Saturday, September 30, 2023

Visas and Skullduggery

 Visas and Skullduggery

Just moments ago, in defiance of gravity, we soared higher as the gear and flaps retracted on departure from the USA.   After a few weeks in Italy, our stops in EU member states

Destination Belgium


will swell with the addition of a pause in France at Charles de Gaulle airport before continuing by train to Belgium.  Freewheeling jaunts like these, up to now, have been the norm, but with the burgeoning of globalization and growing security concerns, times are changing which is why I’d like to take a moment to go over some new and old travel rules that will soon impact American tourists.  

A new kind of travel visa will soon debut among the ‘must haves’ of travel documents before last-minute travelers, and pleasure-seeking jet setters can grab their passports and hop a flight “across the pond”.  Those unrestricted days will soon be gone because the rules for travel to Europe have changed. 

Currently, only non-EU citizens (ex; American citizens) who intend to stay in Italy for more than 90 days must apply for a long-stay visa. Like many Americans, we never had to obtain one.  Because we both worked during our early travel years, staying that long was inconceivable.  By the time it became possible, we had acquired Italian/EU passports, which made a long-stay visa unnecessary.

The new kid on the block is the European Travel Information and Authorization System travel visa, ETIAS for short.  It was scheduled to debut in 2024, but thankfully, its implementation has been rescheduled to May 2025, with further delays possible. [1]  ETIAS is an electronic travel authorization, also known as a visa waiver that goes along with any other form of visa (already in place as mentioned above) that also may apply.  This new entry requirement affects former visa-exempt nationals traveling to any of thirty European countries.[2]  The current list of countries (just about all of Europe) requiring this new visa to enter is as follows:

• AUSTRIA • BELGIUM • BULGARIA • CROATIA • CYPRUS • CZECH REPUBLIC • DENMARK • ESTONIA • FINLAND • FRANCE • GERMANY • GREECE • HUNGARY • ICELAND • ITALY • LATVIA • LIECHTENSTEIN • LITHUANIA • LUXEMBOURG • MALTA • NETHERLANDS • NORWAY • POLAND • PORTUGAL • ROMANIA • SLOVAKIA • SLOVENIA • SPAIN • SWEDEN • SWITZERLAND [2]

In the past, travelers from 59 countries were exempt from needing a visa to enter the EU, but with this change this is no longer the case. [2]  If you plan to visit any of the countries listed for a short-term stay and wonder if the USA is on the list now requiring this visa, be assured it is.  One form of immunity to ETIAS requirements is if you are a national of a European country requiring an ETIAS visa.  For example, the holder of dual passports, US and Italy, would be immune to the requirement. 

If there is a nice part to the new rule, it is that this visa is valid for three years or until the travel document you used in your application expires, whichever occurs first (i.e.: if you get a new passport, you need to get a new ETIAS travel authorization as well).  Another convenience is that it will be computer-based and allow applicants to apply for an ETIAS travel authorization before their departure, online. 

It would be wise to apply well in advance.  Although it is hoped that most applications will be processed within minutes, so fingers crossed, it seems likely that most last-minute applications just might make it.  Applying for an ETIAS requires a payment of €7.[3]  Those under the age of 18 or over 70 will have their fees waived.[4]  But since things will likely change before the new requirement goes into effect and following that, from the growing pains of lessons learned, it’s best to check for the latest information.

To recap, a valid ETIAS travel authorization allows entry into participating European countries as often as you want for short-term stays.  However, short-term visits for frequent travelers can be impacted by what is known as the Schengen Convention.  The Schengen Convention also takes the form of a visa, the most common in Europe, that allows a person to travel to any Schengen member state for up to 90 days in every six month period starting from the date of entry.  Within this zone, checks at EU internal borders have been abolished.  Currently, twenty seven nations comprise the Schengen area.[3]  

Keep in mind that the EU is a political and economic union.  In contrast, the Schengen area allows for the free movement of people between the participating countries.  It also helps to remember that an ETIAS permit is like a Schengen visa, but for visa-exempt travelers.  At first glance, it appears to be a straightforward rule, but is often misunderstood even by savvy travelers.  It is essential to know how the rule works to avoid overstaying and facing subsequent penalties.  A Schengen Calculator is available to determine when your 90-day allowance in a 180-day window ends.[6]  When you arrive in a Schengen area, don’t be surprised if a border guard asks to see your passport and other documents and verify that you meet the entry conditions.  I wonder how, with all the imprints in our passports, none of which are in any sequence, they know the earlier entry/exit dates, but the newer biometric passports may do the counting for them.  Unprepared, it can be an unexpected shock for any traveler.  I recall a gentleman ahead of us at German entry control once being told he had only a few days remaining.  He was stunned into the realization he quickly needed an early go-home plan.

