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Travel Tips, Arts and Culture Guest Contributor Travel Tips, Arts and Culture Guest Contributor

India—An Ethnic Kaleidoscope

A nation or a “Wonder World” that dazzles with color and chaos, India takes visitors on a journey of soul-stirring encounters. This country boasts a matrix of innumerable co-existing beliefs, a 5000-years old civilization, a home to some of the most colorful and vivid folklore from several ethnic groups, five seasons a year; a festival every day, a smile every second. It’s easy to realize that India is a magical paradox with modern connotations.

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Arts and Culture Fran Glaria Arts and Culture Fran Glaria

The Royal Holy Mary Cathedral of Pamplona

Gothic cathedrals such as this were built with the purpose of trying to reach God and to let the light of God embody your soul. This temple achieves this beautifully. Inside, you will find a very elegant and slender cathedral illuminated by the sunlight coming through stained-glass windows. It is almost mystical.

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Arts and Culture, GC Faves Lisa Anderson Arts and Culture, GC Faves Lisa Anderson

The Big Bench Community Project

The joy of exploring new places in good company is my idea of a good time: winding country roads where you come to a crossroads and take in the lay of the land before deciding which way to go, sometimes on a whim and sometimes with intent. The region of Piemonte in the northwest corner of Italy is the perfect place for a wanderer, and one of my favourite pastimes over the past few years is finding Big Benches. 

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Social Matters, Arts and Culture Trish Feaster Social Matters, Arts and Culture Trish Feaster

Filipino Roots and Bamboo Poles: Celebrating Asian-American/Pacific Islander Heritage Month

My mom and dad emigrated from The Philippines to the United States in the late 1960s to work as as chemists/researchers at the University of California, San Diego. A few years later, I was born in La Jolla, California. I’ve been fortunate to travel to my parents’ native land with them three times, and on our last visit, we were treated to a cultural experience that had a deep impact on me. Re-watching a video of the event recently has brought up some strong memories and feelings about my ethnic patrimony.

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Arts and Culture Charlie Rawson Arts and Culture Charlie Rawson

Held—A Poem

To begin, thank you.
Giving back to share your heart and voice.
This space has comforted us while we redefine who we are,
Where we belong, 
and find our North again.
Now we can listen to our other inner voices.

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Arts and Culture Fran Glaria Arts and Culture Fran Glaria

Puente de la Reina: A Crossroads on the Camino de Santiago

By the time pilgrims arrived in France, four different routes were clearly marked as the official ones. Those four routes merged into three and then into two before crossing the Pyrenees. They meet at the entrance of the village of Puente la Reina in Navarre, a small village that became the center of the world…or at least the center of the Christian world.

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Arts and Culture Roberto Bechi Arts and Culture Roberto Bechi

Is Rebirth Utopian?

Being a guide, I am also curious about the idea of rebirth in history. Almost everyone in the Western World studies the Italian cultural and artistic Renaissance, which of course has at its root the word for rebirth. Historians, though, do not tend to love the term, because although there is a clear cultural movement during that period, no cultural idea “dies”—nothing is reborn.

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Arts and Culture, GC Faves Ben Curtis Arts and Culture, GC Faves Ben Curtis

How to Geek Out on the Habsburgs

If you want to do a deep dive on the most important family in European history—or, heck, even if you don’t want to go fully down the rabbit hole, but do want to learn a bit more—then I’ve got some resources for you. These are a few websites, movies/tv series, and books (besides the one I wrote) that are all worth exploring. Enjoy—I’d be interested to hear if you have any favorites!

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GC Faves, Arts and Culture Ben Curtis GC Faves, Arts and Culture Ben Curtis

The Best Habsburg Palaces

You can easily imagine that the Habsburgs, as the most important family in European history, amassed some pretty amazing real estate. And who hasn’t dreamed of living in a palace, of relishing the crème-de-la-crème life of European royalty? The Habsburgs didn’t have to dream, of course, but we can all indulge our “let them eat cake” fantasies by touring the lavish homes they left behind. So let’s play “House Hunters International” with my picks for the most fabulous Habsburg palaces!

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Arts and Culture Fran Glaria Arts and Culture Fran Glaria

Saint Ignatius of Loyola

He discovered a dimension of the world that he had never noticed. He saw how his previous motivations were vain, mean, and absurd when he placed them in front of the greatness of God. Those earthly pleasures and honors, even if intense, were momentary, while spiritual ones endured. He concluded that God was giving him a new opportunity. He rethought his life and became Ignatius.

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Arts and Culture, Social Matters Susan Brown Arts and Culture, Social Matters Susan Brown

From Scotland to Serbia and Back Again

Louisa Jordan’s working career was mainly in care and nursing on the East and West of Scotland. She later enlisted with the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service in December 1914, after the start of the First World War.  She joined the first Serbian unit and looked after war wounded soldiers until the outbreak of a typhus epidemic in 1915, when she took charge of a typhus ward in Serbia.  

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Arts and Culture Jorge Roman Arts and Culture Jorge Roman

The Bells of the Basque

Imagine my fascination  when I found a store in a tiny town in the Pyrenees and saw endless cencerros in different shapes, sizes and materials. I approached the lady owner and asked her the reason for such a variety. When I heard her reply, my brain just exploded!. Not only do the shapes and materials differ, but the clappers also have a lot to do with the variation in the bells.

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Arts and Culture, GC Faves Guest Contributor Arts and Culture, GC Faves Guest Contributor

SICILY THROUGH 6 MOVIES

As a movie-lover, I always thought that one of the best ways to get to know a place and a culture (apart from traveling) is to watch movies and read books. This list of movies could be endless, so I’ve made a selection of well-known and lesser-known movies staged in Sicily.

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