.  Neither could be lost long under the circumstances.  The tea brings to mind other senses.  Its scent recalls the extraordinary smells of the medina in Fez:  the odor of raw hides at auction in the open-air, leather market; the odor of charcoal fires and grilled meats from thousands of street vendors; the whiff of manure from the varieties of beasts of burden; the fragrances of exotic spices, many utterly unknown to me, piled artistically in the open air by spice merchants; the stench of toxic tanning baths in which laborers finished and dyed leather with their bare hands and feet.  Its color evokes others:  the green of the tiled roofs of Al Karouine amidst a cityscape of white; the reds and blues of the tiled walls in every palace and mosque; the orange of citrus trees and the purple of bouganvillia that seem to grow from every crack and crevice.  As the azan invades my dreams, so does Fez fascinate my waking mind to this day.

View of Fez. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

View of Fez. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

Moroccan shops. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

Moroccan shops. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

Beyond that still so medieval city, the modern disappears altogether into a kind of timelessness.  We journeyed over the Moyen Atlas, seeing fields of snow and herds of camels in places high and low.  We journeyed across the arid Plaine de Tamlelt, where we enjoyed the conundrum of a lunch of freshly caught and grilled trout served in a place so manifestly without water.  As we traveled, the landscape became more hostile and the lifestyle more precarious.  The villages consisted largely of one-story mud-brick structures that seemed everywhere on the verge of collapse.  Apart from herding the ubiquitous sheep, goats and camels, how could these people scratch a living from such a place?  Scratch they did, however.  Surrounding these friable yet durable huts were neighborhoods of contemporary, concrete structures, all in various stages of incompletion, most unoccupied.  Sidek explained that young men and women leave these villages for lack of education and employment opportunities to make a living in the cities of Morocco or Europe.  Yet, they never leave home in the sense that they return during their vacations to buy land and build houses—projects that can extend over decades—to which they hope eventually to retire.  Those who do not emigrate, barter and truck.  At every stop they appear, seemingly out of nowhere, surrounding the bus to sell all kinds of hand-made, sometimes quite lovely, trinkets:  camels plaited from palm fronds, jewelry polished from small fossils, scarves woven from local cotton.  On the very few dollars they earn from each sale, they somehow manage to survive.  At the far edge of the Tamlelt, the highway picks up the Wadi Ziz and follows it.  This shallow river in its deep gorge was once a great caravan route, leading from the desert into and across the mountains to the cities along the coast, a contested route as evidenced by the many ksar (fortified villages) and fortresses that mark its progress.  At the water’s edge is a lushly fertile strip, a surprising contrast to the wasteland surrounding it in all directions, that broadens eventually into the great oasis of Tafilalt.  For centuries it had offered haven to the merchants and teamsters who trafficked between the Niger River to the south and the Atlas Mountains to the north.   At the end of this oasis, and at the end of a seemingly endless day, we arrived at Erfoud on the edge of the Sahara Desert.

On the way to Erfoud and the Sahara- snow! Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

On the way to Erfoud and the Sahara- snow! Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

It seems a town in the middle of nowhere, like many other small communities in the Moroccan “out back,” but, it provides an excellent point of departure.  From Erfoud, we viewed the ruins of Sijilmassa, once a great caravanserai, one of the wealthiest cities of all Northern Africa, many times sacked and rebuilt, finally destroyed and abandoned in the 19th century.  Little of it remains now, mud-brick walls melting back into the desert sands from which they were built.  We inspected the ksar of Rissani with its warren of alleys and ruins.  We ventured to Merzouga, where camels transported us into the great erg, or dune sea, at sunset.  I say “ventured” because the road stopped well short of our destination.  We proceeded in four-wheel-drive vehicles, for which the lack of roads was no barrier.  At speeds of 40 miles per hour, I learned just how rough the reg, or stone desert can be.  Beyond Erfoud, along the “Route of 1,000 Kasbahs,” lies Ouarzazate.  A kasbah is a fortified dwelling, not unlike the fortified tower-houses of medieval Italian cities, such as San Gemignano, that housed several generations of a single clan.  Like the ksar, it is constructed entirely of sun-baked mud-bricks that dissolve eventually, if not constantly repaired and maintained.  Abandonment spells disintegration.  Hence, to preserve a material part of the Berber heritage, the government pays people to live in them, the lack of such modern conveniences as plumbing, sanitation and electricity notwithstanding.  Left alone, these structures never lose their intrinsic beauty and proportion, but quite literally recycle themselves within a generation of two.  What a stark contrast to the plastic permanence of the Hollywood sets that dot the landscape around Ouarzazate, the film capital of Morocco.  Here, American movie companies have made such blockbusters as The Mummy, Gladiator and The Kingdom of Heaven, and their structures, the most impressive of which, in my opinion, was the city of Jerusalem, have an ugly agelessness, very much at odds with indigenous construction.

