/ricerca/ansait/search.shtml?tag=
Show less

Se hai scelto di non accettare i cookie di profilazione e tracciamento, puoi aderire all’abbonamento "Consentless" a un costo molto accessibile, oppure scegliere un altro abbonamento per accedere ad ANSA.it.

Ti invitiamo a leggere le Condizioni Generali di Servizio, la Cookie Policy e l'Informativa Privacy.

Puoi leggere tutti i titoli di ANSA.it
e 10 contenuti ogni 30 giorni
a €16,99/anno

  • Servizio equivalente a quello accessibile prestando il consenso ai cookie di profilazione pubblicitaria e tracciamento
  • Durata annuale (senza rinnovo automatico)
  • Un pop-up ti avvertirà che hai raggiunto i contenuti consentiti in 30 giorni (potrai continuare a vedere tutti i titoli del sito, ma per aprire altri contenuti dovrai attendere il successivo periodo di 30 giorni)
  • Pubblicità presente ma non profilata o gestibile mediante il pannello delle preferenze
  • Iscrizione alle Newsletter tematiche curate dalle redazioni ANSA.


Per accedere senza limiti a tutti i contenuti di ANSA.it

Scegli il piano di abbonamento più adatto alle tue esigenze.

In the 'Alps of the East' an authentic spirit of life

In the 'Alps of the East' an authentic spirit of life

Bait's latest effort a religious volume imbued with panism

TRIESTE, 12 gennaio 2025, 19:36

Redazione ANSA

ANSACheck
- RIPRODUZIONE RISERVATA

- RIPRODUZIONE RISERVATA

(di Francesco De Filippo) MAURIZIO BAIT, "EASTERN ALPS.
    STORIES OF MEN, WOMEN, ANIMALS AND FORESTS" (ediclo publisher; 189 pp.; 16 euros) The Way of Songs, The Way of Resonances, The Ways of Bear Mauro and even The Ways of War in Paradise: there is not just one way up to the summit, and in any case, in addition to those already open, "everyone finds his own way" and "the Mountain will reward him with a thousand secret treasures." It is true for the "Eastern Alps," as writer and journalist Maurizio Bait titled his latest book, pointing to that area in Friuli that stretches between Valbruna, Valsaisera, Montasio, Alta Spragna, and Jof Fuart. But it is not a truth confined to this geographical area: "Do not look for climbing scaffolding in the mountain, but look for its soul," was the thought of poet, writer and mountaineer Julius Kugy (1858-1944). A hard and pure Kugy, half-Austrian and half-Slovene, who named Franz Schubert his own "personal saint": for him and his direct heir Vladimir Dougan, planting nails and chains-"hardware"-in the rock was blasphemous, Bait recalls. Generalized truth not only geographical but also intimate: climbing to the summit understood as a spiritual path, leading to inner peace. A mountain enthusiast, a connoisseur of Italian, Germanic and Slovenian culture, Bait in a "religious" book, pervaded by forms of panism, rattles off a sort of Spoon River of the Julian Alps with dozens of stories and faces known or known only in the harsh world of mountaineering, with frequent and learned historical, cultural, scientific diversions. In the triangle of land between Italy, Austria and Slovenia, the references to the psychoanalysis of Jung and one of his famous patients, Herman Hesse, are strong, no less those of more distant figures such as Heraclitus, Heisenberg, Roth. Bait loads the reader on his shoulders and escorts him through the rigors of frost and the suffering of World War I, which here claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of young men; he takes him to truly stormy peaks and back in time to the dawn of mountaineering, when natives went to high lands as poachers and not-as years later- for challenge or sport, with technical clothing but out of need, out of hunger, in the hope of hunting a chamois, which meant meat for days and for the whole family. Then, when mountaineering became popular, wealthy Austrians and people from Trieste began to arrive who wanted to carve their names as the first to reach the summit of Montasio, for example. Then the natives stopped hunting to be guides, taking foreigners all the way up pretending that no one had gone that high. At the summit they would build a cairn with stones as was the custom, leaving a case with the mountaineer's name as a testament to the supremacy, and descend again. When the rich people left again, they would climb back up, dismount and erase the trail waiting for the next tourist who would attempt the feat of climbing the summit first and thus another cairn of stones and new pouch. Bait teaches the reader to recognize larch trees, which live to be eight thousand years old, the philosophy of the lof pack, the wolf, and unfamiliar countries with mysteriously Aztec, Mexican sounds like Chiutzuquin and Mincigos. Walking through the woods at night with a dim acetylene lamp illuminating no more than a meter, Bait recognizes noises, noises, smells, describes almost mythological figures of wolf-men, bear-men. "One evening a few decades ago," he recalls, "while in a secluded hut I was sharing a frugal dinner with a friend while a blizzard was raging outside, the door swung open and a man dressed completely in black, with a black cap and a sort of blunderbuss entered: in a very narrow Friulian dialect he asked for polenta, cheese and a bottle of wine. We gave him everything, he took it and disappeared back into the blizzard."
   

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA

Not to be missed

Condividi

Or use

ANSA Corporate

If it is news,
it is an ANSA.

We have been collecting, publishing and distributing journalistic information since 1945 with offices in Italy and around the world. Learn more about our services.