Jump to Navigation
Home

Subscribe to The Jewish Week's RSS News Feeds Today

  • Newsletters
  • Subscriptions
  • Advertise
  • Classifieds
  • My Cart
  • Login
  • New Account
  • New Password

Tweet

Vacations

The Fiesta Season

03/12/2013 | Hilary Larson | Travel Writer | Vacations
Pyramid scheme: Festa revelers in the Major de Gracia neighborhood. Turisme de Barcelona

Siesta and fiesta: they are the rhyming clichés of the carefree Spanish lifestyle. And nowhere are the midday pause and nocturnal festivities more evident than in Barcelona, Spain’s party capital.

  • Facebook Like
  • Tweet Widget
  • Google Plus One
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Favorite

The Other Granada

03/05/2013 | Hilary Larson | Travel Writer | Vacations
A picturesque cobble-stoned square in downtown Granada. Dick Washburne/Nicaraguan Tourism Board

Granada is, arguably, Spain’s loveliest city. But its American namesake, Granada, Nicaragua, needs little argument: wedged between a volcano and the vast Lake Nicaragua, the new-world city might be the most romantic town in all of Central America.

  • Facebook Like
  • Tweet Widget
  • Google Plus One
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Favorite

The Destination Bar/Bat Mitzvah

02/26/2013 | Hilary Larson | Travel Writer | Vacations
Ethan Bernstein’s bar mitzvah celebration in Italy. MaryAnn Bernstein

In 2010, Amy Krauss reflexively set a bar mitzvah date for her son at their Tucson, Ariz., Reform synagogue.

  • Facebook Like
  • Tweet Widget
  • Google Plus One
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Favorite

A Jewish Spring In Atlanta

02/19/2013 | Hilary Larson | Travel Writer | Vacations
For those in the boutiquey Virginia-Highland section, Congregation Anshi S’fard is the neighborhood shul. Kevin C. Rose

With Twelve Oaks pillars in mind, I arrived in Atlanta humming “Marching through Georgia,” the Civil War Yankee hymn I grew up square-dancing to at summer camp.

  • Facebook Like
  • Tweet Widget
  • Google Plus One
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Favorite

Dawgs And Dogwoods, And A Lot Of Culture

02/12/2013 | Hilary Larson | Travel Writer | Vacations
Athens’ vibrant nightlife scene. Marcus Williams

Bulldogs are everywhere.

They’re snarling on car-window stickers, growling from bar menus, staring out from red hoodies and popping up in plush. The red-shirted mascot of the University of Georgia is a ubiquitous sight in Athens — a classic Southern city that’s also a vibrant, quirky college town.

And on a “game” Saturday? The town’s a sea of red and black, the Bulldogs’ colors. Fans of all ages storm the bars, line up for tailgate and cheer “Go Dawgs!” at Sanford Stadium. You can pretty much have the rest of Athens to yourself.

Football aside, there’s a lot to cheer about here. Just over an hour from sprawling, congested Atlanta, Athens has a relaxed, white-pillared charm that makes it an ideal weekend getaway. It’s also a town with a lot of history: in addition to the classical name, Athens is a stop on Georgia’s Antebellum Trail, with 15 neighborhoods on the National Register, Greek Revival house museums to tour, and a Civil War-era canon in front of City Hall.

The dogwoods are just budding as a Southern spring unfolds. This month, the Classic Center — Athens’ downtown convention and event space — holds its grand re-opening after a major renovation that includes an 8,000-square foot atrium with art installations; a Feb. 27 gala fete will feature the Boston Pops.

Next month, the Athens Jewish Film Festival celebrates its fifth anniversary, magnolias burst into bloom at the State Botanical Garden, and seasonal house tours invite the public into classical mansions.

Still, it’s the more than 30,000 students at the University of Georgia who give Athens its youthful energy — as they have since 1785, when UGA (as it’s known) became the first state university chartered in America.

That energy is palpable in the historic districts just north of campus. It’s easy to feel old while strolling amid teenaged co-eds on Clayton Street, where the boutiques feature youthful styles and the coffee shops are full of laptops in mid-morning.

