The Swiss Colony of Uruguay

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 10. 05. 2020
  • No bang, no excitement. Just some farmers living life.
    I thought the Volk deserved a story, too.
    Your support keeps us going: / rareearth
    Follow our Instagram: / rareearthseries
    Follow my twitter: / evan_hadfield
    Merch (more designs to come): teespring.com/stores/rareearth
    This video was made possible thanks to our incredible Patreon subscribers Abram Blocton, Adam Lenk, Adam Kaufman, Alanna Mills, Alejandro Fuentes Salazar, Alex Garland, Alex Ross, Alexander Lesiw, Alexander Reilly, Alexandros Papageorgiou, Alexis Michelle Smith, Alf Einar Solberg, Amay Khara, Ammobunny, Andres Rama, Andrew Beals, Andrew Larson, Andrew Reeve, Andrew, Anina Shaorandra, Aqeel Fassuhudeen, Ari Walfish, Arisyi Raz, Arne 'S Jegers, Atsushi, Audrey Brown, Austin Heyne, Austin Cousineau, Await Future, bajr, Becky B., Ben Reed, Ben Hewitson, Ben West, Benkei Paczek, Blue Penguin, Bob, Bradley Brown, Brenna and Peter, Brian Miller, Brian ONeel, Bruno Mikuš, Bryan Schmidt, Carl Bodnaruk, Catherine Berry, Chris Ferguson, christ k, Christoph Dietl, Christopher Perrin-Porzondek, Claudia Guidi, Cody Belichesky, Collin_, Colin Miskowitz, CompConf, Corey, Cullen McFater, Dénes Berky, Damon Yi Hao, Daniel Demsky, Daniel Sierra Matus, Daniel Tyler, David Johnson, David McConnell, David Benjamin, David Rowe, David Lister, David Badilotti, Djof, Douglas Danger Manley, Dirk Taggesell, Ed, Edward Sykes, Einar Holmedal, Emily Lam, Evan, f1r3w4rr10r, feo, Filip Milkovic, Fred Stocking, Fridtjof Mahnke, Gabe Monson, Gabe S, Ggamefreak22, Giffy, Gilberto Hart, Giulian Fava, Graeme, Gregory Kintz, Gregory Stutheit, Grey Fairer, Guy Beardmane, Ha Do, Hanyang Xing, Hedi Zisling, heeseung lee, Ian Smith, Isaac Langille-LaBerge, J Neko, Jack Clark, Jack Fractal, Jake Schulze, Jakob Ruder, Jakob Mynster Blüdnikow, Jakob Oesinghaus, James Hoadley, James Mari, James Mcc, Jan Langguth, Jan Vilhuber, jannes Dirks, Jarod Hoffarth, Jeffery Konowal, Jeremy Impson, Jeremy Wheelis, Jerome, Jesse Smith, Jessica Mayberry, Joël Gagnon, Joachim Nygaard Kvam, Jochim Timmermann, John Jenkins, John Cline, John Goff, John Specht, Jonathan Lonowski, Josh Hoppes, Joshua Clarke, Juan Coronado, Juan Pablo Rodriguez Morales, Julia Thiele, Julian Fiander, JusRus, Kamal Thalib, Kathryn Fortunato, Keaton Denney, Kelly Moneymaker, Kenan Klisura, Kevin Lee, Kristina, Kristjan Kalve, Kyle Hofer, Kyler Frisb, L W, Lane Seppala, larry82, Lars Sturm, Lars Hjort Christensen, Leo Höppner, Levi Young, Liam Gilles, Logan Lyke, Louis Lenders, lucas van wijk, Lukas Jackowski, Luke Tomkus, Lynneigh McPherson, Mārtiņš Šaiters, MacFoxington, Mad Sumac, makmak, Marc Anderson, Marc Chang, Marek Slabicki, Mariné Avagyan, Markus Szumovski, Marty Otzenberger, Matt, Matthew Barrett, Matthew Roche, Matthias Kleveta, Max Palmer, Melanie Sumner, Merodac, Michael, Michael Amesse, Michael Earle, Michael Leers, Michael Wiedemann, Michael Wla, Michael Belde, Miguel Loera, Mike Frysinger, Mike Pearce, Mike Perham, Mladen Piasetskyi, Mohammad Groof, Mrburgerdon, MrElk, MsTek, Muncorn, Myles W Kamps, Narskogr, Nathaneal Register, Natsumeg, Niclas Andersson, NM, Noah Hawkes, Oliver Cowern, Orofino, Ossian, Paddy Outback, Pamela Sabo, Party Pineapple, Patrick Holdsworth, Patrick Poitras, Paul Knysh, Paul Cleeves, Paul Estella, Paul McHone, Paulina Jonušaitė, Peaceful Conquest, Penny Underbust, Peter Bjorvand, Petr Dolezal, Phyronnaz, Pjotr Bekkering, Ricardo Machado, Rob Rose, Rob Womack, Robert Cross, Robert Velten, Rocky Yip, Roger Roca, Roger Wu, Ron Warris, Ronen Finegold, Ruddy Ezequiel Arroliga, Sabolc Jut, Sam Aryavong, Sam Collins, sam, Sasha Mamzelev, Saul, Scott Pressman, Scrungii, Sean Dennis, Sean McCool, Sean Lavery, Sebastian Schäfer, setoh, Shravan Bendapudi, Simen Thoresen, Simon Tobar, Stephen C Strausbaugh, Stephen Williams, Svein Ove Aas, Tedd Tiger, This Has Not Gone Well, Thomas Paris, Tianyu Ge, Tim Barrett, Tim Nagy, Tim Vickerman, Timur Seipel, Tino Dervisagic, Tom Collier, Tomáš Kunc, Toni Tienvieri, Twisol, Varun Perumal, Victoria Lierheimer, Wes Mills, Whitefang, Will Mullins, William Thomas, Wojtek Kłos, Wu Jim, Xellos, Yuto Takamoto, Zach Kuzmicz, Zaratan, Zoe and Zoltán Ulrich. We love you guys!
    Thanks for watching! You're clearly one of the good ones.

Komentáře • 992

  • @RareEarthSeries
    @RareEarthSeries  Před 4 lety +414

    Thank you for letting me tell stories. Sorry if they're a little late these weeks. Quarantine has sapped our creative engines.
    If you have the capacity to support us, please consider our Patreon: www.patreon.com/rareearth

    • @Hazzard0
      @Hazzard0 Před 4 lety +6

      No. Thank YOU for telling stories!

    • @luiscardozo0000
      @luiscardozo0000 Před 4 lety +6

      this time you make me cry ....from brampton ontario thanks from an uruguayan who miss a lot

    • @doniestauntonul7813
      @doniestauntonul7813 Před 4 lety +2

      There is a storie like this in Ireland of the Poilish coming to work in Ireland it's not in any history books as it is happening now but I would love to see the story told before it becomes a footnote in some thousand page book in the future. Loved the video hope u can trave agen soon after the pandemic and keep telling forgoted stories

    • @tonycooke8545
      @tonycooke8545 Před 4 lety +1

      Have you checked out the Descendents of a former Welsh Mining community/colony in Argentina?

