Although what follows is a is a story, I have been to all the places mentioned except Chadegan. The world is full of architectural wonders built by people from many different cultures and beliefs. We all share planet Earth.
TheDok
Matthew
There are several events that I have experienced in my life when I still know exactly where I was when they occurred. I am not describing personal matters such as my first kiss, where I met my wife, or the birth of my son. I am describing events shared by millions, and I am certain that two of these events are remembered in the same way by anyone who is reading this story and was over eight years old when they happened. These events are Neil Armstrong setting foot on the moon, and 9/11. But there is a third event that, whilst widely shared at the time, now appears to be a foot note in history.
On Christmas Eve, December 24, 1968, after a journey of almost a quarter of a million miles lasting 68 hours Apollo 8 reached the moon and went into orbit around it. As they passed close over the lunar surface, and on their ninth orbit, the astronauts transmitted a live television broadcast and, as they showed live pictures of the earth and moon, Commander Frank Borman, Command Module Pilot Jim Lovell, and Lunar Module Pilot William Anders read excerpts from The Genesis.
And Jim Lovell said
,
(the) "vast loneliness of the moon is awe inspiring, and it makes you realize just what you have back there on Earth."
At the time this was the most televised broadcast in history, and it is estimated that one billion people or a quarter of the world's population listened to the reading.
But an eight year old boy sat awestruck as if they were talking only to him. And that little boy was me.
In addition to each one of the events mentioned above, I have experienced five rare, similar, and unique occurrences; two of which are described later in this story.
1.Venice
I first met Bedisa in August 1980 when I was nineteen and on holiday In Venice.
A friend and I were staying in a campsite near Venice. As I remember it was somewhere in Fusina on the coast south of the causeway to Venice. It was not a particularly luxurious place, but it had a bar and a restaurant and clean showers and toilets, and for two teenagers that was enough.
That evening we had gone to sleep in our sleeping bags when the wind which had been increasing IN intensity over the last few hours started to cause the front flaps of our tent to move violently. Within half an hour the intensity increased, and it became apparent that we were in danger of losing our tent to the wind and we hurriedly dressed and reluctantly struck camp. And as we did, sheets of rain started to fall drive almost horizontally into our faces.
We quickly climbed into our old battered old car. David lay in the back on his sleeping bag which somehow he had managed to keep dry, He was a short guy and he appeared quite comfortable and despite the storm he was soon asleep. I on the other hand am six feet four inches tall and found it difficult to sleep in the cramped front seat.
Outside the car in the dark, I could see people with torches scurrying around desperately trying to stop their tents blowing away in the wind. In the far distance, about four hundred yards across the field, the lights of the bar flickered on, and I realised the campsite management were providing a place of sanctuary for those stuck outside with no shelter. I contemplated going there but then dismissed the idea. I did not want to get soaked through.
Suddenly I heard a tapping at the window next to me. After a moment of panic, I saw the form of a man in a raincoat gesturing to me. I rolled down the window and recognised him as the owner of a caravan that stood close by. He spoke with a French accent.
"You can't sit there all night. Why don't you and your friend join us in our caravan?"
I looked back at David, who was by then fast asleep, and replied,
"He's good thank you, but I'd like to join you if that's alright. Thank you so much."
A little later I found myself sitting at a table at the end of Professeure and Madame Le Blanc's caravan. They and their 14 year old daughter Bedisa and I drank tea as the wind blew and the caravan shook.
We spoke in English. He was a lecturer in mathematics at The University of Paris and she was an English teacher, and their English was fluent and put my schoolboy French to shame. Even Bedisa spoke passably good English having been tutored by her mother.
The professor explained to me that this storm was called the Bora and was a north easterly wind which often blew in the Adriatic sea.
After a while, the conversation turned to my plans for the future, and I proudly announced that I was starting an astrophysics course in the autumn.
After that, we started to discuss the Apollo moon landings and I explained how they had inspired me. And I described the profound effect that the Apollo 8 Christmas Eve broadcast had had on me, as the command module orbited the moon approaching to seventy miles above the lunar surface, and as Anders, Lovell, and Borman read in turn the opening verses of The Book of Genesis, and the earth rose over the moon's horizon.
And that was when my resolve to become an astronomer was born.
And sitting opposite me a gawky fourteen year old girl with braces listened attentively to everything I said. But I hardly gave her a glance.
A few hours later the winds started to lessen and soon after that the dawn broke. The campsite was devastated with trees blown over and windows in the bar broken, and everywhere tattered tents lay on the ground with all variety of objects including tent pegs and guy ropes, clothes, sleeping bags, cooking utensils, and pots and pans scattered about.
All that day we laboured to clear up the damage and in the evening the bar provided free beer as a thank you to those who had helped. David and I were happy to accept the gift and returned to our tent in the dark and half drunk.
Fortunately, we had had the foresight to put our tent back up earlier in the day and we slept until the following morning when the hot August sun made sleep impossible. And when I poked my head out of the front of the tent, the caravan with Bedisa and her parents had gone.
2. Paris
I did not think of that night again for many years.
By 1991 I had obtained my degree in Astrophysics and completed my doctorate with research into solar flares. I had become a solar astronomer and was newly employed as a lecturer.
That same year I was invited to take part in a seminar at the Paris observatory. I had given my lecture and was standing with a cup of coffee in my hand when I became aware of a young, tall, dark haired woman standing close by and trying to catch my attention.
"Thank you for an interesting talk Dr Hewitt."
And then.
"We've met before you know."
And as I looked quizzically at her.
"In a caravan in a storm in Venice. I was a little girl and you influenced me to become an astronomer. You've probably forgotten. You talked about Apollo 8 and earthrise. I'm Bedisa"
And memories of that night came flooding back.
"I remember," I said.
"How are your parents?"
"Good and still working. How long are you here for?"
"Today and tomorrow and I'm flying home the day afterwards. I've never seen Paris properly, so I thought I'd like to take the chance this time around."
"I'm sure my mum and dad would like to see you again. They still laugh about how a strange boy stranded in a storm influenced my life. Are you free this evening?"
"I've nothing planned."
"Give me a minute. Don't go away."
Then before I could reply she turned and left.
A few minutes later she returned. And as she put her phonecard back in her wallet she spoke.
"All set. Mum says 8 o'clock this evening. Don't dress up and come hungry. Here's the address."
She handed me a note.
"See you later.""
That evening I arrived at a fashionable address in the sixth arrondissement --
-
Germain- Saint des-Prés. I rang the bell, a bottle of good red wine in my hand, and Bedisa met me at the door and invited me in. For the first time I appreciated what a beautiful young woman she had become. She was tall, with dark hair and amber eyes and I thought guiltily of my girlfriend waiting at home for me. I consoled myself with the thought that there had been no suggestion of impropriety and I was not having dinner with Bedisa alone.
Bedisa showed me through to the lounge where her mother and father greeted me warmly and then I was invited to the dinner table, which was filled with dishes, many of which I had never seen or eaten before. I learnt they were Georgian in origin, and that Bedisa's mums' family originally came from Tbilisi, the capital city of Georgia.
And this explained Bedisa's unusual name.
That evening I ate dolma, khachapuri (cheese-stuffed bread), khinkali
,
(Georgian soup dumpling), skewered meats, a variety of vegetable pickles, and various pastries.