The Ciutat Vella, the old bit of Barcelona, its core, is fast becoming its bete boire too. Often in the news, usually negatively, because of robberies, residents' protests, noise and the disgusting state of its streets, it's now hitting the headlines in a positive way. The Town Hall want to make it a referent for culture and good taste. Bravo. An admirable concept even though it's a bit of a turn-around.
According to La Vanguardia, the mayor and the president went down there last week checking on the status quo - though it seems they didn't seem to notice a lot. I mean if they can't see a man peeing all over the pavement as they walk past what chance have they of seeing the zone's deeper problems? The Vanguardia's photographers saw him and branded him an 'immigrant' - though he could equally well have been a Catalan who couldn't locate one of the few public toilets around - but for a photo-shoot 'immigrant' is somehow more compelling. More cachet.
The dignitaries did see one of this zone's new symbols-to-be, the new cultural centre, Filmoteca taking shape and a definite (remember AVE!) opening date of March 2011 was mooted. Though how many of the old biddies who currently attend cultural films in the current building off posh and safe Diagonal will venture into the darkest jungly depths of Cuitat Vella at night remains to be seen. Opening night would be reminiscent of that old Monty Python sketch 'The grannies of Notlob'. Or not, when they don't turn up.
Operation clean-up of the area also started the same week in a diffent way - a moral one - when the police began to get rid of the prostitution which apparently has been endemic in the area for more than a hundred years - where hasn't it? Usually moral clean-ups in BCN are more like LAPD episodes, ie high-profile with lots of noise, doors being broken down and half-naked girls been thrown into police vans. And largely a waste of time and money. For once, using their collective intelligence, this time they tried the Swedish Method (which is not, as you might think, a sexual position) arresting and fining clients instead of the girls). With positive results too. Most fines were paid on the spot to avoid wives seeing the official letters in their post-boxes, and secondly, the number of men seeking extra-marital services dropped to such an extent that the prostitutes began complaining about the lack of business.
The new master plan for the zone is a good compromise - in theory. It will re-define areas, vetting any new businesses, moving those labelled 'entertainment' or 'touristic' away from residential areas. It will hope to draw in heavyweights to give the zone more class and the residents more peace.
The trouble is officials sanctioning the clean-up of Ciutat Vella forgot to look at what was happening under their noses first. It seems corrupt government officials have for some time been taking under-the-table payments - big ones too, including cash, investments, and property -from the owners of flats in that same area who wanted government licences for short-term holiday letting. Not a good start to a clean up. Mmm, should be some interesting election speeches this month.
Tuesday, 2 November 2010
Tuesday, 26 October 2010
Tourism: Please, no tax.
The idea of a tourist tax surfaced again recently according to today's El Pais newspaper. Spain's Balearic islands tried to impose this 10 years ago and after two years of protests by hoteliers it was revoked. One member of the Barcelona's City Council, Joan Gaspert (that's a man by the way) thought it a brilliant idea for a time when the Government was increasingly strapped for cash and was having to scale down many projects to say nothing of salaries for civil servants.
To be honest, most tourists wouldn't notice if they had to pay another beersworth for their stay here. They don't seem to protest in France, New York or in Tokyio. But the real question is not whether or not it should be introduced but whether such a scheme is ethical. The ethics thing of course wasn't mentioned when Señor Gaspert re-introduced the concept but the idea of it backfiring was, so it was eventually buried again. Phew! Someone mentioned (a hotelier?) that such a tax would make the city less competitive and the tourists would all go to Madrid or Valencia instead. And then where would we be? Empty streets means empty coffers.
Of course a tourist tax might be more ethical if some of the proceeds were ploughed back into making tourists feel wanted. Like providing them with toilets in, say, the Las Ramblas area which they frequent the most. Like paying shopkeepers to smile at them when they buy things in their shops and cafes and insult them by holding up their fingers to indicate how many euros a coffee costs.Some of them do speak Spanish you know. You could also make the streets safer for them by paying for more police to patrol certain dark and dingy streets where they get robbed and on the Metro too. In 10 years living here I've never seen a security officer on a Metro, only in the stations. But no, good citizens of BCN, you want your pan y tomate and to eat it. You want tourists money (read 'need' here) but not the noise and the mess. You want tourists who shop in your luxury shops on Passeig de Gracia and eat in your expensive restaurants in Born. You're trying to target the wealthy classes in your Tourist Office publicity.
