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San Jose
Intriguing Capital of Costa Rica
By Walter Glaser
The sun was
shining as we walked through downtown San Jose and approached the Bellavista
fortress, now the Costa Rican National Museum. As I looked up at the corner
tower, a number of small round shadows highlighted some shallow indentations
in the heavy stone walls. I had seen those before --- at the end of World
War II in Europe --- and asked Rudy, our knowledgeable Costa Rican guide, to
confirm this.
"Oh yes! They certainly are bullet marks. But they were
caused over various periods. Fortunately the Revolution didn’t reach San
Jose during the 1948 Civil War," he said. "but this was the place where the
unconstitutional government was planning to hold out against the imminent
Rebel attack on the city.”
"However the ‘Ochomogo Pact’, signed at the Mexican
Embassy some days before the planned attack, arranged for the government to
surrender in exchange for personal guarantees to its loyal soldiers. That
must have been an interesting time.”
“The fort was always the headquarters of the army, and
during the many ‘problems’ in the 20 years previous to the Civil War some
‘damage’ occurred to its exterior walls.” Rudy then went on to tell us
about the 1948 Revolution, and the events that took place and shaped the
future of Costa Rica.
The 1940s was
the era of military dictatorships in Latin America, and in this climate an
election claimed to have been rigged, resulted in the installation of
Teodoro Picado, a President that most people said they did not vote for, and
the 1948 Civil War followed.
After the defeat of that unconstitutional but
army-backed power-play, a new and democratically-elected government led by
Jose Figueres finally took control. A world-precedent was set when the army,
navy and air force was completely disbanded, and the money saved put into
developing the education, health and conservation systems. To this day Costa
Rica is the only country with a population of any size that has no armed
forces
Costa Rica is now in a situation where, in spite of a
comparatively low per-capita income, it has the third highest life
expectancy in the world after Japan and France, one of the highest literacy
rates in the world, and an enviable record of maintaining, and even
improving its environment. There is not one coal-burning power generator in
the country, all electricity being produced by hydro-electricity or wind
power, and the water is drinkable from one end of the country to the other.
Once inside the fortress-turned-museum, we found it
fascinating. As the name Bellavista suggests, it offers a magnificent view
over San Jose from a garden-courtyard, and an overview of Costa Rica itself
through its artifacts. We began our tour on the south side of the museum and
continued in an anti-clockwise direction. Pre-Columbian exhibits such as
petroglyphs from Orosi and Guanacaste, imaginative flying panel versions of
metates, golden ornaments, staff heads, carved funerary stones --- were all
beautifully set out, with excellent explanations. We also found the 17th
century colonial furniture and a Sala Historica, (salon of history) with
panels and captions in Spanish and English outlining the socio-economic
effects of colonialism, an excellent introduction to understanding a little
about the way the old Spanish Empire functioned.
In the gardens we saw the perfectly round stone balls
that early Costa Rican tribesmen had been masters at carving out of granite.
To this day no-one is quite certain of their significance, but the
craftsmanship involved in making these such perfect stone spheres was
exceptional. Near the exit, a young Costa Rican lady was selling beautiful
gold plated reproductions of traditional Central American pre-Columbian
jewelry, many of the items replicas of what we were later to see in the Gold
Museum.
On the way to our next stop we learned more about this
fascinating city. The people of San Jose are known as Josefinos and there
are 600,000 inhabitants permanently residing in the city but with the influx
of workers from the “dormitory” cities in the Central Valley such as
Alajuela, Heredia and Cartago, the population increases daily to 1,000,000.
Although founded in 1737, development was slow until
San Jose enjoyed a boom time late last century when coffee became an
important export earner.
Rudy told us that, to this day, coffee is one of the
country's biggest export earners, and Costa Rican coffee is in big demand
and highly prized around the world. Bananas are another major crop for
which Costa Rica is so famous that it was, in its earlier days, known as the
Banana Republic. The area is also famous for its cigar, and those made in
Costa Rica, Panama, Cuba and the area right up to Florida have, according to
the experts, an aroma and a quality that the mass production products find
difficult to match. We saw a skilled cigar maker at work making some superb
hand-rolled, fragrant cigars that made us realize just why cigar smokers
around the world prize this product so highly.
This year
another dimension will be added to the local economy --- and on a grand
scale. Intel, the world's largest computer-chip manufacturer has built this
company's biggest plant in San Jose. Now beginning production, it will use a
work-force of 6000 and its export earnings will be greater than the total
value of Costa Rica's coffee and banana exports combined.
