vrijdag 1 januari 2016

In 2015, for the first time, I was afraid. Afraid for my precious Europe. It's only three years ago that we, the European Union, won a Noble Peace prize, for bringing decades of peace to the continent. In 2015, there's no denying there's a war raging at our border. The Ukranian-Russian war revealed Europe's limitations, unable to prevent it from unravelling. Unable to interfere. Embarassing. But perhaps sometimes doing nothing is better than doing the wrong thing? I hoped.

On the other side of the border, in 2015, youth unemployment in Greece stood at 50% and Greek banks closed down for weeks. Inexperienced Greek politicans collided with their arrogant European counterparts and almost pushed Greece out of the common European currency. A terrible blow to the euro project, a powerful symbol of the ever-growing European idea, was only avoided at the eleventh hour. The price paid: humiliation of millions of European citizens, in a deal that was meant to punish a country rather than help it. For the first time ever, I was ashamed to be European.

But both the Ukranian war and the Greek debt crisis faded from the news as Europe faced an even larger challenge. Dozens, later hundreds of people died and washed ashore the southern coasts of Europe, as they tried to seek refugee from war in the Middle East. Indifference was replaced by outrage over the picture of a dying girl, only to be replaced by indifference again. Borders which had disappeared within Europe were replaced again, by security checkpoints or sometimes even by walls or fences. Never was the European failure as clear as when thousands of refugees marched across Europe in search for shelter. For the second time in my life, I was ashamed to be European.

In my own and dearest Belgium, refugees awaiting registration were sleeping in the streets. The capital of Europe could not provide shelter for people who risked their lives and left their families to get there. Ironically, this was also one of the moments that gave me most hope this year. Where the Belgian government did not succeed in relieving the basic needs of these people, hundreds of Belgian citizens stepped up with tents, blankets, clothes, food, money, and helping hands. Similar scenes in the rest of Europe. There were terrible and deeply saddening stories of mosques or refugee centers being attacked, but the amount of caring, sharing and welcoming people greatly outnumbered those. In a few decades Angela Merkel will be remembered less for her handling of the Greek crisis than for her historic words. Wir schaffen das.

In 2015, acts of terrorism shook Europe. The Paris attacks initially referred to the Charlie Hebdo shooting, only to be replaced by even greater terror in the same year. Right as the news broke, I was afraid. I'm not afraid of terror attacks as much as I am worried about the way we choose to deal with them. The bellicose language of French President – and socialist – Francois Hollande resembled that of George Bush after 9/11. The Bataclan shooters turned out to be Belgian, but no one ever asked me to apologize because of my nationality. Unfortunately, that courtesy hasn't always been extended to a billion muslims around the world. In Brussels, soldiers on the streets have become a semi-normal sight – greeting me as I take the Thalys to Paris. During a few days of grave terror threat, Brussels was virtually locked down in scenes that resembled Baghdad more than the capital of Europe. When the police asked the Belgian twitter scene not to report its activity out of fear of tipping of potential terorrists, my country showed it can still make light of the situation by flooding twitter with cat pictures.



In spite of the pessimistic tone above, for me 2015 was a wonderful year. It started out with a semester in Boston, where I had the pleasure to be a visiting graduate student at MIT. It was a great experience, which not even a record-level snow fall could temper. I made it to Hawaii. I moved in with a fantastic person! I finished my PhD thesis! In 2016, I will get to defend my thesis and soon I hope to call myself a Dr. – after that, once again, the future is wide open. In a few months, I have no idea which job I will be doing or even where I will be. For 2016, I wish for my new work life to be exciting, and I wish to make it work with my girlfriend no matter where the adventure may take me.

