I TRAVEL I TakeUs Home ForThe Holidays Happy Passover Richmond's Hebrew Cemetery Burial Grounds: Dramatic Travel Sites /.DELTA RUTH ROVNER Special to The Jewish News H WeLoveToFlyAndItShowk 01991 Delta Air Lines, Inc. Jeanne Bassett Presents... Right in Your Own Driveway! LAS VEGAS THE TUNE , -UP MAN MINI JUNKETS Certified by the National Automotive Institute of Excellence The DUNES Hotel & Casino PAY FROM P. P. $379 oc Comes to your home or office with the garage-on-wheels Includes R.T. Air Transfers! Deluxe Rooms, Meals, Drinks & Show Re- bates to qualified S5.00 bettors. ATA contract required. Call for details. Valet service that doesn't cost one penny extra • Expert diagnostic tune•up • Elecronic analyzer all engine systems • Professionally trained mechanics • Perfect results assured Jeanne B Travel & Tours 18121 Eight Mile Rd., E. Detroit, MI 48021 Expanded Services Call Sanford Rosenberg for your car problems (313) 779-8844 3: 398-3605 vnLERIE TMYLO CHOOSE TO CRUISE! 41 3 Exclusively Women's Clothing and Accessories Current Fashions Sizes 2-14 2 for 1 SAIL! Gail Chicorel Shapiro Owner 1844 S. Woodward Birmingham 111111b 1 block North of 14 Mile Rd 540-9548 489-5888 SUMMIT TRAVEL & CRUISE SHOPPE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-6 •, icti om Sat. 10:30-2 . apply 28859 Orchard Lake Rd. Bw. et 12 & 13 Mile Rds. An■ "We Pay Cash for Fine Clothing and Accessories" Mon-Fri 12 noon-6 pm Sat 11 am-6 pm Closed Sunday Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354.6060 84 FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1991 mow FASHION RESALE igh on a hill in Nice stands an old building known as the Castle. It's a popular destination for tourists, who come to look at the stately castle and then stand outdoors to admire the panoramic view of the curv- ing coastline from this van- tage point. But there's another — and far less typical — reason for visiting this site. One of the winding pathways outside the castle leads to a gate and a plaque which reads "Cime- tiere Israelite." Set high on the hill on which the city was first built, the Jewish cemetery of Nice is one of four denominational burial grounds maintained by the city. Insite the gate — and it is open to visitors except from noon to 1 p.m. — are tall, stately trees and varied stone markers. Some are simple, but many are massive and or- nate. Quite a few date back to the 16th century. Near the front of the cemetery, off in one corner, is a reminder of much more re- cent history. Two tall rec- tangles are placed close together. French words etch- ed on each block explain that one memorial contains an urn of ashes, and the other holds a receptacle of soap made from the remains of Jewish victims of the Holocaust. In a resort city of lush beau- ty on the French Riveria, this hilltop burial ground is one of the most unusual and dramatic sites for Jewish travelers. It's just one example of why historic Jewish cemeteries have much to offer the Jewish traveler. In tranquil settings, they evoke history, convey a sense of particular lives and often carry emotional reso- nance. The Jewish cemetery at Newport, for example, in- spired Longfellow to write a poem about it. Even acts of hatred, such as the desecra- tion of the Jewish cemetery in Carpentras, France, show that burial grounds are the focus for strong emotions. Even if a cemetery doesn't have dramatic context, it can be a concrete reminder of the past. Inscriptions that record names, places of birth, and dates of birth and death all convey a sense of individual lives defined by place and time. That's been the case when I've sought out Jewish cemeteries in far-flung places. Far from being a spooky or strange quest, it's often been a way that the past comes alive. What's more, the search to find a particular burial ground has often been part of the adventure of travel. For example, it wasn't easy to find the old burial ground outside the village of Legnau in Switzerland. It was with a Swiss guide that day, and after we visited the synagogue in the village where Jews had lived before they could reside anywhere else in the country, we drove along a winding country road until we saw on a hill an old gate, set well back from the road in a secluded spot. We had to search for the en- trance and finally found it, near the plaque which told us this cemetery had existed since 1750. Inside, we looked at tomb- stones so weathered and covered with ivy we could barely read the Hebrew words and the names. The oldest Jewish cemetery in Switzer- land, this was the burial (