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Cycling To Save Jews

Probably the most famous bicycle road race is the annual Tour de France. It is a grueling endurance test with 21 stages over twenty-three days. While it is considered the world’s premier cycling event each year, other countries host their own versions. For Italy, their premier event is the Giro d’Italia or Tour of Italy. Along with the Tour de France, the Giro is one of cycling’s “Grand Tours.” Don’t confuse the Giro with the Greek gyro—too many gyros and one would find it difficult to cycle up those hills.

The subject of our blog today is a two-time winner of the Tour de France (1938 and 1948) and a three-time winner of the Giro (1936,1937, and 1946). Remarkably, Gino Bartali won his races before and after World War II. While he was a popular and revered national hero and will be remembered in the cycling world for his many achievements, Bartali’s most enduring and humane accomplishments came during the war. However, it was not until after his death in 2000 that his resistance efforts became public knowledge.

The two top Italian cyclists before and after World War II: Gino Bartali (center left) and Fausto Coppi (center right). Photo by anonymous (c. 1940−1943). Private Collection. PD-Expired Copyright. Wikimedia Commons.
The two top Italian cyclists before and after World War II: Gino Bartali (center left) and Fausto Coppi (center right). Photo by anonymous (c. 1940−1943). Private Collection. PD-Expired Copyright. Wikimedia Commons.

Did You Know?

Did you know we have set up a Pinterest site with a lot of interesting images. We hope you’ll visit the site often as Sandy is continuously updating it with new and interesting photographs.  badgeRGB


Let’s Meet Gino Bartali

Gino Bartali (1914−2000) was born in Ponte a Ema, Florence, Italy into a poor farming family. Gino grew up to be a physically strong young man with a boxer’s face. He was a devout Catholic throughout his life and earned the nickname, “Gino the Pious.” At the age of thirteen, Gino got a job in a bicycle shop. Shortly afterwards, he began racing and quickly gained an excellent reputation as an amateur. At the age of twenty-one, Gino turned professional and the next year, he became the Italian champion by winning the Giro for the first time. Watch a memorial about Gino here. Read More Cycling To Save Jews

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Paris Therapy Pets

Just when you think you’ve seen protests for (or against) about every political, humanitarian, or social issue one can imagine, you run into one which makes you scratch your head and say, “What are those people thinking?” For me this time, it’s about the protests in France supporting the Paris sewer rats. Yep, you heard it here and as I’m fond of saying, “I don’t make up this stuff.” In fact, I read about this topic in a recent article entitled, French Freedom Fighters Press for the Rights of Parisian Rats. I can never resist a good article on French Freedom Fighters.

Seriously, Sandy and I visited Paris last September and we were standing in the small park memorializing the Grand Rafle (click here to read The Roundup and Cycling Arena) and the victims who were detained at the Velodrome before being transported to Drancy and ultimately, Auschwitz. As we were walking through the park, good sized rats scurried about around our feet. It turns out that rats have invaded Paris supermarkets, parks, and nurseries (and I suspect many other venues that no one wants to admit). So, the French politicians held a convention to determine a solution.

The Boatwright brothers holding their catch of rats. Photo by anonymous (January 1940). PD-Expired Copyright. Wikimedia Commons.
The Boatwright brothers holding their catch of rats. Photo by anonymous (January 1940). PD-Expired Copyright. Wikimedia Commons.

The solution was one that likely you and I could easily have figured out sans a convention: poison the rats. That’s when the trouble began. Protestors are against this “inhumane” method of execution (I guess they should not have gotten rid of the guillotine albeit perhaps on a smaller scale to accommodate the rodents’ necks). Instead, they presented their solution to the mayor of the 17th arrondissement (district): rodent birth-control. Once again, I don’t make this stuff up.

Dead rats hanging in the window of Auroze, a specialist in dératisation (rat removal). Photo by Ineke Huizing (2013). PD-CCA 2.0 Generic. Wikimedia Commons.
Dead rats hanging in the window of Auroze, a specialist in dératisation (rat removal). Photo by Ineke Huizing (2013). PD-CCA 2.0 Generic. Wikimedia Commons.

And if reading about the rat infestation isn’t enough, you can watch it here. Read More Paris Therapy Pets