torstai 5. tammikuuta 2012

All the roads lead to Rome.... has a new meaning today

Everyone's heard the saying “All the roads lead to Rome”. While normally that is considered to mean that...well... all road lead to Rome, at least in the time when all roads were actually build by the Romans. Then all roads literally lead to Rome. Today this saying has maybe a bit different meaning..

My definition is a bit different. Yes I admit that my road as well has lead to Rome, well total of 3 times. This time a bit longer time, for some 5 months. After one month in Rome I have noticed the biggest problem in Rome. No it is not the mafi... you know what I mean... but it's the roads. All those roads that lead to Rome.

There is some 8 million people leaving in Rome. Seems that all those 8 million have a car... well maybe not all of them, since it is not legal for children to drive (some do anyways I know). The roads in Rome are ancient, some from literally from first century C.E. Unlike in Toronto where roads are literally straight... and tens of kilometers directly to one way... none of the roads in Rome are straight. Maybe that is the reason why the traffic in Rome is so bad, so slow.

Last Saturday it took us 1 hour to driver some 35 km, to the other side of Rome. Sure there was a Juventus and Lazio (Rome) finals football-match. Sure we did not know that when we head on our way. We did see that the traffic on the motorway was standing still, so we took to the small-roads... with the others who thought the same way. On the way back home late in the evening it only took some 30 minutes for the same trip.

If you want to get from A to B in Rome, you might have to take two or three buses, a metro and maybe a train. Journeying for just some 25-35 km inside Rome can take as long as 2 hours. So make sure that you live next to or near your work/school. You don't want to spend 3-4 hours a day in public transportation. While you are on your way, have a book with you, to use your time more wisely. Anyways you'll be exhausted when you come home after all that Journeying, so you don't have energy to do much reading at home for sure.

Metrolines are good in Rome, but unfortunately there are only 2 lines, the A and the B lines. It is not like in most big cities where metro-lines cover most of the city. In Rome that is not happening. One metro goes from West to East and one from South-West to North-East. Also metros stop working at 9pm except on Saturdays. So they do not help much when you are traveling home in the evening time. No wonder people here have their own cars... just to be able to get home in the evenings.

Also another very Roman thing is to strike. Bus strikes are very common. You don't want to get stuck on the other side of the city on a day where there is a strike, so take a habit of checking out from www.atac.roma.it pages in case there is a strike for the buses. On a strike-day the busses normally run in the morning and again from 4 to 8pm. During the day or late evening you are on your own.. literally. No buses so you better make sure you are home in time! I once almost didn't make it home. Would have been nice to walk 10km in the evening. Most likely I would have gotten lost on the way... That road would not have lead to Rome...

The traffic is something that controls the life of people in Rome. It is as usual topic here as the weather is in England... You might have a plan what to do for the day and then the traffic changes your plans totally. You never know how your day turns out to be, it all depends on the traffic... all those roads leading to Rome...

Visiting the Vatican Museum and Sistine Chapel


Through several movies I've become accustomed to hearing about the Sistine Chapel. Seeing it once in their life seems to be the dream of many people fascinated with art. Well art is certainly one thing Rome has a lot. Even thou I've been in Rome twice before this longer stay, I never had visited the Sistine Chapel in Vatican Museum. Sure I had been in Vatican several times, and in St. Peters Basilica as well several times, but never in the Vatican Museum. So now finally I went for a visit.

Since I knew there is normally a long queue inside the Museum, we got our tickets beforehand from the Internet. Sure there are other ways to get pass the line, that is if you take one of the guided tours that are offered everywhere, but especially outside the St. Peters Basilica (or on the road from the Basilica to the Museum. Good to know is that you need to be at the Museum early in the morning, since at least winter time the Museum closes already at 13.45.
Since the Museum is huge it will take several hours just to WALK it through. Yes WALK IT THROUGH, it is quite impossible to see it all. The amount of treasures they have in the Museum is indescribable. You cannot imagine it all before you have seen it. How the church came to have such riches is of cause another story. It does make you wander is it justified for the Vatican to have such riches when so many people – even in Rome – are living in such poor conditions. And when you consider that the riches were accumulated in times when people were even more poor than today. Many of the churches in Rome were financed originally by robbing the poor, yes selling certificates for poor people so that they could buy off from hell one of their dead-loved-one. And at the same time these unfortunate poor ones could not afford to feed their children. This is exactly what Martin Luther (that time Roman Catholic Priest) was shocked about and started his reformation. The reason why the Northern Europe is mainly Lutheran nowadays. With this money many of the Churches were build and money accumulated to the Church. Of cause many of the items in the possession of the church were also acquired through wars and “taxation”. So you could say that seeing the riches in Vatican just gives an additional proof of these methods being used earlier.

The Sistine Chapel has an interesting history. Not only did the painting of the Chapel took many years to paint (and Michelangelo was painting lying down and his arm raised up), but the paintings themselves were very controversial. Not only were there many naked persons on the paintings. So many that it was considered shocking when the Chapel was opened. The naked persons almost got the whole Chapel being demolished. But one of the popes saw the value of the Chapel. The many naked persons were given “given some clothing”, so their private parts were painted over.

I must say the Chapel is bigger than I thought it would be. Quite much bigger. Well maybe that was good since the whole Chapel was full of people. Some of the paintings were easily identified, but many were non-Biblical, but had images of pagan “persons”. Quite fitting when you think that the Chapel is in the Vatican, the place where so many pagan statues, paintings and artwork have their home. How fitting to have the Sistine Chapel - “Mother of all the chapels” to be the home of pictures of pagan features. Was the Chapel worth seeing? Well at least for the sake of it's history, yes it was very interesting. It did brought again the point how paganism and “Christianity” has mixed in the Ancient Rome. This mixture still exists of cause today!


One thing that Vatican is trying hard to conceal is the name of God in the St. Peters Basilica. Name Jehovah (or tetragramaton JHWH) appear twice in the St. Peters Basilica. You will find it from the last-right-corner in the Basilica, where you see white statue with an Angel, with a “star” in it's head. On the head you'll see the JHWH Hebrew letters, which means Jehovah. The second place is on the left-side where you'll see a big painting of the high-priest. The high-priest has the tetragramaton JHWH again in his head. Funny thing is that Vatican istrying to hide these two places, by using a bad lighting and walls to restrict the access to these areas. The tetragramaton is also in the Vatican Museum in a ceiling-painting of Moses. Why is Vatican so adamant of hiding God's name? Rome is definitely a place where God's name is prominently present, no matter how much Vatican has tried to destroy the evidence of God's name.