Helsinki Warming
The city of Sibelius, known as a center for innovative technology and design, now stakes its claim as an urban hotspot
- By Jonathan Kandell
- Photographs by Yoray Liberman
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2007, Subscribe
When the long northern winter finally ends, the Finnish capital of Helsinki returns slowly to life. Deathly pale residents, who look as if they have just emerged from confinement in a cellar, roost on the gray stone steps of Senate Square; students from the University of Helsinki sprawl in the greening grass to soak up the sun; crowds linger by the Baltic Sea harbor, where fishing boats, painted bold red and blue, sell the day's fresh catch, watched closely by gulls wheeling in the salt air. The whole city is bathed in golden light, which brushes the pastel neo-Classical buildings, shimmers on the blue sea and shines on the capital for 20 hours a day, all the more welcome after the months of darkness.
Dour climate and isolation have made the Finns a grim people. That, at least, is the conventional wisdom regarding this nation of 5.3 million. They would have reason enough for melancholia, having endured not only eons of winter but also centuries of dominance by more powerful neighbors—first the Swedes, then the Russians, then the Soviets. (The country declared its independence after the fall of Russia's czar Nicholas II in 1917.) Finns survived all of this by dint of sisu, their phrase for stolid perseverance in the face of long odds and frequent disparagement. Even their old capital, of which Finns are justifiably proud, was designed by an outsider, Carl Ludvig Engel, the famed German architect hired in 1816 to rebuild Helsinki when it was hardly more than a town of 4,000.
Now, after years of self-doubt on the sidelines, that capital has grown to 561,000, and the Finns are finally stepping out into the sunlight of modern Europe. They are even showing the way for the rest of the world: Finns were among the first to embrace modern telecommunications, arming themselves with Nokia cellphones, a local product that they unleashed upon the planet, and one that keeps virtually 100 percent of this once-reticent nation chattering away, breaking down the vast distances that characterize their sparsely settled country.
Helsinki's inhabitants have always lived—and thrived—by balancing their urban and bucolic souls. Because parts of the capital are blanketed by woodland and washed by the sea, it is sometimes difficult to distinguish where nature ends and city begins. About three quarters of Finland's 130,500 square miles are thickly forested. The country has some 190,000 lakes, and the coastline crumbles into 95,000 islands. This means that many a Helsinki family has easy access to a summer cottage—usually a modest one, without electricity, but comfortable enough for July and August.
Perhaps as an antidote to the sensation of being overwhelmed and isolated by their natural landscape, Helsinkians have embraced technology more quickly and avidly than people elsewhere. Finland's Nokia, the largest cellular phone manufacturer in the world, introduced wireless phones across the land at a time when most Americans were still using land lines, and the capital's new residential enclaves come equipped with wireless broadband on the premise that good access makes good neighbors.
More than a century ago, Finland's greatest composer, Jean Sibelius (1865-1957), helped forge his nation's identity by writing music that sought to bring the spirit of the ancient forest into the cosmopolitan salons of the growing capital. At the time, the Finns were about to emerge from centuries of foreign rule—by Sweden (1100s to 1809) and Russia (1809 to 1917).
By age 33, Sibelius had established his reputation as a musical genius with his 1899 tone poem, Finlandia; his countrymen immediately embraced the piece, and its composer, with patriotic fervor. But Sibelius had already fallen into a life of partying that was sapping his musical output. A famous 1894 painting by Akseli Gallen-Kallela, ironically titled Symposium, depicts Sibelius and some artist pals carousing at the Hotel Kamp's restaurant. This unflattering portrayal scandalized the public. In 1904 the composer decamped for the countryside. "In Helsinki, all song dies in me," he confessed.
He found respite—and inspiration—north of Helsinki in a country retreat named Ainola, after his wife, Aino. She and Sibelius lived out their days there, drawing strength from prolonged immersion in the landscape of dense forests and limpid lakes. Weather permitting, Sibelius spent hours each day walking amid the pines and birches, lingering in farm fields and finally reaching the shores of nearby Lake Tuusulanjarvi. Dressed in a suit, vest, tie and Borsalino hat, he looked like a gentleman banker. These daily encounters with nature infused his music.
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Comments (2)
Dear Editor,
I did not know until some months later that the item above (about the NZSO's highly successful Sibelius Festival) had been published. Would you use further material from New Zealand (as long as it has some relevance to Finland). Since I am retired after 49 years practising journalism in various parts of the world (including Finland at the 1952 Olympics), I am keen to keep at it for as long as possible. Regards,
Murray Masterton
in Nelson, New Zealand.
Posted by Murray Masterton on November 5,2010 | 11:34 PM
Dear Editor, Helsinki Warming,
You may or may not know that the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra has comnpleted a four-evening Sibelius Festival to full houses in Wellington, the country's capital.
No country is further from Finland than New Zealand, yet New Zealanders are ardent admirers of Sibelius' music and he knew it.Further, the orchestra has had Pietari Inkinen, a Finn, as musical director and conductor for the past year, and the orchstra leader and violin soloist is yet another Finn, Vesa-Matti Leppanen.
The programmes included all seven symphonies, plus Finlandia, the violin concerto and Tapiola -- truly a one-conductor festival.
And there is a personal touch: when I visited Finland for the 1952 Olympic Games (with Reuters) and later toured "med tum" I met Sibelius at his then summer vacation residence near what was Jakobstad. More to the point, I was taken there by an enthusiast host driver and as a result was thrown out (very politely, of course) by the master himself.
If you would like this 1500 words with Inkinen let me know by email (mediaptr@ihug.co.nz) and it will be sent by return.
If there is anything more you would like from New Zealand by all means ask. I am a life-long journalist, now long retired, but still keen on increasing my retirement income with an article or two.
My regards
Murray Masterton
Posted by (Dr) Murray Masterton on November 10,2009 | 11:21 PM