Sorry Barcelona, but you can't choose tourists. They choose you. And if they go off you, they won't come back. Nor will their friends, no matter how many EasyRyan flights arrive at El Prat Airport. You can build all the 4 and 5 star hotels you like but if the city isn't safe they'll stay empty. And putting a tourist tax on top will really make the tourists roll in won't it?
To be honest, most tourists wouldn't notice if they had to pay another beersworth for their stay here. They don't seem to protest in France, New York or in Tokyio. But the real question is not whether or not it should be introduced but whether such a scheme is ethical. The ethics thing of course wasn't mentioned when Señor Gaspert re-introduced the concept but the idea of it backfiring was, so it was eventually buried again. Phew! Someone mentioned (a hotelier?) that such a tax would make the city less competitive and the tourists would all go to Madrid or Valencia instead. And then where would we be? Empty streets means empty coffers.
Of course a tourist tax might be more ethical if some of the proceeds were ploughed back into making tourists feel wanted. Like providing them with toilets in, say, the Las Ramblas area which they frequent the most. Like paying shopkeepers to smile at them when they buy things in their shops and cafes and insult them by holding up their fingers to indicate how many euros a coffee costs.Some of them do speak Spanish you know. You could also make the streets safer for them by paying for more police to patrol certain dark and dingy streets where they get robbed and on the Metro too. In 10 years living here I've never seen a security officer on a Metro, only in the stations. But no, good citizens of BCN, you want your pan y tomate and to eat it. You want tourists money (read 'need' here) but not the noise and the mess. You want tourists who shop in your luxury shops on Passeig de Gracia and eat in your expensive restaurants in Born. You're trying to target the wealthy classes in your Tourist Office publicity.
Sorry Barcelona, but you can't choose tourists. They choose you. And if they go off you, they won't come back. Nor will their friends, no matter how many EasyRyan flights arrive at El Prat Airport. You can build all the 4 and 5 star hotels you like but if the city isn't safe they'll stay empty. And putting a tourist tax on top will really make the tourists roll in won't it?
Wednesday, 20 October 2010
Language: 2B or not 2B a Catalan
Visitors have often asked me if Catalans are different from the Spanish but it's difficult to give a simple answer because it's like asking are the Scots different from the English or the Welsh. There are so many different aspects to this question.
Like the Welsh, Catalans certainly have a different language - of which they're very proud - and one which was banned by Franco so you can understand why. To me as an outsider, it seems a part French, part Spanish mix with a few local words thrown in - though that's probably an over-simplification as well as being heresy. For me in many museums and galleries that pride-in-your-language thing goes a bit far in the way information is presented in bold in Catalan and fainter in Spanish - and English if you're lucky. One presumes it's a political thing - and it really is - or that the optician lobby badly needs business. But almost all Catalans can speak Spanish (not necessarily want to though) I've only met one Catalan who said that he doesn't like to speak Spanish but there must be a lot more. Even the President, Montilla, had to learn Catalan to be accepted here. Surprisingly foreign films in Catalan cinemas tend to be dubbed into Spanish not Catalan. Maybe there's a bigger market for them worldwide? For many foreigners too, Spanish has a greater currency value in terms of communication than Catalan, so unless they want a job with the Catalan Government or are married to a Catalan they're more likely to learn Spanish to communicate not just with natives in Catalunya but also the rest of the Spanish-speaking world. The language certainly causes problems in schools where many South and Central American kids resent having Catalan as the medium of education and not Spanish. What's on Catalans' passports, they say. Catalan no. Spanish, yes.
As with all countries there are always stereotypic qualities - both the Dutch and the Scots are said to be mean, Germans organised and efficient, Americans friendly and the Brits reserved, for example. The trouble is these are general characteristics, often are not true and certainly don't apply to everyone from a particular country. But they certainly exist so I'll trot out a few that I've heard people use when describing Catalans.
How's this for starters: devious, loud, pushy groupies, clannish, tight, image-conscious, parochial and matriarchal biggots. And how many times have you had to walk round a group of them standing talking on the pavement or had to push past someone sitting on the outside seat on the bus or Metro? If you've read the papers this month maybe you could add 'corrupt' in the way that a scandal is currently blowing up about Barcelona civil servants on the take - but then that's a Spanish thing too isn't it, corruption? Oh, and we'd better add football crazy too.
