June 2000 During a long career with Red Cross I have been invited to so many dinners and cocktail parties. They can be dreadfully boring or you can make them fun. Here is one I distinctly remember.
On Monday evening I
was invited for dinner by the Turkish Ambassador and his wife. Invited were the French Ambassador with his
Burmese wife, the European Union Ambassador; Antonio, from Portugal, the Thai Ambassador and his charming wife,
the Foreign Secretary, a former
Bangladesh Ambassador, to the US, the Bhutanese Ambassador and wife,
plus a Turkish politician and his French wife. It was typically a Turkish
evening, a nation that is west and east and is so often the bridge between east
and west. Before dinner, I sat with the French Ambassador who had garrish red
horned-rim glasses and a personality as bubbly as Moet. He was the French
Ambassador in New Zealand
when the French secret service blew up the Rainbow Warrior, a Greenpeace ship,
In Auckland harbour. His other inglorious moment was when the French Rugby team
was thoroughly thrashed by the All Blacks. He enjoyed his time in NZ and
recalled his most memorable time was when
he spent some days on a high country South Island sheep station where
the farmer rounded up his sheep by helicopter, which he flew wearing wellingtons.
Here was my chance to tell a few sheep jokes. He laughed so much that he spilt Bordeau down his shirt front. The stain matched his spectacle rims.
After some superb French Red wine, we moved to a huge Burmese
teak table, with all the crockery bearing gold Turkish Government insignia of
the crescent and star.
I was seated between the Ambassador from Bhutan and the
Turkish diplomat.
It was very quiet and to break the silence I asked the Bhutanese Ambassador "What's the
population of Bhutan?"
He replied, " 600,000 people and our main sport is archery" as he went through the movement of drawing a bow. Then I
managed to get the wife of the Foreign secretary to quote poems from Hassan
Raja, at which, the rather dashing Portugese EU Ambassador said to me, "
Your wife is Kazakh, isn't she ? I am
going to Tashkent
in a few weeks and I want to know more
about Samarkand
and Bokhara." Here was my chance to quote Flecker's "
We make the golden journey to Samarkand." The Turkish politician next to me was not
going to be outdone, so he started quoting Rumi. All in all a delightful
evening.
After the Turkish coffee and Arak, the Turkish Ambassador took me outside
to see a bust of Kemal Attaturk in his garden and we spent time discussing Gallipoli and the First World War.
Bob
ReplyDeleteI remember that French guy. On the evening that the Rainbow Warrior was bombed he was giving a talk to the Dunedin branch on the Institute of International Affairs (of which I was a member).
Of course, he denied any French involvement in the bombing. I am quite sure that he knew nothing about it, so it must have been slightly embarrassing later to find out that it was indeed an act of French State terrorism.
You really do need to get a more effective bot stopper for your blog.
Cheers
Gollum