blue seashell icon New!

The catalogue for the exhibition "Märchenbilder — Bildermärchen" is now available for download as e-catalogue.

» e-catalogue
(pdf, en)

» e-Katalog
(pdf, de)

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blue seashell - ornamental icon Today is World Literacy Day

de | en

International Literacy Day, proclaimed by UNESCO in 1965, is celebrated on 8 September since 1966.

Banner for World Literacy Day 2009Who assumes that the inability to be able to read and write properly is a problem of developing countries or immigrants, is very much mistaken.

Today the sum of illiterate people in Germany is estimated to be ca. four million people.

For comparison: Berlin, Germany’s largest city has ca. 3.4 million inhabitants. In other words, more people than all the inhabitants of Berlin are not able to read and write properly in Germany.

That’s quite a figure.

(Even if four million still make up only a small part of the whole population of Germany.)

And that in a time when reading and writing gets more and more important as the internet grows more and more important.

But what good can it do to blog about illiteracy (since all of us are able to read and write!). Or those nice ads on TV that encourage illiterate people to learn how to read and write—if someone is unable to read and write, how are they supposed to write down that phone number and address?

Point the first:

Today can remind us—who are lucky enough to regard being able to read and to write as nothing special—that it IS rather special to be able to read and to write. The education that has enabled us to learn how to read and how to write is special. It has taken us centuries to get to the point where that kind of education is no longer “special” in this country. In many countries, and for many groups of people in many countries, this basic education is still special. Especially girls are still being excluded from this kind of education.

To be able to read and write is special.

The fact that this ability and the opportunity to acquire this ability seems unremarkble to us is a privilege.

Now and again we should remember that.

Point the second:

There are people, and not just in distant troubled regions but right next door, who cannot read and write properly. Not necessarily because they are intellectually unable to, but because they eventually got left behind. Without additional support it was eventually too late for them to catch up.

Those people are excluded from many things and areas of life. From the job market and acquiring welfare money because you have to fill in forms for that, to the many opportunities offered by the internet, to the simple joy of reading a book, a story, or a poem.

Not exactly something to be proud of as a society, four million illiterate citiziens. Even if that still may be a sound percentage with regard to the whole population.

You can draw conclusions from that realisation.

For example, at the next election you can take a look at the educational policies of the various parties. And you can cast your vote with that in mind.

Or when you contemplate donating money for a good cause, why not for literacy? In Germany, or anywhere in the world.

Point the third:

Reading and writing are more than a useful cultural technique.

Reading and writing are forms of art. Not just skills.Real art.

Reading and writing are beautiful.

Reading and writing are fun.

I remember well how happy I was about finally learning how to read and write. To read stories, to write stories. That was one of the huge miracles of my childhood.

And such a miracle is a reason for a celebration even twentyseven years later!

Therefore:

Don’t be content with reading and writing mails for your job today, to give dictation to your secretary, to study a company report, to write a shopping list.

Today, on World Literacy Day, how about reading a poem for the first time in years?  How about writing a love letter on real paper? How about reading something to a loved one that has touched you deeply?

brown seashell ornament icon Medieval Party!

de | en

invitation to Castle RavensbergLast weekend an invitation for a birthday party from our good friend M. took us to Castle Ravensberg in the Teutoburg Forest.

A castle as such is already a very spiffy place for a birthday party, but M. had come up with something really special: a medieval party on a castle!

Therefore the guests had to appear in garb: as knights, damsels, squires, wenches, monks, thieves … or witches and wizards.

U. and I had been wanting to acquire some medieval garb for ages to appear “in style” at medieval fairs — and to maybe even look into participating in the “Society for Creative Anachronism” or take part in a Live Action Role Play.

So that was a brilliant opportunity for us to finally put those plans into action.

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Related posts:

brown seashell ornament icon Addendum: Finissage

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finissage

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brown seashell ornament icon Addendum: Museum’s Day 2009

museumstag_plakatApart from my exhibition “Märchenbilder — Bildermärchen” there was another event that kept me busy during the last few weeks: the Museum’s Day 2009.

Explanation: in my spare time I work as the manager of the Pleinfeld museum for local history and brewery. This museum takes up nearly a whole wing  and three floors with hundreds of objects of the Steward’s Mansion. The exhibits range from a wooden plough to a historical shop, from to a book of town council minutes from the 17th century to an antique Roman spear point.

The Museum’s Day is the highlight of the year for the Pleinfeld museum.

The International Museum’s Day, which is celebrated by museums around the world in the middle of May since 1977, presents a great opportunity to show that even small museums for local history have a lot to offer. And this year Pleinfeld also had an anniversary to celebrate:

160 years railway station Pleinfeld!

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photograph of 'Stephantasy'

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Wise Words

“I only believe in fire. Life. Fire. Being myself on fire I set others on fire. Never death. Fire and life.”

—  Anaïs Nin

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