As warm afternoons give way to shady dusk, beer-sipping crowds flock to live music at the clubs on Washington and Broad streets. It won’t be long before you hear a reference to the two most successful acts to come out of Athens, R.E.M. and the B-52s, whose worldwide success launched the city’s reputation as a rock-and-roll incubator.

I’m more of a classical fan, so I was excited to see a lineup at the UGA Performing Arts Center that includes Brooklyn’s own Robert Spano conducting the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra later this month.

Also right on campus is the state’s signature art institution, the Georgia Museum of Art. Two years ago, the museum re-opened after a renovation that tripled its exhibition space and added a sculpture garden to its holdings of 19th- and 20th-century American paintings, Italian Renaissance works and Asian decorative arts.

The Museum is also where the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival will celebrate its fifth anniversary at the opening gala on March 16. Unlike its month-long cousin, the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival (going on right now, through late February), the Athens event is held during a single week — but it’s no less ambitious as a cultural beacon.

Opening night for “Jewish films, Universal themes” features a screening of “Hava Nagila,” last year’s celebrity-dotted documentary about the evolution of our bat-mitzvah anthem. Filmgoers enjoy a daily “nosh” of snacks donated by local eateries; a selection of movies from Europe, Israel, and the Americas reflects a community with diverse roots.

Immigrant Jewish families from Europe were an early part of the Athens mix, with Jewish retailers playing a large role in the local economy, and Jewish patrons and intellectuals in the development of UGA.

Congregation Children of Israel was founded shortly after the Civil War. Today, the Reform temple takes its role as the nexus for Jewish life in Northeast Georgia seriously. Its on-campus counterparts are the UGA Hillel, which serves up kosher Shabbat dinners and holiday events for 2,000 Jewish “Dawgs,” and a recently opened Chabad House.

While the five-day film festival is a major event on the Jewish calendar, the festival organizers have established a year-round presence, drawing on both a growing Jewish population and a cosmopolitan spirit. The Festival now holds screenings year-round at theaters around town, as well as a contest for emerging Jewish filmmakers.

So don’t let those white columns, or the statue of Athena, fool you. Athens may be historic — but it’s most definitely not a place where time stands still. 

  • Facebook Like
  • Tweet Widget
  • Google Plus One
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Favorite

On South Island, Fjords, Kosher Wine And The Arts

02/05/2013 | Hilary Larson | Travel Writer | Vacations
Milford Sound, the best known of the many sounds on New Zealand’s South Island. Julian Apse

The biggest surprise about New Zealand’s South Island is that there’s so much to do there.

  • Facebook Like
  • Tweet Widget
  • Google Plus One
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Favorite
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • …
  • next ›
  • last »

Travel Sections

Israel Travel
Vacations
  • News
  • Editorial & Opinion
  • Arts
  • Features
  • Food & Wine
  • Special Sections
  • Blogs
  • Support Us
  • Calendars
  • Contact Us

© Copyright 2013 The Jewish Week, Inc. Please read our terms of use for more information ~ Website by Actual Systems
~

  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Site-map

Newsletter Signup

Please select the area(s) of interest you have from the above and click the sign up button below.

Subscribe Today!

Gift Subscription Print - NY State, 1 Year
Gift Subscription Print - other US and Canada, 1 year
Print Subscription - New York State
Print Subscription - US & Canada

Advertising Info

  • Advertiser Information
  • Our Readers
  • Mechanical Requirements
  • General Policies
  • Print Ad Rates
  • Advertising Rates for TheJewishWeek.com
  • 2013 Special Issues: Upcoming Advertising Opportunities

Contacts

Associate Publisher
Richard Waloff
Ext. 217

Sales Director
Ruth Rothseid
Ext. 254

 

Manhattan Jewish Organizations
Stephanie Leone
Ext. 220
 
Manhattan Synagogues &
Bronx/Westchester
Ani Vuolo
Ext. 226
 
Manhattan Retail / Real Estate/ Upper W. Side
Arlene Bienenfeld
Ext. 209
 
Restaurants,
Queens/Westchester
Seth Yedwab
Ext. 222
 
National/Manhattan Corporate/Theater/Healthcare
Michelle Plotsker
516-569-9189
 
Long Island/Automotive
Yitzie Hyman
Ext. 207

Westchester 
Marshall Weiss-Allen
Ext. 219

Select a Department to Contact

  • Back Issues and Content Questions
  • Complaints & Kvetches
  • Editorial Comments/Questions
  • General Inquiry
  • Subscription Questions
  • Website Problems or Suggestions
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Get Advertising Information Here

