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Main › Jewish Heritage Tours › The Jews of Poland for 12 Days - Past, Present, And Future
From $6,950
OVERVIEW
In collaboration with Jewish Heritage Travel we are excited to offer this tour of Poland.
Before World War II, Poland’s three million Jews represented one of the world’s largest and most diverse and influential Jewish communities with Hasidim, secular intellectuals, Yiddish writers, Zionists, and socialists. Today, on the site of the Warsaw Ghetto sits a world-class museum devoted to the Jewish history that flourished in the country for a thousand years before the war. Jewish festivals attract crowds from across the globe. Multiple universities have even opened Judaic studies departments where graduate students have produced impressive publications documenting an astonishingly rich history. Jewish culture is being rediscovered, revitalized, and rebuilt in Poland.
Beginning in Warsaw, we’ll take a guided tour of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews. We will visit remembrance memorial sites across the city, including the monument to the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, the memorial of Mila 18, and the Umschlagplatz where Jews were deported to Auschwitz and Treblinka.
We will travel to Lodz to learn about the prosperous Jewish textile industry and the role Jewish residents played in this thriving industrial city. In Wrocław, we’ll take a walking tour, enjoy a university visit, and see a revitalized Jewish cemetery filled with artwork. From there, we will travel to historically rich Kraków, once home to a flourishing Jewish presence. We’ll explore the district of Kazimierz with its many surviving synagogues, a prewar Jewish cemetery, and the largest medieval market square in Europe. There will even be a moving tour of the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum and the newly expanded Auschwitz Jewish Center.
Jewish Heritage Travel guest scholars will provide lectures and on-site commentary to help reveal this land that is so pivotal to Jewish history — and to help us honor the tragedies that took place here and appreciate the vibrant Jewish life that existed in Poland throughout the centuries.
Departures
Duration
Highlights
Notes
Activity Level
Tailor Made
Itinerary
Program Cost: $6,950* includes:
11 nights’ accommodations at deluxe hotels
Full breakfast daily; one lunch; four dinners
All group transportation via deluxe air-conditioned coach
*Per-person, double occupancy; single supplement: $1,600. Fees not included: gratuities: $195.
Travel note: Plan to arrive in Warsaw on Friday May 9 and depart from Krakow on Tuesday May 20.
Each of our scholars are outstanding experts in their fields and play an active role in helping us design our journeys as well as accompanying us as we travel.
Marcin Wodziński is a professor of Jewish history and literature and head of the Department of Jewish Studies at the University of Wrocław. His academic interests range from the social history of Jews in the 19th century to the history of Jews in Silesia and Jewish material culture, especially the history of Hasidism and Haskalah. His publications include more than 100 articles in Polish, English, Hebrew, French, and Czech, nine books authored and one coauthored, and six volumes coedited.
His publications include: Hebrew Inscriptions in Silesia from the 13th to 18th Centuries (1996); Bibliography on the History of Silesian Jewry II (2004); Haskalah and Hasidism in the Kingdom of Poland (2005); The Polish Kingdom Authority Against Hasidism (2008); Hasidism and Politics (2013). Wodziński is the editor of the Makor Academic Series / Sources of Austeria Publishing, Bibliotheca Judaica Series at the University of Wrocław Press, editor-in-chief of “Studia Judaica.”
Maciek Zabierowski is head of Learning at the Auschwitz Jewish Center, a role he has held since 2006. He designs and runs workshops on Jewish history in Poland, the Holocaust, and human rights for Polish and European students of all ages and Polish law-enforcement officers. Zabierowski received a master’s degree in history in 2006 from the Jagellonian University. In 2012, he was featured as a scholar for Facing History and Ourselves’ Holocaust and Human Behavior international seminar. He is also a licensed tour guide in Kraków, specializing in Jewish walking tours.
Evening: There will be an orientation for guests to meet and get to know one another and a presentation by our Jewish Heritage Travel scholar to help prepare us for all we will experience during our time together, followed by a welcoming Shabbat dinner at the hotel.
Meals Included: Dinner
Accommodations: Bristol Hotel
Morning: Free time or option to attend services at the Nożyk Synagogue (built in 1898, and Poland’s only existing synagogue since then, an easy walk from the hotel), followed by a walking tour of Warsaw that will include the Old Town, Market Square, and the Barbican (surviving remnant of Old Town’s defensive structure). Break for some time on our own in the Old Market Square, an area filled with street vendors, cafés, shops, galleries, and some of Warsaw’s top restaurants, all within easy walking distance.