With our European entry paperwork sorted by this

Bruges Zot Beer


point, we find ourselves well
past Newfoundland, mid-Atlantic, with Greenland ahead.  What attracts us to fairytale Bruges is more than chocolate, waffles, and blond Zot beer.  The food there, which we expect will be excellent, is served in the most inviting settings, interspersed with canals, replete with storybook architecture, churches, and museums.

One of its charms is the Madonna of Bruges.  Because little is known of the details and associated drama surrounding its creation, it is relegated to the branch of lesser-knowns in the annals of art treasures.  Yet, there is reason enough to visit.  More than simply a Madonna, it also presents the Christ child.  What makes it especially treasured is that it was sculpted by Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni, whom we know simply as Michelangelo.   That connection is all the more reason to explore its remarkable history.

From 1501 at age 26 until he died in 1564, Michelangelo’s talent did not suffer for commissions.  By then, his fame had spread internationally to include King Francis I of France, the Signoria of Venice, even as distant as the Sultan of Turkey.  Although these foreign patrons were rejected or held off, as in the case of the Sultan for 10 years, one commission was accepted from the Mouscron brothers, Giovanni and Alessandro, wealthy Dutch cloth merchants from Bruges, which at the time was one of the leading commercial cities in Europe.[4] 

Michelangelo accepted their request for a statue to adorn their hometown Church of

Church of Our Lady, Bruges

Our Lady.  Purchased for 100 ducats (each today worth approximately $150), it was transported to the Flemish city of Bruges in 1506 by the merchant who commissioned it, hence the name by which it is known. 

This beautiful translucent marble creation is often compared to Michelangelo's Vatican Pietà, completed five years before his Bruges masterpiece.  The Madonna wears the same solemn facial expression in both sculptures.  Other shared similarities include Mary's flowing robe and the movement of the drapery.  Her long, oval face is also reminiscent of the Pietà.[4]   

In this work, Michelangelo took a different approach

than his predecessors, even from his earlier representations of this often-depicted scene.  His other Mother and Child portrayals feature a pious Virgin smiling and lovingly looking down on the infant in her arms.  However, in Bruges, we will see Jesus standing upright, almost unsupported, only loosely restrained by Mary's left hand.  He appears to be about to step away from his mother.  Mary does not cling to her son or even look at him but gazes down and away with an expressionless stare.  This distancing may be accounted for when we take into account the belief that this sculpture was intended as an altarpiece to be positioned above the main altar.[5]

Adding to its notoriety, it would be the only sculpture by Michelangelo transported outside Italy in his lifetime.[10]  Following its arrival, history would see it depart Belgium twice, beginning in 1794.  During that year, the sculpture was removed to protect it from French Revolutionaries. [7]  It and other valuable works of art were moved to Paris for safekeeping, only to return after Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo in 1815.  Its second departure occurred during World War II.  With the retreat of Nazi soldiers, the sculpture was smuggled swathed in mattresses in a Red Cross truck to Germany in September 1944 as the Allies advanced on the city. [2] [8]

In her book, The Rape of Europa, Lynn Nicholas tells the story of a French woman,

Rose Valland, who spied on the Nazis’ looting operation and singlehandedly saved many works of art. [11]  Later, Robert Edsel created a documentary film based on Lynn’s work and went on to publish a book entitled The Monuments Men that was made into a 2014 movie by the same name.[12]  It was the Monuments Men who recovered the Bruges Madonna as the war came to an end, hidden in the vast salt mine in Altaussee, high in the Austrian Alps. 

