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Travelling with Ruth Ellen Gruber

Ruth Ellen Gruber is one of the most respected journalists and authors working in Central and Eastern Europe. Aside from contributing articles to The New York Times and other publications, Ruth is the Senior European Correspondent of The Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Ruth’s books on Jewish Eastern Europe include “Upon the Doorposts of Thy House,” “Jewish Heritage Travel,” and “Virtually Jewish”.

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Vienna
by Ruth Ellen Gruber

Vienna looms large in Jewish history and memory.
The imperial Habsburg capital was the vibrant hub of a vast, multi-national Empire that stretched across Europe and encompassed a colorful and sometimes contentious mix of peoples, languages, religions and local cultures.
Jews lived here for centuries. Surviving pendulum-swing periods of tragedy and triumph, prosperity and persecution, they made key contributions to the cultural, economic and intellectual development of the city.
Nineteenth and early 20th century Vienna in particular was home to some of Europe's most influential artists, authors, musicians and thinkers -- from the writers Joseph Roth, Arthur Schnitzler and Stephan Zweig, to the composers Arnold Schoenberg and Gustav Mahler, to the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud. Vienna was also the cradle of some of the icons of popular culture: the filmmaker Billy Wilder grew up in the city, and the novelist Vicki Baum, the author of Grand Hotel and other best-sellers, was born here and wrote about her Viennese childhood in her memoirs. "To be a Jew is a destiny," she once said.
The Holocaust swept this world away. But monuments, museums and other vestiges of this long and creative Jewish presence can be found in many parts of the city.
What's more, Vienna is home, now, too, to a new flowering of Jewish life and creativity, both religious and secular. Vibrant schools, synagogues and other Jewish centers bear living witness to a remarkable Jewish rebirth in the decades since the Shoah. And Jewish writers, artists, musicians and filmmakers are putting their stamp on contemporary culture.
Visitors to Vienna can get a taste of both worlds. Most Jewish historical sites and monuments, as well as most active synagogues and Jewish centers, are located in central parts of the city, embedded in a historic urban setting that conjures up the grandeur of the past amid the contemporary bustle of modern-day life.
The following itinerary highlights some of the most important (and most easily visited) Jewish sights, but still, alas, gives only a brief taste of the richness of Jewish experience in the city.

The Jewish Museum

Vienna's Jewish Museum is a good place to start for both an overview of the city's Jewish history and a taste of today's Jewish cultural offerings.

The Museum's main location opened in 1993 in the Palais Eskeles, a downtown mansion at Dorotheergasse 11, in the heart of Vienna's First District. Its unusual exhibition arrangement offers a unique view of Jewish history and memory.
On the ground floor there a display of Judaica objects from a noted collection is paired with an artistic installation reflecting Viennese Jewish history by the American artist Nancy Spero. Upstairs, there is another display of Judaica -- in what is called the "Viewable Storage Area." Here, massed together on shelves, are hundreds and hundreds of ritual and every day objects, many of them salvaged from destroyed households, synagogues and prayer rooms. Some of the silver objects are charred and smoke-stained from the fires of Kristallnacht. The intent of showing the objects this way is to underscore the pride and prosperity of the Jewish community, as well as the extent of the destruction.
The permanent historical exhibition is something quite different. It comprises no physical objects at all. Instead, it consists of 21 holograms, arranged in a bare room. Each is a sort of holographic still life that represents a specific stage, facet or theme associated with Austrian Jewish history and the relationship between Jews and Austrian society. These themes include "Houses of God," "Zionism," "Anti-Semitism," "Loyalty and Patriotism," "From Historism to Modernism," "Shoah," "Vienna Today Š", "Banishments" and "Fin de Siecle."
Key components of the museum are also a comfortable cafe -- reminis cent of the coffee houses where Jewish writers, intellectuals and luftmenschen alike once passed long hours -- and a well-stocked bookstore featuring hundreds of titles of Jewish interest or by Jewish authors on a wide range of topics.
The Jewish Museum also has a branch at Judenplatz, the heart of Vienna's medieval Jewish quarter, which forms part of a complex inaugurated in 2000 that also includes a Holocaust memorial commemorating the 65,000 Austrian Jews killed in the Shoah and a Holocaust documentation center.
Vienna's flourishing medieval Jewish community was snuffed out in 1420/21 by persecutions that culminated in expulsions, murders and the torching of the synagogue on Judenplatz, with Jews inside. A 15th century plaque in Latin on the house at Judenplatz 2 still celebrates this, reading, in part: "Thus arose in 1421 the flames of hatred throughout the city and expiated the horrible crimes of the Hebrew dogs."
The underground remains of the synagogue were discovered during excavations in the 1990s and these now form the core of the Judenplatz Jewish museum, along with a multi-media exhibit about Medieval Jewish life.
Above, at ground level, stands the Holocaust Monument, a massive cube of reinforced concrete that dominates the square. Called the Nameless Library, it was designed by the British sculptor Rachel Whiteread and takes the form of an "inside-out" library -- rows of books with their spines facing inwards. Also inscribed are the names of the sites where Austrian Jews were killed.
Not far away, near the Opera House, stands a big Monument against War and Fascism, by the artist Alfred Hrdlicka. Among several big symbolic sculptures it incorporates a bronze sculpture of a bearded Jew on his knees, almost prostrate, covered by barbed wire, forced to scrub the street. And as you walk about parts of the city, keep an eye out for the Stolpersteine, or stumbling blocks -- these are brass cobblestones put down to mark the houses where Jews and others killed by the Nazis once lived, as part of a commemorative  project by the artist Gunter Demnig.