Meals Included: Breakfast
Accommodations: Bristol Hotel
Morning: We will begin today at the National Museum of Warsaw and enjoy a private guided tour highlighting the “Polish–Jewish Exchange” through works of art from the 19th and 20th centuries. Our tour will focus on Jewish themes in Polish art, including contributions of Jewish collectors and patrons. Especially prominent on this tour are works of artists Maurycy Gottlieb, Moïse Kisling, Eugeniusz Zak, and Henryk Berlewi.
Afternoon: After breaking for lunch, we will visit the Warsaw Jewish cemetery, the largest Jewish cemetery in the world. Many Jewish luminaries were buried here over the years, and the cemetery comprises more than 200,000 marked graves and the mass grave of victims of the Warsaw Ghetto.
Evening: We’ll enjoy a presentation by our scholar at the hotel.
Meals Included: Breakfast
Accommodations: Bristol Hotel
Depart our hotel for Umschlagplatz (where the Jews were gathered for deportation to Treblinka) and proceed on foot for Mila 18 (site of Jewish fighting organization in the Ghetto uprising). We’ll continue our walk to the impressive Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews. At the museum, we will have a private guided tour, with ample time to have lunch and browse the gift shop. (Please note: For those who want to spend more time at the museum and explore exhibits of personal interest on their own, taxis are available.)
Evening: The group will gather for another presentation this evening.
Meals Included: Breakfast
Accommodations: Bristol Hotel
We will depart Warsaw for Lodz, known as the Manchester of Poland, where Jews were an integral part of the textile industry in the early 20th century. In Lodz, Jewish families owned 175 factories, including the I. K. Poznański factory, one of the largest textile plants in Europe. Upon arrival, we will stop for a visit to the Radegast train station historical site (used extensively to serve as the Umschlagplatz for deportation of Jews to the extermination camps) and the Lodz Jewish cemetery — once the largest Jewish cemetery in Poland.
Late this afternoon, we will depart Lodz for Wrocław (formerly known as the German city of Breslau). On arrival, we will settle in and enjoy dinner (included) at our hotel.
Meals Included: Breakfast, Dinner
Accommodations: Hotel Monopol
In Wrocław, we will visit its impressive Jewish cemetery, which reopened in 1991 after many years of neglect. The beauty and diversity of styles and symbols on display here are unmatched — so much so that it is now known as the Museum of Jewish Cemetery Art, in tribute to the craftsmanship of its sepulchral art. Many noteworthy figures are buried here, including renowned biologist Ferdinand Cohn, historian Heinrich Graetz (author of the first complete history of the Jews), Clara Immerwahl (first female PhD student at the University of Breslau), Ferdinand Lassalle (founder and leader of the first labor party in Germany), and the parents of Edith Stein, also known as Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, a highly respected German philosopher. Born and raised in an Orthodox Jewish environment, Stein converted to Catholicism and was ultimately canonized as a saint by the Catholic church, even though she was, ironically, deported to Auschwitz and murdered there because of her Jewish heritage.
Following a break for lunch in the Old Market Square, we will enjoy a walking tour of Old Town, including a visit to the University of Wrocław, and enjoy a special tour and presentation by Professor Marcin Wodziński. We will also see the White Stork Synagogue before returning to our hotel for an evening of leisure.
Meals Included: Breakfast
Accommodations: Hotel Monopol
This morning, we will depart for Kraków. En route, we will visit Katowice for a private guided tour of the Silesian Museum (one of the largest in Poland), which contains unusual works of Polish art, including some remarkable portraits by Stanisław Wyspiański.
Upon arrival in Kraków, we will have time to rest and relax before a late-afternoon walking tour of Old Town and the Rynek — Kraków’s main square, a UNESCO World Heritage Site dating back to the 13th century and the largest square of its kind in Europe.
Meals Included: Breakfast
Accommodations: Bachleda Luxury Hotel
We’ll tour the Kazimierz District and visit its important Jewish sites. In this historic Jewish quarter, we’ll see the Alte Schul; the Remuh, Isaac, High, and Tempel Synagogues; the former Jewish streets and marketplace; and the old Jewish cemetery.
We’ll visit the former Ghetto area to see the new memorial on Deportation Square and the remnants of the Ghetto wall from 1941. Our last stop of the day will be the Galicia Museum, which documents remnants of the Galitzianer heritage in Poland and Ukraine today.
Evening: We’ll enjoy a Shabbat dinner at the hotel.