The newish (well I've never seen it before) monthly newsheet, Barcelones, states in an article on Catalan culebrons or soaps that the audience for Catalan TV channels is homogenous, whereas a Spanish medium channel's is less so and therefore might have more difficulty in focusing its themes and could more easily offend or insult sections of its wider audience. Thus Catalan channels can contain more risky elements, societal taboos like incest for example or pederasty in the church because its audience can deal with such issues better. In other words perhaps there are some qualities that are after all general to Catalans.
That doesn't, I know, answer the question as to what they are and I don't suppose Catalans are any more or less incestuous than any other race, but it does point to something that you don't always hear stated - that Catalans are perhaps more liberal and worldly than you think despite their so-called fondness for separateness and tradition. You notice an acceptance of others' beliefs and ways of life and it's only the 'far-right' fringes who call for the expulsion of gypsies and immigrants from Eastern Europe. Maybe the question is unanswerable because every Catalan, like any other nationality, is an individual and is made up of perhaps some of the stereotypes mentioned plus several more positive ones.
What facets of the Catalan character have you noticed? Is there anything that you could say 'that's very Catalan?
Like the Welsh, Catalans certainly have a different language - of which they're very proud - and one which was banned by Franco so you can understand why. To me as an outsider, it seems a part French, part Spanish mix with a few local words thrown in - though that's probably an over-simplification as well as being heresy. For me in many museums and galleries that pride-in-your-language thing goes a bit far in the way information is presented in bold in Catalan and fainter in Spanish - and English if you're lucky. One presumes it's a political thing - and it really is - or that the optician lobby badly needs business. But almost all Catalans can speak Spanish (not necessarily want to though) I've only met one Catalan who said that he doesn't like to speak Spanish but there must be a lot more. Even the President, Montilla, had to learn Catalan to be accepted here. Surprisingly foreign films in Catalan cinemas tend to be dubbed into Spanish not Catalan. Maybe there's a bigger market for them worldwide? For many foreigners too, Spanish has a greater currency value in terms of communication than Catalan, so unless they want a job with the Catalan Government or are married to a Catalan they're more likely to learn Spanish to communicate not just with natives in Catalunya but also the rest of the Spanish-speaking world. The language certainly causes problems in schools where many South and Central American kids resent having Catalan as the medium of education and not Spanish. What's on Catalans' passports, they say. Catalan no. Spanish, yes.
As with all countries there are always stereotypic qualities - both the Dutch and the Scots are said to be mean, Germans organised and efficient, Americans friendly and the Brits reserved, for example. The trouble is these are general characteristics, often are not true and certainly don't apply to everyone from a particular country. But they certainly exist so I'll trot out a few that I've heard people use when describing Catalans.
How's this for starters: devious, loud, pushy groupies, clannish, tight, image-conscious, parochial and matriarchal biggots. And how many times have you had to walk round a group of them standing talking on the pavement or had to push past someone sitting on the outside seat on the bus or Metro? If you've read the papers this month maybe you could add 'corrupt' in the way that a scandal is currently blowing up about Barcelona civil servants on the take - but then that's a Spanish thing too isn't it, corruption? Oh, and we'd better add football crazy too.
The newish (well I've never seen it before) monthly newsheet, Barcelones, states in an article on Catalan culebrons or soaps that the audience for Catalan TV channels is homogenous, whereas a Spanish medium channel's is less so and therefore might have more difficulty in focusing its themes and could more easily offend or insult sections of its wider audience. Thus Catalan channels can contain more risky elements, societal taboos like incest for example or pederasty in the church because its audience can deal with such issues better. In other words perhaps there are some qualities that are after all general to Catalans.
That doesn't, I know, answer the question as to what they are and I don't suppose Catalans are any more or less incestuous than any other race, but it does point to something that you don't always hear stated - that Catalans are perhaps more liberal and worldly than you think despite their so-called fondness for separateness and tradition. You notice an acceptance of others' beliefs and ways of life and it's only the 'far-right' fringes who call for the expulsion of gypsies and immigrants from Eastern Europe. Maybe the question is unanswerable because every Catalan, like any other nationality, is an individual and is made up of perhaps some of the stereotypes mentioned plus several more positive ones.