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 Před 4 lety

      Not sure if anyone has mentioned it yet, but minor correction to the end card:
      > _Von_ Bergen und Meer umgeben
      > Haha nur _ein_ Scherz
      But otherwise pretty good German for someone claiming he doesn't speak German. ;)

  • @BlackTiger3645
    @BlackTiger3645 Před 4 lety +582

    We uruguayans are much like hobbits- we like living quiet lives, we like eating and we like drinking. We don't like war, and we don't like to stand out.

    • @biponacci
      @biponacci Před 4 lety +34

      Love your country; gotta visit sometime

    • @aymanbarakat8780
      @aymanbarakat8780 Před 3 lety +31

      But you guys have two worlds cups and many cupa america 😄.

    • @dewinmoonl
      @dewinmoonl Před 3 lety +4

      @De St man how did you survive for a month eating only steak haha it was great for the first few meals but after that I literally had to go to mercado fernado to eat poke bowl hahaha. maybe the uruguayan diet is so different from chinese one I just couldn't handle it after the first week. siempre parrilla y papa fritas jajaja. punta del este is great, but you're not missing much, it's just like any other playa.

    • @evanw2195
      @evanw2195 Před 3 lety +9

      I’m gonna visit Uruguay with my Spanish speaking brother because of this, Puerto Rico was great but Uruguay seems cool

    • @evanw2195
      @evanw2195 Před 3 lety +1

      De St can i ask why you refused to go to punta del este does it have bad history?

  • @xxxkiraxxx8038
    @xxxkiraxxx8038 Před 2 lety +69

    I'm a Swiss, living in London and this week, I met someone from Uruguay who told me about this. I'm absolutely mind blown! Thank you for making this wonderful video!

  • @derrickmantie2413
    @derrickmantie2413 Před 4 lety +615

    This is Uruguay, this is Rare Earth, and THIS is a sheep sneeze-pooping

  • @alejandromechina5959
    @alejandromechina5959 Před 4 lety +588

    Im from Uruguay. Nueva Helvevia is a beautiful calm rural town 2 hours away from the country Capital. The cheese there is excellent.

  • @mauriciorivas2533
    @mauriciorivas2533 Před 4 lety +634

    As an Uruguayan, I'm loving this serie.
    The history of this country is so, as you say, silent, that it simply vanish and mixes with us, its alive, but in silence.
    I never knew that Colonia cheese were "swiss" made, I'm never gonna eat it the same way after this video.

    • @fargoflagrant7796
      @fargoflagrant7796 Před 4 lety +33

      * mirada introspectiva mientras corta el queso para la tostadita *

    • @jofrn294
      @jofrn294 Před 4 lety +13

      Todos los uruguayos viendo esta serie sobre nuestro propio país jajajaja

    • @stevensonDonnie
      @stevensonDonnie Před 4 lety +2

      I’ve been there several times. There is a Swiss presence near Colonia and between Montevideo and Punta del Este. Good food!

    • @carlorielmendez6505
      @carlorielmendez6505 Před 4 lety +2

      So how are you going to eat it this time onwards.

    • @kkuukkoo2
      @kkuukkoo2 Před 4 lety +3

      @@carlorielmendez6505 With swiss accent of course

  • @alpenschatz
    @alpenschatz Před 4 lety +361

    Loved this episode. My family split apart around 1890; one part moved to Nueva Helvecia, the rest stayed in Schaffhausen. I keep in contact with the Uruguayan part of our family over Facebook. It's great to see this little part of Swiss (and Uruguayan) history being covered! Thank you Evan.
    Cheers from Switzerland! 🇨🇭

    • @kiranshashiny
      @kiranshashiny Před 3 lety +1

      How do you communicate ? The Uraguayan-Swiss speak Spanish, and I believe you speak Swiss Language ? Common language is English on FB.

    • @mayube9292
      @mayube9292 Před 2 lety +3

      @@kiranshashiny the official languages of switzerland are french, german, italian, and romansh. The last one being the closest to a "swiss language" and predominantly spoken in one region of the country.
      And Facebook has no "language". English has become the common language of the internet solely because english-speaking countries like the UK, Canada, and the US were among the first to adopt the internet.

  • @lukasgalli
    @lukasgalli Před 4 lety +357

    I am swiss and did not know this. Thank you

    • @MisterPyOne
      @MisterPyOne Před 4 lety +19

      You might have family there you didn't know about, I recently found a big part of my German family Tree in Germany not living very far away (my Grandparents went to Uruguay and my mom and me came back to Germany when I was a small child)

    • @rickc2102
      @rickc2102 Před 4 lety +4

      Grüezi!

    • @TheAwillz
      @TheAwillz Před 4 lety +2

      Is the link between the Swiss banks and the Templar’s after Friday 13th commonly know by your people?

    • @yzorgone
      @yzorgone Před 4 lety

      i found out when the facebook started. was puzzled to find, there were quite many people with the same last name as i have in south america. :) befriended some back then.

    • @MicroBIOS
      @MicroBIOS Před 4 lety +1

      You are welcome to visit us whenever you can.

  • @aassug
    @aassug Před 4 lety +91

    Something interesting is the statue in the center of the square.
    That is the only central square in Uruguay where Artigas does not appear.
    They are just two anonymous man pushing a plow, which really complement the tematic of the video if you think about it...

    • @gaston24uru
      @gaston24uru Před 3 lety +5

      pretty sure there are other central squares in small towns without Artigas

    • @theodoxa
      @theodoxa Před 3 lety

      The central square in Minas has a Lavalleja statue and the other important square in the city is called Plaza Rivera.

  • @koantao8321
    @koantao8321 Před 4 lety +209

    As a Swiss (with Swiss-German and Swiss-Italian roots) who lived most of his life away from his country (I wasn't even born there as my father, working for a Swiss company, was abroad at the time) this beautiful video brought a small tear. I actually had a colleague who returned to Switzerland from Uruguay and we bonded because I could speak Spanish, however she felt cramped living in a mountainous area, coming from flat Uruguay.

    • @koantao8321
      @koantao8321 Před 4 lety +5

      @@DJTreviCSRecordings No, I took the name from a citation by Danish Physicist Niels Bohr and Fritjof Capra's The Tao of Physics.
      Very exciting and deep reads.

    • @peterpluim7912
      @peterpluim7912 Před 4 lety +1

      I must have a long talk with my mum about my ancestry. I’m from Flanders in Belgium - Le Plat Pays from Brel and after all these years the monotony of the landscape makes me uncomfortable. Hills and mountains make me a happier person so my wife insisted we move to the Ardennes in the French-speaking part of Belgium.

    • @ccarter1378
      @ccarter1378 Před 2 lety

      @@koantao8321 I loved that book! I read it in the in the '80s, but I was exploring metaphysics.

  • @BK01012
    @BK01012 Před 4 lety +466

    How to fight poverty:
    Switzerland: get rid of poor people

    • @agschwend
      @agschwend Před 4 lety +1

      @@morrisse0_088 yes it would. Thank you for your input.

    • @mattipra
      @mattipra Před 4 lety +5

      @@morrisse0_088 Could be worse. At least you haven't voted to join them and afterward telling everyone how you were the first victim.

