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15-Day Discover Eastern Europe |
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Take a full two weeks to discover
and explore the history and stories of Jewish Eastern Europe, from the depths of
Jewish despair in the concentration camps and ghettoes to the hopes and prayers
of the revived Jewish community. Traveling from Poland to Prague,
Brno to Berlin, your Jewish journey will be enriched
by the expert guidance and knowledge of the tour educator, relating the facts,
stories and situations facing the Jews before, during and after the Holocaust.
The fifteen-day tour is an opportunity to enrich your knowledge of Jewish
history and understand your Jewish soul.
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Tour Highlights
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- Guided visit through the
Okapova Cemetery, one of the largest Jewish cemeteries in the world.
- Visit the Warsaw
Ghetto.
- Interactive program in the
Kazimierz Jewish Quarter, Krakow.
- The history-filled
underground memorial and tomb of Rabbi Chaim Shrieber, known as the Chatam
Sofer.
- Shabbat dinner with members
of the Jewish community of Budapest.
- Walk across the Danube and
through the Castle Hill.
- Visit Prague's old town.
Guided visit through Jewish Prague, including the Old Ghetto, the Precious
Legacy Exhibit at the “Jewish Museum” and the Jewish cemetery.
- Visit the town of Terezin
and the showcase concentration camp, including memorial service.
- The Jewish Museum of
Berlin.
- Walk to the Holocaust memorial,
The Monument to the Murdered Jews of Europe.
Trip Includes
- 13 nights
accommodation in selected hotels.
- 2 nights
Warsaw.
- 1 night
Krakow.
- 1 night Bratislava.
- 3 nights
Budapest.
- 3 nights
Prague.
- 3 nights Berlin
- Breakfast daily
and 7 dinners.
- Sightseeing per
itinerary in a modern air-conditioned motor coach with panoramic
windows.
- Services of a friendly and
professional English-speaking Expedition Educator throughout the trip.
- Entrance fees per
itinerary.
- All hotel portage and
tipping included.
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DAY ONE:
Sunday
• Depart the U.S. to
Poland.
Overnight: Flight
DAY TWO: Monday ARRIVAL IN WARSAW
- Arrive at Warsaw Airport.
- Welcome by our representative and assistance with
arrival formalities.
- Transfer to the hotel and check in. (Transfer from
airport to hotel is included.)
- Relax, unpack and settle in.
- Opening dinner and orientation with Expeditions
Educator.
Overnight:
Warsaw
DAY
THREE: Tuesday THE WORLD THAT WAS
Breakfast at the hotel.
1000 Years of Grandeur: The Story
of Polish Jewry, with the Expeditions Educator.
The World That Was - Guided visit
through the Okapova Cemetery, one of the largest Jewish cemeteries in the
world and a testimony to hundreds of years of Jewish life in Poland.
Guided visit through the Warsaw
Ghetto, including the Remnants of the Ghetto Wall, the Warsaw Ghetto Memorial,
Mila 18, Umschlagplatz, site of the deportation of the Warsaw Jewish community
to Treblinka.
Concluding Warsaw program at the
Nozyk Synagogue, the last remaining pre-Holocaust synagogue in Warsaw.
Da'at Encounter: Dinner
with members of the Beit Warszawa Jewish
community in Warsaw.
Overnight: Warsaw
DAY FOUR: Wednesday THE DESTRUCTION
OF EUROPEAN JEWRY
- Breakfast at the hotel.
- Check out of the hotel.
- Depart Warsaw and travel to Krakow by train.
- Arrive in Krakow.
- Depart for Auschwitz.
- In This Place - Guided visit and study session in the
Auschwitz -Berkenau camps.
- Visit the Osvizem Jewish Center.
- Return to Krakow.
- Da'at Encounter:
Creating Community in a Devastated Land: Dinner at the hotel with
members of the Tzulent Society - young Jews in Krakow.
Or
- Da'at Encounter: Non
Jews and Jewish Life in Poland - Dinner and dialogue with Dr. Jolanta
Ambrosewicz-Jacobs, Head of the Center of Holocaust Studies at the
Jageillonian University and an advisor to the Auschwitz
Museum.