What facets of the Catalan character have you noticed? Is there anything that you could say 'that's very Catalan?
Monday, 18 October 2010
Not another Barcelona blog!
Right now there's another blogette setting off in life, a tadpole recently hatched and swimming in a murky pond with all the other blogettes waving their flags for attention. Much more importantly the weather's warm. It's not raining and there's an intensely blue sky outside on my terrace. Which is one of the main reasons why a lot of people like me come from chilly damp northern Europe to live in Spain. Actually in my case that's not strictly true as I came from the other end of the thermometer scale, from 20 years in the 50º Celsius fry-eggs-on-your-car-bonnet Middle East summer temperatures in order to escape excessive amounts of sun. Barcelona, I considered, would be a compromise between the London in my own country and Dubai.
I arrived eight years ago and wasn't disappointed. I found Barcelona to be a city with lots of positives and only a few negatives. In the Middle East I suffered achingly from CDS, culture-deficit syndrome. Now I gazed open-mouthed at the splendour of Barcelona's awesome modernist and contemporary architecture, its elegant shops, its museums and galleries, its wide boulevards where people actually walked - you only drove in the Middle East! Its exciting night life with thousands of bars, clubs and restaurants all had me transfixed like a wild boar in car headlights. And within a couple of hours from the city I could be skiing or scuba-diving . It was glaringly apparent why the city ranked high in the most visited cities in Europe list. Perfect you might think.
And you'd be right. It was. But you have to remember visitors and residents are never a homogenous mass. A society is composed of many strata. Criminals like the good life too, and a city like Barcelona offers rich pickings to its criminal high-life. Lots of money can be made out of prostitution, drugs, money-laundering, robberies, scams - just to name just a few areas of lucrative 'free enterprise' on offer. The city has good zones but also bad zones where after midnight the police patrol in threes. In the eight years I've been here I've seen several examples of violence in the streets and had my wallet stolen twice. Mmm perhaps not so perfect!
I've set this blog up - after abhorting an earlier one (http://spanishflyonthwall.blog.com/ ) I'd had for two years - to write about the city from the point of view of outsider/resident so if you want objective description, this blog is not for you nor for the tourist who is just visiting 'the sights' for a few days. I'll be using newspapers as my main source and adding my comments to their new. Hopefully the views expressed will be interesting enough to get you to comment.
So please feel free to agree - or just as important - disagree. I look forward to your comments. Let me know too if you are blogging about Barcelona .
I arrived eight years ago and wasn't disappointed. I found Barcelona to be a city with lots of positives and only a few negatives. In the Middle East I suffered achingly from CDS, culture-deficit syndrome. Now I gazed open-mouthed at the splendour of Barcelona's awesome modernist and contemporary architecture, its elegant shops, its museums and galleries, its wide boulevards where people actually walked - you only drove in the Middle East! Its exciting night life with thousands of bars, clubs and restaurants all had me transfixed like a wild boar in car headlights. And within a couple of hours from the city I could be skiing or scuba-diving . It was glaringly apparent why the city ranked high in the most visited cities in Europe list. Perfect you might think.
And you'd be right. It was. But you have to remember visitors and residents are never a homogenous mass. A society is composed of many strata. Criminals like the good life too, and a city like Barcelona offers rich pickings to its criminal high-life. Lots of money can be made out of prostitution, drugs, money-laundering, robberies, scams - just to name just a few areas of lucrative 'free enterprise' on offer. The city has good zones but also bad zones where after midnight the police patrol in threes. In the eight years I've been here I've seen several examples of violence in the streets and had my wallet stolen twice. Mmm perhaps not so perfect!
I've set this blog up - after abhorting an earlier one (http://spanishflyonthwall.blog.com/ ) I'd had for two years - to write about the city from the point of view of outsider/resident so if you want objective description, this blog is not for you nor for the tourist who is just visiting 'the sights' for a few days. I'll be using newspapers as my main source and adding my comments to their new. Hopefully the views expressed will be interesting enough to get you to comment.
So please feel free to agree - or just as important - disagree. I look forward to your comments. Let me know too if you are blogging about Barcelona .
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