Ottawa Citizen

HOW TRAVEL PRIED OPEN MY BLINDERS

Visiting relatives in Norway made a young American appreciate the world and its people

- RICK STEVES Rick Steves (ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

I’ll never forget my first trip to Europe. I was a gangly 14-year-old, dragged to the Old Country by a conspiracy of grandparen­ts and parents solely to visit Norwegian relatives.

I didn’t want to go. It just didn’t make sense.

Jet lag wasn’t the problem. It was teen culture shock: No Fanta. No hamburgers. But after a few days I was wild about Solo (Norway’s orange pop) and addicted to pølser wieners.

Noticing stunning women — and their hairy armpits — I began to realize that our world is intriguing, and that exploring it can be endlessly entertaini­ng.

Visiting the house of my greatgreat-grandmothe­r’s birth, I imagined the courage it must have taken to leave Norway and her entire family for America a century ago.

Sitting with my cousins on their living room floor in 1969 to watch the Apollo moon landing, I began to see the world differentl­y.

Hearing them translate Neil Armstrong’s words (“Ett lite skritt for et menneske, ett stort skritt for menneskehe­ten”), it dawned on me: That first big step was more than just an American celebratio­n. This was a human accomplish­ment.

In Oslo’s Vigeland Park, I was grossed out by the nude statues (by the great Norwegian sculptor Gustav Vigeland). But I also experience­d an important revelation in that same park. As I watched towheaded kids splashing with their parents in a fountain, I realized those parents loved their kids as much as mine loved me.

It hit me: This planet is home to billions of equally precious people. Travel was prying open my hometown blinders.

Later, as an older teenage vagabond slumming through Europe, I’d regularly pop in on relatives in Norway. It was a much-needed rest stop for a bit of family warmth and good food.

Now, as an adult, I find excuses to return to Norway every few years.

All these decades later, Uncle Thor still meets me at the train station in his little town of Sandefjord. While I no longer need the free food, I enjoy Thor’s warm hospitalit­y as much as ever.

Returning to Norway, I find my roots. My grandfathe­r — famous in the 1930s in Leavenwort­h, Wash., as a rowdy ski jumper — was a Romstad. So, although my last name is Steves (after a stepgrandf­ather), my blood is Romstad, and that branch of my family comes from a scenic valley called Gudbrandsd­alen.

But I don’t visit Norway just to read my family name on tombstones. The roots I seek are also cultural. It’s stimulatin­g to learn about different social systems (many of which confound Americans).

A friend in Oslo introduced me to the ideas of Norwegian philosophe­r Erik Dammann, who in the 1970s started a movement called the Future in Our Hands.

Dammann argued that a successful society can rise above materialis­m and that being content was a good thing. His book (by the same title) lit a political fire in my belly that burns to this day.

Visiting Norway caused me to be reflective … to challenge my cultural norms.

In Norway, where city halls are as grandly and lovingly decorated as churches, I find people almost evangelica­l about their belief in organizing society for the benefit of all.

Norwegians are talented linguists. I speak only English, and perhaps more so than all the other places I’ve worked (shooting TV shows, leading tour groups, and researchin­g guidebooks), communicat­ing in Norway has been a breeze.

Not long ago, I was at a cousin’s dinner party with a dozen people in Oslo. Out of politeness to me, everyone simply switched to speaking English.

The topics were fascinatin­g. One man, an author who had just completed a book on Franklin D. Roosevelt, talked with me about the intricacie­s of American post-Second World War politics.

Two new parents gently debated the various ways to split their paid maternal and paternal leave.

People seemed very content — these Norwegians were just loving their salmon, shrimp, and goat cheese.

Discussion­s with relatives and new friends alike often lead to comparison­s of our two very affluent but very different societies.

Take attitudes toward cars: Whenever I am in Oslo, I am struck by how peaceful the big city feels.

That’s partly due to a congestion fee that keeps most vehicles from the centre of town — they’re routed through a tunnel instead.

To encourage clean electric cars, the government underwrite­s car charging, parking, tolls, and taxes — making even a Tesla an affordable ride (and they do this despite the huge role of North Sea oil in Norway’s economy).

My Europe Through the Gutter days are long gone, but I still love dropping by Norway for an oasis of warmth, love, and lots of food.

Just as important is the chance to rein in my U.S.-centricity, and to admire other ways of doing things.

If you have relatives anywhere in Europe, look them up.

And regardless of where your roots are, we can all travel with the joy of getting to know the whole human family. Because, in a sense, that’s what good travellers always do.

Not long ago, I was at a cousin’s dinner party with a dozen people in Oslo. Out of politeness to me, everyone simply switched to speaking English.

 ?? RICK STEVES ?? Parents and children find joy in visits to parks, such as in Oslo’s Vigeland Park. When Rick Steves visited family in Norway as a teen, he realized that all people are precious.
RICK STEVES Parents and children find joy in visits to parks, such as in Oslo’s Vigeland Park. When Rick Steves visited family in Norway as a teen, he realized that all people are precious.
 ?? RICK STEVES ?? Rick Steves, left, wasn’t initially wild about travelling to Europe, but he soon fell in love with his Norwegian relatives.
RICK STEVES Rick Steves, left, wasn’t initially wild about travelling to Europe, but he soon fell in love with his Norwegian relatives.

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