Meals Included: Breakfast, Dinner
Accommodations: Bachleda Luxury Hotel
Morning free. In the afternoon, we’ll tour the Wawel Castle (seat of the Polish monarchs until 1596), including Wawel Cathedral and Dragon’s Cave, within walking distance of our hotel.
Evening: We’ll return to our hotel for another informative presentation by our scholar.
Meals Included: Breakfast
Accommodations: Bachleda Luxury Hotel
We will spend the day visiting the Auschwitz Jewish Center for a tour and a light lunch (included), followed by a guided tour of Auschwitz itself. The Auschwitz Jewish Center (AJC) in Oświęcim, operated by the Museum of Jewish Heritage, is located two miles from the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camps. The only Jewish presence in the vicinity of Auschwitz, the center opened its doors in 2000 so that people from around the world could gather to learn, pray, and remember the victims of the Holocaust. There will be an evening discussion where we will process our experience at Auschwitz together.
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch
Accommodations: Bachleda Luxury Hotel
Our day will begin with a drive out of the city to the 13th-century Wieliczka Salt Mine, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Lying on nine levels, this was the only mine in the world that continuously produced table salt since the Middle Ages (until it finally closed in 2007).
Afternoon: Free for exploring sites of interest on our own and/or last-minute shopping. Those interested can also visit Schindler’s factory. (Transportation will be provided.) Gather for a farewell dinner at the hotel.
Meals Included: Breakfast, Dinner
Accommodations: Bachleda Luxury Hotel
Depart for home.
Payment Reserve your space with a nonrefundable deposit of $1,000 per person. Final balance is due 120 days prior to departure.
Membership Participation on these tours is a benefit for active members of JHT museum partners. During the registration process, you will be asked about your membership status with your affiliated museum. If you are not a current member, you will have a chance to activate your membership.
Participation Tour sizes are limited to 28 participants unless otherwise noted. Trips entail considerable walking including over uneven terrain. Participants need to be in good health, be able to keep up with the group, be able to experience group and cultural differences with grace. Please let us know if you have any physical conditions that may require special attention while on tour.
Cancellations All cancellations must be received by Gil Travel in writing. Cancellations received 120 days or more prior to departure: full refund less nonrefundable deposits, per person; 119–90 days prior to departure: 50% refund per person after nonrefundable deposits. 89–0 days before departure: no refund.
Trip Cancellation Insurance Gil Travel Travel strongly urges all participants to purchase travel insurance for coverage of losses necessitated by having to cancel due to illness or accident. For your convenience, we are providing a link to RoamRight, which many past participants have used. When purchasing insurance, please consider the plans carefully to familiarize yourself with what is covered. In this context, do take note that most insurance companies generally will waive exclusion for preexisting conditions only if your application is received by them within 14 days from the date of your program registration. If you have a preexisting medical condition and are interested in taking trip insurance, you should do so either with Roamright or through your own insurance agent within 14 days of registration.
Changes All rights are reserved by Gil Travel and Jewish Heritage Travel to make scholar substitutions and/or to modify the itinerary (including hotels) as needed. Every reasonable effort will be made to operate the program as planned; however, should unforeseen world events and conditions require the itinerary to be altered, Jewish Heritage Travel reserves the right to do so for the safety and best interest of the group. Any extra expenses incurred in this situation are the responsibility of the participant.
Disclaimer of Responsibility By registering for this program, participant specifically waives any and all claims of action against Gil Travel or the Museum of Jewish Heritage and the Jewish Heritage Travel office and their respective staffs for damages, loss, injury, accident, or death incurred by any person in connection with this tour. Gil Travel, The Museum of Jewish Heritage and the Jewish Heritage Travel office and their respective staffs assume no responsibility or liability in connection with the service of any train, vessel, carriage, aircraft, or other conveyance that may be used wholly or in part in the performance of their duty to the passengers. Neither will Gil Travel, the Museum of Jewish Heritage or the Jewish Heritage Travel office or their staffs be responsible for any injury, death, loss, accident, delay, or irregularity through neglect or default of any company or person engaged in carrying out the purposes for which tickets, vouchers, or coupons are issued. No responsibility is accepted for losses or expenses due to sickness, viruses, weather, strikes, wars, and other causes. In the event it becomes necessary or advisable for any reason whatsoever to alter the itinerary or arrangements, including hotels or scholars, such alterations may be made without penalty. All rights reserved to require any participant to withdraw from the tour at his/her own expense when such an action is determined by the tour staff to be in the best interest of the participant’s health and safety and that of the group in general. Prices subject to change. Cost in effect at time of registration will be honored.
