Back to Helsinki

That’s me on a ferry on the way back to Helsinki. I can’t even describe how happy I felt after these three days in Estonia!

Back To Tallinn

We returned to Tallinn at 8 PM and had a very late dinner at Pepper Sack:

I took the outside photo the next day, at daylight
Moose meatballs
Apple and raisin cinnamon crepes
Sorbet boat
The Holland-style Townhall photo
Continue reading “Back To Tallinn”

Narva

Narva is a border city, and nowadays, this border does not look peaceful. People who compare Tallinn and Narva might consider the latter one “depressed,” but that’s only if they never saw Ivangorod, a Russian city on the other side of the bridge. Boris saw both because he crossed this border a couple of times, and he says the contrast is striking.

You can see people on the bridge crossing by feet, or rather standing waiting in line at that point.

I took this picture when we visited the Narva Fortress. We had some time before the train back to Tallinn, and we went there. it turned out that there was some special occasion: they were reopening the city museum after some remodeling, so there was a ribbon cutting, official speeches, and TW news, We didn’t have enough time to see the museum, so we just walked around and saw the outdoor exhibit.

The exhibit showing the devastating effect of the Soviet “liberation” of Narva

I want to see more of that fortress, and I want to visit this museum and dine in their restaurant. I will come back!

Meanwhile In Chicago

I am still on my vacation (for two more days), but today, I am recalling my escorting shift on June 15. It was early morning, and only our shift lead and I were there. Our shift lead brought some food for those who didn’t have time to have breakfast at home, as she always does, and as always, the food was inside the lobby.

We just got outside when a young Latinex man approached us and started to ask about something. It took us a couple of minutes until we realized that he was asking whether we had any food. B. (our shift lead) asked: do you want a banana? He nodded, and she rushed inside. I saw her putting together a parcel with bananas and bagels, adding some cream -cheese to bagels and adding more bagels. When she finally emerged and handed the parcel to a young man, he burst into “thank you” and “god bless you.”

B. and I started to talk about Venezuelans who had been kicked out of the shelters just before that. She talked about their wounded dignity and how men can’t stand the situation when women find work, and they don’t. I keep wondering what happened with the promise to issue work permits for Venezuelans. We have enough open positions in the Department of Streets and Sanitation or on CTA. Why not let people work, make money, and make the city cleaner? That’s what I thought when Biden announced the path to citizenship. I mean, it’s all great, but that will be “sometime,” and what about now? Why are they not allowed to work?! I can’t understand that…

Narva-Joesuu

The pine forest was very much like I remembered it, but it looks way healthier now that there are fewer people wandering around.

I also found the house where we rented the rooms for summer! I remembered the address, and I went right there, and I saw the roof of the house from the far, and I couldn’t believe it was that house, but it was! There are just a couple of houses on that street that were not replaced by the new ones sometime within these 50+ years, and that house was one of them!

Continue reading “Narva-Joesuu”

Mission Accomplished

I didn’t talk much about the main goal of my current trip because it sounded so unrealistic that I didn’t want to jink it. I still can’t believe that I did it! Here is how yesterday went.

We grabbed our brown bag breakfast at reception at 6 AM, went to the railway station, and boarded the 6-46 AM train to Narva. Although I researched in advance what bus we should take and when it was scheduled to depart, we managed to take the wrong bus and ended up in the wrong place. Thankfully, Estonia is small, and you can’t go too far! We were able to hire a private driver who got us to the right place, and shortly after 11 AM, we were at Narva-Joesuu, where I spent three amazing summers when I was a child!

My most important goal was to find the grave of my great-grandfather (the father of Baba Fania, Baba Grunia, and Uncle Misha). He died while vacationing there, and Baba Fania used to take me to his gravesite. I felt like for the past forty years, nobody ever gave a thought to his grave left behind in a foreign country. I mean, I do not feel super-obligated to attend to all the graves of the relatives I never even talked to, but if you care about the ancestors’ graves in general, I would imagine you should be concerned. Anyway, I felt I should at least try. I had nothing but childhood memories of how the place should look like fifty-three years ago, and even though the cemetery is small, it’s not that small – it has been continuously operating, at least since the end of the nineteenth century.

My first walk-thought didn’t yield any result – I remembered the memorial being sort of standing up above the other graves around it. I also remembered it being on the hill and being very light grey. On my second pass, I started almost from the entrance, trying to remember the general direction and adjusting the distances and size to the seven-year-old me. And then I got a feeling. I turned slightly left and back and saw the surrounding chains, and I knew that was it! I was sure the memorial sign didn’t survive – I passed multiple graves with no name on them, but even if there wasn’t a sign, I knew. And then I walked around it, and the sign was there!

Boris waited for me in the main alley, and I ran all across the cemetery to tell him that I found the grave! We walked back together. Unfortunately, there was no service point at the cemetery. I talked to the old couple who were visiting a nearby grave. The husband remembered the last name Levitin, but he said he used to be friends with “a younger guy.” That could be only Uncle Misha, but the name didn’t ring a bell to him. They didn’t share any contact information, so I just asked them to take a look at David Solomonovish’s grave when they came to visit his mother’s grave. Her name sounded somewhat familiar to me as well, but I also can’t put a finger on it. I copied the contact information of the cemetery administration from the board at the entrance, and I will try to arrange some care for the gravesite.

And I found a wild strawberry in the forest by the cemetery – just like I did when I was a child!

To be continued

Hello Tallinn!

I booked a suite in one of the Old Town hotels hoping for a Medieval experience, and it was an experience indeed! The location is amazing, and it worked perfectly for everything we planned, including a very early train to Narvs this morning. But the suite itself was an adventure (and for the record, it was the most expensive suite in the hotel.

Here is how you enter:

It was a complete darkness when we entered, and it took us quite a while to find the main switch.

Just picture what it would take to climb this kind of stairs, and even worse at night!
And no, I do not like this level of Medievalness!
The hotel courtyard

The city is still magical, and maybe more than ever 🙂

The hotel breakfast didn’t open until 7 AM, and we had to take a 6-46 train. We asked the reception, and they had brown bags for us with sandwiches, fruit, and water. It ended up being even more useful than I originally thought because the trip didn’t go smooth 🙂

To be continuied.

On A Ferry To Tallinn

There are a lot of first-times on that trip. Believe it or not, but out of my dozens of visits to Tallinn throughout my entire life, that’s the first time I have stayed there overnight. And because of that, it’s the first time I am not taking the early morning ferry and have not a breakfast buffet, but a lunch/dinner buffet. We boarded early enough to be able to secure a table by a front window, but since these tables are in the form of segments, it is inconvenient to sit by the window together – we would be too far from each other. Boris strategically put our belongings at the sharp end of a segment, and that way, nobody tried to sit at the same table – hurray!

FYI – the caviar is artificial

So we ate and talked and booked our trip to Athens. I decided that I would go to Athens regardless of whether my talk would be accepted. If not, it will be a vacation. I still have at least ten unused vacation days!

Biking In Helsinki

We biked to Ikea yesterday, using a new route that Boris found instead of the one that is half in an under-construction zone. As usual, biking in Finland is amazing, and I can’t stop admiring its convenience and safety. The big portion of the route was through the forest and meadows, with the smell of the blooming flowers and the sounds of the birds chirping following us.

Ikea was just a destination, not like we needed anything specific (although I got some non-essential things, can you avoid it?). And we had lunch there. I do not know anything about other Ikea stores in their native territory, but this particular Ikea in Espoo never spoke any language other than Finnish, so I always struggled to communicate with the staff, including the restaurant. Boris had to utilize his Finnish 🙂

Another Morning Biking

Sunday morning