What is today Vienna's Second District, across the Danube Canal from the inner city, was long a Jewish neighborhood. Before World War II about 60,000 Jews -- one-third of Vienna's Jewish population -- lived here, and the district was home to so many synagogues, Jewish theaters, schools and other Jewish institutions, that it was dubbed "The Matzo Island." Most of these sites no longer exist, but a number of plaques AND STOLPERSTEINE, OR COMMEMORATIVE STUMBLING BLOCKS, evoke the neighborhood's Jewish history, and new synagogues and other institutions make it a center of Jewish life.

 

 

The Main Synagogue


The Stadttempel, Vienna's Main Synagogue, is located on sloping Seitenstettengasse. Designed by the architect Josef Kornhausel, it was built in 1824-26. From the outside, it looks like a plain, anonymous building -- in fact, many synagogues in Europe were hidden behind featureless outer walls. This was either for protection or in compliance with edicts that allowed direct access to the street only for churches. This in act saved the synagogue during Kristallnacht pogrom in November 1938; it was not torched for fear that the entire block could go up in flames. All of the other nearly 100 synagogues and Jewish prayer houses in Vienna were either destroyed or severely damaged. What sets the synagogue apart these days are the armed guards outside.
Inside, the a graceful oval sanctuary is encircled by two tiers of women's galleries and topped by a sky-blue domed ceiling sprinkled with gilded stars. A gilded sunburst surmounts tablets of the Ten Commandments above the ark.
At Jewish holidays, every seat is full, and the building complex also houses the Jewish communal offices and archives.

