Saturday, 26 April 2008

Anastasia Romanov or Anna Anderson?

When I was little my father told me a story about a lost princess, little Anastasia. I remember being fascinated by her and I still am. I wonder if any of you are familiar with the story. Anastasia was the youngest daughter of Tsar Nicolas II the last Tsar of Imperial Russia. Anastasia had three elder sisters: Olga, Tatiana, Maria and a younger brother Alexei. They lived in an enchanted world of elegant palaces and grand parties.
On the 17 th of July 1918 the family was awakened and told to get dressed. Believing they were going to be photographed they stood in a row but were surprised when armed men came in and started firing. It is believed that the Tsars died straight away but the bullets for some reason bounced off the girls (unknown to the soldiers they had sewn the Royal Crown diamonds on their dresses, so they could smuggle them around while they were being captivated). The soldiers were stunned by such a miracle and started stabbing the girls.

Rumours about Anastasia being alive were spreading through Russia. And I honestly believe that she did survive and I’m going to tell you why.

Two years after the massacre a woman jumped off a bridge in Berlin, she was saved and taken to a hospital. She had no ID and did not identify herself so she was sent to a mental institution. There was buzz going around of how much she looked like the Grand Duchess Tatiana. Later she admitted she was Anastasia Romanov and explained what had happened on the night of the shooting including the incident of the royal diamonds. She was able to make her escape with the help of a guard who rescued her from amongst the corpses after noticing that she was still alive and took her to Romania. Up to here she could have been an imposter but some strange facts make you think the opposite they’re just too many coincidences. However she was rejected by many family members maybe because they were scared that if she really was Anastasia then they wouldn’t inherit much, because it was believed that Tsar Nicolas had 20 million rubles in a Swiss account. Nevertheless Anastasia’s uncle Grand Duke Ernst of Hesse was determined to prove she was an imposter and substantiated an investigation that indicated that Anna Anderson was actually a polish factory worker, Franziska Schanzkowska but this theory was some how controversial because the woman who testified was paid. In those days what factory worker could actually speak so many languages fluently? However some questioned why she wouldn’t speak Russian, which was Anastasia’s native language, but the truth is she understood when spoken to her but replied in German, the reason she gave for this was that she would never speak the language spoken by those who killed her family. She spoke of private details that outsiders of the Russian Royal Family wouldn’t know and even met Princess Irene, Anastasia’s aunt (who hadn’t seen her niece in ten years) said the were nothing alike but later admitted that they were very similar. Moreover her son, Anastasia childhood playmate sent Anderson a list of questions that only the REAL Anastasia could answer. Consequently Anna answered all of them correctly. Peculiar isn’t it?
DNA testing does, in fact, reveal that bodies were missing from the pit into which the Romanov bodies were thrown and burned. In addition, scars that Anna Anderson had on her body were said to have matched those that the Princess Anastasia had as well.
Anderson and Anastasia were very alike and also had other physical similarities. Anderson had a foot deformity like Anastasia's. Anderson suffered from bone tuberculosis, a condition said to have been common among the Romanovs. Better still, Anderson recalled that Grand Duchess Olga used to call Anastasia "Shvipsik", which meant little one, a pet name only a few family members ever knew to begin with. Anthropologists who studied their photographs found their faces to be very similar. In addition a famous anthropologist, Dr. Otto Reche, testified in court that Anastasia and Anna Anderson had to be either the same person or identical twins.
A handwriting expert also swore that she was the real Anastasia because their handwriting was identical. But the truth is that she didn’t win the case in court because as far as the Judge was concerned she didn’t have enough proof and was identified as being the polish factory worker( who didn´t have no schooling and was considered to be limited in inteligence) . However nobody could explain her intimate acquaintance with History and customs of the Romanov family( including how to walk, sit, stand and offer her hand in exactly the home-trained manner) and how she knew every royal house in Europe, dealing easily with hotel staff in French and also knew how to play the piano with or without a sheet.
Anna Anderson died in February 1984 from pneumonia.
Unknown to Anna, in 1979, before her death, the bodies of the missing Romanov family had actually been finally found; but due to political instability in Russia, the bodies had been reburied until 1989. The remains were "officially" recovered in 1991. In all, the skeletons of nine people were found in the grave but eleven people had been shot by the Communist Party in 1918, so two bodies were missing from the grave. Forensic examiners soon determined that the missing bodies were those of the two youngest children, Alexis and Anastasia. So at this late date, there was established a possibility that Anastasia had actually escaped the execution. But did she? And was Anna Anderson her? I believe she really was the lost princess.

