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April 24, 1998 - Image 129

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1998-04-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

littered gutters and buildings with
peeling paint, a whirring sound
emanates from upstairs windows;
small clothing factories remind Ameri-
cans of earlier times on New York's
Lower East Side.
The synagogue on Rue Payee [with
no official name] was built in 1912
and is a historical monument because
it was designed by Hector Guimard,
who created the Metro's whimsical
entrances in Art Nouveau style.

The Marais:
Parisian Jewry's
colorful
neighborhood.

Visitors strolling down Rue de
Rossiers find many attractions: Jewish
bookstores, kosher restaurants and
bakeries. Call the Consistoire de Paris
(4285-71-09) for an up-to-date list of
kosher eateries.
Surrounding streets throughout the
quarter offer myriad other sights, of
Jewish and secular interest.
* The Musee Picasso in the Hotel
Sale on five floors (5 Rue de
Thorigny), offers a few of the artist's
works, plus paintings from his collec-
tion.
* The Carnavalet Museum (23 Rue
de Sevigne), partly housed in the
16th-century hotel that was the abode
of Mme. de Sevigne when she received
Voltaire and Montesquieu, includes
family furnishings, documents of four
centuries of Paris's history.
* Hotel de Saint-Aignan (71 Rue
de Temple) will become home to the
Jewish Art Museum, with the Chagall
works and synagogue models relocat-
ing from their temporary quarters.
* The most moving site in the area
is the Memorial of the Unknown Jew-
ish Martyr (17 Rue Geoffroy l'Asnier).
Outside stands a round bronze memo-
rial symbolizing a burial urn bearing
the names of Nazi concentration
camps — including Struthof in
France; within a dark and stark crypt
lies a black marble tomb shaped like
the Star of David, an eternal flame in
its center.
For further information, contact
the French Government Tourist
Office, 610 Fifth Ave., New York, NY
10020; 212-757-1125.



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