Archive for the ‘Mid-town’ category

Got Ogbono? The Nigerian Independence Parade

October 1, 2007

I was all set for what I thought would be a real downer of a parade.  I expected to almost revel in how minor an event it would be.  But the Nigerians ended up coming through with a pretty good parade.

Last year, I had accidently run into the parade on my way home from some wanderings and had been entranced/bemused by the display.  I had seen a series of flatbed trucks packed with people just bouncing to some loud music; most of them didn’t even have any banners on the flatbeds.  The parade moved incredibly slowly and I had done my grocery shopping at one point and when I came out, the parade had barely moved.

And I expected just about the same this year.  But that wasn’t to happen.  This year, I went out a little early for the parade and found myself a good spot around 47th.  The parade was on 2nd Avenue and the cops had blocked off about half of the street (lengthwise) and still let two lanes continue on.

The parade was to start at 1pm.  Well, that time came and went and all that I was seeing were me and the cops.  There was a flow of Nigerians (discernable from their green and white clothing) heading northward, where the parade was to begin.  A perverse part of me started to think that perhaps that was the parade…just an occasional group of one or two or five people on the sidewalk.  That would have been even more low-key than last year.

At 1:25pm, it was still just me and the cops.  Amazing.

 At 1:30, I started to hear some music in the distance and people started to line up at the barricades.  By 1:45, I’ve seen the beginning of the parade.  The parade started 54th Street, so it had taken them 45 minutes or so to get 6 blocks…if they had started on time.

Finally, they arrived.  This is the only Manhattan parade that I’ve been at the very beginning and not seen the cops on horses.  Nor were there any politicians; although that’s happened a number of times.  But they did have the other staple:  the dignitaries.

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Of course, I haven’t the slightest idea of who any of them are.  But this guy looked pretty impressive.

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It was interesting that a lot of the Nigerians were happy to pose for photos during the parade.  I have to admit I liked that a lot.  Usually, marchers are caught up in what they’re doing or talking with their friends or even talking on cell phones.

There were a number of different groups that came through.  None of them were slickly produced or had expensively created stuff.  Here are a couple of examples.

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 The parade had one marching band.  I don’t know if they had any direct connections to Nigeria as one of the members handed me a card when he saw me taking pictures.  The band is called the “Pan-American Marching Band of New York”.  Nevertheless, they were good and loud; and that counts for a lot in a marching band.

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But they did have some company that looked very Nigerian.

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The parade was reasonably long, but the highlight of the parade came with the MoneyGram float.  They were playing some loud recorded music and, during a pause in their slow progress, some of the float riders decided to dance.  It was great!

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 And I’d be remiss not to mention that the parade did have another standard item in the parade:  men in skirts.  Okay, these guys cheated by also wearing pants, but I think the streak of every parade having some men in some sort of skirt does continue.

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 There were a number of other floats and groups and the like.  But one of the more interesting items about the parade was, as usual, the crowd.

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As parade viewers go, this was a pretty diverse set of people.  But I think the key is that most of the Nigerians on Second Avenue during that perfect Saturday afternoon were actually in the street marching with their countrymen.

An aside:  just before the parade started, a woman had come by to find out what was going on.  I told her about the parade and how I had expected it to be a poorly executed and viewed parade based on what I had seen last year.  I think this caught her attention and she stuck around for most of the parade.  She’s with a well-known foreign policy thinktank (in a staff support role) and may simply have had a sympathetic reaction to such a pronouncement.  Instead, she got a pretty good parade and she was actually very supportive of the groups that were marching past.  (My apologies for leading you astray.)

And finally:  ogbono.  I dunno.  It was on a shirt that I saw.  Apparently ogbono is a type of nut that Nigerians use to make a variety of their staple foods.

-H

The Algonquin Round Table

September 28, 2007

As odd as it may seem, one of the great desires I had when I first moved to NYC was to see the Algonquin round table.  It took me a month or two, but I did it and I still ankle over there on occasion to check in on it.  My version of a thrill.

And it always astonishing me that no one seems to know what it is.  What it is….is a round table in the Algonquin Hotel located on W. 44th Street between 5th and 6th Avenues.

And the round table itself.

It’s got ten seats around it now, but my memory of its reference was that there were actually eight seats in the heyday of the 20’s.  Wikipedia has a nice entry on the table with all of the key players identified.

I first remember learning about it when I read Harpo Marx’s autobiography “Harpo Speaks”, which is a great read.  The table was where NYC’s intellectual glitterati of the 20’s would gather each day to one-up each other with witticisms and cut-throat insults.  The most famous of the participants were Dorothy Parker, George S. Kaufman, and Robert Benchley.  There were lots of hangers-on (like Harpo), but the gist of the table was a celebration of how smart and popular these characters were.  Harpo was apparently a good friend of Alexander Woolcott (a key member of the “real” group) and I’m sad to say he’s one of only two characters in the core group that Wikipedia doesn’t have an entry for.  As I understand it, Woolcott was a critic and newspaper writer who had something of an edge to him.

The hotel has a painting of the group next to the table.

