South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Europeans differ on what is truly essential

- By Raf Casert

HALLE, Belgium — The concept of what is essential to keep a society functionin­g during coronaviru­s lockdowns is gripping Europe as the pandemic unleashes death, poverty, illness and isolation.

Beyond obvious candidates like food stores and pharmacies, some answers in the patchwork of nations and cultures that make up Europe can approach the surreal. An activity or item considered essential in one country can be off-limits across the border just a brief stroll down the road.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that while it might seem fairest to just shut everything down, “it’s perhaps not the most practical” solution.

“If people are only satisfied when everything possible is shut down, then that’s a view which naturally doesn’t make economic sense,” Merkel said.

That’s why Germany is keeping car dealership­s open after their closure during the first lockdown in the spring hurt the country’s huge automobile industry.

In Belgium, chocolate shops are staying open.

“Chocolate is very much an essential food around here,” said chocolatie­r Marleen Van Volsem at the Praleen chocolater­ie south of Brussels. “It has to be. Because chocolate makes you happy.”

Yet consider how differentl­y Italy and Britain treat a service that gladdens many a heart. In the country that coined the term “bella figura” — the art of cutting a fine figure — hairdresse­rs are deemed essential.

“Italians really care about their image and about wellness,” said Charity Cheah, the Milan-based co-founder of TONI&GUY Italy. “Perhaps psychologi­cally, the government may feel that going to a salon is a moment of release from stress and tension, a moment of selfcare, that citizens need.”

But across England people have had to scramble to get their hair done in the last days and hours while they still could, before new pandemic restrictio­ns went into effect Thursday.

“The thought of another lockdown and being stuck at home — (people thought) I’m going to throw caution to the wind and I am just going to come in and have my hair done,” said Richard Ward, managing director at the Richard Ward Hair & Metrospa on London’s swank Sloane Square.

And then there are life’s finer pleasures.

In France, the love of books is unquestion­ed. No country has more Nobel Prize-winners in literature, and a book review program on TV like Apostrophe­s used to be watched by millions every week. But walk the streets of Paris and you will find bookshops closed.

Sylvia Whitman, who runs the famed Shakespear­e and Company bookstore on the Left Bank, seethes at the prospect of giant online platforms gobbling up business while her shop is shuttered. Her sales have dropped 80% since the the spring lockdown.

“I find it really tiring that the bigger you are the more you can ignore laws, you can avoid taxes, you can find loopholes,” she said. “The smaller you are, the more expensive and the more complicate­d things are.”

Across the border in Belgium, books were deemed essential. Even then, Wouter Cajot, owner of the ‘t Stad Leest in the port of Antwerp finds it a mixed blessing. The lockdown has reduced passing shoppers to a trickle and he will have to decide whether heating and personnel costs make it worth his staying open.

But when essential goods cannot be bought in a store they can still be delivered.

“During the first lockdown we had to invent a website in three days and nights,” said Cajot, and he got “new logistical equipment — a cargo bike,” to the delight of his Antwerp clients who get books delivered within hours of placing their order. “So why order books at an internatio­nal online giant when the corner bookstore can deliver same-day by bike?”

That’s also become a question of government policy. With small shops often forced to suspend operations, and drifting closer to bankruptcy as a result, the door is wide open for supermarke­t chains and online giants to pounce. Several countries have taken steps to ensure supermarke­ts during lockdown cannot sell many products that provide the livelihood of closed shops.

It can get very complicate­d, with some supermarke­ts forced to tape off sections of their merchandis­e. In Belgium, Christmas decoration­s which took weeks to set up may now be hidden from view, since retail stores cannot sell them, as they are deemed non-essential.

“Books and magazines are allowed,” said Harry Decraene, manager of a Carrefour department west of Brussels. “DVDs, CDs and games are not allowed. Sewing equipment is allowed, stationery is allowed, garden equipment can be sold. Pots and pans, toys and Christmas supplies are not allowed.”

Just as toys would seem essential for children, petanque — France’s traditiona­l outdoors game that involves mostly elderly players tossing metal balls with leisurely accuracy — might be considered a must for the country’s retirees.

There is nothing quite like the petanque grounds of the Provencal village of Saint-Paul-de-Vence, where the likes of actors Yves Montand and Lino Ventura would click their balls on the dirt. Now they’re deserted, as the government opined that petanque is not essential.

“It’s a leisure activity, we can do without it,” said Sandrine Leonard, who manages the local tourism informatio­n center. Now that dead leaves provide the color the sun usually does, “it’s more a period to stay quietly at home, to do some cooking. We spend less time outdoors. Hence the importance of having a good book.”

But wait! Bookshops are closed.

 ?? ALBERTO PEZZALI/AP ?? Richard Ward, of Richard Ward Hair & MetroSpa, works Wednesday in London, one day before closing amid a lockdown.
ALBERTO PEZZALI/AP Richard Ward, of Richard Ward Hair & MetroSpa, works Wednesday in London, one day before closing amid a lockdown.
 ?? VIRGINIA MAYO/AP ?? In Belgium, chocolatie­rs are staying open amid a new coronaviru­s lockdown. Above, chocolate eggs in facemasks.
VIRGINIA MAYO/AP In Belgium, chocolatie­rs are staying open amid a new coronaviru­s lockdown. Above, chocolate eggs in facemasks.

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