Are Kosher meals available?
While we do not offer Kosher food, we offer fish and/or vegetarian options at every meal included in the trip.
How many people will be on the trip?
On average about 24 people.
What is the age group?
55+
What is the makeup of the participants?
A good mix of singles and couples.
How fit do I need to be? How much walking is there?
You should be able to walk about two miles in a day, though not all at once. Please see the itinerary of the trip(s) you are interested in to get a sense of the schedule for each day. When there is free time, some choose to stay active, others to rest.
If you prefer more activity, many of the hotels we stay in have pools and fitness facilities, and some of our trips do offer the opportunity for more physical activity.
Are the trips accessible for people with canes, walkers, or wheelchairs?
People who use a cane to aid their walking have found our trips accessible. You still need to be able to walk about two miles in a day, though not all at once. Unfortunately, accessibility can be limited in the places we travel, making it too difficult for people in wheelchairs or walkers to participate in our trips.
Is the trip Shabbat Observant?
We normally have a Shabbat dinner together be it at a hotel or restaurant and sometimes at a synagogue. We do not have programming on Saturday other than perhaps a meeting with the scholar. In some destinations we offer walking tours on Saturday. You can refer to the itinerary of your chosen trip for specifics.
When does the program actually begin?
The Itinerary and Program Details section of the trip you are interested in will indicate when to plan to arrive and depart, as well as when the program begins and ends. Every trip includes a welcome session to get oriented and meet each other, the guides, and scholars and a farewell event to celebrate, reflect, and say good-bye to our fellow travelers.
Are airport transfers included?
Airport transfers are not included. Taxis, and often other transportation options, are available from all airports.
Are meals included?
The Itinerary of the trip you are interested in will indicate which meals are included on each day. For meals on your own, suggestions are available from the concierge at the hotels we are staying in. We encourage you to explore the diversity of local and international cuisines in the places we visit.
Are the trips only for Jewish people?
While the majority of our travelers are Jewish, our trips are for anyone interested in exploring the Jewish heritage of the destinations we take you to.
I’d like to explore my genealogy at one of the places you are going to. Is that possible?
Our trips are not designed for genealogical research. If you want to undertake genealogical work, it is necessary to do this on your own and would be best to plan for an extra few days before or after one of our trips.
How much free time will I have?
Please see the itinerary of the trip(s) you are interested in for information on when free time is scheduled for exploring on your own, resting in your room, engaging in conversation with new friends, etc.
Is there Wi-Fi everywhere?
While WiFi is available in most of the world, there are regions or locations where it is not as accessible. Most of the hotels we stay at offer free WiFi.
What Museum Memberships Qualify?
Museum of Jewish Heritage New York: $54
Holocaust Museum LA: $100
Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center – Nassau County: $54
Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History: $54
*Membership # will need to be provided upon registration
Accommodation
Situated on the celebrated Royal Route, next to the Presidential Palace and just a short stroll from the Old Town, Royal Castle, National Theater and Opera House. Hotel Bristol has served as a city landmark and distinguished destination since 1901. A captivating union of history and modernity, the Art Nouveau masterpiece enchants with exceptional interiors. The iconic Café Bristol, Marconi Restaurant, two bars and the enchanting rooftop offer singular epicurean indulgence while our Bristol spa combines a scenic relaxation area, indoor pool, gym, sauna, and a steam room. Our luxury hotel rooms and suites blend classical style and modern finesse. Unrivaled stay experience with outstanding views, timeless decorations and unsurpassed comfort. The Paderewski Suite is an exquisite gem in Bristol’s crown, boasting pure beauty and luxury. Original antiques from the beginning of the 20th century recall the historic spirit of the place. Our 5-star hotel is pet friendly and welcomes trained pets for a fee.
The Bachleda Luxury Hotel Krakow MGallery Hotel Collection is a luxurious, five-star hotel, located at Juliusz Kossak 6 square. It will delight you with its sophisticated style and unique elegance, inviting you to stay in an exclusive place in the city of kings.
Hotel Monopol Wrocław is a 5 star hotel in the heart of Wroclaw. Place where art meets business and the modern interior design blends in with the oldest hotel building in city of Wroclaw. Marble interiors, fresh flowers, professional and friendly Staff, relaxing Spa and delightful restaurant. All that will make your stay an unforgettable journey to world of luxury and pleasure.
*Star rating standards vary from country to country.
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