This weekend was Juhannus, i.e.
midnight sun festivities in Finland. Cities get empty as everybody travels to summer retreats and festivals to celebrate. Not me though, this is the first time in my life that I spent the midsummer in Helsinki. It was great, a wonderful dinner outside with couple of other friends that didn't want to go anywhere and hardly no one else around. Then to sauna and midnight walk in a very very quiet city.
Actually, we don't have midnight sun in southern parts of Finland, sun goes down 22:49 and get up 3:56 in Helsinki. This leaves a fair amount of light anyway :) This picture was taken approximately at midnight.
Why am I telling this in here? I don't really know. It just that quite often I hear Finland compared to New Zealand. Both countries have, although really different, very unique and beautiful nature, which leaves its marks to the citizens.
Ooh, and the female power! New Zealand was first nation to grant women the right to vote. Finnish women got the right as the 2nd nation in 1906, and Finland was the first country in the world to have women in the parliament, 1907. Does it reflect anywhere nowadays? I'm not sure because there are countries (Sweden) where equality between genders is more advanced.
Although I would claim that ABC's plays empower women, our
Dress The Nation plays that reflect the current political events happening in a global scale, have of course the known male politicians as front figures, because the lack of women in the high power places. And perhaps even the classic men go to war, women are victims -trail. But how visible is the gender in DTN and DTN2? Maybe it would be interesting to trying to make a point of that in DTN3, which we'll probably start to develop in scanz.