|
Moving to Geneva

It's exciting
to visit a country or city you've never seen before.
It's something
else entirely to take a job in a city you've never visited, and
move there sight unseen: exciting, but nerve-wracking also.
I was lucky;
the new position I've taken up at the United Nations is in Geneva,
which has proved a lovely place to move to indeed. Apparently I've
arrived the year before the bicentennial of Geneva's joining the
Swiss Confederation! And arriving a week before I was due at the
office gave me plenty of time to begin exploring the city.

Everywhere you
walk here, the mountains are always visible in the distance: the
Jura chain on one side, and the Alps on the other.
Switzerland
has four official languages: German, French, Italian, and Romansh.
Terms used by locals, and not usually used outside of Switzerland,
are known as Helvetisms. Apparently some of these words have been
borrowed by others over the years, and heimweh, or homesickness
(in German) is one of them, first used by Swiss soldiers posted
far afield.
An interesting
new word for me was bise, which the Oxford English Dictionary defines
as: "A keen, dry N or NNE, wind, prevalent in Switzerland and
the neighbouring parts of France, Germany, and Italy."
I felt this
wind for the first time the other day, and I could see its rippling
effects on the lake, which is otherwise usually clear as glass.

But what does
the word Alps actually mean? According to the Online Etymology Dictionary,
the word is derived from Celtic, through French, as a word for high
mountains, possibly stemming from *alb (hill). Apparently, strictly
speaking, the word alp refers to the summertime grazing pastures
in the regions below the glaciers -- not the peaks themselves!
I haven't had
a chance to visit the mountains yet, but while apartment hunting,
came across an artist called Jean-Etienne Liotard. All the street
names here have brief descriptions telling you who the streets were
named for, which is very handy and interesting. Later, I looked
up Liotard and learned that he was an artist and art dealer from
the 18th century. Apparently he visited Constantinople and painted
domestic Turkish scenes, as well as adopting Turkish dress even
when back in Europe. Other artists and writers have done this, too,
including Lord Byron - who also spent time in Geneva. The summer
that he lived here, with Percy Shelley, and Mary Wollstonecraft
Godwin, Godwin wrote Frankenstein and Byron worked on a number of
poems, including "The Prisoner of Chillon", inspired by
a castle fortress on Lake Geneva/Leman.
I also saw a
sign on a building near my apartment-hotel stating that Dostoyevsky
had lived there for a year in 1867-1868, something I hadn't known
before. And Tolstoy used to visit cousins at the Villa Bocage in
the Ariana Park on the United Nations grounds. That's of course
without mentioning some of Geneva's own famous residents, such as
John Calvin and Jean Jacques Rousseau.

Ariana Park
is situated on land that was originally owned by the Revilliod de
Rive family, whose last descendant bequeathed it to the City of
Geneva. One of the conditions was that peacocks should roam freely
on its grounds. Apparently most of the birds there today were donated
from a zoo in Japan and gifted by the Permanent Mission of India
to the United Nations. Their calls can be heard throughout the park.
I'm looking
forward to exploring everything else Geneva and Switzerland has
to offer, especially in the summertime!
May-June 2014
Old Articles
by Deniz B. Bevan:
Salon Moov
Jujubes
Shakespeare in the Park
Chicago
Château Ramezay
Walking In Old Montreal
My First Novel
Istanbul Sapphire
Pâté or Pouding Chômeur
An Expression
Ice Apple Wine
Montreal Is An Island
Haiku
Lavender Fields
Exotic Fruit
Ideas for Your 'Staycation'
Istanbul: I Only Have Two Days To See Everything!
Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Bladeby
Diana Gabaldon
Approaching Ireland by ferry...
Just Plain Nesin
|