44 F
New York
Friday, March 29, 2024

Jewish Travel Consultant Offers Personalized, Client-Centered Tours All Over the World

Related Articles

-Advertisement-

Must read

Grand Choral Synagogue, St. Petersburg, Russia; the second largest synagogue in Europe.This week: Jewish St. Petersburg

Ukrainian-born, Florida-based travel consultant Sophia Kulich owns and operates a one-of-a-kind travel agency, specializing in Jewish heritage tours. Customizing these tours for individuals, families, and groups in search of their ancestor’s cultural and physical landscapes is her passion. Previously in the Jewish Voice, Ms. Kulich offered our readers a virtual tour of Jewish Germany. This week, she brings us a glimpse of Jewish life, past and present, in St. Petersburg, Russia:

St. Petersburg, the Northern Capital of Russia, is the most European-like city in the country and one of the world’s largest cultural centers. The city is well-known for its unique historical monuments, unmatched as architectural ensembles. St. Petersburg’s exceptionally rich past is inseparably linked with the heritage of Jewish people.

The late 18th century marks a significant turning point in Russian Jewish history, when many Jews left their small towns, known as shtetls, and came to St. Petersburg, the Czarist capital. As Russia’s Jews became better educated, attained greater prosperity, and moved closer to the highest Russian authorities in their socioeconomic status, their influence was felt even among their brethren who still lived in the poor shtetls along Imperial Russia’s Western border. St. Petersburg became the center for Jewish publications, organizations, and social services that had an impact far beyond the boundaries of the city. This was an era of great flourishing in the cultural life of St. Petersburg’s Jews, in Hebrew writing, in Jewish ethnography and history, in drama, art and music. Out of this community came such creative luminaries as S. Y. Ansky, Simon Dubnov, Marc Chagall, Yasha Heifetz, Osip Mandelstam, and Isaak Babel.

By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the small community of Jews, once temporarily living in St. Petersburg, had transformed into a permanent culture enriched by political and social traditions. Not only was St. Petersburg the nucleus of Jewish life in Russia, a dauntingly large country, but it had become an internationally significant center of Jewish life. St. Petersburg saw the creation of international Jewish organizations and the organization of Zionist congresses attended by the most famous Jewish political figures. Chabad-Lubavitch, an important movement in Orthodox Judaism, has many of its roots in St. Petersburg’s spirited and socially-active turn-of-the-century atmosphere.

A Sampling of Jewish Sites in St. Petersburg

The Grand Choral Synagogue is an architectural monument of importance to all of Russia. The Synagogue complex includes the Grand Choral Synagogue, the Small Synagogue, the Wedding Chapel with the first community museum, a kosher restaurant, a shop, and a mikvah. Being the only synagogue in the city, the Choral Synagogue has become the center around which Jewish life in Saint-Petersburg takes place. Today the Grand Choral Synagogue is not only a magnificent monument of architecture, but also the “pulsing heart” of the Jewish community. Many Jewish organizations are concentrated around the synagogue. It doubles as the visiting center for different people wishing to get acquainted with the Jewish tradition, religion, culture, food or simply to receive encouragement or wise advice from a rabbi.

The exhibition at the Russian Museum of Ethnography, “History and Culture of the Jewish People on the Territory of Russia,” traces the Jewish culture’s history, from the epoch of biblical Patriarchs to the period when Jews lived within the Pale of Settlement, a term used to describe Imperial Russia’s Western border region that was once populated with poor shtetls. At the opening ceremony, Mikhail Shvydkoy, the Director of the Federal Agency for Culture and Cinematography, stated that “the new exhibition is one of the stages of establishment of a full-scaled museum of Jewish culture.”

The Jewish Memorial Cemetery in St. Petersburg was opened in 1875 as a Jewish section of the Preobrazhenskoe Cemetery. Its complex of buildings became the spiritual and cultural centre of the St.Petersburg Jewish community. The wooden worship house for cleansing and burial services was reconstructed in stone in 1908. Inscribed on old tombs, one can find an array of Jewish symbolism: the Star of David, Kohen’s hands, menorahs, Torah scrolls, tables of the covenant, and the tree of lament. Many of the monuments were designed by famous architects. The local chevra kadisha (“Holy Society”) was in charge of burials, ensuring that all burials were conducted in accordance with Jewish law. The cemetery had a permanent supervisor (shamash) and an architect. Among those buried here are railway entrepreneur and public figure S.S.Polyakov, publisher D.G. Ginzburg, sculptor M.M. Antokolsky, and historian M.S. Altman. Sailors of the Baltic Fleet, which perished during the Great Patriotic War, and citizens who died in the Siege of Leningrad are honored.

Kolomna quarter used to be a thriving Jewish neighborhood and was once home to Salman Rubashov. Here you will find important educational centers such as Conservatoire, founded by Anton Rubenstein, State University, the Academy of Arts, all of which were attended by many Jewish students and served as Jewish cultural focal points.

Music and Concerts

Сhoral Concerts are performed by Gregory Yakerson and the male choir of the Grand Choral Synagogue. The repertoire of Mr Yakerson includes many Jewish folk songs, professional vocal music written by Jewish composers, and Judaic-Baroque music.

Since 1995, a popular ensemble of Klezmer musicians has performed at the St. Petersburg Jewish Community Center. They perform chazzanut, folk songs, and of course, klezmer music.

The music salon at the Samoilov Family Museum. was opened in St. Petersburg in 1994. A small concert hall revives the musical traditions of the Samoilov house, where regular musical soirees with celebrity guests were once held.

Kosher Food

Le’ Chaim Restaurant: Located in the Grand Choral Synagogue of St.Petersburg. “Le’chaim” is a kosher lemehadrin restaurant, where the food preparation process meets all the standards prescribed by Jewish religious law and custom. The restaurant is under the kosher supervision of R’ Menachem-Mendel Pewzner, Chief Rabbi of Saint-Petersburg. On offer is traditional Jewish, or, to be more precise, Ashkenazi cuisine. At the same time, as the restaurant’s head-cook, Vlad Nadezhdin, has years of experience working in Israel, the restaurant menu also includes a number of Israeli dishes.

Seven Forty Restaurant: This restaurant offers lovely atmosphere and delicious food, making it popular among locals and travelers alike. Location: Bolshoj Sampsonievsky Prospect, 108.

Sophia Kulich’s Jewish heritage tours include, but are not limited to, countries throughout Western, Central and Eastern Europe, Scandinavia, Morocco, Turkey, Russia, and the former Soviet Union. In addition, she provides kosher private tours and trips to countries with notable Jewish immigrant populations such as Peru, Argentina, South Africa, and China. Each tour has its own itinerary with room for customization.

For more information, go to www.jewishtravelagency.com, email [email protected] or call 877-466-2934

balance of natureDonate

Latest article

- Advertisement -