So, backing up about two weeks...
I went to a bicycle race with my friend Jens. It was called Danmark Rundt, and was basically like the Tour de France, except only in Denmark. One of the legs ended in Aarhus, right by the beach, so we went down there to watch it. What I learned: bicycle races look pretty much the same in person as they do on TV. The riders whiz past and it's kind of blurry and people wave stupid things around in the air. But, kind of fun anyways.
That weekend I went to the Occupation Museum in downtown Aarhus. This museum basically looked like a bunch of old people in the town cleaned out their garages, pooled the stuff they found, wrote a couple captions, and opened a museum. Personally, I tend to like these kinds of museums, especially when they include the original old people, which this one did. However, the old man who was on duty the day I visited was either senile or hard of hearing, because, after buying my ticket and chatting with him in my heavily accented Danish, he complained to me about all the noisy American tourists that had been visiting the museum that day. The museum had a lot of artifacts from the German occupation of Denmark during WWII. The Danish government was allowed to remain power during the first two years of the occupation, making Denmark a bit different than most German occupied countires. However, the situation later deteriorated, and the Germans took power, leading to the rise of the Danish resistance in the last few years of the war. Here is a picture of some of the illegal magazines they distributed to counteract the German propaganda:
My favorite piece of propaganda from the Germans was an anti-Russian article in a Danish newspaper, with a headline that read "The Russians Eat Each Other and Burn Women and Children". Here is another really cool artifact from the Danish Resistance:
There are four pigs on the top sheet. If you fold it up correctly, you get a picture of Hitler's face, with text that says "The Fifth Pig!". There was also a big display on the bombing of my dorm, which was used as the Nazi headquarters in Aarhus. When the Nazis moved into the dorm, the local resistance realized that they had files on a lot of the resistance members, which the Nazis planned to use to arrest them. The resistance decided that the files needed to be destroyed, so they told the British to bomb the dorm. This mission was very successful and the Nazis were not able to arrest any of the resistance members. Another interesting aspect of Denmark during WWII was that the Danish people saved almost all of the Danish Jews - they saved over 99% of the country's 8000 Jews by smuggling them to Sweden. The channel between Denmark and Sweden is very narrow, only about a 45 minute journey by boat. Since Sweden was neutral during WWII, they pledged to accept any Jews who found their way there. When the Danish government got word that the Germans were planning to round up the Danish Jews and send them to concentration camps, they alerted the Jewish community and the Danes who lived along the coast close to Sweden. Danish fishermen, merchants, and even people who just owned a personal boat helped to smuggle the Jews across to Sweden every night. I've actually visited a couple places on the coast where the Jews met up with the boat owners; this occured mostly in churches.
The next couple days were pretty busy with finished up work and packing all my stuff up. My data from all my research turned out to be not quite as bad as I thought, so I was at least able to identify some data trends and write up lengthy reports. This made me feel slightly better, as the entire summer of research had not been a total fail. Then I went to the Natural History Museum on the Aarhus University campus. They mainly had exhibits about animals that live in Denmark. Here are some hedgehogs, or "pindsvin" as they as called in Denmark.
Aww, they are so cute. If you go outside at night during the summer in Denmark, you can sometimes find them in hedges (haha, how apt) or fields. They are quite docile and stupid, so you can actually pick them up! Now, for something less cute. THIS MONKEY WILL KILL YOU WHILE YOU SLEEP.
Last Thursday, I packed up my room and moved out of my dorm in Aarhus. I took the train over to Copenhagen and stayed the night with my host parents, Peter and Mona. It was so great to get to see them again this summer and it was really sad to leave because I don't know when I will make it back to Denmark to see them again. On Friday, I headed up to Roskilde (another town on the island of Sjaelland, about 45 minutes from Copenhagen). Roskilde is located on the water, in a fjord. In the 1960s, 5 sunken viking ships were found in the waters of the fjord. Researchs temperarily dammed the fjord, drained the water, and excavated the ships. Over the course of the next 20 years, they reconstructed the ships and preserved the wood. Then, they built a great museum to show them off! What is even cooler is that the museum includes a big boat building workshop, where the researchers have built exact replicas of all five ships. Last summer, the largest ship was finally finished, and the researched sailed it from Roskilde to Dublin and back to recreate a viking voyage. Here are some of the reconstructed boat ruins:
And here is the reconstructed boat that sailed to Ireland and back last summer:
That afternoon, I headed back to Copenhagen to meet up with my other host family from when I was an exchange student (I lived with two families throughout the year - this is completely normal and is just the way the exchange program worked). I was worried about this being awkward, because I was not quite as fond of them and haven't kept in touch very well over the past four years. But, it turned out fine and it was nice to chat with the for a few hours. They drove me to the airport and I flew off to Amsterdam.
When I arrived in Amsterdam, I was pretty touristed out and didn't feel like doing a lot. I wandered around a big flea market, ate ice cream, and people watched. There were tons of tourists there but not a whole lot of Americans. Apparently, I look incredibly Dutch, because many Dutch people approached me and spoke to me in Dutch, and then acted very confused when I did not understand.
Sunday I headed home to Yakima. Since then, I have been hanging out with my family and my cats, and doing all the random little things that I have to do when I go home, but which pile up because I'm home so rarely, like going to the dentist (OK, I actually love going to the dentist - they just get my teeth so clean). My head is still slightly confused about languages - this was not helped by a visit to my Danish friend in Yakima yesterday. There are couple Danish words/phrases that I find really useful but without English conversational equivalents, so I keep almost using the Danish ones. I am also having the ridiculous dreams in which people speak in Danish and then I get angry with them for tricking me because they do not, in fact, speak Danish in real life. Also, an exciting new haircut! This brings me to new heights of hair laziness - instead of spending 2 minutes to fix my hair in the morning, I now spend 1 minute. It's great.
On the schedule for next week: a visit to Salt Lake City to visit my good friends Max and Chris, and a trip to Vancouver Island, Canada, to go camping with my family.
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