Brussels
Hello to all, as I use this strange keyboard to type:
The
keyboard has the letters located in quite unfamiliar places. I am assu,ing as
QWERTY is the format for frequently used letters, this must be the same for the
Belgians, arranged for efficiency. But, quite difficult to adjust for me.
Anyway, Hope all is well, I just left Paris last night, met a couple of British
ladies with whom, I traveled on up to Bruxelles (Brussels). It's quite the
typical older European city... So I will move on to Brugge, which is supposed to
be quite beautiful, I sent out some cards today, more to come. I hope all are
well, some with whom I haven't spoken in a while, I hope we can catch up when I
get back. But for now, lunch: Belgian Waffle at street corner, then some Belgian
chocolate, A few Australian lads/chaps are joining me for the trip to Brugge, so
I have to get moving. Versailles yesterday was quite a sight, remember World
History back in 8th grade? Louis XIV's castle/mansion...lavish and posh, quite a
display of frivolous spending... It's colder than Paris here and I need to go
put my sweat shirt on... After Brugge, Amsterdam, then Aachen (June 1+2), then
to Trier on the 2nd midday. Hope all are well. I love EUROPE. So much culture,
so much beauty, so much history, sex appeal, and bizzazze. Will write more soon.
au revoir, ?la prochain.
I cannot wait to get to Italy and Ibiza later;;;;;
Au revoir et ࠢient?r>
Nojan

Jardin Botanique



"Pee-pee Boy" or Mannekin Pis. was created in 1388. It was destroyed many centuries later. By popular demand, the City of Brussels commissioned Jerome Duquesnoy to build another in 1619. This statue is alive and well today, situated in the labyrinth of little shops that surround The Grand Place in Brussels, Begium.
I saw the little guy "in person" during my trip and I must say, we expected a bit more than the 24" high statue we saw. Nevertheless, the people of Brussels adore this little guy and he has become quite a famous fellow. On special occasions the city dresses him in one of over 600 costumes. As a bonus he "pees" beer on the days that his costume is changed. Most the time, however, he is as nature intended him to be. He has been dressed as Elvis, a samurai warrior, in full hockey gear, soccer clothing, as Mozart and as a Shriner — to name a few. Many of his costumes were donated by government officials and such celebrities as Elizabeth Taylor. His first costume was donated by King Louis XV of France in 1747.
Legend surrounds the Mannekin Pis. Nobody knows why he was created but there are many stories. We are free to pick the one we like the best.
One such story (with many variations) places our "Wee Boy" as the savior of the city, drowning out the flames of a deadly fire with his wee-wee. Another variation is that he, with precise aim, extinguished the fuse that would have caused a devastating explosion.
Another story has our fellow as a street urchin who was unwise enough to relieve himself on the doorway of an evil sorcerer who then condemned him to that position and to pee for eternity.
The story I choose to believe is that the boy was the son of a wealthy aristocrat who was missing and feared kidnapped. The father, so relieved to find the boy unharmed, had the statue commissioned in honor of the way he was found — peeing against a tree.
The Mannekin Pis has been stolen seven times during his long life on display and recovered each time. One man, Antoine Lucas, was sentenced to 20 years in prison when, in 1817, he ripped the statue from its base and fled with it.