Cemeteries and other sights


What is today Vienna's Second District, across the Danube Canal from the inner city, was long a Jewish neighborhood. Before World War II about 60,000 Jews -- one-third of Vienna's Jewish population -- lived here, and the district was home to so many synagogues, Jewish theaters, schools and other Jewish institutions, that it was dubbed "The Matzo Island." Most of these sites no longer exist, but a number of plaques evoke the neighborhood's Jewish history, and new synagogues and other institutions make it a center of Jewish life.
Vienna has several Jewish cemeteries that are worth exploring, both for their historical importance and for the artistic beauty of the tombs.
The vast Zentralfriedhof or Central Cemetery, at Simmeringer Hauptstrasse 234 in the 11th district, was consecrated in the 1870s and has an extensive Jewish section where about 100,000 people are buried. There are many stately tombs and mausolea, testifying to the prosperity of the community.
One of the easiest cemeteries to visit -- and also one of the most fascinating -- is the Rossau cemetery, the oldest preserved Jewish cemetery in Vienna. It is entered by walking straight through the lobby of a modern municipal old age home at Seegasse 9, in Vienna's 9th district, a five minute walk from the Rossauerlaende U-Bahn stop. (It may seem a cruel juxtaposition to enter a cemetery through an old-age home, but from 1698 to 1934 this was the site of a Jewish hospital.)
The Rossau cemetery is believed to have been founded in 1540 -- the oldest legible stone dates from 1582 -- and it operated until 1783, when the Emperor Joseph II issued a decree banning burials inside what today is the "Gurtel" ring around inner Vienna. Many 17th and 18th century luminaries were buried here, including the financiers Samuel Oppenheimer and Samson Wertheimer.
According to the useful guidebook Jewish Vienna published in 2004 by Mandelbaum Verlag, some of the few local Jews still living in Vienna in 1943 managed to rescue some of the tombstones, either burying them on the spot or transporting them to the Central Cemetery and burying them there.
In the mid-1980s, after the discovery of these stones, the cemetery underwent a full restoration -- and the surviving stones were set up in their original places thanks to a map of the cemetery that had been made in 1912. Many of the stones are massive and feature elegant calligraphy, lengthy epitaphs and some vivid carving of Jewish symbols and floral and other decoration, similar to that on tombs in the Jewish cemetery in Mikulov, Czech Republic, and elsewhere in Moravia. Fragments that could not be put together were used to construct a memorial wall, similar to those that exist in other countries at restored cemeteries. Wertheimer's tomb, a white mausoleum with carved end pieces, is the cemetery's most imposing.
The Rossau Cemetery is a short walk from the Sigmund Freud Museum, at Berggasse 19, which occupies the building where Freud lived and worked from 1891 until 1938, when he fled to England to escape the Nazis. The museum includes original furnishings, some of Freud's antiquities collection and library, films and other material that provide insights into his life and work. The museum also houses a collection of contemporary art and a research library.

 