Finally, for 2016, I wish for my Europe, my Belgium, and yes, my Denmark, to regain its confidence and its openness. I've heard stories of my grandparents talking about war and its horror. When I tell my kids or grandkids, I will tell them I've been lucky never to experience war. And I want to tell them that the parents or grandparents of some of their friends, were refugees who were fleeing war in other places of the world and came to our great continent, where they found shelter. That when they drowned at our shores, we put a halt to that and our rescue boats saved them. That we gave food and housing to whoever needed it. That we welcomed the next generation of Europeans. That they were many and things weren't always easy, but we rose up to the challenge and dealt with it. Then I will proudly tell them that in my country, in my continent, every single man, woman or child who needed help received it. Because yes, we can – and we have the money, infrastructure, courage and warmth to do so. Wir schaffen das. Because we are the richest and most developed continent in the world, and we lead by example. And because this is 2016. Happy New Year!



Vincent

woensdag 1 januari 2014


In 2013 there was a big train crash in Spain, Syrian children died of nerve gas and the Philippines got hit by a major typhoon, while Edward Snowden dramatically demonstrated the relativity of privacy. The Boston marathon got startled by a bombing, a Nairobi shopping mall got invaded by terrorists. Belgium changed Kings from Albert to Filip, the Vatican traded Benedictus for Franciscus. 

In Thirteen, Europe didn't fall apart and the recovery from crisis times has really begun. May Europe really overcome its internal struggles in 2014 and may European solidarity regain its true meaning. May Ryanair fly you to pretty European cities! May new generations of European students become the continent's ambassadors, educated in different countries through Erasmus exchanges. From Belgium to Denmark, Germany through Greece, in Romania or Spain, places are beautiful and people are pretty. May you discover the continent, great in diversity! A Europe which can unify and aid where necessary and preserve all the unique cultures, is a wonderful project which deserves your optimism and encouragement! For the people from Belgium, I wish for us to be a bit more conscious and proud of the great things our little but beautiful country possesses, and of course that we may be victorious at the World Cup in Brasil!

A year ago, I wrote here about my New Year's resolutions for the past year. I announced I would start to play the piano again, as well as to learn the Danish language and speak it fluently. I did buy myself an electric piano and have played it a bit, albeit not nearly regularly enough to really improve on my (very basic) skill level. I have spent most of the year in Danish class at LaerDansk, where I unfortunately missed the exam of the final module 5, as I was in the US in November. However, people will now have a hard time gossiping about me in my presence, and I can watch Borgen without subtitles. 

So perhaps there is still a little bit of room for improvement for both - does anyone know a nice piano teacher in Aarhus? And for my Danish colleagues, så snakker vi kun på Dansk! Jeg kan godt forstå det, du må bare hjælpe mig lidt! - but largely, mission accomplished! The biggest personal achievements during the year Thirteen have really been job related. I published a paper in Summer and had another one accepted for publication. I talked about this last one - of which I am especially proud and in which we discovered a new interesting exoplanet! - at MIT and at Harvard and presented it on a poster at the NASA Kepler conference. I've been to the US three times in the past year, I operated a telescope for the very first time in La Palma, I had a great summer school at the beautiful Onsala in Sweden. I've been teaching students about exoplanets, during a course which only two years ago was my own very first introduction to the research field. 

'13 for me has also meant really settling down in Aarhus. Many nice new friends have made me feel at home. While an international environment inevitably means no one stays forever - sadly, Sandra, one of the nicest people who was there from day one of my Erasmus experience, went back to Spain a few weeks ago - I have high hopes for there to be some lasting friendships nevertheless. Finding a lovely apartment in the middle of town and an even greater roommate Catalina has also played a big role in calling Aarhus home!

As publicly announcing resolutions appears to be beneficial for their chances of success, here it is again. In 2014 I intend to explain more astronomy to everyone. Many scientists do really great research, largely funded by tax payer's money. Unfortunately is often complex and difficult to bring to a broad audience. I will make my own little contribution by attempting to explain some of the universe's most interesting mysteries to anyone that may be interested. I will be happy to talk about extra-solar planets which may be quite like or unlike our Earth and some of which may have life. No matter your scientific background, as long as you are interested or intrigued. Secondly, I want to find the time in 2014 to travel for longer than two weeks and discover a country I haven't seen before.

What I finally wish for everyone for 2014 is spelled out in the Holstee Manifesto at the bottom of this page. This is your life. Do what you love, and do it often. Life is short. Live your dream. Wear your passion. Hello 2014! Happy New Year!



