fpb: (Default)
fpb ([personal profile] fpb) wrote2008-01-28 01:53 pm

Praise where praise is due

There is a montain region in northern Italy where they speak German (rather, Tyrolean dialect) and treat anything and everything Italian with contempt and derision. I could say a lot of things about them, but there is no space here; let me just say that I do not treat South Tyrolers as Italians, and, although a large number of them race under Italian colours, especially in winter sports, when any of them wins "for Italy" and there is the three-coloured flag flying and our national anthem playing, I, for some reason, forget to applaud.

However, there is one person for whom I will make an exception. Her name is Denise Karbon, and apart from being a champion skier in giant slalom, she is a member of one of the Italian police forces. This shows unusual commitment to the country for a South Tyroler, and therefore I am willing to consider her an honorary Italian.

Which is just as well. Because a couple of days ago, young Denise crowned a sequel of triumphant slalom races by winning her seventh of the season -

- with a broken hand.

Photobucket

[identity profile] atallvlad.livejournal.com 2008-01-28 04:52 pm (UTC)(link)
She certainly looks (in the face) as if she is a direct descendant of Ostrogoths. Wasn't a large portion of northern Italy in the German empire from the time of the Visigoths/ Ostrogoths until very recently? relatively speaking. The historical atlas I am using only goes from ad 300 to ad 1361 and the northern parts of italy are firmly german from ad 600- ad 1361

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2008-01-28 04:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Never mind the Germans, most of whom are brown-haired anyway. There are blondes in Italy all the way down to Sicily. Julius Caesar was fair-haired, and so was Garibaldi.