Penn alumni voyage across the desert on camels. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

Penn alumni voyage across the desert on camels. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

Camel passage. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

Camel passage. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

I wonder, whether there is anything more to Ouarzazate.  We barely paused there, arriving late and leaving early.  Our road led now to Marrakech, for Westerners synonymous with Morocco itself.  Yet, before we got there, the way passed by Ait ben-Haddou and over the Haut Atlas.  Ait ben-Haddou is one of Morocco’s best-preserved ksar, a village of tightly packed kasbahs that sits blood red on the shoulder of white sandstone mountains at the bend of the Ounila valley, where palm trees and vegetable gardens border the wadi.  Achingly beautiful, it is, perhaps, one of the most spectacular sites I saw in a country filled with spectacular sites.  The Haut Atlas offer tremendous vistas across mountain ranges and into secret valleys.  The road traversed Tizi N’Tichka, a high-altitude, serpentine pass without benefit of guardrails that tests our nerves on more than one occasion.  Moroccan drivers seem to possess a kind of fatalism on the road.  Though their speeds are never reckless, their maneuvers bespeak a confidence at odds with the situation.  They seem unfazed by passing on a blind curve, between granite and the abyss.  At one point, I spied a young man, probably a shepherd, lying on his side at the edge of the road, absorbed in the show.  To each passing vehicle he waved.  Was he greeting or encouraging?

Ait ben-Haddou, a village of tightly packed kasbahs. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

Ait ben-Haddou, a village of tightly packed kasbahs. Photo by Penn alumnus Murray Sherman, GR’69.

From the high pass, the road wound down into the lush coastal plain, and we arrived at dusk in the city of Marrakech.  I got the impression that most of my companions were looking forward to our stay here.  I was.  In the minds of many, Marrakech stands for Morocco.  Indeed, the entire country was long known in the West as the Kingdom of Marrakech.  The generation that came of age in the city recognized Marrakech as a different sort of Mecca.  It is, by all accounts, Morocco’s most cosmopolitan and, according to some, most beautiful city.  But I found it Morocco’s most disappointing city.  Certainly, Marrakech has much that is sophisticated, beautiful and interesting.  No visit to Morocco would be complete without time spent there.  One can stroll the spectacular Jardin Majorelle, donated to the city and the world by Yves St. Laurent and Pierre Bergé.  There, too, one finds the Musée Berbère with its unique exempla of Berber arts and crafts.  Not to be missed are the Koutoubia Mosque with its soaring minaret and the Palais El Badii and the El Bahia Palace, evidence of the wealth and power of Moroccan sultans.  The medina with its extraordinary artisans, aggressive salesmen and bewildering passages and the souk, Djemaa El Fna, meet every expectation of Morocco.  Yet, Marrakech did not impress me the way Fez had done.  Perhaps I was tired at the end of a long journey.  I nonetheless had an irrepressible sense of the artificial or, perhaps better put, of a city acted out with Westerners in mind.  The city is real enough, as are its inhabitants.  They display what I had by now come to think of as Moroccan courtesy and hospitality, which is high praise.  Unlike Fez, however, here they seemed to me to be putting on a show.  Though there were plenty of Moroccans in the Menara, I do not recall many in the Majorelle.  I did not get the same sense of Moroccans shopping in the medina to meet their daily needs.  These shops seemed designed for the tourist trade.  The Djemaa El Fna lived up to its reputation as the busiest open-air market in all of Africa, and to call it colorful is to understate the case, but its snake charmers, monkey handlers and street musicians seemed intent upon Western custom.  Not so much a city or even a museum as a carnival.  As I write, I think this cannot be accurate.  It was a fascinating city.  Why was I not fascinated?  What did I miss?  I will have to go back.

The souk, Djemaa El-Fna. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

The souk, Djemaa El-Fna. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

The Koutoubia Mosque of Marrakech. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

The Koutoubia Mosque of Marrakech. Photo by Professor Thomas Max Safley.

Of Casablanca, I have little to say.  It remains to me nothing more than a port of entry and exit.  I have no real impressions of it beyond a too sudden return to the modern.  Expansive suburbs and a high-rise center speak to the global urban experience in ways that leave no unique mark or memory.  Of course, there is Rick’s American Café, located near the harbor.  We had a meal, such as we might have eaten in any American restaurant, but in a place meant to invoke the classic movie of 1942, an American story and the American self-image.  I enjoyed myself thoroughly, as I had throughout the trip, but I suspect I was ready to go home.  And the next day I did.

[For more information about Penn Alumni Travel or to browse our upcoming tours (including our November departure to Morocco), click here. To view all the pictures from this tour, click here.]

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A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words… or a Kindle

Author: Janell Wiseley

The Third Annual Penn Alumni Photo Contest has just concluded and we have some fantastic winners.

The photo contest is open to all participants who have taken a Penn Alumni Travel trip. They may enter one photo in the following four categories: people, places, culture and nature.  Each photo is judged by its creativity and relevance to the specific category.

Grand Prize Winner and First Place, Places Category: “Reed House-Uros Islands,” by Amy Converse

Places-Reed Houses Uros Islands-Amy Converse

First Place People Category: “Father at Monastery of St. John,” by Robin Love

People-Father at Monastery of St  John Patmos Greece-Robin Love

First Place Culture Category: “Street Musician-Havana,” by Arthur Brown

Culture-Street Musicians-Arthur Brown

First Place Nature Category: “Orchids of Machu Picchu,” by Alex Converse

Nature-Orchids on Machu Picchu-Alex Converse

For more information about the photo contest visit our website. To enter the Fourth Annual Penn Alumni Travel photo contest, you can email your submission directly to me at jwiseley@upenn.edu.