Overnight: Krakow
DAY FIVE: Thursday RECREATING
MEMORY
- Breakfast at the hotel.
- Interactive ‘Site & Text' program in the Kazimierz
Jewish Quarter, including:
- The Altshul, the oldest synagogue in Poland.
- The Rema Synagogue, the synagogue of Rabbi Moses
Isserles the “Rema,” the great codifier of Jewish law.
- The Rema Cemetery, where many great rabbinical leaders
of Polish Jewry are buried.
- Visit to the Galicia Museum, a collection of
photographs known as Traces of Memory, a photographic exhibition
offering a contemporary look at the Jewish past in Poland..
- The “Pharmacy” gateway to the Ghetto, and the Jewish
Ghetto.
- The Temple, Krakow's Reform congregation.
- The Oskar Schindler factory.
- Depart for Bratislava.
Arrive in Bratislava
and check in to the hotel.
Dinner at your
hotel.
Overnight: Bratislava
DAY SIX: Friday THE JEWISH RICHNESS OF BRATISLAVA
- Breakfast at the
hotel.
- Visit the history-filled
underground memorial and tomb of Rabbi Chaim Shrieber, known as the Chatam
Sofer, one of the great leaders of pre-Holocaust Ashkenazi Jewry, buried in
the remnants of an old Jewish cemetery.
- Visit the Museum of Jewish
Culture to meet with local Jewish leaders to hear about the Bratislava (known
to Jews as Pressburg) Jewish Community past and present.
- Gather for a memorial
ceremony at the Holocaust Memorial, located on the remnants of the Pressburg
Central Synagogue.
- Drive to Budapest.
An introductory tour of
Budapest.
- The Jewish History of
Budapest: From the Roman Empire through the 20th Century: with Professor
Michael Miller (subject to confirmation).
- Explore the Story of Jewish
Budapest in the Past 150 Years:
- Dohaney Street Synagogue,
the largest in Europe.
- The Jewish Museum, housed
on the site of Theodor Herzl's birth.
- The Heroes' Temple,
dedicated to Jews who died in World War I.
- The Community Holocaust
Memorial.
- Check into the hotel and
prepare for Shabbat.
- Optional Kabbalat
Shabbat/Maariv at the Dohaney Street Synagogue.
- Da'at Encounter:
Shabbat dinner with members of the Jewish community of
Budapest.
Overnight: Budapest
DAY SEVEN: Saturday SHABBAT IN
BUDAPEST
- Breakfast at the hotel.
- Optional Shabbat services at one of the Budapest
Synagogues.
- Free time for rest, relaxation and wandering around
Budapest.
- Walk across the Danube and through the Castle Hill
area with your Tour Educator.
- Free time and dinner on your
own.
Overnight: Budapest
DAY EIGHT: Sunday JEWISH LIFE IN
BUDAPEST
- Breakfast at the hotel.
- Guided visit through downtown Budapest, including
Heroes Square and the sprawling boulevards of Budapest.
- Da'at Encounter:
Drive across to Pest for a special program with the Budapest Jewish
Youth Club or at the Jewish Community Center.
- Guided visits to
- Visit the Small Synagogue, one of the oldest in the
area of Budapest.
- The Fake Cemetery, site of a repository of Jewish
tombstones dating from as far back as the 13th century.
- The Raul Wallenberg Memorial
- Drive to the Danube Bend and the unique village of
Szendentaire, including its small and one of a kind synagogue.
- Dinner on your own, followed by an optional cultural
event (on your own).
Overnight: Budapest
DAY NINE: Monday BETWEEN BUDAPEST
AND PRAGUE
- Breakfast at the hotel.
- Depart for Brno in the Czech Republic.
- Da'at Encounter: Visit the Brno Synagogue, and meet with
one of the last Jews remaining in this once thriving Jewish community.
- Drive to Prague.
- Arrive in Prague and ascend Metronome Hill for a brief
orientation to Prague.
- Check in to hotel.
- Free time and dinner on your own in Prague's Old Town.