It was thanks to a toothache that The Monuments Men learned of the Altaussee mines.  Months earlier, Captain Robert Posey was in the city of Trier in eastern Germany with Pfc. Lincoln Kirstein and needed treatment.  Townspeople led Posey and Kirstein to a local dentist, who pulled the tooth.  Before they left, the dentist

A Few WWII Monuments Men

suggested they visit his son-in-law, who had been an art scholar before the war.  In a remote cottage, the son admitted that he had once worked closely with Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring (Hitler’s second-in-command) and Alfred Rosenberg, the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg (ERR) leader.  Hitler had tasked the ERR to steal art for the Führer-museum complex planned to showcase Hitler’s plunder.  In the process, the son-in-law told them the location of Goring's and Hitler's stash in the vast salt mine at Altaussee.[8] 

Thankfully a plan to destroy the mine to prevent the artwork from falling into enemy hands was thwarted by a combination of local miners and Nazi officials who considered the plan folly.  The mine director convinced the Nazi district leader to set smaller charges to augment larger bombs already in place.  He then ordered the larger ordinance removed without the district leader’s knowledge.  On 5 May 1945, the smaller charges detonated, closing the mine's entrances and sealing the art safely inside instead of seeing it destroyed.[8]

    As the war quickly drew to a close, the area, within days, seemed destined for Soviet

Examining Their Mattress Protected Find

control.  Time was of the essence if The Monuments Men were to beat the approaching deadline for partitioning the territory.  It forced the American team to work around the clock before Soviet forces arrived.  While locals predicted it would take weeks to clear a route through the rubble, Captain Posey used his architectural training to clear a path.

With a lantern in hand, Captain Posey was the first to enter the mine through the small gap in the rubble, followed closely by Pfc. Kirstein.  Inside, they discovered Michelangelo’s Madonna.  Hidden inside the mine’s miles of tunnels, some chambers more than a mile inside the mountain, the ERR had also hidden other masterpieces, including Vermeer’s The Astronomer, the Ghent Altarpiece by Jan van Eyck, and thousands of other works of art and culturally significant items looted from the great French collections by the ERR. [8] [9]

Days were spent packing the Michelangelo Bruges Madonna, described as “looking very much like a large Smithfield ham.” [8] 

Getting the Bruges Madonna Ready to Ship

On 10 July, it was lifted onto a mine cart, rolled to the entrance, and loaded into a truck with other recovered pieces destined for a collection point, a former Nazi Party headquarters in Munich.

As the sun begins to rise as we wing our way across the Atlantic, closing in on our own EU and Schengen checks in Munich, it is my desire to see this recovered masterpiece, once shrouded in a cave, that fuels my interest in Bruges and the trials and tribulations of this masterwork.  And to think, I needn’t go to Moscow to see this stolen, recovered, and well-traveled masterpiece.

Instead, it will be Bruges, where it sits, believed to portray the Christ child in His head bowed mother’s hands, reflecting on her son's tragic fate, in contrast to Michelangelo’s representation in his Pietà of the crucified Jesus, again in her arms, but there reflecting on His destiny fulfilled. 

Until we see and report on it, travel far, eat well, and live long.


From That Rogue Tourist,
Paolo

 

[1] European-Union-Postpones-Launch of Entry Requirement Document, https://www.travelagentcentral.com/europe/european-union-postpones-launch-two-authorization-processes?utm_medium=email&utm_source=nl&utm_campaign=TAC-NL-Daily&oly_enc_id=7910E7565989E6B

[2] Who Should Apply, https://travel-europe.europa.eu/etias/who-should-apply_en

[3] Schengen Area, https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/schengen-borders-and-visa/schengen-area_en

[4] ETIAS Frequently Asked Questions, https://etias.com/etias-frequently-asked-questions

[5 ] New Requirements to Travel to Europe, https://travel-europe.europa.eu/etias/what-etias_en#validity 

[6] Schengen Calculator, https://www.schengenvisainfo.com/visa-calculator/ 

[7] Madonna of Bruges, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madonna_of_Bruges

[8] Madonna of Bruges, https://www.michelangelo.net/madonna-of-bruges/

[9] Michelangelo, The Artist, the Man, and his Times, William E. Wallace, 2010, Cambridge University Press

[10] True Story of The Monuments Men, https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/true-story-monuments-men-180949569/

[11] Rose Valland, https://www.artonauti.it/rose-valland-spia-rischio-vita-per-salvare-arte-francese/

[12] Robert M. Edsel, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_M._Edsel