    • @henryc1000
      @henryc1000 Před 4 lety +3

      Education/skills ≠ poverty.

    • @sonjak8265
      @sonjak8265 Před 4 lety +3

      Keeping bank information secret is a more effective method.

    • @dinolandia8978
      @dinolandia8978 Před 3 lety +3

      Yes - the old idea of sending them off to die in a war wasn't working anymore.

  • @thetrickster42
    @thetrickster42 Před 4 lety +547

    This is fascinating. I’m Irish, and more than 1m of us emigrated, mostly to America, in the 19th century but the story of the Irish in America is well-known.
    It’s crazy to think that the same level of emigration happened to Switzerland and so many people don’t know!

    • @RareEarthSeries
      @RareEarthSeries  Před 4 lety +124

      I bet you don't know about O'Higgins and the Chilean Navy!
      I almost did this exact style of video on him and the Irish Chileans. Interesting dude. Huge hero of theirs.

    • @thetrickster42
      @thetrickster42 Před 4 lety +30

      Rare Earth wow, no I didn’t. This looks like an amazing rabbit hole to go down

    • @BlackWolf9988
      @BlackWolf9988 Před 4 lety +21

      im a descendant of one of the swiss that emigrated 200 years ago but instead of going west they moved east to russia and greatly suffered between ww1 and the end of the soviet union.

    • @iGabenewell
      @iGabenewell Před 4 lety +14

      @@RareEarthSeries Have you heard/done a video on the Patagonian welsh?

    • @relo999
      @relo999 Před 4 lety +6

      The Dutch have a similar story, though instead of immigrating out of necessity. We were asked to move to Canada, got a free plot of land some seeds and asked to farm because we were great at farming (and still are, being the second largest agricultural exporter in the world).
      My dads uncle was one of those farmers moving a Canada to be a farmer there. (and another one sold his wife in Canada if family stories are to believed, he didn't become a farmer though)

  • @frankerzed973
    @frankerzed973 Před 3 lety +21

    I'm Brazilian, I've been to Uruguay and it's a really charming country full of hidden richness
    My love for all the uruguaios out there ✨

  • @edgelord8337
    @edgelord8337 Před 4 lety +244

    Switzerland.
    One of the world's most peaceful nations.
    has a colony in Uruguay.
    Nothing like seeing some Swiss farmers in uruguay

    • @carlosUY1
      @carlosUY1 Před 4 lety +10

      Though this one was not ruled by Switzerland. So Switzerland being peaceful or not is not really relevant.

    • @jasoncreamer5747
      @jasoncreamer5747 Před 4 lety +36

      Their reputation for being peaceful is a rather modern one. They were known for anything but peaceful in the past.

    • @okofreak01
      @okofreak01 Před 4 lety +6

      Peaceful yes, but neutral only on paper.

    • @twZera413
      @twZera413 Před 4 lety +17

      It's quite fitting, given how Uruguay used to be called The Switzerland of America.

    • @schaulinnoam
      @schaulinnoam Před 4 lety +10

      @@okofreak01 Hey, were neutral! We sell weapons to everybody and take money from everywhere 😉

  • @kolibri5523
    @kolibri5523 Před 3 lety +12

    Much love to Uruguay and Uruguayan people from Switzerland. ♥️

  • @Larry82ch
    @Larry82ch Před 4 lety +55

    Never heard of this before.. And I considered myself as a well informed Swiss citizen.
    Thank you for this!

    • @SARUJAN5
      @SARUJAN5 Před 3 lety +1

      Same. It's history they never teach us in schools

  • @cantbother
    @cantbother Před 4 lety +29

    As a proud Uruguayan, it fills me of joy that you are making this series so everybody can see what a beautiful land this is!

  • @killercaos123
    @killercaos123 Před 4 lety +102

    I live in Oregon, and just north of me there is a Swiss farming community that stretches back to like the 1840s or something.
    The town name is Helvetia. And they make ice cream there. So yeah

    • @croth75
      @croth75 Před 3 lety +4

      There is a Swiss settlement in WV with the same name.

    • @0patience4flz
      @0patience4flz Před 3 lety

      So, yeah. (...cripes.)

    • @JW-qj3se
      @JW-qj3se Před 3 lety

      @Cegesh Leavenworth isn't Swiss

  • @AndyValdiv
    @AndyValdiv Před 4 lety +56

    This season has made me really want to see Uruguay one day. Thanks Evan and crew!

    • @ax6356
      @ax6356 Před 4 lety +3

      same!

    • @anonanon5627
      @anonanon5627 Před 4 lety +5

      As an Uruguayan, you are welcome any time.

    • @VisibilityFoggy
      @VisibilityFoggy Před 4 lety +1

      Uruguay was supposed to have been my next trip - last month, April 2020. I've been practically everywhere in South America, but never Uruguay. I was going to start in Montevideo, then rent a car and see where the road took me, which is how I usually travel. But coronavirus put a stop to that. Hopefully in the time that it is winter in the US next year, I'll head down for summer there, maybe hit Punta del Este for a little beach and fishing time, too.

    • @valentinaolm949
      @valentinaolm949 Před 22 dny

      @@VisibilityFoggy i hope you got to visit! Punta del Este is amazing.

  • @BurnRoddy
    @BurnRoddy Před 4 lety +61

    This is kind of what happenes to every immigrant group in Uruguay even tho Italians had by far the biggest impact.

  • @gilbertbeltran1562
    @gilbertbeltran1562 Před 3 lety +10

    "The world doesn't need to know your name for you to be remembered" that was so beautiful. I took it sort of as, 'you can make meaningful contributions to the world without it being about your ego'. Well done!

  • @javierferrongorlo5789
    @javierferrongorlo5789 Před 3 lety +8

    I’m from Nueva Helvecia, and I can’t believe that this video appeared on my timeline from nowhere. Great video!!

    • @lhanat.6901
      @lhanat.6901 Před měsícem

      I'm Swiss and would like to come visit Nueva Helvecia. Are there many Swiss people and are there many who speak Swiss German?

  • @IRosamelia
    @IRosamelia Před 4 lety +70

    Much like in Switzerland, I noticed those streets were squeakly clean ☄

    • @rickc2102
      @rickc2102 Před 4 lety +7

      That's why I love Ticino, it's just like Italy, only squeaky clean!

    • @pepperoni243
      @pepperoni243 Před 4 lety +13

      Uncle Eidolf Nothing like a bit of casual racism... Even if you were to make this argument, it would have to do with culture, not genetics

    • @IRosamelia
      @IRosamelia Před 4 lety

      @madelfuns a madelfuns, I'm not assuming, I'm commenting on what I saw in the video. I have lived in South America and Spain and such a level of cleanliness in the streets is very rare

    • @IRosamelia
      @IRosamelia Před 4 lety

      @Pepe TheFrog Pepe, you're wrong, culture doesn't have to do with genetics but with education

    • @IRosamelia
      @IRosamelia Před 4 lety +2

      @Uncle Eidolf Adolf, you go fuck yourself mate. Btw, there's no such thing as a true pure blood european, even if there are plenty of idiots like you claiming to be thus

  • @richardnavas2207
    @richardnavas2207 Před 4 lety +13

    As a native of Uruguay, and 35 year resident of New Jersey, you gave me goosebumps, and knowledge. For that, I thank you.

