Images: Flowers blooming everywhere.
We visited Niederweningen two years ago. A narrow two lane street, winding all the way, led us into the village from Zürich.
The first thing that caught my eye was the fresh flowers. It seemed to me that every house we drove past had something blooming on the balconies and windows. My favorite was geranium, the red flowers that appeared most often.
Image (left): A lovely house in the village.
Most houses had brown rooves, with dark
riegel (beam) covering the walls. The red flowers, brown roof, and
beamed white walls together formed a simple and refreshing beauty that
never failed to amaze me while I was in Switzerland.
Lying in the smooth hills at the eastern tip of the Jura mountains,
Niederweningen represents the small hill villages in the area. The
population is less than two thousand. In the village, unsurprisingly,
people know each other and notice every new face in town. The first
day there, when we walked down from a hill, I picked a few fruits from
a strawberry bush on the roadside. Somebody must have spotted that,
because on the second morning when I opened the door, I found a basket
of red strawberries lying there, still shining in the morning dew. We
never figured out who sent them. The strawberries lasted for a few
days and gave me the first taste of hospitality of the villagers.
A villager, Urs, is a graphics designer and spends a lot of time
traveling and photographing. We watched a slide show in his home,
with dozens of pictures he and his wife took in various countries. A
few hours into the show, with a vivid description by Urs, we had
experienced the most beautiful moments in four seasons of his beloved
country: winter snow in the Alps, golden hills in the fall, blooming
flowers in the spring, and the outdoor cafeterias along the summer
lake ...
Many of the slides showed folk dancing, gatherings, or just
people walking on some streets somewhere in the world. Urs has a
genuine interest in people and likes to make friends. There's a
notebook they kept, in which many people made comments in their native
languages after watching the slide show. The day we wrote on it,
there were already more than two dozen different languages in the
book. My comments in Chinese increased the count by one.
Some of the people who made comments in Urs' guestbook actually lived
in Niederweningen. There were quite a few "foreigners" in the
village. A lot of them from Germany. The village lies very close to
German border; cross-border marriage is not uncommon. There was a
Chinese woman in the village, married to a local. She visited us with
her lovely little boy. With a pleasant and kind nature, she was very
well accepted and integrated into the local community. There were
also people from the Eastern Europe Bloc. For political and economic
reasons, there were more and more immigrants from Eastern Europe and
Africa each year, which had made some people uneasy, especially in the
past few years when the jobless rate increased. The time we visited,
there were about 1.4 million foreigners in Switzerland. It made up
more than 20 percent of the population. The figure was much higher
than I had expected.
Urs and his wife were generous in sharing their talents with others.
They often volunteered to photograph important events like family
reunions and weddings in the village. And they would carry the zest
throughout the events. They were not alone in the village in this
respect. As the founder of the International Red Cross in 1863, the
Swiss are still a model of providing volunteer help in their
communities.
Schnellman is a successful mechanical engineer. He had worked for
some time in America, but eventually returned to Niederweningen. He
has a beautiful house on a hill, with the living room wall built from
glass, overlooking the trees and grassland outside. We stayed there
for a night. It was quiet at night, however in the morning I woke up
hearing a strange noise coming from a back room. I went in and was
astonished to find two trains running on a huge model railway. The 3D
model filled a room of 12x12 feet! Later on I learned that it was the
20-year old pet project of Schnellman, who had succeeded in extending
his profession of mechanical engineering into his own house. Spending
a large part of his spare time in this room, he would build the whole
thing around a theme, tearing it apart after it was done to start from
scratch on a new theme. The day we visited, the theme was
frontier-time Arizona. There were saguaros, shabby liquor stores and
motels, cowboys, painted mountains, and of course, sand and stones
imported from Arizona. The room had been a popular spot for some
local kids, who helped to build small pieces of his models. Among
them had been his little son, who later on became a mechanical
engineer himself.
His daughter built the interior of the family
bathroom. It had a very different design from anything I had seen.
The room was mostly made of light brown wood. The most interesting
part was the mirror in the center of the room. It was designed in the
shape of the sun, and the sun rays, which were decorated with yellow
light bulbs, emitting light and heat into the room.
The family infused their creativity into the house like a child
playing with his toys.
Another villager, Marta, had never owned a car until all her children
had their own families. In fact even if she had had one, she would
have been too busy to use it. Being a housewife since her marriage
thirty years ago, she worked around the clock before her children
finally became independent. Every few days, she would ride the
postbus to a nearby city, Baden, to get good cheese and fresh bread on
the family dining table.
When she had some time to spare, she would
chat with the neighbors over the balcony or sit down to do some
knitting for her family and friends. Inside her house, we saw her
influence everywhere. The table clothes, the carpet, the small
handmade decorations here and there were not art pieces for exhibition
halls, but nonetheless we could see her dexterity in it. Perhaps
it's her unselfish love and sacrifice for her family embodied in the
small crafts that impressed me most. Like many other Swiss, Marta
breathed happily in the belief of family and love.
She was devoted to
making her life useful to others. Such a quality I had observed many
times in Swiss women, and that constant observation had made me
believe in the unfailed morality and the future of the country.
The belief in love was probably one reason that made Switzerland
successful in education. For centuries, affluent families sent their
children over the Alps to Switzerland for a better and more balanced
education. Perhaps the preamble of the Zürich school system
tells it all:
Unfortunately, the village, and the country, is not immune from the
problems that plague other nations. We had visited the train station
of the village and found broken chairs and windows in the small
waiting cubicles along the railroad.
The local government had tried to
repair them but they would go back to the same condition overnight. I
was told that it's done by some local youth. We had also heard about
serious crimes that had been committed in the village in recent years.
Just as in the rest of western Europe, industrialization has brought
affluence, and with it materialism, competition, and a sense of
disorientation, particularly among the educated youth. Undoubtfully
there are still Heidis and her grandfathers living in harmony with
nature in some remote mountain top villages, but that's more an
exception than a normal form of life.
The time spent in Niederweningen has been unforgettable. When I look
back sometimes from my busy life in Arizona, the village seems like a
dream, like a remote and inconspicuous flower, quietly beautiful,
satisfied on its own way of existence and harmony.
Image (right): Niederweningen, one of Urs' favorite spots to
use his photographic talents and enthusiasm.
Image (left): Swiss flag on top of a hill in an old battle field.
It looks exactly the same as the Red Cross flag except that the white
and red colors are swapped.
Image (right): The moon and star decoration on a public
fountain.
Image (left): View from the highest spot of Baden city. Many
Niederweningers take train or bus to work or shop in Baden, the
closest city to the village.
Image (right): Village church. Like many villagers, Marta is a
frequent church goer.
"In conjunction with the home, the primary school aims at the
harmonious development of the child's physical and mental
powers so that the result may be a balanced, vital personality."
Image (left): A view from the train station.
Image (right): Inconspicuous but nevertheless beautiful flowers.
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