Monday, 17 March 2008

Bravo! Bravo!

Oscar winner Marion Cotillard , unlike other French actresses she’s sexy and known for having that je ne sais quoi about her so it’s easy to understand how she earned her reputation. But now she’s in trouble and has been called big mouthed and having a few screws missing after saying that the 9/11 was staged and never happened. Ups. Her lawyer has already tried to soothe her comments because they’re causing a huge fuss in the cinema industry. But families who still endure those they lost are really upset with her statements. After being questioned about her comments in an American program Marion tried to take back what she had said. "At no point did I intend to contest the horrific attacks of September 11, 2001, one of the most tragic days in all of history".
Some are worried about what will happen to her career because her statements were very strong. Next time think before you open your mouth Marion!

Currently all over the internet there’re videos mocking her Oscar winning speech.

Here’s a hilarious one.

http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/154aac41c2

Saturday, 8 March 2008

The Memory Keeper´s Daughter


I wonder if any of you have read The Memory Keeper´s Daughter by Kim Edwards? What did you think of it?
I came across it last year after looking in a list of best sellers on the Waterstones website and I’m glad I did. This book is beautiful. Heartbreaking. Powerful. Wonderful. Sad. It’s an actual storm of emotions.
The book tells the story of David and Norah Henry. On a heavily snowy night in 1964 David gives birth to his own twins in his clinic. One healthy boy and an unexpected twin, a girl with Down syndrome.
On that night Dr.Henry, knowing in the 60´s that imperfect children were sent away to institutions where they died young and their families spoke of them in whispers, had also had a sister who died young due to heart failure causing pain to all those who loved her. Considering these reasons and trying to spare Norah the pain, Dr.Henry made a haste decision. He told his wife the child had died at birth and gave orders to his nurse to take the child to an institution and never tell anybody what had happened.
The nurse, Caroline after seeing the conditions at the institution is appalled and decides to bring up Phoebe on her own.
Over the next 25 years we see how David’s decision affects all, Norah mourns her baby that nobody wants to talk about, David who regrets giving her away and has to live with his decision driving the family distant, Paul who thinks he can’t live up to his father’s expectations whilst growing up in the secrets that tear his parents apart.
Meanwhile Caroline faces discrimination as she tries to get medical help for her daughter, taking us through various events that might seem outrageous to us today, but were widely held at the time the book is set.
This book is an engaging story written beautifully, making all of us feel Caroline’s pain as a mother when anybody looked at Phoebe differently. Each chapter is told from a different perspective making us understand each person’s motives, feelings and lies.

Would you have done the same as David? I think this story helps us understand David’s decision, even though we don’t agree with it. Throughout the book we begin to love this unwanted child who was denied love by those who should have loved her. Phoebe is an ordinary child with just slower abilities that people should comprehend. It helps us realise how difficult it was for a parent to bring up a child with Down syndrome in those days because they were denied education and medical help being considered mentally retarded and that they would overwhelm the education system.

Post in your opinion…

Tuesday, 4 March 2008

Human Remains Found In Bolonese


Yesterday police found the bodies of two students in a London Secondary School.The bodies somewhat savaged were found in the gym´s cupboard by a teacher.Considering the recent result of human DNA in the spagetti given for lunch, the status of the investigation has now changed into a major butcher man hunt .