The aroma from my mug of latte spirals ever closer to the mammoth tangerine-orange lampshade dangling above. The mo dish and moody grey interior walls of the café on Leopold Vanderkelenstraat shut out the sound of the bustling streets of Leuven. It is registration week at the university and Leuven’s restaurants and bars are competing for the attention of this year’s new intake of students.
I’m reluctant to plunge a teaspoon into the milky froth of my coffee and destroy the barista-drawn heart so tenderly applied. It’s a work of art. But needs must. While others in the café tap away at laptops or chat about university matters, I reflect on a photograph of a man with a barbered moustache, white hair and bushy eyebrows. The photo is a portrait of Dr. Henry Guppy CBE, a stiff-upper-lipped Englishman who has a decisive frown. His starched white collar, protruding above his dark threepiece suit, seems to stifle any likelihood of a smile.
Henry looks stern. Yet, everything that I have read about this man suggests kindness, generosity, modesty, service and compassion. I have only ever known Henry in black and white. But his red blood runs through my veins. He is my great-grandfather.
I have come to Leuven to see Henry’s Belgian legacy — the city’s University Library, a striking building at the head of Monseigneur Ladeuzeplein. The library’s Renaissance demeanour — all Flemish frills and furbelows — would suggest that, like the university, the building has stood for centuries. But its architectural style belies the truth. Less than a century has passed since the foundation stone was laid in 1921.
I step outside into the late summer sunshine, dodging shoppers, sightseers and students and stroll the short distance to Ladeuzeplein. The streets are thronging as the tinkling carillon bells from the tower of the University Library sing a delicate tune (it is actually the Reuzegom, a Flemish drinking song), followed by a more sonorous clang which marks the full hour.
I glance at my watch for unnecessary confirmation and note the date — 25August. It stops me dead as the significance of the timing of my visit strikes me with a blow as forceful as the chiming bells now coming from the University Library. For it was on the 25th of August 1914 that German troops torched the Belgian city of Leuven. Within 24 hours, the 600-year-old library of the Katholieke Universiteit, now known as KU Leuven, was destroyed.