People do sit and eat at the table and I’ve always wondered if they knew that they were sitting at the center of a lot of what the “Roaring 20s” was all about.  It doesn’t matter.  The Algonquin is still a very, very nice hotel with an active entertainment schedule such as lounge singers and the like.  I haven’t eaten there (their prix fixe is about $60 and I keep telling you folks I’m cheap), but it gets good reviews.

-H

Marble Collegiate Church on Fifth Avenue

September 25, 2007

This is just a simple post about a nice little church building that I’ve walked by many times, but only recently noticed.

Empire State Building and Collegiate Church

This picture is from somewhere around 5th Avenue and 26th Street in the middle of Manhattan.  When I originally took the picture, I was thinking in terms of a post commenting on the Empire State Building and how it really doesn’t capture the hearts of New Yorkers.  It’s not a bad building, but it isn’t one that you admire in the way that the Chrysler Building is admired.

The picture above captures some of the plainness of the Empire State Building.  It isn’t an ugly building by any stretch, but it is only notable because it’s the tallest building in the city…now.

Anyway, the nice church in front of it does capture the difference between big and beautiful.  That was how I was thinking of characterizing it.  It’s not a deep thought by any means, but this blog is all about introducing and presenting NYC (I’ve had several tourists point at the Chrysler Building and ask if that was the Empire State).

But the church is the subject, let’s stop my straying.

It’s formal name is the Marble Collegiate Church.  It’s part of the Reformed Church of America.  That’s a puzzle to me and I’m usually pretty good on that sort of stuff.  Apparently is the new version (or “a” new version) of the Dutch Reformed Church.  The church itself says it’s been around since 1628, making it plenty old. 

It’s got a great front door.

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On the day I walked by, the surrounding fence was covered with ribbons.

Ribbons on Marble Collegiate Church

The ribbons are posted to symbolize the deaths of American soldiers (gold), prayers for the Iraqi people (blue), and prayers for peace (green).  The writeup doesn’t give any indication whether the ribbons are part of a protest or simply exactly what it seems to indicate:  prayers for peace and help to the grieving.

And was this the reason for me doing this post?  No.  Nor was the relative ancientness of the church.  Instead, it turns out that this is where Norman Vincent Peale spent 50 years of his ministry.  He’s famous for his teaching on “the power of positive thinking”.  There’s a statue of him in the courtyard.  Barely visible due to the ribbons. I had to climb up on a ledge to get a decent shot of the statue.

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And, tucked away well to Dr. Peale’s left, is another statue.

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It appears to be Joseph, Mary, and Child; possibly on their flight to Egypt (Matthew 2:14).

It’s small and well out of the way whereas the statue of one of the church ministers is big and front and center.  Make of that what you will.

-H

Fireworks at the United Nations

September 20, 2007

I live in a east-side section of Manhattan called Tudor City.  I was working on a post this evening and heard a loud explosion.  And then another, and another.  I’m a stone’s throw from the United Nations and they’re all in a tizzy regarding opening of the general session and visits from President Bush and the president of Iran (I’m not going to google his name just to get the spelling right, though).

So, I thought something was up.  I grabbed my camera and went to the East River.  Okay, to an overlook in Tudor City that looks out to the East River.  It was fireworks.  Not really a huge show (the 4th of July stuff is unbelievable), but a big one.  One large barge in the middle of the East River just a few hundred yards downstream from the UN.

I wasn’t the only one there.  We had about 50 of us.  The show lasted maybe 15 or 20 minutes and that was it.

I took a number of pictures, but only one was any good at all.

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And absolutely no one had any idea why it was being done.  I heard speculation regarding Yom Kippur, the equinox, celebrating a presidential visit, and the opening of the general session of the UN. 

-H

Taiwan Protest March in NYC

September 19, 2007

On Saturday, I was leaving my apartment to go to the Steuben Day Parade and saw a long line of marchers dressed mostly in green coming down 2nd Avenue and then turning west on 42nd Street.  It took me a moment to realize that this was a Taiwanese protest march that I had seen announced a few days ago.

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They were very orderly, had a few chants, stayed on the sidewalk, and had a bunch of people.  I don’t think they’re going to ever get what they want, though.  They want to have recognition of their independence and a seat in the United Nations.  Not likely.  The U.S. is their best friend and even we oppose it.  Too bad.

Actually, I visited there long ago in 1972.  A beautiful island that had a lot of wonderful things for a teenager to see and buy (they didn’t recognize copyrights and you could buy a whole album for about 50 cents; you can imagine how many albums my brother and I brought back).  Whenever I mention my visit to a Taiwanese, he/she always, always, always says something like:  “It’s changed a lot from back then.  It doesn’t look like that anymore.”  It’s almost scary.

Some more pictures of the group.  I’ve no idea of the size, but they stretched way, way out.

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I feel for their situation.  They’re an extremely prosperous nation with a wild and wooly democratic system that occasionally includes fistfights in their government’s chambers.  And the rest of the world thinks of them as a rebellious region of mainland China.  Just like Chechnya, which is what these protesters really fear. (For the reasons of that fear, see here and here.)

-H