Showing posts with label Riga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Riga. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 March 2018

NATALIA BEAN: LATVIAN IMPETUS FROM THE SPACE

Natalia Bean with Valentina Tereshkova
Natalia Bean. Astronaut. Latvia.

I was born in Riga, the capital of Latvia one of the Baltic Republics. Living in a small country offers to you a particular vision of life. This is the reason because of I decided to have another one and I became an astronaut. When you're in the space you feel like an ant and realize the magnitude of the Earth without borders during the day, full of light during the night. I like Mexican culture and photography.


-Good morning, Natalia Bean, and thanks to attend us.
-Good morning. Welcome to my country, one of the most prosperous of the European Union.

-Thanks. It's always a pleasure being here. Well, to start this interview I would like to know how you define yourself.

-I'm an astronaut, a person who travels in space and tries to search answers to thousands of human questions.

-The most part of people, when they were children wanted to be an astronaut. How can you explain them to them?

-Yes, it's true. An astronaut or a firefighter. I don't know but perhaps an explanation could be that children are honest and maybe they perceive astronauts and firefighters like modern heroes. Everybody wants to be a superhero when he/she is a child because a superhero represents good things and because of they are still innocent, they have the superheroes like someone to imitate. A child always imitates the things that he/she sees. It's normal. They're under an age of knowledge and learning.

-Then, do you believe in heroes?

-Yes, of course. Everybody can be a hero, because a hero isn't a superhero. A superhero is a modern creation, a person who has incredible powers but a hero is a person who resists adversity and fight against it. Then, in our society, we can find millions of examples of heroes.

-How do you feel being a member of The Beans family?

-It's a good experience. The family is a group of fantastic people and I'm very proud of being a part of them. It has been a great experience to open happiness.

-How is a normal day with The Beans?

-It's difficult to talk about a normal day with The Beans because we're a family full of energy and creativity and then all is possible and they can change all things in a second but I must accept that I've revised my English with them.

-How long have you been studying English?

-Although I'm Latvian, I come from a multicultural family with different origins. This is the reason because of knowing English isn't strange for me but I didn't study English at school, I studied Russian when we were a part of the USSR, and Latvian at home. Later, when we recovered our independence in 1990, we could study Latvian again at school. I come from a Jewish family, then I also speak Jewish.

-Russian? It's a difficult language, isn't it?

-No, exactly. The secret of learning a language is starting as young as you can. If you're a child, you're like a sponge and you can absorb as information as you want in different languages. Nothing happens. When you became older, your brain put all words in order and with its correspondent language. It's fascinating.


-Then, you speak four languages? Is it very difficult to do it?

-No it isn't. In fact, as many languages you speak is easier to learn the next. I have learnt this from The Beans. All of them speak, at least, two languages and this is very important because a language is a powerful tool of communication and, in my case, these four languages mean four different alphabets, too: Germanic, Cyrillic, Greek and Jewish.

-What can you explain about your life with The Beans?

-It's a great experience. I spend my life up, in the sky and it's good to stay with your feet on the land and pay attention about the reality from another point of view. I've spent good moments with them.

-And after?

-When we started as a family, we arrived with different ideas, knowledge and perspectives. During my experience as a Bean, we have been working together and we've created a good team. This is something that we won't lose although every member of our family is going to take a different path but I'm sure that we're going to open happiness wherever we stay.

-Which is your best memory with the family?

It's very difficult to choose only one but I remember two special moments: the day that I explained them some personal adventures in Mexico and the day that I cooked some pizzas for all of them. Amazing moments!

-You like photography, don’t you?

-Yes, I do.

-What's your own favourite photo?

-I remember when we were in the space station and were flying over the Canary Islands. We could take photos of a new island that emerged from the underground next to Hierro Island. It was spectacular.

-You have also said that you like reading biographies. Which is your favourite?

-Although I have read all the biographies of the most important astronauts like Neil Armstrong or Yuri Gagarin, I must admit, especially in a day like today, that the biography which impressed me much was about Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space. It's very difficult to success in some kind of jobs which seem destined only to men. I also want to remember Sally Ride, the first American woman in space in 1983, twenty years after Tereshkova.