Our next stop was Mercado Central --- the central
market --- which was to prove another highlight of our visit. We were
fascinated and delighted by the sights, sounds, color, intriguing scents and
the atmosphere of bustle we found here. The goods for sale included
everything from live chickens (a great staple food) to medicinal herbs, all
labeled for their respective uses. Leather goods, hammocks and pottery items
enabled us to engage in a serious session of retail therapy, and we also
found this market to be one of the best places to sample the traditional
Tico food at what must surely have been the best prices in town. However, we
were warned that pickpockets are notorious, having developed their craft
into an art form.
The heart of San Jose is the Plaza de la Cultura. It is
here that painters, traders, artisans, street musicians, actors, shoppers,
young and old alike gather to work or play or just observe the passing
crowds. We found the terrace of the Parisienne Café in the Gran Hotel to be
a friendly little corner, and an ideal place from which to observe the plaza
in its full flood of frenetic activity.
Beneath the plaza was the Gold Museum, an
extraordinarily impressive establishment which featured gold in hundreds of
different items, artifacts and everyday utensils. Gold looms large in
Central and South American history. It was gold that brought the Spanish
Conquistadors, greedy for this magic mineral that was used as an everyday
metal by the indigenous people. They adorned their heads, their feet and
their arms with gold artifacts, and even drank from golden bowls.
And it was here in The Museo de Oro - The Gold Museum -
where we saw a spectacular display of pre-Columbian gold that made our eyes
pop. The hammered gold breastplates with fine repousse work, and intricately
sculpted ornaments cast by the lost wax method were outstanding examples of
the goldsmith’s art.
Discovery of this process, possibly from their
neighbors in Venezuela and Colombia around AD400, enabled Costa Rican
craftspeople to cast solid gold miniature versions of armadillos,
alligators, parrots, frogs, even butterflies (a feminine symbol). Panels in
both Spanish and English explained about the alloys, production methods and
the significance of the shapes and decorations. Ironically the local natives
were eager to swap their common gold items with glass-bead necklaces offered
by the Spaniards in 1502.
We found
several other museums of great interest, the like of which you may not see
anywhere else. The most unusual of these was the Jade Museum, unobtrusively
located on the 11th floor of a modern social security building, a location
we thought was a surprisingly strange spot for this fascinating place.
Costa Rican jade is really jadeite, as distinct from
the denser nephrite jade popular in Asia. Jade was a valuable currency for
Costa Rica's early inhabitants, and was buried in graves for use in the
after-life. It was carved in the Olmec or Maya tradition and was considered
the most valuable material for ritual objects for the better part of two
thousand years from around 300BC to 500AD.
Jade was believed to attract and absorb energy, and was
associated with agricultural fertility. Various carving techniques were
employed such as carving in the round on the Atlantic side of the country,
to Guanacaste's tradition of carving into the curved surface of a polished
jade piece. Examples of this work appear in the museum along with other
displays which give a picture of Costa Rica's civilizations and links with
Mesoamerica and South America long before the Conquistadors discovered this
rich coast they aptly called Costa Rica.
When the National Museum and Library were built in 1886
it was, no doubt, in response to the enthusiasm created by the country's
first National Art Exhibition held one year earlier. Costa Rican art
traditions have thrived ever since, and in the 1920s an art movement
developed known as The Nueva Sensibilidad, or 'new sensitivity'. The Museo
de Arte Costarricense is the place to see the overall development of art in
this tiny and creative country.
The Galeria Nacional de Arte Contemporaneo y Diseno
stage dance and theatre performances in an old converted liquor distillery.
Costa Rican folk dancing, with its distinctive Spanish influence and
colorful costumes, is a real joy to watch. The complex is also home to a
permanent collection of Latin American art, and temporary exhibitions by
international artists and designers. We left, thinking that no visitor to
San Jose should miss a visit to this late 19th century complex in its
renaissance into a modern dynamic cultural complex.
Cultural events are rated so highly in Costa Rica that
the government subsidizes ticket prices, making it extraordinarily cheap to
attend any of the 15 theatres in the city. Performances in both native
Spanish and English are regularly staged, with one theatre, Teatro Lawrence
Olivier being named after a man who was arguably one of the greatest English
thespians.
For us,
however, the jewel of all the buildings in San Jose was the National
Theatre, decorated with marble, gold, bronze, tropical woods, stucco,
crystal chandeliers, mirrors, velvet drapes, statuary, paintings and a
fabulous ceiling fresco. And its history is as fascinating as the building
itself!! It was built in order to tempt one woman to come to San Jose. But
this was no ordinary woman! She was Adelina Patti, the Maria Callas of the
19th century. This lady had ignored San Jose on a South American tour
because it had no venue in which she could perform satisfactorily. The
government had no money to build one, so the coffee barons, the cafetaleros,
decided to build one themselves!