Vincent

vrijdag 21 juni 2013


Last weekend was Northside festival weekend! Sunday, Saturday and Friday were spent with beer in plastic cups, music filling the ears and pretty people everywhere. I did 2 x 8 hours of work, as a teamleader for the Student House in the Green Bar, and got a free ticket to the festival in return.

Friday was my work-free day and I went to enjoy the music with Tina and some of her biological friends. I started the day with a concert of Daughter, but it was Kaisers Orchestra an hour or two later that really impressed me with an inspiring concert. In the evening, I was truly disappointed by Keane: despite his fans and the music he's made, he couldn't hide his arrogance while on stage. Someone told me he should be compared to something like Coldplay, but he's not - he's simply not a nice guy. In addition, he was the living proof you don't need to be able to dance to make it to a festival stage, and when his only interaction with the public was when he started clapping for himself, it became a little bit ridiculous. 

There was also The Knife, and there is only one word to describe their concert: it was weird. It started out with some psychedelic music which I thought was the intro, but turned out to be the concert. There will ten dressed up girls on the stage dancing intensely and it took until the last twenty minutes to hear some vocals. The end of the night came with the sounds of the Danish band Nephew, who played for a home crowd and did what Keane couldn't: inspire the public. 







During the weekend and the days before, we had some friends (or friends of friends) making use of our spare living room bed, and so on Saturday I left for the festival grounds with my lovely roommate Catalina, her Italian friend Elena and Danish boyfriend Thomas. Not before picking up some raincoats, because the forecast predicted some real Danish weather for the day - read: showers! However, for me soon the time came to start my first shift and become responsible for 23 volunteers in the biggest bar of the festival. 



It was hard work, and my job certainly wasn't the hardest. I fixed some problems, did some explanation and tried to keep everyone happy by running around with candies. Team C, however, served a lot of customers and poured even more beers. Luckily, being in the center bar, we could enjoy a lot of the music while working. Worth remembering were Alt J, Kings of Convenience, Imagine Dragons, but most importantly... Nick Cave! Ah, music!








 After eight hours of hard work, when the festival grounds were empty and the bar cleaned up, we poured ourselves some after-work beers and saw our bar manager Niels wearing a weird (but apparently, warm) jacket. A few hours of sleep later, I had to be back, because my next eight hours of shift started at 11h.




 

This time, we died. Sixteen hours of work in less than 24 hours - too much. I did my best to keep morale up for everyone, but in the last hours, I had some moments of weakness. Luckily, the team was great and everything worked smoothly - with the exception of a little incident with our beer draft machine, which suddenly started pouring beer unstoppably. 



Luckily, to beat the fatigue, there was music. The beautiful Ellie Goulding and Fun in the afternoon, Gogol Bordello, Kashmir, Band of Horses, ... And after my work was finished (and I stuffed myself with food to recover somewhat), there were the great Arctic Monkeys and pretty Portishead to finish off a great weekend. Despite playing as the final band, this time of the year in Denmark, it never really gets dark outside.



See you next year!

Vincent

woensdag 27 februari 2013

The birthday party of my great Aarhus friends, the biologists Sandra and Tina. Entrance to the party was on condition of wearing a special hat or glasses - I picked glasses that convinced people I am an astronomer, without having to spell it out.





donderdag 10 mei 2012

(Post in English for convenience of Danish Youth Goodwill Ambassadors) 

Last week the university park transformed into the scenery of an incredible event. Maybe totally insane is a description that fits more accurately. Thursday was Kapsejladsen. The boat race.

An annual competition where the different student groups compete at the lake, surrounded by about 25 000 students, cheering and drinking. A lot of them start arriving as early as eight o'clock in the morning to pick the best spots on the hills around the water - some even bringing their tents there on the previous evening.

As for the exact concept of the competition: each team has to do some sort of relay, crossing the lake by boat, running out of it to quickly finish a beer and spin around 10 times (!) and finally get back to the other side to let the next person literally jump in, to take their place. Footage below shows the competition's final (straight from Aarhus University's Vimeo channel):

 

In my home university in Leuven, the event resembling this the most would be the 24-hour run where all student societies participate. Quite amazing as well, but this is an entirely different league.

