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BERKLEY TOURS
& TRAVEL INC.
ER
Eleven Fabulous
ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER'S
Destinations
Join the finest Jewish families from all over the world
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64:4•,,, experienced organizers of
Passover Holiday Vacations and it
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shows in all the ways we serve you.
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..,„,,,,-. ...The most well-planned activities,
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childrens' programs, social events
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P ,::,.; --:7,;--- organized Seders con-
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ducted by famous Cantors
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...The best Kosher cuisine
Glatt Kosher Under Strict Orthodox Rabbinical Supervision
Fontainebleau Hilton • Golden Tulip Aruba • Marriott's
Desert Springs • Nordic Hills Resort • Ocean Place Hilton
• PGA Resort • Pierre Marques • Rye Town Hilton •
Scottsdale Princess • Tamiment Resort • Tara Hyannis
World of Ambassador Tours 38 West 32 Street, New York, N.Y. 10001
212-971-6010 FAX 212-971-7378 To Free 800-338-6010
op
PHANTOM OF THE
OPERA TORONTO
ALEN pp.
From $ 16 7 DBL.
• R.T. BUS • EXCELLENT PHANTOM SEAT • 1
OR 2 NITES HOTEL • TOUR (2 NITE PKG. ONLY)
WEEK-END PACKAGES THROUGH JUNE
TRAIN PACKAGES ALSO AVAILABLE
"CAMELOT" — WESTGATE
DINNER THEATRE — TOLEDO
Sun., March 10
or April 21
• BUS • LUNCH • SHOW
$47,,
"A CHORUS LINE" — TOLEDO
$56
APRIL 7
• BUS • LUNCH • SHOW
LAS VEGAS
From $ 319 P.P. DBL.
• R.T. AIR & TRANSFERS • 3 OR 4 NITES HOTEL
CALL FOR DETAILS & PRICES!
NEW YORK CITY, ELLIS ISLAND
& STATUE OF LIBERTY
$439
APRIL 18-23
Only
BUS • HOTELS • MEALS • TOURS
P.P.
D
CHICAGO
210 DPB. PL.
APRIL 26-28
$
• BUS • HOTEL • ''DAMN YANKEES" (at
DRURY LANE) • DINNER • MUSEUM • TOUR
• SHOPPING (NIGHT CLUB OPT.)
STRATFORD FESTIVAL-1991
ft PassOver '"'
Glatt Kosher
ONI
e
Deauvi
•
TAHTE
ON THE OCEAN AT
One of Miami Beach's
Largest and Most
Luxurious Hotels.
67TH
HOTEL
BEACH &
TENNIS
CLUB
STREET • MIAMI BEACH. FLORIDA e•—•
Our 9th Year
4-9 & 10
NIGHT PACKAGES
MAY THRU
NOV. DATES
From $ 54 P.P.
I & 2 DAY PACKAGES — CALL FOR DETAILS!
CALL FOR ADDITIONAL
MOTORCOACH TRIPS
AS WELL AS ALL
YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS
INCLUDING AIRFARE
AND CRUISES!
1-800-875-TOUR or
559-8620
SEDURIM & SERVICES
WILL BE CONDUCTED
BY CANTOR
ASHER SCHARF
from
$495*
• 600 Beautifully Refur-
bished Accommodations
• Wide Ocean Beach
INCLUDING
• 2 Pools • Children's
Recreation Room • On-
3
MEALS
DAILY
Premises Tennis
'per person double occ
• Dancing • Enter-
Plus Tax & Tips
tainment & Shows
STRICTLY GLATT KOSHER
• Delicious Cuisine
• Complimentary Tea
Religious & Cultural Services & Programs
Room
Conducted by Rabbis Jerome & Hersch Markowitz
"THE FINEST IN CUSTOM
CABINETS FOR HOME OR OFFICE"
For Information & Reservations Call
TOLL FREE: 1-800-327-3734 or 305-531-3446
or write Passover '90 Deauville P.O. Box 402868, Miami Beach, Florida 33140
IN
DETROIT, CALL BOB TORGOW: DAYS 961.4330 EVES 355.5645
Larrg Paul makes
FURNITURE
NEW.
