




Geneva is an anomaly, proving the idiom 'small is beautiful'. An
international fame city yet nothing pompous within it. Geneva is
little more than town-sized and exceptionally simple like its
residents. About 38 percent of the population in Geneva is that
of foreigners, basically US or French people. Located on a
picturesque location, it is centred around the point where
the River Rhône flows out of Lake Geneva (Lac Léman in French,
Genfersee in German) flanked on one side by the Jura ridges
and on the other by the first peaks of the Savoy Alps.
The Godfather of the city is the Reformer Jean (or John) Calvin,
the inspiration behind Puritanism and Presbyterianism, who
turned Geneva into a "Protestant Rome" in the 16th century.
His parsimonious spirit made Geneva one of the richest cities
in Europe. "The Republic and Canton of Geneva" is only nominally
(4 kms) within Switzerland's borders, sharing a large territory
(108km) with France all around. Most of the French residents get
benefited from both a high Swiss salary and relatively low French
living expenses, whereas the Genevois save money by doing their
shopping in France.
Instead, Geneva has nowadays become the businessperson's city par
excellence, unrufflable, efficient and tightly packed with hotels.
The cobbled Old Town, standing high on its central hill, is
atmospheric but strangely austere. At the heart of the city is the
huge Cathédrale St-Pierre, and an array of museums, including the
giant Musée d'Art et d'Histoire and an impressive gallery of East
Asian art, the Collections Baur increasingly visited by the tourists.
The residential lanes on both the banks of the Rhône, such as Les
Pâquis and Plainpalais, offer more appealing wandering. A short way
south of the centre is Carouge, an attractive 18th century suburb
built in Sardinian style to be a place of decadence and freedom beyond
Geneva's control; its reputation lives on in its high population of
artists and designers. Last but not least, Geneva is the headquarter
of many of the international organizations. Two of them - the United
Nations' European headquarters and the International Committee of the
Red Cross, the latter with an award-winning museum - allow visitors a
glimpse of the veiled charisma of the city, the diplomatic and
administrative confidence that has made Geneva the world capital of
bureaucracy.

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