  • @MrMighty147
    @MrMighty147 Před 4 lety +562

    The whole "Poor people will die periodically anyway so screw them, let them starve" mentality hasn't really gone away amongst the rich people, hasn't it?

    • @mrnice4434
      @mrnice4434 Před 4 lety +18

      Nope

    • @Farmeraap
      @Farmeraap Před 4 lety +52

      No, eat the rich

    • @daedraq
      @daedraq Před 4 lety +22

      Well in Switzerland it isn't to bad. No one is starving here. We have great social systems that prevent such scenarios. Just go out in the streets in a Swiss city. It will take a long time to spot beggers or homeless people compared to other European or American cities.

    • @PaulLemars01
      @PaulLemars01 Před 4 lety +25

      @Christian Gamer 69 Why? Rich people are raised on the best of everything. They even tell you constantly that they have great taste. Believe them.

    • @koantao8321
      @koantao8321 Před 4 lety +17

      @@daedraq Yes, but the rich (btw, I am one of them) still f@@k the middle class with the health insurance system which is meant to be single-payer, but actually is a fixed-rate tax, no matter what your income is. Private insurers, who make mountains of money, f@@k the tax-payers by getting paid by the state for the low-class insured who need subsidies to pay their health insurance.

  • @jupena
    @jupena Před 4 lety +96

    This was very interesting, thank you RE!
    Bit of history here: During WW2 the first nation to open its doors to the Jews was (get this) the Dominican Republic! about 1,000 families migrated to a small town call: "Sosua" in the norther side of the island (some of the most beautiful beaches in the entire island) where they form a small colony that exist to this date, Rare Earth should check it out.
    Uruguay is still on my bucket-list of countries to visit.

  • @stillwaiting4Wonder
    @stillwaiting4Wonder Před 4 lety +17

    I’m half Swiss and half Uruguayan... did you make this video for me? Joking obviously, but it’s amazing that I never knew the connection between the two, especially since I got to know swiss-german speakers in Uruguay. Love the vid, keep it up!

    • @lhanat.6901
      @lhanat.6901 Před měsícem

      I'm Swiss and would like to come visit Nueva Helvecia. Are there many Swiss people and are there many who speak Swiss German?

  • @Moncho1234
    @Moncho1234 Před 4 lety +12

    The grand-father of my grand-father came from Switzwerland to Uruguay. He was one of the fist settlers of Colonia Suiza.

    • @lhanat.6901
      @lhanat.6901 Před měsícem

      I'm Swiss and would like to come visit Nueva Helvecia. Are there many Swiss people and are there many who speak Swiss German?

  • @fargoflagrant7796
    @fargoflagrant7796 Před 4 lety +114

    00:47 It's actually Nueva Helvecia (Elve-ess-ee-ah), not Nueva Helvetica.
    I've never been but I visited neighboring La Paz which was originally a Piedmontese colony. Great episode!
    edit: typo

    • @RareEarthSeries
      @RareEarthSeries  Před 4 lety +39

      Oops, Helvetica/Helvetia is the German and naturally I switched to German in my head. Thanks!
      I even discussed that I was going to be wrong on this with Kata right before we released. At least I'm becoming prescient.

    • @PWN3DU01
      @PWN3DU01 Před 4 lety +7

      @@RareEarthSeries Helvetica is just the font :D

    • @fabiandietler9857
      @fabiandietler9857 Před 4 lety +6

      @@PWN3DU01 switzerland calls itself Confoederatio helvetica in latin (even is on the money, coins specifically)

    • @user-vq4pi1pc9m
      @user-vq4pi1pc9m Před 4 lety +1

      fargoflagrant little correction there, Colonia Valdense is actually the Piedmontese colony, not La Paz

    • @fargoflagrant7796
      @fargoflagrant7796 Před 4 lety +1

      @@user-vq4pi1pc9m This seems to be true for both towns. La Paz is also known as Colonia Piamontesa.

  • @issuesboy
    @issuesboy Před 4 lety +14

    I love this series. I’ve been itching to visit (move to?) Uruguay for decades..,

  • @DuffyElmer
    @DuffyElmer Před 4 lety +112

    9:33 Minor pedantry:
    New Helvetia, not New Helvetica. Helvetia is Switzerland, Helvetica is "from Switzerland/Swiss" (and also the name of a typeface).

    • @RareEarthSeries
      @RareEarthSeries  Před 4 lety +51

      Hahah, even more pedantry, it is Helvecia, as it is Spanish. :)
      What's funny is right before I released this I turned to Kata and was like "I just know I got the Helvetica wrong"

    • @y_fam_goeglyd
      @y_fam_goeglyd Před 4 lety +3

      @@RareEarthSeries I missed that one, but what made me giggle a bit (I do have a warped sense of humour) is that like so many other mass emigrants from Europe, this has Celtic connections.
      Being Welsh I know more about Patagonia than Uruguay, though still not enough, but I do know that the Helveti (Helvetii? I can never remember which) were also Celts. My sister lives in Germany, on the flat but just before the Alps. It takes about 2 hours on the train to get to Zurich, so I've been to Switzerland a few times. When I'm there, it never feels like there is anything Celtic about the place, but I have only been to the German-speaking part, so maybe it's different in the French part (although I believe that where sis lives was once Celtic land. We got about a lot a couple of millennia ago :D. Anywhere that starts Gal- or Gaul- in Europe & Turkey is definitely Celtic).
      It would be interesting to know if any part of Switzerland feels Celtic to its inhabitants. Definitely wouldn't be anywhere without alcohol or music ;)
      I absolutely love your stories. Have you considered writing a book about your travels, or about the stories you've learned and shared, and maybe turning it into an audiobook? I'm sure it would be very popular.

    • @iandalziel7405
      @iandalziel7405 Před 4 lety +3

      @@RareEarthSeries - I guess it's a case of juggling between being a font of all knowledge or having a knowledge of all fonts...
      Being landlocked Switzerland doesn't have much 'serif'...

