Last week I went on the annual 'Rio Trip' sponsored by the European Law LLM program at the University to Strasbourg, Luxembourg, and Brussels. It was a total school field trip complete with buses, hostels, and constant counting of people, but it was a really great experience. The trip was led by a Leiden professor who had excellent contacts at all of the seats of European government and got us in to all of the institutions and to meet with judges, diplomats, and high ranking officials.
Our first day in Strasbourg began with a visit to a concentration camp outside the city. It was my first visit to a concentration camp and I was quite overwhelmed. It's one thing to read about it, to see the pictures, but a very different thing to actually be there, to touch things, to look at the same woods, sky, ect. It was a cold, grey, and rainy morning and I ended up in the bunkers at the far end of the camp by myself, at the bottom of a big hill with no one even within shouting distance. I saw the crematoria, the rooms for 'medical experiments', the autopsy chamber, the solitary confinement cages, and the torture chambers with floors tilted so the blood could drain more quickly. There was something about being there alone that took away what little 'museum effect' cushioned the experience and I was very shaken.
We got on the bus and headed out of the mountains and back into the city. As we did, the rain stopped, the clouds lifted and it was suddenly a very symbolically nice day. We went straight to the European Court of Human Rights, a direct outgrowth of the World War II and the Holocaust. We saw the inside of the courtroom, spoke with a judge and two lawyers who work as clerks for the court (though the system is different). We walked over to the Council of Europe and heard a bit about the political manuvering that goes on behind the scenes and then ended the day with a reception at the residence of the Permanent Dutch Representative to the Council of Europe.
On Tuesday I got up and visited a French court of first instance for a little bit, then we all went to the European Ombudsman office (boring name, interesting job), then to a european television station, then on to Luxembourg!
On Wednesday we went straight to the European Court of Justice where we watched of first instance trial about ompetition law and state aid in Slovakia. Luxembourg is beautiful but strangely situated city- it's spread on either side of a steep ravine. We walked up to old city for dinner and saw that the original protected fortress was actually situated very well for defense.
On Thursday we started in Brussels and visted the European Parliament, Commission, and Council of Ministers over the next two days. We also had some really interesting presentations on the Lisbon Treaty, the application of Turkey for EU membership, and EC policies toward immigration and asylum.
While the trip was great, getting back to our lovely little apartment with bedrooms with doors, large, private bathrooms and a squishy couch was a definite highlight.
Strasbourg, or the German part of Disneyland?
Natzweiler-Struthof Concentration Camp
Inside of the European Court of Human Rights, designed by the same architect who did the Pompidou Center in Paris. The concept was that justice should be transparent, just like the structure of the building.
At the European Court of Human Rights
ECHR Member State Flags

European Court of Justice, Luxembourg
Beautiful Brussels