Deadline for photo entries is February 28, 2014.

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A Trip to Belgium

By Sabrina Shyn, C’13

Today until April 30th, a group of Penn alumni, along with Professor Simon Richter, are visiting Belgium and the Netherlands for Penn Alumni Travel’s “River Life along the Waterways of Holland and Belgium” trip.

I spent a semester studying in Belgium last year and I loved it. Here are some photos I took in various cities in Belgium while I was there. I wish I could go back!

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The Franklin Flyers

Author: Emilie Kretschmar LaRosa

Penn Alumni Travel is launching a new program: The Franklin Flyers. The Franklin Flyers is our brand new frequent traveler program, and a way for us to show our appreciation to all our loyal Penn Alumni passengers. Now, when you travel with Penn, you automatically earn credit towards great gifts and benefits.

Official Franklin Flyer kite pin. Looks great on blazers, cardigans, camera bags, and other accessories!

Official Franklin Flyer kite pin. Looks great on blazers, cardigans, camera bags, and other accessories!

There are three levels: Silver (2-4 trips), Gold (5-7 trips), and Platinum (8 or more trips). As soon as you take your second trip with us ,you are enrolled in the Silver level and are sent a Franklin Flyer kite pin and a handy travel reading light. Each level has its own set of great travel gifts concluding with a beautiful and useful Penn Alumni Travel carry-on bag at the Platinum level.

Silver level travel reading light. We love how compact and flexible it is.

Silver level travel reading light. We love how compact and flexible it is. Join us on 2 or more trips and this could be yours!

The perfect travel bag. Platinum level Franklin Flyers will benefit from this great carry-on tote.

The perfect travel bag. Platinum level Franklin Flyers will benefit from this great carry-on tote.

You can also earn rewards by referring friends to our program. If a referred friend ends up taking one of our fantastic tours, the referrer earns a $100 credit towards a future trip and the friend earns a $50 credit. Not a bad deal!

With so many travel options available today, we truly appreciate the support of our alumni who continue to book our trips year after year. One of the most special things about a Penn Alumni Travel trip is the people you’ll meet. The camaraderie of Penn alumni coming together and exploring the world is unique and special, and I hope the Franklin Flyers will encourage more people to join us. The year’s not over. You can still book a 2013 tour with us, and soon we will be announcing our 2014 schedule.  A little sneak peak for all you bloggers- 2014 will include trips to:

  • Cuba – January 2014
  • Antarctica – February 2014
  • The Galapagos – September 2014
  • Myanmar – November 2014
  • And 20 other fantastic destinations! Stay tuned to our website and e-newsletter for details.

If you’re interested in any of the trips above, shoot me an email at emiliek@upenn.edu and we’ll add you to a priority mailing list.

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Explore the World at Home

Author: Emilie Kretschmar

Penn Alumni Travel is now offering travel webinars on specific countries and destinations across the world. This winter and spring, you can learn about Morocco, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Italy from the comfort of your own home. Each webinar is hosted by a Penn professor who is also leading one of our 2013 educational tours. This is a great opportunity for past, present, and future Penn alumni travelers to learn about some of our beautiful destinations.

We began our travel series last month with a discussion about the varied landscapes of Morocco (if you missed it, don’t worry! You can still catch a recording here). Professor Tom Safley of Penn’s history department presented an overview of the history, culture, and topography of this Northern African country. Each webinar is followed by a  Q&A session so, when you join us for our next travel webinar, bring your questions. Professor Safley and 25 lucky Penn alumni left for Morocco on Saturday and are due to return next week. Look for a blog about their adventures later this month.

You haven't missed the boat yet. We have a second departure to Morocco in November. Visit our travel website for more details.

You haven’t missed the boat yet. We have a second departure to Morocco in November. Visit our travel website for more details.

Next month, we will be offering two more travel webinars: Perspectives on Holland and Belgium and Perspectives on Italy. Professor Simon Richter of Penn’s Germanic Literatures and Languages department will discuss Holland and Belgium on March 13at noon (EST). You can register for this free webinar here. Professor Michael Gamer of the English department will discuss Italy on March 11at noon. (EST). To register for this free webinar, click here.

Dutch Windmills

Dutch Windmills

View of Venice

View of Venice

We will be adding additional travel webinars to our lineup this spring, so check our website often to take advantage of this free opportunity, or sign-up for our travel e-newsletter here.

This webinar series is but one of the many lifelong learning opportunities we offer to Penn alumni. Visit our Penn Alumni Education website for more information about events (on campus, online, and regionally) and classes. In particular, you can register for one of our Office Hours webinars where one of Penn’s dynamic faculty members presents a live and interactive discussion on a relevant topic. Join us, and continue to learn and explore with your Penn Alumni community.

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Filed under Alumnni Education, Emilie, Penn Alumni Travel, Travel