    • @etepeteseat7424
      @etepeteseat7424 Před 4 lety +5

      @@y_fam_goeglyd The Celtic character of most of Western and Central Europe was already diminished by centuries of Roman control of those regions which had been inhabited by Celtic-speaking peoples, and with the influx and ascendance to political hegemony of Germanic-speakers such as the Franks, Goths, and Alemanni in most of the regions historically associated with Continental Celtic populations, many of the traces of those peoples that remained were further elided to the point that, for all intents and purposes, the dominant cultural identities of people living in those regions were, if not tied to a Germanic ruling class, then certainly a syncretic regional identity (i.e. Frankish versus French).
      In any case, it's been nearly 1,600 years since those areas of Continental Europe came under the control of the medieval predecessors to the modern states of the region, and in the intervening millenium-and-a-half, completely new, post-Classical identities have developed-in short, whatever traces of Celtic language and culture that remain there are minimal at best, generally speaking. However, by then many of those regions had widely-recognized names due to associations with past inhabitants, and many-especially Latin-place names were retained, often in modified form, hence Germany (Germania), France (Francia), Helvetia, Scotia/Caledonia (Scotland), etc.
      The most notable exception would be the Bretons of Brittany, who have retained some small measure of uniquely Breton cultural and linguistic identity, though they have largely been incorporated into the larger French cultural and linguistic hegemonic sphere due to more than a millennium of French rule, and the effects of standardization policies undertaken since the French Revolution (which have cognates in those major Western European countries whose national language was standardized early in the Modern Period, such as English). There is a movement to revive the Breton language, much as with other Celtic languages, etc.
      Breton is a P-Celtic language like Welsh, so they're more closely related than Welsh is to the Q-Celtic Goidelic languages of Scotland and Ireland, and like the Welsh, the Bretons are the remnants of populations which once were more widely distributed on the island of Britain and in Continental Europe. Of course, by now the Welsh have a lot more in common, generally speaking, with Scottish and Irish folks, due to being subject to English, rather than French, rule.
      Anyway, as an American with a Welsh surname and predominantly Scots-Irish ancestry, I hope the essay I just wrote in a CZcams comments section was interesting and informative. ^^;

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 Před 4 lety +4

      @@y_fam_goeglyd You might be delighted to hear that the German-speaking Swiss call the French-speaking Swiss "Welsch".

  • @ShinigamiInuyasha777
    @ShinigamiInuyasha777 Před 4 lety +22

    The most hilarius part is that Uruguay is considered "The Switzerland of the Americas"....But not for the Cheese!

  • @josephtokarz7305
    @josephtokarz7305 Před 3 lety +5

    I was surfing CZcams and you popped up. I was like, "Uraguay?" Swiss!?..... learn something new everyday, That was very good! Thank You!!

  • @AlexGreat87
    @AlexGreat87 Před 4 lety +82

    It makes me remember the Welsh colony in my province (Chubut, back in Argentina). I'm not Welsh at all, but it's just fascinating.

    • @bdm-astroscorpion5025
      @bdm-astroscorpion5025 Před 4 lety +3

      I heard about them years ago. I heard they kept the Welsh language alive in their part of Argentina, parts of Patagonia. I am not Welsh but have friends who are 100% Welsh. I travel to Wales many times.

    • @mjk97dubstep
      @mjk97dubstep Před 4 lety +2

      There is also the history of the Volga german comunity in all over Argentina. It's pretty much the same as the one of the video but now we are a quite large population haha (but please don't confuse us with nazis)

    • @lanahanbrian0
      @lanahanbrian0 Před 3 lety

      Can you speak Cymraeg?

    • @samjl4
      @samjl4 Před 3 lety +1

      It rather shocked me to learn how many british immigrated to Argentina, tierra del fuego may even of had a majority british ancestry. it makes me wonder how the falklands war even happened, either people simply had no choice but to go with it under a military junta or we British integrate so well people forget where they’ve come from after a generation or two.

    • @ludwigmack
      @ludwigmack Před 3 lety +1

      El mejor te gales se toma en Trevelin! =)

  • @Dragoncam13
    @Dragoncam13 Před 4 lety +6

    My great grandfather was one of those Swiss that left Switzerland during the great Swiss migrations and he came to Louisiana. It's pretty awesome honestly to see how widespread across the Americas the Swiss immigrants landed and lived.

  • @ulquiorracifer3359
    @ulquiorracifer3359 Před 4 lety +16

    Uruguay is so interesting could you make more videos about it?

  • @Remo_Wo1kenstein
    @Remo_Wo1kenstein Před 4 lety +11

    I m swiss and I never heard of it!
    So thank you.

  • @Dangic23
    @Dangic23 Před 4 lety +23

    Uruguay is looking more and more like the place I need to move to.
    Jumped to #3 in my list after Spain and Philippines.
    Lets see if it moves up my list during this next year before I pack.

    • @veljkoradovanovic1130
      @veljkoradovanovic1130 Před 2 lety +1

      Where you ended up moving?

    • @Dangic23
      @Dangic23 Před 2 lety

      @@veljkoradovanovic1130
      Napa, California.
      Destin, Florida.
      Bought a house in Batangas Philippines, but not moving there yet.

  • @ghostd00r
    @ghostd00r Před 4 lety +27

    This is a good moment to point out that Uruguay has a swiss colony, a german colony and a russian one, all within the same county.
    (Yes, they do make great cheese, beer and liquor respectively lol)

    • @ghostd00r
      @ghostd00r Před 3 lety

      @Telos de Aries Of course! How could I forget, they even hold a Chocolate Party during the wintertime~

    • @FloreMar-yp3iz
      @FloreMar-yp3iz Před 3 lety +1

      Nueva Helvecia has a lot of celebrations. The Bierfest on early december, a Chocolate fest on late July, some Switzerland festivities around August, between other small ones :3

  • @holaeltipo
    @holaeltipo Před 4 lety +14

    Very good video! As a Uruguayan whose grandparents were born and raised in Nueva Helvecia, I must admit the quality of the video was well-over my knowledge! Keep up the good work!

    • @eduardohugo8552
      @eduardohugo8552 Před 3 lety

      My Grandparents too, were born and raised in Colonia Suiza

    • @lhanat.6901
      @lhanat.6901 Před měsícem

      I'm Swiss and would like to come visit Nueva Helvecia. Are there many Swiss people and are there many who speak Swiss German?

    • @lhanat.6901
      @lhanat.6901 Před měsícem

      @@eduardohugo8552 I'm Swiss and would like to come visit Nueva Helvecia. Are there many Swiss people and are there many who speak Swiss German?

    • @holaeltipo
      @holaeltipo Před měsícem +1

      @@lhanat.6901 there are many descendants of Swiss, though not many of them may still speak the language.

  • @kevanlannister3672
    @kevanlannister3672 Před 4 lety +35

    Well as a swiss I want to visit urugay now XD

    • @L.K.48
      @L.K.48 Před 2 lety +1

      Bisch choch? Bisch vo Bärn? Dari? ^^

    • @kevanlannister3672
      @kevanlannister3672 Před 2 lety +1

      Nai sorry bi vo schwyz :)

    • @L.K.48
      @L.K.48 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kevanlannister3672 easy :D

    • @lhanat.6901
      @lhanat.6901 Před měsícem

      Bisch gsi in Uruguay, hesch Nueva Helvecia gsee?

  • @darugla
    @darugla Před 2 lety +5

    Very nice report. I am a swiss-german and jewish descent. My great grand parents emigrated from Zurich in the late 1800 to Uruguay. If you know someone with last name Glättli is part of my family. They were a bunch of brothers, only one of them went on and decided to stay in Argentina. I emigrated 21 years ago to the States, and I also have some cousins in here. We are also in contact with some cousins in Switzerland.

