Sunday, April 25, 2010

6 cities. 9 days. 1 long blog post.

just got back from a long, awesome, tiring, beautiful, hilarious excursion that my study abroad program organized for us. we spent 9 days and 8 nights traveling through eastern-central europe on a rented bus, seeing new sites and trying weird food (accidentally ate LARD in krakow. gross). i'll try to be concise...

krakow
the first stop on our journey was krakow, poland's religious and cultural capital (warsaw is the actual capital). we arrived in the city in the afternoon, went on a walking tour through the old town square and castle areas. the next day we went on another tour of the jewish quarter, kazmierez. went to the galicia museum, and spent a lot of time walking around. the most interesting thing about being in the city at this time in particular was the fact that the Polish president, along with about 30 other political officials, had recently died in a tragic airplane accident. to be in a country where the head of state has recently died is a strange thing, especially in a super patriotic country, like Poland. we left the city for auschwitz the day of the funeral--taking place in krakow--which made getting out of the city very difficult. (shout out to ANNA for being in krakow the same weekend :)

auschwitz/oswiecim

we finally made it out of the city, and were able to visit 2 former concentration camps located in the city of auschwitz (german name)/oswiecim (polish name). it was my second time visiting these camps, the first time was when i spent a semester in israel in 11th grade, so it was a very strange feeling to return to such an eerie place. it was obviously incredibly moving, though, and i definitely learned a lot more about the holocaust and world war II. the next day we also went on a tour of the city and visited the Jewish museum there - i found it really disturbing that there are people living minutes away from a former death camp.

olomoc
the next day, we ventured to this city in Moravia, the eastern part of the Czech Republic. there's a huge university there, with about 50,000 students - i felt like i was in the Madison, WI of the czech republic :) lots of college students everywhere, we slept in a dorm, and went out to a bar/club at night. good times all around.

brno
the second biggest city in the czech republic, also located in Moravia. we were only able to spend a few hours there: visited the museum of Roma culture and then ate a quick lunch. then we hopped back on the bus.

mikolov
a gorgeous winery village, located right next to czech-austrian border. went on a walking tour with an ex-pat from Michigan, who showed us the castle and biggest barrel of wine i've ever seen. it was really awesome to get to see different parts of the czech republic, other than prague. this country has such a unique history and so much to offer.

vienna
by far one of the most beautiful places in the world. i felt like i died and went to architectural heaven. went on 2 walking tours of the city, got to go to the belvedere castle museum where Gustav Klimt's "The Kiss" is housed. i went to the modern art museum there, where they had an exhibit about television (!!!!!) - got to watch some episodes from the Andy Warhol TV show that aired in the 1970s. very cool stuff. we went to a summer-castle that had amazing gardens and beautiful fountains, and got to lay out in some parks as well. we really lucked out with weather.

finally returned to beautiful prague. what an unreal adventure. more to come soon.

***CHECK FACEBOOK FOR PHOTOS!!!!!***

ciao,
julia

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

i am a tourguide and my apartment is a hostel








this weekend The Ross Twins and alexa rosenbloom invaded my living space, for 3 days of sightseeing and awesome times. we ventured to all the typical tourist destinations (old town square, prague castle, the john lennon wall, wenceslas square, etc etc.) and had some delicious food along the way. Radost FX for dinner one night (deeeeeeeelish vegetarian cuisine and also a club at night) and of course Bohemia Bagel for breakfast, plus awesome street food: langose, which is just like fried dough but better...mmm, smazeny syr = FRIED CHEESE on a hamburger bun, and many more things.

highlight of the weekend was definitely going to DOX Center for Contemporary Arts which, for the rest of April, is housing David Cerny's ENTROPA. Entropa is a massive sculpture (about the size of a 3 story house) that contains satirical depictions of every country in the European Union. the Czech Republic currently holds the presidential seat of the EU, and the sculpture was created for this reason. read this to get all the infoooooo. it is SO cool and huuuuuge!!!

the museum also had an exhibit of about 15 different Chess Boards, each hilarious, quirky, and weird in its own way. loved it.

after that we had lunch at cross club, which was delicious and CHEAP.

i love having visitors - they make me realize how much i really love in this city.

slezska's seder


happy passover, readers!!!!! last week we had a seder here at slezska 107 that was absolutely amazing. we had 15 friends come over, and everyone brought a delicious dish and a bottle of wine. some items from the menu included...

stuffed zuccini
garlic-balsamic salmon
mashed celery root
home made haroset
egg noodle kugul w/ cinnamon
israeli salad

we read the 4 questions, celebrated freedom, sang some songs and got a little tipsy :)

sHaLoM
julia