-Who is your favourite character?

-I haven't got a special one but I would like to think that one day, in a closer future; someone will be able to read The Beans Biography because it will mean that we have contributed to do something positive to our society.

-What title would you choose for this biography?

-Eating the world, because every day we have worked very hard to learn something new and to live unforgettable experiences while we were eating the most delicious food made by some members of our family.

-Do you like this message?

-Yes I do. It's a motivational message in the line of We can do it of Naomi Parker. If you have enough force, enough interest and enough luck you can do whatever you propose.

-What will happen if it's not possible to do it?

-Don't give up. Don't forget that if you don't find a way, you must create it. Sometimes, we follow the line created by other people and sometimes, we must create our own line, a line that will be followed by others.

-Thank you very much, Natalia Bean.

-Thanks to you.


 A bird cannot fly with one wing only. 
Human space flight cannot develop any further 
without the active participation of women. 

Valentina Tereshkova

Monday, 26 June 2017

TINA PICOTES VISITS LATVIJAS REPUBLIKA

Tina Picotes walking across Riga streets
Tina Picotes is visiting the Latvijas Republika, one of the three Baltic Republics. She wants to explains us lots of things about this wonderful country.

Latvija, officially the Latvijas Republika or Republic of Latvia, is a country in the Baltic region of Northern Europe, one of the three Baltic states. It is bordered by Estonia to the north, Lithuania to the south, Russia to the east, and Belarus to the southeast, as well as a maritime border to the west alongside Sweden. Latvia has 1,957,200 inhabitants and a territory of 64,589 km2. The country has a temperate seasonal climate. Latvia is a democratic parliamentary republic established in 1918. The capital city is Riga and Latvian is the official language. 

More information: Latvia

Latvians and Livs are the indigenous people of Latvia. Latvian and Lithuanian are the only two surviving Baltic languages. Despite foreign rule from the 13th to 20th centuries, the Latvian nation maintained its identity throughout the generations via the language and musical traditions. Latvia and Estonia share a long common history. As a consequence of centuries of Russian rule (1710–1918) and later Soviet occupation, both countries are home to a large number of ethnic Russians. Until World War II, Latvia also had significant minorities of ethnic Germans and Jews.

Tina Picotes in Cesis Castle in Riga, Latvija
Latvia is historically predominantly Protestant Lutheran, except for the Latgale region in the southeast, which has historically been predominantly Roman Catholic. The Russian population has also brought a significant portion of Eastern Orthodox Christians.

The Republic of Latvia was founded on 18 November 1918. However, its de facto independence was interrupted at the outset of World War II.  

In 1940, the country was forcibly incorporated into the Soviet Union, invaded and occupied by Nazi Germany in 1941, and re-occupied by the Soviets in 1944 to form the Latvian SSR for the next fifty years. 

The peaceful Singing Revolution, starting in 1987, called for Baltic emancipation of Soviet rule. It ended with the Declaration on the Restoration of Independence of the Republic of Latvia on 4 May 1990, and restoring de facto independence on 21 August 1991.


Tina Picotes visiting Riga at night
The name Latvija is derived from the name of the ancient Latgalians, one of four Indo-European Baltic tribes, along with Couronians, Selonians and Semigallians, which formed the ethnic core of modern Latvians together with the Finnic Livonians. 

Henry of Latvia coined the Latinisations of the country's name, Lettigallia and Lethia, both derived from the Latgalians. 

The terms inspired the variations on the country's name in Romance languages from Letonia and in several Germanic languages from Lettland.

The sole official language of Latvia is Latvian, which belongs to the Baltic language group of the Indo-European language family. Another notable language of Latvia is the nearly extinct Livonian language of the Finnic branch of the Uralic language family, which enjoys protection by law; Latgalian, referred to as either a dialect or a distinct separate language of Latvian, is also formally protected by Latvian law but only as a historical variation of the Latvian language. Russian, which was widely spoken during the Soviet period, is still the most widely used minority language by far. 

More information: Lonely Planet 


A true portrait should, today and a hundred years from today, 
the Testimony of how this person looked 
and what kind of human being he was. 

Philippe Halsman