  • @ThousandTimesBefore
    @ThousandTimesBefore Před 4 lety +66

    As a Swiss person, it's weird to see this footage. Beautiful sides of Switzerland, but not how most of us live haha xD

    • @-gemberkoekje-5547
      @-gemberkoekje-5547 Před 4 lety +17

      It's with most countries.
      Germany isn't all a quaint old Bavarian city
      Russia isn't all the Kremlin
      The Netherlands isn't all tulip fields
      The US isn't all the grand canyon
      Canada isn't all the Rocky mountains

    • @myrddinemrys1332
      @myrddinemrys1332 Před 4 lety +1

      @@-gemberkoekje-5547 I probably wouldn't have gone with the Rockies for Canada as they are around an even split between the US and Canada.
      Ontario or Toronto might have been a better pick.

    • @-gemberkoekje-5547
      @-gemberkoekje-5547 Před 4 lety +1

      @@myrddinemrys1332 they are internationally as far as I know the image of Canada

    • @myrddinemrys1332
      @myrddinemrys1332 Před 4 lety

      @@-gemberkoekje-5547 I dunno. I'd at most say their surrounding forests in BC were the image.

    • @SARUJAN5
      @SARUJAN5 Před 3 lety

      Same here. I learnt something new. I was never taught this

  • @Lic51
    @Lic51 Před 4 lety +4

    I'm Uruguayan and a foreign friend showed me this. Good job! It's great to see good material in English. 👏

  • @YAYKUTTEL
    @YAYKUTTEL Před 4 lety +7

    It feels really weird to finally see some portion of my family history here. My ancestors kept sailing all the way past Tierra del Fuego and only stopped when they reached Washington. But some of their relatives stopped in Argentina and Uruguay

    • @Alfonso162008
      @Alfonso162008 Před 4 lety

      Washington D.C? Or is there another Washington in the south of the continent?

    • @amacrad
      @amacrad Před 4 lety

      @@Alfonso162008 You know there is a state named Washington in the north west of the USA, don't you?

  • @thiagoferrermorini9417
    @thiagoferrermorini9417 Před 4 lety +5

    Uruguay also had between 1955 and 1967 a collegiate system of government (formed by the two main parties) that, as far as I know, only has existed in the last century in another place on Earth... Switzerland.

  • @dewinmoonl
    @dewinmoonl Před 3 lety +14

    isn't it amazing? went to uruguay in januaray this year, and it is such an amazing country, just people sipping mate on the playa and eating great steaks. nothing fancy, but really no glaring issues such as racism and inequality. I hope uruguay stays the way it is for years to come. gaucho power!

  • @Sabrowsky
    @Sabrowsky Před 4 lety +64

    "they just came and farmed"
    So they're pretty much hobbits then?

    • @LogicReel
      @LogicReel Před 4 lety +7

      That's basically every immigrant in 19th century Uruguay.

    • @dunzerkug
      @dunzerkug Před 4 lety

      Hobbits drink more.

    • @InEmberClad
      @InEmberClad Před 4 lety +1

      Tolkien travelled extensively through switzerland before writing LOTR. Where do you think he got the inspiration for the shire and the hobbits from?

    • @burzwild2292
      @burzwild2292 Před 4 lety +1

      @@dunzerkug Dwarves drink, hobbits smoke

    • @dinolandia8978
      @dinolandia8978 Před 3 lety

      Hobbits also love smoking pipe weed. Uruguay is also known for legalizing that stuff too.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Před 4 lety +44

    Dutch: *G E K O L O N I S E E R D*
    Swiss: Hold my neutrality

    • @johnc916
      @johnc916 Před 4 lety

      Avery the Cuban-American Why are u in every comment section lol

  • @deboraskinner
    @deboraskinner Před 4 lety +5

    I loved seeing the streets I used to walk some years ago (not just in this video but in the previous ones as well). I’ve also enjoyed listening to a review of our story. These are definitely videos I would share with my friends when they ask me about Uruguay. Thank you!

  • @TwinIonEngines
    @TwinIonEngines Před 4 lety +5

    South America can be summarized as the place of people that, despite not having much to give, will still give you a meal and a place to stay, because all of us there have at some point come from somewhere else to find a new beginning, and we know what that's like, maybe not personally, but our grandparents knew, and they passed that to their sons, and their sons sons.
    We're a conglomerate of fugitive cultures, alive today because those with little, gave us a meal and a place to stay.

    • @TwinIonEngines
      @TwinIonEngines Před 4 lety

      @Patricia McCoy Patricia, as a born and raised Brazilian who actually lived and grew up there, with all due respect: You have no fucking idea what you're talking about

  • @santigestido
    @santigestido Před 4 lety +7

    Thank you for your videos about Uruguay, I can't stop learning about my own country with you.
    I feel like going to Nueva Helvecia next weekend, I have never been to it yet.
    Its a shame that many Uruguayans will not see your channel because they don't know English but im really surprised about the quality of your videos and the possibility you give to English speakers to know about us.
    Keep it up.

  • @sethmatson7654
    @sethmatson7654 Před 4 lety +5

    Reminds me of the Welsh town in Argentina, Y Wladfa. You wouldn't expect them there and yet...there they are!

  • @ebbeb9827
    @ebbeb9827 Před 4 lety +10

    The same happened in Sweden, many villages completely empty

  • @camilamorales5102
    @camilamorales5102 Před 4 lety +4

    Amo ver gente hablando sobre Uruguay like. URUGUAY ES EL MEJOR PAÍS 🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶

  • @saraalcaire8802
    @saraalcaire8802 Před 4 lety +6

    I’m Uruguayan but I live in USA !!! Very interesting this video !! I’m born in Montevideo and never visited Colonia Suiza and Nueva Helvecia same day I will go to there and buy delicious cheese!! Thanks for made this video !!!

  • @C_hoffmanni
    @C_hoffmanni Před 4 lety +11

    Best shot of the video was the goat pooping then walking towards the camera

  • @SARUJAN5
    @SARUJAN5 Před 3 lety +2

    Wow. I learnt something new about my county. Greetings from Switzerland

  • @taimunozhan
    @taimunozhan Před 4 lety +3

    One of the things I like the most about this channel is how it will often focus on stories that would hardly be on the spotlight otherwise; untold stories others gloss over.
    I doubt most Uruguayans would think of the Swiss in Nueva Helvecia as a topic to be featured in a series about the country. It doesn't appear to be so note-worthy Yet, this video did put the topic on the spotlight but not so much as a local story about a town in Uruguay but as a much more general reflection on several universal topics, from poverty to immigration to the construction of one's own identity in relationship to one's heritage.

  • @gb8518
    @gb8518 Před 4 lety +4

    I been there in the late 70's We spent a couple of days at that hotel I remembered it wasnt in a good shape but the place was beautiful Like to be in a farm The food was awesome So delicious. Homemade meals. I cant believe at this time of the night found a video from a place 50 years ago.

  • @20FGUY
    @20FGUY Před 4 lety +2

    Diego Godin was born near these town in Rosario. The former President of Fifa Josepp Blatter used to visit Nueva Helvecia

  • @Kameeho
    @Kameeho Před 4 lety +20

    Nobody:
    Rare Earth: Did you know there is a swiss colony in south americas?
    Everyone: wait what?

  • @PepperoniMilkshake
    @PepperoniMilkshake Před 4 lety +13

    No wonder cheese over there was so good!

