Menu
home
photo galleries
Biology Field Station
Creative Writing Vision Program
Zembrodt Center
Menu
CAMPUS/STUDENT NEWS
GIVING BACK
ANNUAL GIVING HONOR ROLL
FACULTY NOTES
FACULTY PROFILES
ALUMNI NEWS
CLASS NOTES
SAINTS SIDELINES
PRESS RELEASES | NEWS
SAINTS SPOTLIGHT
HISTORY
MESSAGES FROM THE PRESIDENT
In The News
CONNECT WITH Thomas More University
Alumni Association
Thomas More University
For questions or to submit a story idea, email
[email protected]
or call 859-344-3443.
Browse:
Home
/
where is flat tommy
/
Judith Bland ’68 Travels Abroad with Flat Tommy
Judith Bland ’68 Travels Abroad with Flat Tommy
admin
/
July 15, 2014
/
Leave a comment
/
where is flat tommy
Judith and Tommy visited the moai (statue) quarry first. Behind Flat Tommy is a moai that was still being carved on when work stopped.
Judith Bland ’68 and Flat Tommy on the way to Easter Island (Isla de Pascua). Almost there! It is 5 1/2 hours from Santiago.
This statue was in front of the quarry, it was a little farther along in the process. The artisans dug a hole while they finished the moai. Time has filled in the hole but the moai was about ready to be moved to its erection site somewhere on the coast.
The local Catholic Church had a grotto that reminded Flat Tommy and Judith Bland ’68 of TMC and its campus!
Here Flat Tommy poses in front of another group of moai with his travel friend, Judith Bland ’68. They had a great time discovering the island together.
Pictured is a restored site. Europeans, local unrest, and time had toppled many moai. Different groups now work to restore the moai found in various areas. These are sacred to the current residents of Rapa Nui many of whom are descendants of the original Polynesian settlers. The moai were erected to face inland. Initially a chief would have commissioned a moai to serve as his “headstone.” Once his bones were interred beneath the moai and the eyes were completed, his spirit was believed to move into the moai that then became a guardian for the local community.
Comments are closed, but
trackbacks
and pingbacks are open.
← Angie Brown ’99 Travels with Flat Tommy
10-Minute Spiritual Break – Fall 2014 →
Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.