T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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884.1 | Gibraltar | TAVENG::MONTY | No more Mr. Nice | Wed Feb 14 1990 22:13 | 22 |
| Malcom,
My wife and I spent a week in Gibraltar after we got married (more
years ago than a care to remember).
Its a very restful place, in as much as there isn't too much to do on
the island. I don't know what it is like now, but when we were there,
there was no access to Spain from there. One day we took a day trip to
Tangiers which was very interesting.
There is quite an active Jewish community, with a few shuls, a
community center and kosher food shops.
What it lacks in "action" it makes up in tranquility. To give you an
idea of the size of Gibraltar, I hired a car for one day ... it took
15 minutes to drive round the island.
Double Mazal Tov ... on your forthcoming marriage and the birth of your
niece.
Regards,
.... Monty
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884.2 | Gotta have something to do for a week | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Wed Feb 14 1990 23:27 | 11 |
| Well, I think Venice is highly overrated. I found it dirty, damp
and completely overwhelmed with tourists and tourist traps - I mean
overwhelmed! Not worth more than a daytrip, in my opinion. Florence
is nice, but just isn't all that special, except for Ufizzi.
We are going on our belated honeymoon just about the same time,
and we decided to split the time between Rome and Paris. I think Rome
and its museums, streets, antiques and surrounding countryside are
the best I've seen in Italy. My wife thinks just as highly of Paris.
One note of caution: Paris is likely to be much colder than Rome...
DG
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884.3 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 15 1990 16:02 | 36 |
| To quote a friend of mine, "Taste is all a matter of taste."
I disagree with .2 on Venice, which I think is a beautiful, restful city.
However, you won't find kosher food easily -- there's a nursing home
there that serves lunch to the public, and that's about it. If you do
go during the tourist season, be sure to check out Gianni Toso's
glass shop in the Old Ghetto. Gianni is a native Venetian glass artist
who's a baal tshuva via Lubovitch. He's got a "Chabad House" sign
in his shop window. He and his wife Karen (an American) are very
warm people. They only live in Venice during the summer, spending
the rest of the year in New Jersey. BTW, the synagogue tour in Venice
is fascinating.
We found Florence much too hectic, with narrow streets full of maniacal
drivers. Of course, this was after spending over a week in Venice,
where the "streets" are full of boats. There's a restaurant connected
to the synagogue, but I'm not sure how good the hashgacha is. The
synagogue is a very interesting building.
Rome is not really my cup of tea, but if you go, you must see the museum
attached to the main synagogue. The security measures they've had to
take are sobering. This was the synagogue that was attacked by
terrorists several years ago. The Arch of Titus is worth a look,
particularly where "Am Yisrael Chai" is scratched below the scene
of the spoils of Judaea. When we were in Rome two years ago,
there was a kosher fast food place around the corner from the synagogue.
If you want to check the current status of kashrut in Italy, ask
Rabbi Garelick in Milan. He's the one whose hashgacha is on all
the Italian kosher wines.
Paris is nice, except there are too many Parisians. Kosher food
is widely available. There's a lot of anti-semitism, with neo-Nazis
walking around.
I may be wrong, but isn't kosher food available in Majorca?
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884.4 | more info... | TAVENG::MONTY | No more Mr. Nice | Thu Feb 15 1990 18:18 | 8 |
| RE: 0
>> I am also interested in being close to a shul
>> and kosher shops/restaurents.
Does that mean that you don't want to tour about too much ?? More or less
stay in one or two places ???
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884.5 | | IOSG::LEVY | QA Bloodhound | Thu Feb 15 1990 21:21 | 17 |
| I want to tour around the city but would prefer to be within
walking distance of a shul for shabbath and chug. I did think that
most cities were not so big that staying in one place would be
restrictive on what could be done by way of touring.
I was thinking of staying in one or two cities so had thought of
Florence and Venice or Paris and perhaps Lyon (but what's worth seeing in
Lyon?).
I know that Paris has a Jewish region so that was one point in it's
favour. The idea of rampant anti-semitism is not too appealing
at all.
I hope this answers your question.
Another idea about touring, I would like to go and see the local
countryside.
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884.6 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Fri Feb 16 1990 15:42 | 23 |
| I'll disagree, in part, with the comments on Parisian
anti-semitism expressed in .3. Anti-semitism is alive and well in
France (as most everywhere else) and you'll find as many skinheads
in Paris as in many other European (and American) cities, but I'd
find it hard to substantiate a suggestion that Paris welcomes
anti-semitism any more than other cities in the world. Le Pen,
the French politician-bigot who wants to send N Africans back and
who said that the holocaust was a "minor detail" of WWII, gets
almost all of his (relatively meager) support from the south
of France, not from Paris.
In support of Paris as a destination, there are a wealth of Kosher
restaurants in the Rue Rosier neighborhhood (though the most
famous Jewish restaurant in the neighborhood, Jo Goldenberg's, is
not Kosher), and accommodations in that section of the city
will be less expensive than in some of the more touristy areas.
You might want to consider spending some time in Antwerp. There is
an enormous Jewish population there, with lots and lots of kosher
restaurants. You can also make easy day trips (by rail or auto)
from Antwerp to Brussels, Amsterdam, or Bruges.
--Mr Topaz
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