  • @danielbergmann4330
    @danielbergmann4330 Před 4 lety +13

    Kind of an unrelated storry, but since you mentioned in the video about people speaking thire ancestors language, in southern Brasil you can easly find Italian colonies that most people speak Talian, a unique offshoot of old venitian italian and Portuguese, it is quite interesting gramatically.
    Thers even a tiny luxemburghian colonie founded by ex napolean officials exiled from europe with theire families.

    • @fabianreusch4870
      @fabianreusch4870 Před 4 lety

      Encountered some German speaking people from southern Brazil as well
      It was a little weird though, they were giving off somewhat racist vibes lol

    • @TheProcrastinator6
      @TheProcrastinator6 Před 4 lety

      @@fabianreusch4870 maybe nazi exiles lol

    • @thalissevero7627
      @thalissevero7627 Před 3 lety

      @@TheProcrastinator6The first german immigrants came to Brazil mostly in the late 1800's and early 1900's. Most of them arrived before WW1 even happened. I'd bet that 99% of the german descendants in Brazil today have no connection whatsoever with the nazis who came to South America after WW2.

  • @fedeiink
    @fedeiink Před 3 lety +5

    como uruguayo tremendo orgullo que subas estas cosas, graciass

  • @ArtifexExMachina
    @ArtifexExMachina Před 4 lety +44

    Is this leftover footage from the Lichtenstein video interspersed with some extraneous shots from Uruguay?

    • @RareEarthSeries
      @RareEarthSeries  Před 4 lety +36

      Sort of, it is maybe 20% liechtenstein border region (the only place I'd filmed industry while there) with 30% just Switzerland and the rest the town of Nueva Helvecia, Uruguay.

    • @JanB1605
      @JanB1605 Před 4 lety +2

      @@RareEarthSeries Yeah, some border region film material but the rest is all Switzerland (and Uruguay, but I can only confirm the Switzerland part).

    • @Alfonso162008
      @Alfonso162008 Před 4 lety +14

      Basically, if you see mountains and snow, it ain't Uruguay.

    • @Tairneanach
      @Tairneanach Před 4 lety

      There's at least one shot from Zurich in there. I recognised the church with the two towers.

    • @JanB1605
      @JanB1605 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Alfonso162008 Basically, yes. :D

  • @NoahDiesSlowly
    @NoahDiesSlowly Před 4 lety +3

    2:01 is the most unreasonably beautiful shot of a cow I've... ever seen?

  • @JanB1605
    @JanB1605 Před 4 lety +11

    Thank you for this video. Today I learned something about my country (Switzerland) I didn't know before. And your German on the end card is really good (despite two little errors but German is hard, I know that)!

    • @rickc2102
      @rickc2102 Před 4 lety

      Nicht so schwer wie Schwiezerdüütsch! 😄👍

  • @consciouspointers
    @consciouspointers Před 4 lety +2

    Your script writing is beautiful and your reading of it and the video editing as well. Exquisite. It moved me.

  • @ninac4501
    @ninac4501 Před 2 lety +1

    Nueva Helvecia is a delightful town where I spent the night in, and made friends with a family there, on my past trip to Uruguay.

  • @FloreMar-yp3iz
    @FloreMar-yp3iz Před 3 lety +4

    OMG I literally screamed when I saw this video, is my hometown :D
    (Also i screamed more when I recognized some people in the video ngl)

  • @lolo4976
    @lolo4976 Před 4 lety +7

    There´s a lot of this type of colonies around the region, my ancestors came to Uruguay from a German colony in Brasil.
    I know for a fact these people in Nueva Helvecia have their bank accounts very clear of any debt, it didnt surprise me, knowing how wealthy their old country is...

  • @jorgefantoni3182
    @jorgefantoni3182 Před 3 lety +2

    I was born and raised in Uruguay until the age of 25 when I moved to Texas, I've been to Nueva Helvecia, a few time , really nice town ,I didn't know the story, thank you so much for let us know 🇺🇾

  • @MichaelDeHaven
    @MichaelDeHaven Před 4 lety +7

    Thank you for the laugh, I got at that ending.

  • @CalamityDiamond
    @CalamityDiamond Před 4 lety +27

    Glad you're still putting content out, given the state of the pandemic I was afraid you might end up in a bad spot. Stay safe.

  • @nathanseper8738
    @nathanseper8738 Před 4 lety +31

    Malthus didn't know what he was talking about. The more people there are, the more people who can innovate and solve problems. If you give people education and a decent life, they can go on to create new things that can advance human society.

    • @shadowmax889
      @shadowmax889 Před 4 lety +3

      How he would know?, he lived at the start of the industrial revolution, he didn't have the decades of experience and history we have

    • @patrickmastrobuono310
      @patrickmastrobuono310 Před 4 lety

      Malthus ignorance had more to do with his timeline, and with the typical aristocratic disdain for the people.
      Seeing the poor as animals to be slaughtered has been a mainstay of these monsters since ancient times. From feudalism, to the new capital overlords seeing workers as meat for their machines. There's a reason they and Hitler's Nazi party took this as their core belief.

    • @weirdshibainu
      @weirdshibainu Před 4 lety +1

      You're not entirely correct. The more people there are, the more consumers that have to buy from the elite who as write this are consolidating even more power and wealth against the backdrop of the pandemic.

    • @jorgegomez524
      @jorgegomez524 Před 4 lety

      True, but only until a point. Where’s that point?, nobody knows.

    • @helloimbanned
      @helloimbanned Před 3 lety +1

      No, Malthus was right. Population has the capacity to grow faster than anything necessary for life, and he use the example of food, but also applies to housing, water, energy. Look at the rest of the world most people are extremly poor, there's starvation, lack of sanitation, lack of water, medicines, etc. Take a look at India, Indonesia, Bangladesh, etc. Even in the 1rst world. California is overpopulated, there's a water crisis and a housing crisis, many homeless people and overpriced houses. That's why California needs high taxes in order to sustain the high standard of living but most people don't know this.

  • @prajnaseek
    @prajnaseek Před 2 lety +1

    Really well done. My ancestry is Swiss-English Canadian. My grandfather came from Switzerland to Ontario to start Canada's first Swiss cheese factory. Migration, independence and entrepreneurship seem to be in my blood - and Uruguay is looking like my top pick, ironically, following the trail of my ancestors. But to more important points, I was very glad you gave Malthusianism the good thrashing it deserves. This is far more important than most people know, because the Western elite have been in love with Malthusian and social Darwinian self-rationalizing delusions for a century and a half, up to and including the present. The current "de facto world government", as the leading business journal of the Western world, the Financial Times calls the World Economic forum at Davos, is comprised mainly of billionaire corporate oligarchs, who by in large are Malthusians, social Darwinists, and eugenicists, and they are quite literally neo-fascists, as we are clearly seeing now. See Vandana Shiva, Rocco Galati, Peter Phillips, James Corbett and John Perkins, and my own writing, for more details.

  • @stevensonDonnie
    @stevensonDonnie Před 4 lety +2

    I had lunch at the Hotel Suiza. There is another, smaller Suiza restaurant on the road between Montevideo and Punta del Este.