- Introductory Welcome Tour of the center of Prague with
your Tour Educator.
Overnight: Prague
DAY
TEN: Tuesday THE GLORY OF PRAGUE
- Breakfast at the hotel.
- From the Maharal to Kafka,
the Legacy of Jewish Prague, with the Da'at Tour Educator.
- Ascend to the Prague Castle
for a guided tour of the Castle and an overview of the City of 100 Spires, a
walk along the Golden Lane, through the Lesser Town and over the Charles
Bridge.
- Guided visit through Jewish
Prague, including the Old Ghetto, the Precious Legacy Exhibit at the “Jewish
Museum” and the Jewish cemetery.
- The Altneu Shul, the longest
continually used synagogue in Europe and site of the first use of the Magen
David.
- The Pincus Synagogue, a
memorial to the Jews of Prague who died in the Holocaust.
- The Klausen Synagogue, where
the Nazis began their exhibit: “Jewish Life from the Cradle to the Grave,” in
1943.
- The Maisel Synagogue, named
after a Jewish mayor of Prague, exemplifies the Golden Age of Jewish
Prague.
- The Old Cemetery, with
the graves of such Jewish luminaries as Judah Loew, the Maharal and Mordechai
Maisels, and the ceremonial hall with the well-known Hevra Kadisha paintings;
active program.
- Da'at Encounter: Dinner
and wrap-up conversation with group members.
Overnight: Prague
DAY ELEVEN: Wednesday MEMORY AND
CONTINUITY
- Breakfast at the hotel.
- Da'at Encounter: Terezin as a Home and as a Hell -
Dialogue with a Survivor of Terezin.
- Depart the hotel.
- Visit the town of Terezin and the showcase
concentration camp, including the new art museum and the newly found hidden
synagogue in a potato store shed.
- Participate in a Memorial Service in Terezin.
- Return to Prague.
- Free time to wander around Prague's Old Town.
- Jewish Life in Europe: A Vision Toward the Future,
with the Expeditions Tour Educator.
- Dinner on your own.
Overnight: Prague
DAY TWELVE:
Thursday PRAGUE-BERLIN
- Breakfast at the hotel.
- Early departure from Prague.
- Take the train to Berlin (this train ride will take
just under five hours).
- Orientation bus tour of Berlin.
- Upon arrival in Berlin we take a short bus ride to the
Pergamon Museum located on the Museum Island: This museum is subdivided
into the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum and the museum of
Islamic art. View the collections and explore the interesting history of
the The Pergamon Museum, which was severely damaged during the air attack on
Berlin at the end of World War II.
- Check in to hotel.
- Free time and dinner on your own.
Overnight: Berlin
DAY THIRTEEN: Friday BERLIN
Breakfast at the hotel.
Introductory bus tour of Berlin with a stop at
Weissensee Cemetery, a Jewish cemetery located in what was East Berlin.
It is the largest Jewish cemetery in Europe with approximately 115,000 graves
attesting to the rich Jewish life in pre-war Berlin.
Visit the Jewish Museum of Berlin, designed by
architect Daniel Libeskind. One of the most conspicuous architectural
landmarks in the city, it embodies remembrance, melancholy, and
departure. The museum chronicles the history of the Jews in Berlin from
Roman times through to the revival of Jewish life today.
Da'at Encounter: Dialogue with the museum curator.
Continue on to Topography of Terror: An open-air
exhibition in the excavations along the Niederkirchnerstrasse, where the
central institutions of Nazi persecution and terror were located. The
cellars of the Gestapo headquarters, where many political prisoners were
tortured and executed, were excavated and turned into a memorial and museum,
detailing the history of repression under the Nazis.
Visit Checkpoint Charlie: Visit the Checkpoint and the
Museum at what was a crossing point between East and West Berlin during the
Cold War. Checkpoint Charlie became a symbol of the Cold War,
representing the separation of east and west, and - for the East Germans - a
gateway to freedom. Today, the museum next to the checkpoint struggles
to keep alive the memory of this famous point.
Return to your hotel.
Optional Kabbalat Shabbat/Maariv on your own at one of
Berlin's synagogues.