Ruth Grubers' Archive:
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Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (ruth@ruthellengruber.com)   2010-07-16
Rees -- try searching on the JewishGen.org site or some of the other Jewish genealogy site. They furnish a lot of info, names and other tips
Posted by: Rees Chapman   (winwinsit@gmail.com)   2010-07-07
Ruth, can you direct me to a source of birth/marriage records for 2 Jewish families from 1880-1920 who lived in Sharhorod and Luchynets in Vinnitsa in the Ukraine? (Surnames were Malchuck and Corn/Cornman/Kornman) Should I write the mayors? The rabbis? Any historians? My wife and I hope to visit the area in a year or so, but we first want to confirm their ancestry there.
Posted by: Sue M.   (maggin555@hotmail.com)   2010-07-04
Dear Ruth, Just found Centropa.org after doing much searching on line...and only 4 days before relatives are traveling to Hungary...looking for sources of Jewish family history for Velikiy Berezna, which by my estimate would be 180 miles northeast of Budapest...do you kow of anyone in that area who goes there? Who has knowledge of what may be left after all these years? Any guidance is greatly appreciated. My thanks. Marian
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (ruth@ruthellengruber.com)   2010-07-01
I do have some pictures but from quite a few years ago, and it would take a bit of time to find them... Ruth
Posted by: Ruth Kinsley   (ruth_kinsley@yahoo.com)   2010-06-30
Hello, Ruth, I'm writing to ask if you, or any other readers, has an image of the Jewish cemetery in Satoraljaujhely. My husband and I just came back from a visit to the town, but our camera got lost. My father was born there - my maiden name was Friedman. Thanks so much, Ruth
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (ruth@ruthellengruber.com)   2010-02-26
Bella -- check Jewish Gen http://data.jewishgen.org/wconnect/wc.dll?jg~jgsys~shtetm~-1047220
Posted by: BeMurovanyyella Greene   (belgreen@telus.net)   2010-02-25
Goodday Ruth, I tried looking for Murovanyye Kurilovtsy, Ukraine but can't find anything. All the documents I have say Kirilovtze Podolia USSR. Perhaps the spelling is wrong but I can't read Russian that is one of the passports I have. Regards, Bella
Posted by: Rina Levi   (mytikvah@yahoo.com)   2010-01-15
I think you have the most fascinating jobs. A few years ago I bought your book Jewish Heritage Travel. Had I known when I went to university what my passion was, I would have probably followed in your footsteps (instead of being an actuary. My husband and I try to travel to Europe every few years and my passion is old Synagogues. I have quite a few books on their architecture and the jewish community history. We are off to Romania, Bulgaria and Istanbul this summer and everytime I do a google search I come back to you. I wanted to thank you for everything you do. Rina
Posted by: Ruth Ellen   ()   2010-01-15
Thanks, Rina! There is a lot on Romania (and some on Bulgaria) on my blogs.
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (ruth@ruthellengruber.com)   2010-01-12
You probably mean Murovanyye Kurilovtsy, Ukraine
Posted by: Bella Greene   (belgreen@telus.net)   2010-01-11
Good day, I was wondering if you have ever heard of a place by the name of Kirilovtze Russia? My father as well as his family are from there. My father was born in 1921. Some of his family moved to New York in 1924.
Posted by: Marty Blank   (marty@mblank.com)   2009-09-24
Ruth, do you know where I can get information about Dvitrovka?
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (ruth@ruthellengruber.com)   2009-09-24
Marty -- I think the town you mean is Dmytivka, east of Kiev, which I think is in the Chernigov (or Chernihov) oblast. You may be able to find info online, somewhere at JewishGen.org -- the base data bank page is http://data.jewishgen.org/wconnect/wc.dll?jg~jgsys~shtetm~-1037824 But I would also suggest getting in touch with Miriam Weiner and her "routes to roots" service and foundation. She specializes in Jewish heritage/genealogy research in Ukraine and knows more than anyone. http://www.routestoroots.com/webs.html or http://rtrfoundation.org/ There is also a Jewish research institute in Kiev that may have material. chrs. Ruth
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (ruth@ruthellengruber.com)   2009-09-24
Marty -- Sorry, I keep making spelling errors. I think the town you mean is now known as Dmytrivka. Ruth
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (ruth@ruthellengruber.com)   2009-09-21
No -- most of the sites I cover are in western Ukraine. I do have entries more or less near Dvitrovka on Kharkov and Dnepropetrovsk.
Posted by: marty blank   (marty@mblank.com)   2009-09-18
Ruth, does your book cover the town of Dmitrovka in the Ukraine?
