Blogs.ya.com Quitar publicidad
On poetry and culture shock
Because the blogosphere needs haikus.
Acerca de

GUIRI: In Spain, a foreign person, especially a tourist. For my friends, it also applies to me, a Spanish woman who likes to live in English-speaking countries.

I have wanted to be online for a long time, but I never found the time to teach myself how to make a proper website. Now that getting a blog is technnically as easy as getting a Yahoo email address, it seems a start.

You might expect

Brief comments on what it means to be a foreigner in an American University town.

Poetry, mostly my own, and bits of other people's.

HispaLab
HispaLab
Sindicación
 
Religion at Universities
The Spanish Constitution says that we don’t have an official religion but that the government may take measures to acknowledge the social importance of individual religions. That is a lot more lax than the American First Amendment and in practice it means that the Catholic church is present in public life in a degree that many people find unacceptable. Since we are still a very homogeneous country racially and culturally, it is normally understood that the only alternative to Catholicism is laicism. Kids in school choose either Religion (meaning Catholicism) or a secular alternative. People elected for public office have a choice: swearing on the Bible or promising on the Constitution. One of these days there might be other books or religious objects on that table next to the other two books, but that will not happen soon. Not before a decade, is my guess.

That is why there is an office at Seville University, in MY building, with a sign that says: “Office of Religious Assistance to the University Community”. Guess what? According to that sign, “religious” only means Catholic. It makes me sore and itchy to pass by that door knowing that we have such a shortage of classrooms and that the biggest of the two cafés in the building closed down three years ago to make room for professors’ offices. And what’s worse: after having worked at that building for nine years, I haven’t seen them organise any activity. I have no idea of what they do and people who don’t study in the Humanities building don’t know this office exists.

In my year in Aberdeen, I saw that the Chaplaincy was different. The University chaplain belonged to the Church of Scotland (I think) but there were several multi-purpose rooms, there were services for different denominations and it worked as a referral service too. Nice. And here at Cornell there is the Annabel Taylor Building. I could not believe my eyes when I saw what was going on. About fifteen different religions, sharing a building, each one with one or more chaplains. On Sundays there is a mad rush as each Christian denomination takes turns to use the chapel. And everyone seems to get on well.

When I told my brother about it, he said Spaniards should see that sort of thing to stop thinking our culture is so important; and those are big words coming from my favourite atheist. Seeing the difference between this University, Seville University, and the very different roles religion has in them, I am even more convinced that the Office for Religious Assistance should be dissolved and make room for more useful things. A new café, for example.

(Titular de la Gaceta Universitaria, año 2015: El SARUS cierra para dejar espacio al nuevo bar de Filología. Obispo de turno: “La Decana ha declarado la guerra al bienestar espiritual de sus alumnos”.)

 
Comentario:
A friend of mine, whose religion is Sikh, asked to me why there is people who doesn't like the idea of having "churches" for different beliefs. Well, one day of these, I will attend to her church (I was invited a few days ago) and I think it can be an interesting experience (although she knows I am not a religious person at all... just asked to me if I was atheist).
No