More Ways to Connect

  • Newsletters
  • Subscriptions
  • Advertise
  • Classifieds

Our Address

THE JEWISH WEEK
1501 BROADWAY, SUITE 505
NEW YORK, NY 10036

Telephone: (212) 921-7822
Fax: (212) 921-8420

  • National News
  • New York News
  • International News
  • Israel
  • News Briefs
  • Short Takes
  • All News Page

Recent New York News

The home next to Rabbi Elimelech Laufer’s was washed away in the storm, leaving his closest to the ocean. Stewart Ain
Families, Synagogues Still Reeling 7 Months After Hurricane Sandy
New York News
Passageway Gate by ceramic artist Emmet Leader. Tajlei Levis
For Jewish Artists, A Space Of One’s Own
New York News
Avital Sharansky, left, with her husband Natan, campaigned around the world for his release from a Soviet prison.
‘The Other Sharansky’ To Be Honored Here
New York News
  • Editorials
  • David Wolpe's Musings
  • Gary Rosenblatt
  • God-Talk
  • Jew By Voice
  • Letters
  • Opinion
  • Point-Counter-Point
  • Sabbath Week
  • Street Torah

Gary Rosenblatt

Jewish Megatrends
Israel: Don’t Overreach
Is AJCongress Jack Rosen’s Show?
  • Guide to the Arts
  • Film
  • Books
  • Music
  • Dance
  • Theater
  • Museums

Recent Arts & Culture

Barbara Sukowa as Hannah Arendt covering the Eichmann trial in Margarethe von Trotta’s “Hannah Arendt.” Zeitgeist Films
Film
A Too-Distant ‘Hannah Arendt’

Film on The New Yorker writer’s coverage of the Eichmann trial lacks some passion.

Émigré community finds new voice in Lost and Found, Russian division of the Folksbiene Yiddish Theater, which premiered “Covers”
Theater
Russian-Jewish Identity, Lost And Found

New theater troupe, a division of the Folksbiene, mounts second production digging into Russians’ complex background.

Naomi Patz adapted the wartime play, “The Last Cyclist,” which will be staged at the West End Theater.
Theater
Terezin Show Makes It To N.Y.
  • All She Wrote
  • Food & Wine
  • Fruit of the Vine
  • Jewish Techs
  • The JW Q&A
  • Lens
  • Matchmaker
  • Nosh Pit
  • A Rabbi's World
  • Reform Really
  • Success Without The Tsuris
  • Travel

Latest Features

Michael Mittelman: “We want this parade to reflect the diversity of our community.”
Preparing To Celebrate Israel
A New York Minute
Rabbi Marci Bellows
What A Rabbi Learned From Her Roller Coaster Of A Wedding
Reform Really
  • 36 Under 36
  • Arts Preview
  • Celebrate
  • Go Green!
  • Healthcare
  • Israel Now
  • Jewish Life
  • Kosher Wine Guides
  • Purim Spoof
  • Science & Technology
  • Text/Context
  • The Good Life

Recent Special Sections

Kosher Wine Guide March 2013
Kosher Wine Guide March 2013

Learn the "Top 18" Kosher white, red and Israeli Wines, Read about the American kosher wine scene, Israeli wines and much more

Israel Travel May 2013
Israel Travel May 2013

Tourism booming in the Negev, that first teen roots journey, driving in Israel (really!), and more.

  • Political Insider
  • Well-Versed
  • The New Normal
  • The RosenBlog

Recent Posts

Proposal By Text: How Rotem, IDF Vet With A Brain Injury, Won Shelly
05/21/2013 - 14:55
The New Normal
A Photographer With An Ironic Eye
05/21/2013 - 11:10
Well Versed
Life Lessons In The Lunchline
05/20/2013 - 13:09
The New Normal
Ira Forman Named Envoy To Combat Anti-Semitism
05/20/2013 - 13:05
Political Insider