  • @georgewbushcenterforintell147

    Sometimes homer Simpson amazes me with his simple mind brilliance.

  • @farkasishtar5565
    @farkasishtar5565 Před 4 lety +3

    Im from Uruguay, in the uruguayan golden age, Uruguay was called "The Swideland" of America
    PD:Sorry for my bad english

  • @daviaurelio7035
    @daviaurelio7035 Před 3 lety +2

    Theres a town in Brazil called Campos do Jordão that had a swiss colony too, nowadays it is a touristic place

  • @victordeoliveiramelo
    @victordeoliveiramelo Před 4 lety +1

    I've was there in 1.8.2011 with my Swiss girlfriend. We even got to meet the Swiss embassador that came from Montevideo for the event....very cool experience...

  • @TheCellCH
    @TheCellCH Před 4 lety +11

    Wait you speak german? I did not know.
    Also I'm swiss but I did not know about the uruguay colony. Nice video :)

  • @MatiasND
    @MatiasND Před 3 lety +11

    Can you talk about russians colonies in Uruguay:
    San Javier and Colonia Ofir

  • @stevefarb9422
    @stevefarb9422 Před 4 lety +1

    I was a self-funded volunteer street minister in Uruguay during the Junta in 1983-84. I once visited friends living in Colonia Suiza and knocked a few doors. I thought I was smart and asked the first lady that answered her door, “Sprechen Sie Deutsch?” Her face lit up and she started talking in German...which I didn't to my great embarrassment. I lived in Colonia del Sacramento at the time and was impressed by how nice Colonia Suiza was.

  • @minisithunknown5568
    @minisithunknown5568 Před 4 lety +1

    There are so many interesting comments on every video for you.
    Love each and every video you put out. Keep up the top notch videos and keep safe.

  • @benrex7775
    @benrex7775 Před 4 lety +5

    I have to say the images are on point. They are chosen perfectly. I'm from Switzerland and every clip of the first half of the video looked pure Swiss and I felt at home. And although I have no clue about Uruguay the images looked as if they were picked just as carefully.
    By the way I didn't know the specifics but I knew about the starving Swiss back then and that the poor people left Switzerland in droves.
    How did you do your research? This video seems to be done by a person living in Switzerland and loving his home country.

    • @caroa.3523
      @caroa.3523 Před 4 lety

      that is because the first half was from Switzerland, we have no mountains in Uruguay.

    • @rickc2102
      @rickc2102 Před 4 lety +1

      Rare Earth is a team of people living on and loving their home planet.

    • @benrex7775
      @benrex7775 Před 4 lety

      @@caroa.3523 I know that the first half was from Switzerland. But you can take pictures from a place and it looks like any other place on this earth and you can take pictures of a place and you immediately know from where they are.
      Technically it's not entirely true, here in the comments I've read that some of the pictures are from Lichtenstein. But culturally and geographically they are pretty close to Switzerland.

    • @RareEarthSeries
      @RareEarthSeries  Před 4 lety

      @@benrex7775 Liechtenstein shots are just the river border region of Switzerland. There are no shots except for the sheep that were entirely shot in Liechtenstein. :)

  • @ROGER2095
    @ROGER2095 Před 4 lety +10

    This week at Dollar Tree, I bought a bag of rice that came from Uruguay. It was delicious! (Is there a shortage of rice farms in the USA?)

    • @davidbunner6708
      @davidbunner6708 Před 4 lety +2

      No but heavy government subsidy keeps the price high; making imports attractive.

    • @fargoflagrant7796
      @fargoflagrant7796 Před 4 lety +5

      Uruguay just exports a lot of rice, nothing weird there.

    • @1vawt
      @1vawt Před 4 lety

      Glad you enjoyed it. Do you remember the brand? Im from Uruguay, just curious..

    • @ROGER2095
      @ROGER2095 Před 4 lety +5

      @@1vawt It's an American brand - Mc Trader (McLane Global) - that probably imported the rice in bulk and packaged it in Texas. But the package says, "Product of Uruguay." I eat a lot of rice and I have to say, it's really very good! I'll buy more.

    • @MalditoSeasEstadoDelsrael
      @MalditoSeasEstadoDelsrael Před 4 lety +1

      That's another migration story in Uruguay, one of the biggest rice companies was founded by some japanese fleeing from the WWII aftermath. Also and slightly unrelated, Joseph Mengele set up here in a town 70 kms away from the one they mention in this documentary, had a wife and everything.

  • @el_naif
    @el_naif Před 4 lety +2

    I'm Peruvian and I grew up in the dairy capital of the country, eating a locally produced variant of the Swiss cheese, made by a tiny colony of Swiss people.

  • @ecrusch
    @ecrusch Před 4 lety +1

    I've learned more from Rare Earth then I did from a lot of my schooling.
    Thank you. Always interesting.
    (And always well produced too.)

  • @Foul_Quince
    @Foul_Quince Před 4 lety +6

    The Sound of Music was set in Austria, not Switzerland.

    • @jokepp
      @jokepp Před 3 lety +1

      Came here to look for this comment

  • @Zestrayswede
    @Zestrayswede Před 4 lety +6

    My german is shoddy as shit and I understood most of the endcard without needing a dictionary. I'm proud of myself.

    • @Zestrayswede
      @Zestrayswede Před 4 lety

      I take it you're quite proud of the endcard yourself, Evan. Either that or you feel my pain.

  • @Lolwutfordawin
    @Lolwutfordawin Před 4 lety

    I'm loving this series! A more.. peaceful one than previous. A welcome change for these times. Thank you for doing what you do!

  • @onetwo-ty6cc
    @onetwo-ty6cc Před 4 lety +1

    There is a town called Helvecia an hour away from Santa Fe city. As far as I know there are two Swiss colonies in Argentina, one in Potrerillos, Mendoza and in Bariloche.
    I need to visit Uruguay someday :)

  • @pelipequi1493
    @pelipequi1493 Před 4 lety +5

    Have you done a video on San Javier, the Russian colony? This is great...köszönöm

  • @deanndu2374
    @deanndu2374 Před 3 lety +3

    Sehr schoen, und der Kaes ist spitze! I am planning to visit Uruguay in December to see if it's a possible retirement fit for me.

    • @mauricio1194
      @mauricio1194 Před 2 lety

      Uruguay is an amazing country but you have to know we are an expensive country to live. Saying that just for your knowledge. Cheers!

  • @GuntherRommel
    @GuntherRommel Před rokem +1

    This video escaped me for two long years. But now, I watch.

  • @bbalila
    @bbalila Před 3 lety

    Thanks for sharing, Last year I went to a Swiss village on Lake Arenal, Costa Rica. Wonderful place. Now this is on my list too.

  • @henriquemelchiorgomes8750
    @henriquemelchiorgomes8750 Před 4 lety +10

    There are Swiss cities in Brazil, and isn't even in the South, it's in Rio de Janeiro. Nova Friburgo is one of the cities.

    • @LiiMuRi
      @LiiMuRi Před 4 lety

      They even have a cable car going up a mountain side there :)

  • @rangergxi
    @rangergxi Před 4 lety +3

    I've heard of these people. The Swiss family Rodrigo.