Da'at Encounter: Dinner and wrap-up conversation with
group members.
Overnight: Berlin
DAY FOURTEEN: Saturday BERLIN ON YOUR OWN
Breakfast at the hotel.
Explore Berlin on your own, with some suggested
walking tours:
- Walk to the Holocaust memorial, designed by
architect Peter Eisenman. This undulating field of reflection with
thousands of concrete dark gray slabs forms a gentle wave, ankle-high in
some places, designed to give visitors a sense of groundlessness and of a
loss of orientation. The memorial also includes a subterranean information
center at the edge of the site, housing a permanent exhibition dedicated to
the six million Jewish victims of the Holocaust.
- Walk to the Brandenburg Gate, originally
commissioned by Friedrich Wilhelm II to represent peace. The gate was
ironically incorporated into the Berlin Wall during the years of the
Communist government. Perhaps the most well known landmark in Berlin, it now
stands as a symbol of the reunification of the two sides of this
city.
- Walk along Grosse Hamburger Strasse. This short
street, which once epitomized Jewish life in Berlin in all its diversity,
also bears witness to the Nazis' determination to extinguish it. Today it is
the location of the Jewish Old People's Home, turned by the Gestapo into a
deportation center, and now a monument commemorating the victims of the
transports to ghettos and extermination camps. This was also the site of the
city's oldest Jewish cemetery and is the burial place of 18th-century
philosopher Moses Mendelssohn. The building of the former Jewish boys'
school, just next door, now houses a Jewish secondary school, inaugurated in
1993.
- Walk along Unter Den Linden, a beautiful boulevard
that includes the Russian Embassy, the Berlin State Library, Berlin State
Opera, Humboldt University and the former Crown Prince's Palace, ending in
the Book Burning Memorial, where in 1933 the Nazis staged the burning of
non-German books, paving the way toward a Nazi totalitarian state.
- Visit the new Sony Center on Potsdamer Platz, opened
in 2000 as the new center of Berlin. The complex is dominated by glass and
steel and includes offices, apartments, cinemas, restaurants and the Sony
European headquarters. The complex represents a clearly visible symbol
of a modern multimedia society.
Dinner on your own.
Overnight: Berlin
DAY FIFTEEN:
Sunday DEPARTURE
- Breakfast at the hotel.
- Depart for the Berlin Airport.
- Transfer to airport for flight home. (Transfer is
included from hotel to the airport. Please allow a minimum of two hours for
check-in.)
- Fly home.
- Arrive in the U.S. on the same
day.
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Need to Know
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- Tour prices are per person in U.S.
dollars. All hotel accommodations, motor coach transportation, special
dinners, sightseeing, admissions, luggage handling and the services of local
guides, drivers, and the Expedition Educator are included.
- Hotel Accommodations: The
tour price includes all hotel accommodations, in hotel rooms with private
baths. Our standard is to provide the best available hotels while considering
value. Although the level of the accommodations may differ slightly from hotel
to hotel, we are committed to your comfort. Two-bed rooms are reserved in most
hotels. Triples are two-bed rooms with a rollaway cot where available and are
not recommended when considering the comfort of those in the room. King-size
beds are not available in most hotels; what is considered king-size usually
consists of two single beds pushed together and made up separately, but with
one headboard. Some two-bed rooms may have two twin - not full- or queen-size
- beds.
- Meals are included as
specified in the itinerary.
- Expedition Educator: All
trips are conducted by our Expedition Educators or local guides who remain
with the group throughout the tour.
- Gratuities Included: All
gratuities for restaurant and hotel staff.
- Luggage Responsibility: All tour
packages allow one piece of luggage per person and one carry-on bag. Excess
luggage will be subject to charge of up to $100 per piece. The Travel Agent
and/or Tour Operator shall not be held responsible for any damage to or loss
of luggage/personal items. All damage/loss must be reported at time of
incident and documented in writing by local authorities for submission to your
insurance company.
Not Included
- Airfare to the tour
departure point and from the tour ending point is not included. Airfare may be
purchased from us for travel originating in the United States. Please see
Flights tab in the right-side toolbar.