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (ruth@ruthellengruber.com)   2009-07-17
I do mention "The Lost" -- right in the second paragraph.
Posted by: Froma Zeitlin   (fiz@princeton.edu)   2009-05-31
How could one not mention Daniel Mendelsohn's prize winning magnificent book, The Lost, which is all about Bolechow and his search for 6 missing relatives there?
Posted by: n   (loverly@ca.rr.com)   2007-03-22
I am hoping to speak or email with Ms. Collier! My realitves are from Ricse and I am taking my Mom back there for the first time since the war. She too was taken to Auschwitz. Her Uncle was Adolf Zukor. And my Great Grandfather is buried there. We are going there in July and I am hoping to speak with her and see what contacts she has there that may help us. Her story of finding her cousin moved me so. I am hoping for an experience like that for my Mom. She lost so many loved ones in the war. Can someone at this publication help me contact her? Thank you! And of course.... like her...all my mother does is bake cakes for the world! Her passion and how she is know by all she meets. As no one leaves without one!
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (r@reg.com)   2007-03-21
Hi -- I want to let everyone know that my new book, "National Geographic Jewish Heritage Travel: A Guide to Eastern Europe," officially came out today, March 20. It''s a new, updated and expanded edition of my original Jewish Heritage Travel, which first came out in back in 1992 -- a lot has changed since then.... The new edition includes 14 countries -- Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia-Hercegovina, Macedonia, and Montenegro. Lithuania and Ukraine (mainly western Ukraine) are newly added; sites in the other countries have been updated. There are all-new pictures, and the book has been redesigned. I include web resources and publications, as well as addresses for kosher facilities, synagogues, etc. Alas, there was only room to note a few of the Jewish culture/music/etc festivals in the region, but there is a book-event for it scheduled for this summer''s Krakow festival, and probably also one in Prague the week before that. The book is available at internet bookselling sites and (I hope) in bookstores. Happy Trails Ruth
Posted by: ruth Ellen Gruber   (r@reg.com)   2007-03-09
There is a tremendous amount of material on contemporary Jewish communities and life in Europe. The most up to date may be in the media. JTA has run a lot recently, and you can check the archives at www.jta.org. Also, many Jewish communities maintain web sites. Some local Jewish newspapers in various cities and countries are also posted in full on the web
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (r@reg.com)   2007-03-09
Hi -- Soragna is a little market town, about 28 km from Parma. The synagogue and little Jewish museum complex is on, I think, via Cavour, just opposite the huge early Baroque castle that dominates the town. Ruth
Posted by: sfienberg   (sfienberg@bellnet.ca)   2007-02-27
I would like to visit the Soragna Synogogue in Parma. Can you provide me with a municipal address
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   (r@reg.com)   2007-02-23
Hi Marta -- great to hear from you! The Trieste Jewish community now has a web site with contact information -- www.triestebraica.it. It's probably the best place to start. ciao Ruth
Posted by: Robert Shechter   (robs11@verizon.net)   2007-02-23
Hello Ruth - I have enjoyed your writing for many years. Could you please refer me to the most up-to-date studies/books/papers on contemporary Jewish life in Europe. This would include demographics, rabbinic leadership, and cultural/ religious institutions. Thank you kindly.
Posted by: lynne groban   (lgroban@comcast.net)   2007-02-23
Do you have or know of anyone who can provide current information on Jewish Turkey? Thanks.
Posted by: Ronnie Ptasznik   (ronptasz@bigpond.net.au)   2007-02-23
RE Dzialoszyce On the right of the synagogue you picture is an even older building, the Bet Midrash or house of learning. My family lived in Dzialoszyce for at least 400 years and my fathers family made saddles and matresses. The vice Mayor of the town was Jewish as you were not allowed to be Mayor if you were Jewish. There is a quiet forest near the synagogue where most of the younger members of the community were taken and shot in 1942. There is a memorial there, the rest of the community was killed at Belzec. When I visited there I found 2 drunks sitting in the middle of the destroyed synagogue drinking beer. When I considered the countless high holidays and celebrations that must have taken place in that spot over hundreds of years I thought It was one of the saddest sights I have seen. The town had it's own Chassidic Rav whose son survived the war and died about 10 years ago in Belgium. I visited there but just missed out on seeing him. I spoke to his wife who was originally American but knew little of Dzialoszyce before the war. Many in the town, my family included supplemented their income by smuggling accross the Russian border. The end of WW1 saw the border move further away and hence the town suffered economically. Ronnie Ptasznik Melbourne Australia.
