‘hand-delivering letters across france is slow and full of love’
‘hand-delivering letters across france is slow and full of love’"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
A letter from a grandmother to her granddaughter, a hand extended to a former classmate not spoken to for over a decade… These are some of the messages Vincent Berthelot has hand-delivered,
often taking several months. Like any good postman, he does not look inside, but sometimes people are eager to share. “They are always love letters,” he said. “Love in every sense of the
word. Love for humanity.” FIRST TRIP WAS 6,000KM It all started when Mr Berthelot (64) retired from teaching in 2015, and wanted to mark the transition with a cycle trip. “The problem was, I
didn’t know where. I’ve always thought the path was more interesting than the destination, so I decided not to decide where to go.” He came up with the idea to ask the people around him if
they had any important messages to send, starting with friends and family, colleagues, the local baker… His first round took him to the four corners of France across 6,000km, from his home
in Redon (Brittany) to Lille, Strasbourg, Marseille and the Pyrenees, all the while on a recumbent bicycle. It took him 93 days. READ MORE: CYCLISTS WHO MADE HUGE GPS DINOSAUR ON FRANCE TRIP
BREAK WORLD RECORD HAND-DELIVERED LETTERS HAVE GREATER IMPACT He believes Brittany is a “privileged area in terms of human relations”, which helped him to amass the letters. Maëla
Palvadeau, 36, has known Mr Berthelot since she was a student at the middle school where he taught. When he was asking around for letters, she was pregnant with her first child, and decided
to write to her in-laws, who live in Valence (Drôme). “My partner’s father is very private and rarely shows his emotions,” she said – but he ended up writing back. “I thought it was
important to open up a dialogue in the relationship between my partner and his father. “They realised they could tell each other things. I knew that once we had a child, he would have to
open up. I didn’t want him to have the same kind of relationship with his child as he had with his dad – slightly distant.” She says hand-delivered letters have a greater impact for the
recipient. “You don’t write just anything in a letter like that. So it has a weight, which also comes from the personal encounter.” Another trip followed in 2017, between the Loire, Rhône
and Pyrenees, before a third voyage took him to Switzerland. This time, Ms Palvadeau sent a long letter to her sister. “Having children made me think back to my own past. It was a chance to
tell her what she means to me.” ‘PEOPLE HAVE DEPTHS OF HOSPITALITY WE CAN’T IMAGINE’ Mr Berthelot has since undertaken a number of shorter trips, and is hoping to plan another long trip
soon. He has delivered at least 300 messages. It is the human interactions that keep him coming back. “Each person you meet is a veritable novel,” he said. “Globally, places are more
welcoming than we are told. We often hear that people are afraid, and it’s true, but they also have depths of hospitality that we can’t imagine. “Maybe we need to reawaken them sometimes,
and invite them to operate in that mode, rather than in isolation and fear of the other. I’m an ardent defender of conviviality.” ‘THE FIRST LETTERS WERE NOT EASY’ Unlocking that side of
people is a skill he had to learn. “The first letters were not easy. I was like a clown or a Lewis Carroll character bursting into their daily lives but I used to do a lot of theatre, and
realised I had to construct a character and stick to it. That immediately made interactions easier. “Even when things were a bit tense, it bothered me less, because it was the character
people were reacting to, not me. But quickly, the ice melts away, and people play along. “At the start, everybody is taken aback, and this can last for a long or short time, depending on the
person, but it usually goes away. “Although there have been encounters where it didn’t go away, and often they would contact me later to apologise for not having been receptive, because
they couldn’t get past this stupefaction.” For his first trip, he spent half the nights sleeping in his tent and the rest of the time with family, in a hotel, or with recipients of the
messages who invited him to stay. These days, he no longer brings a tent, because people usually offer to put him up. READ MORE: THESE ARE THE RULES FOR WILD CAMPING IN FRANCE HE NOW HAS 240
PEOPLE DELIVERING LETTERS He has written two books about his time on the road, and been the subject of a documentary, entitled Le Facteur Humain (The Humane Postman). [embedded content] In
2020, he created the Agence des Facteurs Humains, which now has 240 people delivering messages during slow, low-carbon journeys. Letter-writers send in their location and the desired
recipient’s, and the ‘agency’ adds them to a database that the volunteers can search when planning an itinerary. Their routes have taken them to Iceland and Cuba, and one couple recently
began a three-year walk from La Rochelle to India. This interactive map shows tracking updates of the letters' journeys. “It is a response to a society that wants everything as
quickly as possible,” Mr Berthelot said. “It is a way of saying there are other ways to be happy. You don’t have to go and see the Mont-Saint-Michel. There is as much happiness to be found
visiting a friend’s village in the middle of the Pyrenees.” If you would like to send or deliver a message, email [email protected] RELATED ARTICLES CYCLING IN FRANCE: BIKE FESTIVALS
AND WHERE TO CYCLE THIS SUMMER FRENCH CYCLING: FRANCE'S HISTORICAL PASSION FOR THE BICYCLE WHAT IS IN THE €2BN PLAN TO PROMOTE CYCLING AND BIKE LANES IN FRANCE?
Trending News
Learning french: what does dommage mean and when should it be used?AN ESSENTIAL TERM FOR UNFORTUNATE SITUATIONS Dommage is one of those everyday words that you are sure to hear if convers...
Five potential bolters england’s final rugby world cup squad - ruckEDDIE JONES HAS SPOKEN FREQUENTLY OF HIS DESIRE TO UNCOVER A WORLD CUP BOLTER, ENGLAND’S EQUIVALENT OF NEHE MILNER-SKUDD...
Graphic detail: venture capital avoids bloodbathCleantech boom defies downturn. You have full access to this article via your institution. Download PDF Venture capitali...
Jan 25 Karnataka bandh: Buses, metro and private cabs likely to runWith the Confederation of Pro-Kannada Organisations calling for a bandh on January 25 and February 4, the Centre of Indi...
Bobby harrell “docu-dump” misses key info - fitsnews_CIRCUIT COURT JUDGE’S “TRANSPARENCY” BID FALLS SHORT … _ Embattled S.C. Circuit Court judge Casey Manning released a fl...
Latests News
‘hand-delivering letters across france is slow and full of love’A letter from a grandmother to her granddaughter, a hand extended to a former classmate not spoken to for over a decade…...
Bolangir election result 2024 live updates: bjps' sangeeta kumari singh deo has won this lok sabha seatBOLANGIR LOK SABHA ELECTION RESULT 2024 LIVE UPDATES: With the counting of votes for the 2024 Lok Sabha elections underw...
Melania trump wears £5,847 dress to meet emperor of japanMelania Trump and Donald Trump continued on the third day of their state visit to Tokyo, Japan today. The Trumps visited...
See the french houses which align with sun's movements to save energyTHE HEAD-TURNING PROPERTIES PROMISE TO SHAPE THE FUTURE OF HOUSEBUILDING BY DRAWING ON ARCHITECTURAL PRINCIPLES FROM THE...
Return to door-to-door home rubbish collection expected for many in FranceA French court is expected to reinstate door-to-door home rubbish collections, ending a controversial system introduced ...