- Personal Expenses: All
personal expenses such as: laundry, valet service, cables, telephone calls and
postage are not included.
- Guide and Driver
Gratuities:
- 4 seater -
$70 (i.e. 2 pax) - per day
- 7 seater - $90
(i.e. 3-5 pax) - per day
- 10 seater - $110
(i.e. 5-7 pax) - per day
- 10-19
passengers: Guide $10, driver $5 - per participant per day
- 20 passengers
and more: Guide $8, driver $4 - per participant per
day
Additional Information
- Airline Security Measures:
In the U.S., you must provide identification in the form of a passport at the
time of airport check-in for travel to international destinations. Your
passport name must match the name on your tour reservation and airline ticket
or you may be denied boarding.
- If you are traveling from an
airport outside the jurisdiction of the U.S, you will need to determine what
travel documentation and identification is required for that particular
airport.
- Due to heightened security
regulations, certain items such as a metal nail file, pocketknife, cigarette
lighter or tweezers, and some liquid, gel, or aerosol items may not be
permitted in your carry-on luggage. Please call your airline prior to
departure to obtain current information on non-permissible carry-on items and
recommended airport check-in times. You may also wish to visit the
Transportation Security Administration website at www.tsa.gov to obtain more
information on acceptable identity documentation and prohibited luggage
items.
- Holidays and Museum Closures
- Museum visits and personal shopping time may be disrupted due to unforeseen
circumstances or the many religious, state and local holidays locally observed
in the destinations being visited.
- Photography During Tours: We will
occasionally use photographs taken by fellow guests or your trip director for
promotional purposes. If you prefer that your photo not be used in any
marketing activities, please notify us at the start of your
tour.
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View Map
Accommodations
- 15 Day | Discover Eastern Europe
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Day 2 - 3: Radisson SAS Centrum Hotel
Warsaw
Warsaw's Radisson SAS is located in the city center, close to the
Palace of
Science and Culture
and within walking distance to the Old
Town and most of
the city's tourist highlights, making it an ideal location for your Warsaw
stay.
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Day 4: Radisson SAS Hotel
Krakow
The
Radisson SAS Krakow is located in the city center, just two minutes away from
the largest market square in Europe. The five-star hotel is also close to the
city's main tourist attractions, shops, restaurants and entertainment venues,
making it ideal for tourists.
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Day 5: Radisson SAS Hotel
Bratislava
The Radisson SAS Carlton Hotel welcomes
visitors to its impressive historical building, situated in the heart of
Bratislava´s premier residential district. Spacious and elegantly appointed
rooms as well as suites decorated in a contemporary or classic style feature
heated bathroom floors and Nespresso coffee machines for a truly luxurious stay.
The capital's most attractive shopping areas, elegant restaurants and galleries,
as well as the Slovak National Theatre and the Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra are
easily reachable on foot.
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Day 6 - 8: Novotel Budapest Danube
Budapest
Offering a panoramic view of the
Hungarian Parliament, one of the most architecturally beautiful buildings of
Central Europe, the Novotel Budapest is situated along the Danube River, with an
exterior and interior that evoke the spirit of the Danube. It is a hotel of
spirited elegance and young, retro elements.
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Day 9 - 11: Hilton Prague Old Town
Prague
Located in the heart of Prague's Old Town, the
Hilton overlooks the gates of the city and is within walking distance of Prague
Castle, Wenceslaw Square, the Jewish Quarter and Charles Bridge. The newly
refurbished interior offers luxury and comfort, from the rooms to the bar and
hotel restaurant.
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Day 12 - 14: Berlin Marriott Hotel
Berlin
Fusing contemporary chic with
classic elegance, the Berlin Marriott Hotel is ideally located at the Potsdamer
Platz, within walking distance from the historic Brandenburg Gate, Philharmonic
and Checkpoint Charlie. This is a hotel that offers the ultimate in European
accommodations, with a Berlin twist.
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Dates & Prices
Program
The AW Added Value
AW Flights
Reading List
Need to Know
Peace of Mind
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