Posted by: Marta Halpert   (m.halpert@aon.at)   2007-02-20
Dear Ruth, Read your exciting page on Trieste, really great! Would you know if there is a SEDER to be booked in Trieste for guests like us?? Do you have any contact for me to the Jewish community, where to ask? Thanks a lot, best regards, Reinhard and Marta Vienna
Posted by: Samuel Chackinsky   (samchalk@earthlink.net)   2007-02-17
I think Prague is over-rated and overly expensive and not really worth it. Given the choice, I prefer Vienna. Expensive but worth it, at least...
Posted by: Marta Halpert   (m.halpert@aon.at)   2007-02-16
Dear Ruth, Read your exciting page on Trieste, really great! Would you know if there is a SEDER to be booked in Trieste for guests like us?? Do you have any contact for me to the Jewish community, where to ask? Thanks a lot, best regards, Reinhard and Marta Vienna
Posted by: Marta Halpert   (m.halpert@aon.at)   2007-02-16
Dear Ruth, Read your exciting page on Trieste, really great! Would you know if there is a SEDER to be booked in Trieste for guests like us?? Do you have any contact for me to the Jewish community, where to ask? Thanks a lot, best regards, Reinhard and Marta Vienna
Posted by: Robert Shechter   (robs11@verizon.net)   2007-02-16
Hello Ruth - I have enjoyed your writing for many years. Could you please refer me to the most up-to-date studies/books/papers on contemporary Jewish life in Europe. This would include demographics, rabbinic leadership, and cultural/ religious institutions. Thank you kindly.
Posted by: Frederick Sweet   (dadsweet@earthlink.net)   2006-09-14
I must apologize for misspelling your name Ms. Gruber -- due to my terrible typing "skills." As a footnote to my earlier message, I wish to add that the unique octagonal synagogue in Györ (an ancient city located midway between Budapest and Vienna) has finally been restored with national and municipal funds (costing some $2.5-million). Györ can readily be reached by train -- several leave and return each day from Budapest. By car, it is about a two hour drive (100 miles). This month, the Budapest Sun ran a comprehensive story about the renovation and opening of the synagogue of Györ: http://www.budapestsun.com/full_story.asp?ArticleId={A0567A02C32B451BA8E38DAB75E3529B}&From=
Posted by: Frederick Sweet   (dadsweet@earthlink.net)   2006-09-14
I very much enjoyed Ruth Ellen Grube's tour through the VII District in Budapest. My mother Szerén Kálmán had grown up on Rumbach Street at building 15, adjacent to the Rumbach utca templóm [Rumbach Street Temple] which is building 13.Luckily for us, she immigrated to America in 1924 at the age of 21, and met my father -- also from Budapest -- in new York City. The recent good news about the Rumbach utca templóm is that it has been restored, see: http://www.budapestsun.com/full_story.asp?ArticleId={041528B847B94D2C88B637252DFEA0E4}&From=Style Since 2002, my wife and I have owned an apartment nearby on Szentkirályi Street. We spend about three months each year there. Each of us has been officially working in Hungary as U.S.-Hungary exchange scholars since the mid-1970s. Ms. Gruber's well researched tour is among the best that I have seen. Frederick Sweet St. Louis
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   ()   2006-08-15
Sorry, I haven't visited Svencionys, but I know there are at least two monuments near there marking the mass graves of Jews from the town and nearby villages murdered in the Holocaust. FYI I just visited a number of other sites in Lithuania, which I will include in the forthcoming new edition of Jewish Heritage Travel (to be published by National Geographic in March 2007). The new edition will also, for the first time, include sites in Ukraine and Austria (as well as updated information on sites in the countries covered in the first three editions of the book). Ruth
Posted by: anita wornick   (awornick@aol.com)   2006-08-09
I wonder if you have ever visited the town of Svencyonis in Lithuania...about 50 miles n.e.or n.w. of Vilna. My grandmother came from there and I have read the necrology of those killed by the Nazis and found my great grandparents names. I am curious as to whether there is anything left of the Jewish community there today? Thanks. Anita Wornick
Posted by: Solomon   (solomon.bali@gmail.com)   2006-06-07
Dear Ruth, I finally find way to be in touch with you. Please replay on my new e-mail address. Best regards Solomon Sofia, Bulgaria
Posted by: p maher   (jpmaher@neiu.edu)   2006-01-16
