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Monday, 15 August 2011

The Assumption in France

Went to France once, and arrived early in the morning of the Feast of the Assumption.

First day tried to get together some basic things - you know, food, wine, loo roll. To discover that the entire country was closed. No shops open, no petrol, no nothing. In desperation I ended up spending the GDP of a small country to buy some stale croissants and a bottle of vin ordinaire from a campsite shop during the 20-minute window when it was open.

The interesting thing is that, apart from the Muslim populations in the cities, France is as secular a society as you could hope to find. Even the relatively-devout Bretons are as doubtful as Cardiff during a crisis of faith. And yet the French took the holiday seriously. I suspect that's because the French always take having some time off very seriously - leisure-time is almost the national religion.

Maybe we've something to learn there, as we take our Smartphones on holiday and leave out-of-office messages that make it quite clear we're almost permanently available even when in deepest Provence. Having a break is good, and improves your national cooking.

2 comments:

  1. ha, as you know we were out of contact on holiday- a really good plan in many ways!

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  2. Here in Italy everyone is taking the Assumption very seriously as a holiday, although with about as much religion in it as an English Christmas - and the supermarket we just went to was open and full!

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