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The Second Hand Courtyard
Czech Republic
A courtyard of forgotten memories.

We took a morning trip over the border - of the city of Prague - to Boranovice, a tiny village with one of the largest second-hand clothing stores anyone has ever seen -- the sad poetry of a crumbling farm repurposed as a second-hand warehouse.

As it turned out, the hipsters of the world have bought every funky used clothing item, even all the way out here. (I wonder where, in the world, there still exist the discarded remnants of ancient fashion.) After realizing that there was nothing inside for me, I took a stroll around the courtyard in which these warehouses are placed. This was clearly a farm, centuries ago. Here was the farm house. There was the church. Prague was a half-day journey away. What stories, dramas, or sagas happened here? One day the commies came, and took the farm away from whoever had lived here, for however many generations. They probably turned it into a barely-functioning collective farm. They built some warehouses. After a while the commies went away again. Still, this place stands. But the doors are closed and locked, and the stones don't speak.

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Copyright: Jeffrey Martin
Type: Spherical
Resolution: 5000x2500
Taken: 02/11/2006
Geüpload: 04/09/2008
Published: 04/09/2008
Keer bekeken:

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Tags: news
More About Czech Republic

The Czech Republic is a cool little landlocked country south of Germany and Poland, with a national addiction to pork and beer. Potatos, cabbage, and dumplings are close behind them, and they also have this great bar food called "utopenec." It means "a drowned man," it's pickled sausage with onions, perfect with some dark wheat bread and beer. The Czech bread is legendary, like a meal all by itself.Czechoslovakia first became a sovereign state in 1918 when it declared independence from the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The state of Czechoslovakia lasted until the "Velvet Divorce" of 1993, which created Slovakia and the Czech Republic.It was occupied by Germany in WWII but escaped major damage, unlike most other European cities. The nation's capital, Prague, retains some of Europe's most beautiful Baroque architecture as well as one of the largest medieval castle complexes still standing. The President of the Czech Republic has his offices in the Prague Castle even today.There was a coup d'etat in 1948 and Czechoslovakia fell under Soviet rule. For fifty years Czechoslovakia was a Socialist state under the USSR, subject to censorship, forced atheism and even the arrest of jazz musicians!In 1989, communist police violently squashed a pro-democracy demonstration and pissed everybody off so bad that a revolution erupted over it, finally ending the Communist rule.The next twenty years saw rapid economic growth and westernization. Today in Prague you can eat at McDonald's or KFC, shop for snowboarding boots and go see a punk rock show.The Czech Republic took over the presidency of the European Union in January 2009. This instantly created lots of political drama because the President of the Czech Republic, Vaclav Klaus, is a renowned Euroskeptic.We anxiously await the outcome of "President Klaus vs. the Lisbon Treaty", a world heavywieght fight sceduled for spring 2009.Text by Steve Smith.


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