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Bizarre Tourist Situation
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On Sunday afternoon I went with Youngest Junior Overall (air cadet) to a Battle of Britain church service. There were several high ranking RAF officers there and the church was full.
Part way through the service, the church doors opened and in came about a dozen Japanese tourists. They wandered through the church willy nilly, talking loudly, pointing at things and of course taking a zillion photo's. The vicar never faltered for a minute, even when they took it in turns to stand next to him to have their photo taken. They meandered behind the vicar and took a short break by sitting in the empty choir stalls before resuming their sightseeing.
Throughout all this,very singe person at the service kept their eyes firmly fixed on the vicar as if their lives depended on it.
Well.....apart from me. I had to kneel down on the floor cushion thingy and keep my head down as I was crying with laughter.
I am of course in deep trouble with YJO for once again embarrassing him (it is one of the very few perks of having teenagers)
Part way through the service, the church doors opened and in came about a dozen Japanese tourists. They wandered through the church willy nilly, talking loudly, pointing at things and of course taking a zillion photo's. The vicar never faltered for a minute, even when they took it in turns to stand next to him to have their photo taken. They meandered behind the vicar and took a short break by sitting in the empty choir stalls before resuming their sightseeing.
Throughout all this,very singe person at the service kept their eyes firmly fixed on the vicar as if their lives depended on it.
Well.....apart from me. I had to kneel down on the floor cushion thingy and keep my head down as I was crying with laughter.
I am of course in deep trouble with YJO for once again embarrassing him (it is one of the very few perks of having teenagers)
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.When I worked we once held a dinner in the National Railway Museum for a group of Japanese business journalists.
Included in the exhibition was Queen Victoria's private railway carriage, it was only after speaking to some of the journalists I realised they thought the figure in the carriage, dressed in Victorian clothes, was actually a preserved Queen Victoria.................strange people the Japanese.
Included in the exhibition was Queen Victoria's private railway carriage, it was only after speaking to some of the journalists I realised they thought the figure in the carriage, dressed in Victorian clothes, was actually a preserved Queen Victoria.................strange people the Japanese.
We've had similar, but somewhat more thoughtful, behaviour at our church in the centre of Edinburgh during the tourist season. Non-Japanese tourists just look through the glass doors while the service is going on. Japanese ones open them and walk in, walk around, and take photos. However - at least until now - they have kept to the periphery of the sanctuary, and not encroached on the central proceedings.
The High Kirk of Edinburgh, or St Giles (sometimes incorrectly called St Giles Cathedral) avoids this problem by having sufficient staff to monitor the doors during services, and to admit only worshippers.
The High Kirk of Edinburgh, or St Giles (sometimes incorrectly called St Giles Cathedral) avoids this problem by having sufficient staff to monitor the doors during services, and to admit only worshippers.
We were in the Alhambra in Granada in May, unfortunately followed round by a large party of Japanese people. The shrieking and exclaiming was so loud that we couldn't hear our own tour guide....
..and unfortunately it's not only Oriental people who let the side down. We also went to a Buddhist temple, and some people in our group allowed their children to b onto/ sit next to/pose expansively with the statue of the Buddha, not acknowledging at all that it was a holy contemplative place with deep religious significance.
..and unfortunately it's not only Oriental people who let the side down. We also went to a Buddhist temple, and some people in our group allowed their children to b onto/ sit next to/pose expansively with the statue of the Buddha, not acknowledging at all that it was a holy contemplative place with deep religious significance.
We were at the top of the Eiger or Jungfrau, can't remember which, a couple of years ago, all togged out on our boots, down jackets, walking poles, etc. There's a sign up there, on the icy plateau, a picture of of a high heel with a cross through it. We all looked at each other and laughed...till we saw the Japanese tourists in their high heels, trying and failing to stay upright on the ice. Quite bizarre.
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