Custom Restoration,
Lacquering,
Refinishing of new
or old furniture,
antiques, office
furniture, pianos.
CHOOSE
TO
CRUISE!
Anywhere in the world
For Free
Estimates
681-8280
—
2 CAN CRUISE from $345*
Major discounts
OFFICIAL \V EL
AGENCY FoR TI tE
CRUSE N DLSTRY
HOURS:
Mon.-Fri. 9-6
Sot. 10:30-2
WE SHIP
FURNITURE
k 8e5 9RciOric3ehoiwrd
2L:
12 & 13 Mile Rds.
489-5888
Gail Chicon:I Shapiro
(loner
62
SUMMIT TRAVEL &
CRUISE SHOPPE
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1991
S e
r
6453 FARMINGTON ROAD
W. BLOOMFIELD
855-5822
MAPLE at CRANBROOK)
'r e str icl ions
apply
BIRMINGHAM
433-3070
Basel, the city in which Theodor Herzl said he founded Israel, is situated
on the Rhine River.
Jews Of Switzerland
Organized, Polarized
Geneva (JTA) — Of all the
Jewish communities in Eu-
rope, the Swiss Jewish
community is in many ways
unique.
It is, for one thing, a de-
mographic oddity. The Jew-
ish population of Switzer-
land numbered 20,000 in
1914 and is the same today,
a phenomenon of stability
considering the turbulence
of the years in between.
Of the Western European
countries, Switzerland was
the last to give Jews full civ-
ic rights. They were granted
in 1866, but only after
strong foreign pressure, par-
ticularly from France and
the United States.
The Swiss Jewish com-
munity has had its travails.
But it is generally prosper-
ous, self-taxing and exceed-
ingly well-organized, if po-
larized in recent years.
Dr. Willy Guggenheim,
the general secretary of the
Federation of Jewish Com-
munities, says the first Jews
reached the region of Switz-
erland with the Roman le-
gions that conquered the
land in 58 BCE. In the 13th
century, Jewish populations
are mentioned in Zurich,
Basel, Bern and St. Gallen.
In the 14th and 15th cen-
turies, they were expelled.
The real history of Swiss
Jewry began after the 30-
Year War, when Jews from
Alsace and the Rhineland
got permission to settle in
the county of Baden, which
later became the canton of
Aargau.
The villages of Endingen
and Lengnau granted Jews
resident permits good for 16
years, in return for a large
payment. The main occupa-
tions of the Jews were cattle
raising and horse trading.
Today Endingen is the
only village in Switzerland
that has a synagogue but no
church. But there are less
than half a dozen Jews left.
Beginning in the second
half of the 19th century,
Jewish communities were
founded in all major Swiss
cities, and in many smaller
ones. The Jewish population
rose from 3,000 in 1850 to
20,000 on the eve of World
War I. The increase was at-
tributed to immigration
from southern Germany and
Alsace, and later from East-
ern Europe.
By 1914, Swiss Jews were
being accepted at law and
medical schools. Many were
small businessmen. A few
founded department stores
or textile factories.
They were citizens with
full rights. They performed
military service and, in a
very few cases, entered poli-
tics.
Switzerland played a role
in Jewish history that had
nothing to do with its Jew-
ish community, but with the
seminal events that took
place here.
It was Theodor Herzl who
wrote in his diary at the end
of the first Zionist Congress
in 1897: "In Basel, I have
founded the Jewish state."
The enlarged Jewish
Agency was constituted in
Zurich in 1929, and in 1936,
the first meeting of the World
Jewish Congress convened in
Geneva.
There is a dark side to the
ledger. Switzerland's refu-
gee policy during World War
II was not one of its most
glorious accomplishments.
The borders were closed.
For a time in 1942, the head
of the Swiss Federal Police
Department, Heinrich
Rothmund, ordered foreign