Dear Lorna Cohen, I've read your piece on Dubovnik with interest What was the precise damage done to the synagogue roof? Interior? Were there direct hits, or was it concussion damage? Ordnance used? Did you see the damage? May I ask who your sources of information were? I'd be grateful for any information as I am collecting setails of the effects on the synagogue. J. P. Maher, Professor Emeritus
Posted by: Lorna Cohen   (ornacohen@blueyonder.co.uk)   2006-01-09
I am looking for a good English speaking guide who can give a small Jewish Group a tour of the Synagogue and history of the Jews of Dubrovnik...weekend 28/29/ April Thanks Lorna C
Posted by: Aaron Wilk   (aaronwilk@gamil.com)   2006-01-09
I am a member of the National Yiddish Book Center and I read in their most recent magazine that they are leading a 10 day literary and cultural tour of Eastern Europe. I think they advertised that their tour is pretty small and is staying at superior hotels. Their website is www.yiddishbookcenter.org. Hope this helps, Aaron W.
Posted by: Margaret   (mnlbach@aol.com)   2006-01-06
I'm planning a "roots" trip to Poland in March, focusing on the cities of Poznan, Gneizno and Wroclaw, and am seeing a knowledgable guide with a car, over a period of 3-4 days. Any suggestions?
Posted by: Cathy   (cathy@cre8iveinc.com)   2005-12-23
Do you know the name (s) of any Jewish tour groups that do 1- 1 /2 weeks tours in eastern Europe - medium size group- Superior hotels and age bracket of 50-60 Thanks in advance, Cathy
Posted by: Richard Hyman   (dadhy@comcast.net)   2005-12-01
Do you lead tours? If so, what's your schedule? Thanks
Posted by: Christina Selk   (chanteuse81@yahoo.com)   2005-10-20
I am an art history student enrolled in a Jewish Art class and doing a paper on the synagogue in Szeged. I have come across several of your articles and books during my research and they have been the most useful along with the Dorfman's Synagogues without Jews. Do you know of anyone I could contact (perhaps in Szeged) for some clarification about a few things? For example, the side balconies were originally women's galleries, correct? My Hungarian is abysmal (much to the dismay of my grandfather), but I can correspond in English or French.
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   ()   2005-09-27
I forgot to add that the motorway in Hungary has been extended from Budapest all the way to Miskolc, cutting considerable time from the drive to the Tokaj region. Ruth
Posted by: Ruth Ellen Gruber   ()   2005-09-27
Thanks to all of you for your comments. Here are some important updates to information in my travel pieces. TOKAJ Thanks to a generous donation from a former Tokaj resident, the small prayer house in Tokaj has been completely renovated and equipped with a kosher kitchen, dining/study area, guest room. and restroom facilities. The big syngogue is being renovated for use as a concert hall, with a Holocaust museum and exhibition on local Jewish traditions on an upper floor. MAD The synagogue in Mad has been totally restored and reopened as a cultural site. The sensitive restoration was awarded a 2004 Europa Nostra Prize. Don''t miss it! BUDAPEST A Holocaust memorial/museum/study center opened in 2004 in a complex centered on the restored Lipot Baumhorn synagogue on Pava St.
Posted by: Philip Windsor   (ppwindsor@aol.com)   2005-09-03
Your magazine is a joy to read! Congratulations on presentation and content: quite superb. I much enjoyed Ruth Gruber's article on Krakow, having visited there last May. The old synagogues are a delight, but poignant too. A very emotional experience for me was to sit in a completely empty shul watching a wartime black & white video of the ghetto. If I have to offer some criticism of Kazimirz, it would be that there is an element of fantasy in the re-created Jewish character of the quarter. The restaurants and cafes particularly feel like that. There is Hebrew lettering and Jewish memorabilia everywhere, but it is impossible to forget that these places are not really Jewish at all, just reconstructions for the present-day tourists. However, Krakow is well worth a visit and I can highly recommend Hotel Copernicus PW
Posted by: Michael Antin   (mantin@ix.netcom.com)   2005-06-29
The article on Krakow brought back our recent memories of May, 05, visit there. However, while there, I visited the Remu Synagogue during my tour of Central Europe in May. In the wing of the Building are ceiling hangings. The one #9 states that the Syngogue was built and named for Rabbi Remu (Moses Isserles) and he converted the Sephardim to Ashkenazy. This is a fact of which I was totally unaware. I am trying to reach someone in Krakow who could confirm the historical facts supporting this statement, or, if I misread it, perhaps explain what was really meant. Thank you in advance for any help you can provide. Michael Antin