And for once, even the Danish Weather Gods decided to cooperate and made it the most beautiful sunny day we've witnessed in many months. And thanks to the sun rising here so early, when we got there at eight it was already too warm to wear jackets. Before nine in the morning (but only after breakfast!), we finished our first beers. Many hours/beers later we would end this wonderful Thursday in the Student House at the after party - at least those of us that survived that long.

I almost forget to mention the spectacular "team introductions", including dressed up sea battles or a totally naked stripping (female) student. It was no coincidence that Lucie and Guillaume (friends that were here on Erasmus last semester) chose these days to visit Aarhus again. More about their visit is coming up soon.

Below you find more pictures of the Kapsejlads and its atmosphere that is best compared with large festivals. It is safe to admit that the next day, our bodies were hurting - and not only because of the sun burn we all got.












woensdag 29 februari 2012

Een twaalf! Een Deense twaalf welteverstaan – een Belgische achttien is dat. Ik heb het over het cijfer van Advanced Cosmology, een vak waar ik al in december (nog voor mijn trip naar Belgische bodem) twee papers voor indiende. Eindelijk hebben we dus de punten. De eerlijkheid gebiedt mij om er bij te vertellen dat de punten bij iedereen vrij hoog lagen, maar daarover hoor je mij dus niet klagen.

Inmiddels zit ik hier al aan mijn zesde week van het derde kwartaal. Dat wil zeggen dat ik na deze week nog slechts één weekje les heb van Pulsating Stars en van Innovation. En dat er binnenkort dus al weer twee examens aankomen. In kwartaal vier rest mij enkel nog die masterthesis en zal ik geen vakken meer opnemen. Het zijn dus de laatste lessen ooit die ik dezer dagen bijwoon. Toch een beetje een gek gevoel.

Met vier blokken zijn examens nooit heel ver weg, maar mij hoor je zeker niet klagen nu. Ik zal blij zijn als de vakken eindelijk afgerond zijn en ik me nog een tijd volledig kan toeleggen op het thesis. Er is sprake van enige voortgang, dat wel, maar er rest toch nog meer dan genoeg werk. Binnenkort zullen op de thesis na dus al mijn credits behaald zijn en rest er dus nog slechts één doel op academisch gebied alvorens ik kan afstuderen.

Niet-academisch blijft er natuurlijk nog voldoende mogelijke afleiding over. Een tijdje geleden was het de verjaardag van Sandra, mijn beste Aarhusvriendin. We trokken naar de Eventhall om er met een groepje van een tiental mensen ons uit te leven tijdens het paintballen, het sumo-worstelen, als levende tafelvoetbal en op springkastelen. De gevechtjes deden mij een beetje denken aan de Wina campagneweek.

Ondertussen heb ik ook de Belgen van dit semester ontdekt. Opvallend veel Franstaligen (voornamelijk ook Brusselaars), maar we zijn toch ook met een groepje Vlamingen. Eline uit het Farma-presidium dat opeens in het Student House bij mij een pintje kwam bestellen, zal ik ook niet meteen vergeten. In dat Studenterhus blijft het trouwens aangenaam vertoeven en niet zo lang geleden mocht ik er nog aan ølsmagning (bierproeverij) doen met de teamleaders. Wie herkent het bier op de foto?

Ten slotte vormt er zich ook een begin van een antwoord op de vraag die mij de laatste tijd zeer regelmatig wordt gesteld: wat na het afstuderen eind juni? Ik mag namelijk voor een periode van ongeveer drie maanden gaan werken bij DEME! Wat ik er precies zal doen zal ik later weten te expliqueren, maar ik zal waarschijnlijk ingezet worden bij een project buiten de Europese grenzen! Woep woep!


Groetjes, kusjes en liefde,

Vinnie

PS: Met de Danish Youth Goodwill Ambassadors hadden we maandag een meeting over het gebruik van sociale media. Wie weet ben ik dus binnenkort ook terug te vinden op Twitter of op LinkedIn.

Belgen

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