Passport to the World

How the Acropolis Helped One Son Finally Connect With His Dead Father

19 min · 20. maj 2026
episode How the Acropolis Helped One Son Finally Connect With His Dead Father cover

Beskrivelse

He thought he was the first in his family to see the Parthenon. He was wrong. Hidden in an old sea chest was a faded photograph of his father — a young sailor in 1948, standing on the very same ground. Frank Hosek writes about what it feels like to retrace the steps of someone you lost too soon and never got to fully know. Read his full article, "Athens' Parthenon, Then and Now: Walking the Acropolis in My Father's Footsteps [https://www.goworldtravel.com/parthenon-fathers-footsteps/]," with photos and details at Go World Travel Magazine.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Passport to the World-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

22 episoder

episode The Oldest Wine Country You've Never Thought to Visit cover

The Oldest Wine Country You've Never Thought to Visit

Wine has been made in Armenia for over 6,000 years. And then the Soviets took it away. Travel journalist and editor Isabella Miller visits seven wineries across this ancient, wildly underrated country and finds something far bigger than a wine trail: a nation that lost its identity and spent decades quietly winning it back. From a winemaker who plays jazz for his grapes to an underground cellar where wine was made in secret during Soviet rule, every bottle here has a story worth hearing. Read Isabella Miller's full article, "Armenia: The Unexpected Birthplace of Wine and Why It Deserves a Spot on Your Travel List [https://www.goworldtravel.com/armenia-wine/]," with stunning photos and details at Go World Travel Magazine.

29. apr. 202623 min
episode Everyone Warned Him Not to Go. He Went Anyway: The Other Mali Nobody Talks About cover

Everyone Warned Him Not to Go. He Went Anyway: The Other Mali Nobody Talks About

Everyone told travel writer Edward Placidi not to go to Mali. War in the north, a military government in the south, police checkpoints every few miles. He went anyway. Join Edward as he slips past the warnings and into a Mali most people will never see: forgotten villages where no cars exist, where a blind king still settles disputes from his crumbling palace, and where children burst into screaming delight at the sight of a stranger with a camera. From shelling peanuts with laughing villagers to wandering past 1,000-year-old mud mosques and watching artists burn intricate designs into gourds with heated iron rods, this is a journey straight into a world that feels centuries removed from our own. But the cracks are showing, and Edward wonders how much longer it can last. Read Edward's full article, "A Rare Journey Into Mali: West Africa's Time-Forgotten Kingdom [https://www.goworldtravel.com/mali-west-africa/]," with stunning photos and details on visiting the south safely.

11. feb. 202615 min