Posted by: Sarah Lesitzky   (aslesitzky@yahoo.com)   2005-04-05
Finally, finally, finally, a serious article for serious Jewish touring on Krakow. I wish Ruth Gruber would conduct tours herself. You could sign us up right away. And when is a new edition of Jewish Heritage Travel coming out?
Posted by: vladimir dvoretzky   (dvoretzky@yahoo.com)   2005-02-28
What a wonderful article on Jewish Trieste! I am trying to write a study on Joyce's Bulgarian pupils and it provides an invaluable background. Just for your information, the Bulgarian Honorary Consul General was Italo Svevo's brother-in-law, and his children were Joyce's pupils.
Posted by: Ed Behrendt   (Edward@Theus.com)   2004-11-08
What a great article. Thanks I spent 3 years in Trieste and this brought back memories
Posted by: Joseph L.   (josephnl@yahoo.com)   2004-10-25
Just returned from Budapest (a wonderful trip!) and would highly recommend to those interested in a Jewish Tour of this city...Chosen Tours. Phone number is listed in guide books (Frommer's, etc.)...and try to get on Eva's tour!
Posted by: Esther Krieger   (Estherk@visitrochester.com)   2004-07-22
I am thrilled to have this web site so I can go out and purchase Ruth G books! I was honored to be able to visit Budapest and have someone from the Mayor's office take us around and we went to a old beautiful shul designed like a Spanish style and attached to it was a cemetery where our Jewish people were buried who didn't survive the Ghetto which was down the street, and also my guide turned to me and said my wife is jewish even though I am not and told me the whole story of his wife's survival with her family who were starving to death by the end of the war, which made me feel so sad as I experienced first hand the reality of this sad tragic time. I happened to be the only jewish person on the tour and appreciated his kindness by stopping at this beautiful shul.
Posted by: Illés András   (illesa@vnet.hu)   2004-07-12
If you prefer to know more about the Jewish cemeteries of Budapest, pls. visit an informative website,made by myself as a study of a local toursit guide: www.fw.hu/studyjew
Posted by: Illés András   (illesa@vnet.hu)   2004-07-12
As I see, I am the first Hungarian to comment the articles on Hungary. I am a practising tourist guide, driver-guide focusing my 30 years of experience also on the Hungarian Jewry history and I red the TOKAJ article with enthusiasm. I had completed this tour with an American couple, visiting Miskolc and Tokaj country and I would congratulate for the expretness of the writer of this article.
Posted by: Sarah Gittelmann   (SGittelmann2@comcast.net)   2004-07-10
Thank you for the Trieste review! I have never seen anything on Jewish Trieste and this will help in our planning. I need to find out if I can rent a car in Trieste and take it into Slovenia. For a while, this was strictly forbidden by the rental companies. Anyone know different?
Posted by: Allan Blair   (blairaei@hotmail.com)   2003-07-09
My wife and I bring Ruth Gruber's Jewish Heritage Travel with us whenever we travel to this part of the world. To be frank, were it not for Ruth, I don't think anyone would be offering the advice she has given us in this online column, especially on Tokay and Sloevnia. Please do take us to Cracow, Ms Gruber.
Posted by: Irving Roth   (Boston)   2003-06-28
To be truthful, I was getting Slovakia and Slovenia confused untill about ten years ago. Now I get it, especially after I lectured to an MBA program in Bled. I would love to have had this guide with me when I was there, but my wife and I found the country so lovely during our four day stay, I'm sure we'll be back. From our hotel window in Trieste last month, we could actually look up into Slovenia from our hotel window. An inviting little country.
Posted by: Sarah Miller   (dadsweet@earthlink.net)   2003-05-29
I have read Ruth Gruber's travel book on this part of the world, Jewish Heritage Travel. I hope that she will soon "deconstruct" these chapters, country-by-country, so we can get advice while we are on the road in some of these places. For instance, my family will be in Bohemia this summer, and I would love to have some UPDATED information. This is not to say what's provided here isn't great. It is. Now I have some great background material for Slovenia. Thanks!
Posted by: Frieda Rosenzweig   ()   2003-05-02
My family came from south eastern Slovakia, and we made a second roots tour there last year. We found Kosice to be rather more charming than it had been during the communist days. We also drove south, over the border to Hungary, and we visited the places described in this article. I am both thrilled that this guide exists, and furious with myself for not having found these places. But then, how would one? Thank you Ms Gruber.
       
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