Archive for March, 2008

From the Zeppelintribüne

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Dear reader,

It is a painful morning for me, I stand up with a solid headache. Oppositely, Henry seems vaccinate against the bad consequences of any excess of alcohol !

For our last hour together we decide to walk outside a little – some fresh air may be helpful for my head. One of the nearest sites of Nuremberg is the Zeppelintribüne, the very wellknown place where Hitler held his speaches, a symbolic place of the Nazism, constructed by Albert Speer, filmed by Leni Riefenstahl… just the perfect link with our conversation of yesterday.

Henry is not absolutely sure about the original content of the last found suitcase. One single image is clear in his memory: Tulse and his father sharing some documents, including maps. Henry cannot give me more details about this exchange of papers.

The relationship between Henry and his sister seems especially tense. Usually garrulous and ready to speak about any subject Henry turns suddenly much more silent when I ask him about Daria. I understand that she is regarded as the black sheep of the family, squanding all her part of the heritage, gambling in casinos, nymphomaniac, addicted to drug, and more…

We go back to the hotel. Henry will prepare his next appointment – did I mention his job? Henry Knockavelli is the boss of a very high tech factory specialized in lenses and objectives used in space. And I leave Nuremberg with an increased knowledge and…a few more question marks.

Best regards,

Daniel Capelletti
Head of Research of the Global Connected Researcher Union

   Nuremberg, Germany. The Zeppelintribüne

   Nuremberg, Germany. The memorial

   Nuremberg, Germany. The tribune

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Henry Knockavelli

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Dear reader,

Henry Knockavelli is a tall man, about 45 years old, very open, enthusiastic and inexhaustible, a perfect contact for a researcher. We meet at the bar of the hotel, called… the Henry’s Bar by an odd coincidence, and mister Knockavelli, helped by a few old whiskies, tell me this astonishing story:

”I remember very well Tulse Luper. When he came to visit us in Sark, it was always an enjoyment for me and my sister. He was an exceptional story-teller, and when he described us his adventures, generally after supper, we were hanging to his lips for hours! It was always a hard task for our parents to make him stop, for we didn’t want to go to sleep as long as Tulse was speaking!

My father and Tulse were the very best friends, and with the years I learned more and more of the events who marked out and reinforced this friendship. Among others it was this story about Joseph Duveen and Leni Riefenstahl. You know how much my father was involved in art and collections, and through his activities he developed an impressively large circle of contacts related to art, including Jo Duveen. By the way, it’s my father who organized the deal on the Ardabil Carpet between Jo and J. Paul Getty.

Jo Duveen was an old friend of Leni Riefenstahl, that he admired so much for her talent as a filmmaker. If I remember well, it is in November 1939 that Jo presented Leni to Tulse and my father. Leni was a very beautiful woman, with fathomless brown eyes, and before the end of the year she and Tulse turned lovers.

During the years of war my father and Jo, filled with indignation, revolted by the growing excesses of the ‘Gleichschaltung’, decided to react consequently. They engaged themselve actively in a form of economic resistance, bypassing and embezzling a lot of commercial deals initiated by the Nazis in their war effort. As you can imagine the incurred risks were very high, more especially as my father was travelling a lot in Germany, even during that period of trouble. In 1943, on September 16th, he was arrested in Bonn by the Gestapo, and kept for interrogation. During three days, “the longest days of my whole life” as he said after, he was harassed of questions regarding his position, his political opinion, his contacts, kins and so on. If my father was freed and came back from Germany this time, it was only thanks to Leni and Tulse, both using all their relations, cultural, politic and other. Even Albert Speer was involved in the discharge of my father.

Tulse and Leni came to the end of their affair, and a few months later Leni was marrying an officer called Peter Jacob.”

But it’s late now, the whiskeys were good and numerous, and we decide to finish our conversation tomorrow morning after the breakfast.

Best regards,

Daniel CapellettiHead of Research of the Global Connected Researcher Union

   Nuremberg, Germany. Henry Knockavelli

   Joseph Duveen

   Leni Riefenstahl

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Arrival

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Dear reader,

I arrived yesterday evening in «Nürnberg» (German spelling). The Parkhotel, a very cosy, business-oriented place is one of the two local Ramada, situated in a urban park only a few minutes from the city centre.

Nuremberg is a vast city of half a million inhabitants and nearly one thousand years of history. Situated on the Pegnitz river and the Rhine-Main-Danube Canal, Nuremberg was intensively bombed between 1943 and 1945, and the historical centre of the city was almost totally destroyed. Nuremberg was completely reconstructed after the war, including some of its medieval buildings.

I don’t know if I will have time enough for visit the city, even a small percent of it, for my journey is very short – I’m leaving tomorrow morning, and it all depends of my meeting with Henry Knockavelli, also customer of this Parkhotel. We meet in less than an hour.

Best regards,

Daniel Capelletti
Head of Research of the Global Connected Researcher Union

   Nuremberg, Germany. The Ramada Parkhotel

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