They voluntarily paid a tax on every exported bag of
coffee beans, and architects and artisans from Italy, Spain and France were
brought to work on this grand building. An earthquake-proof steel frame was
even imported from Belgium to support the structure. In 1897 the 1000-seat
theatre was finally completed, and a performance of Gounod's Faust played to
a packed opening night audience.
In spite of all this effort, Adelina Patti never did
come to Costa Rica. Such is life! But surely she too would have been amazed
at this grandest of buildings which rivals anything of its kind in Europe.
The ceiling fresco above the staircase is famous, and is shown on the rare
5-Colones banknote. The fresco shows happy 'ticos' picking coffee and
transporting bananas, but the bananas are bending the wrong way - an
unforeseen circumstance from having these depicted by a painter freshly out
from Italy.
San Jose is on a geotopical fault line and the few
grand mansions and villas that have survived the earthquakes are mostly in
the Barrio Amon area, a reminder of the grand old days. These solidly-built
mansions owe their inspiration to many influences - Caribbean, Victorian, a
touch of French, and even Moorish elements. The large, stately homes were
testaments to both the wealth, and the taste, of the owners. Now, over one
hundred years later, some of these grand edifices have been converted to bed
and breakfast establishments for visitors who probably know nothing about
growing coffee, but enjoy the pleasures of drinking it before a day of
sightseeing in San Jose.
Another suburb Escazu, ('resting place' in the local
Indian language), to the west of the Parque Sabana, the cross-roads of
trails between various Indian villages is a combination of the blend of the
old and the new. The adobe buildings and an attractive church in the town
center contrast with the modern shopping centers.
In the evening, our favorite haunt was El Pueblo, a
charming cluster development of souvenir shops, boutiques, bars, and
restaurants that included the excellent La Estancia steak-house and the
Tango Bar, where, true to its name, reasonably priced drinks were followed
by passionate tango music. For anyone spending an evening here and then
wanting a most memorable finale, I can recommend the spectacular view from
the hills across the Valle Central and over San Jose. In the evening, the
whole valley turns into a sea of lights.
For another look at Costa Rican history, we found
Pueblo Antiguo well worth a visit. Residents often make this a Sunday outing
because there are all kinds of shows and several restaurants. Here one can
also find actors demonstrating traditional craft skills and agricultural
laborers that show visitors the ancient beginnings that illustrate the way
of life in the area before the coming of the Europeans.
There are several day excursions from San Jose which
are of interest to tourists. Two of the destinations involve volcano
craters. The first is The Poas Volcano National Park which surrounds an
8,880ft high volcano which has a crater measuring 1 mile (1.5km) across.
Early morning is the best time to go when there is less chance of the fog
which often thickly blankets the crater. The yellowy-green crater emits
sulphurous vapors and the lake sends boiling water into the air like a
geyser. The last major eruption took place in 1910, another less dramatic
one occurring in the 1950's.
The Irazu National Park is 34 miles (55km) east of San
Jose, and an early morning visit is also recommended in order to experience
the magnificent panoramic view that, on a very clear day, extends all the
way from the Caribbean to the Pacific. Unfortunately, clear days are not
very frequent!
No one should go to Costa Rica without seeing the
fabulous tropical wildlife and birds, and for those who do not have a lot of
time to explore the forests and find it in the wild, the best place is the
Parque Zoologico Simon Bolivar. Here we saw a wide selection of Costa Rica's
natural denizens --- tapirs, reptiles, monkeys, coatimundis, sloth and
colorful tropical birds. If you marveled at these animal shapes in the
miniature in the Gold Museum they will have an extra fascination for you in
real life.
San Jose is a great jumping off point to the further
delights in Costa Rica. The country is now firmly focused on tourism and
offers eco-tours in abundance. Eager tourists can bird watch, wrestle with
sailfish, surf, trek up a mountainside, snorkel around beautiful coral
reefs, try the adrenalin rush of whitewater rafting, quietly watch a nesting
turtle, and trek through lush living jungle with knowledgeable guides who
will point out the obvious and not-so-obvious aspects of this relatively
unspoiled part of the world. If you are thinking of going to Costa Rica,
sooner rather than later is certainly the best time to go.
RESOURCES:
The Costa Rica Company
Ph: ++ 506 280 2440
Fax: ++ 506 280 2449
Website: http://edenia.com/travel
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