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Labels
Monday, October 13, 2008
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Museum of Sex, New York - Animals & What They Teach Us
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Museum of Sex, New York
Monday, September 1, 2008
Alexandria, Egypt, The Alexandrian Quartets and Jewish Justine
Friday, April 4, 2008
Why I never buy black suitcases
Why you should never buy a black suitcase
I have had black suitcases. They are a disaster.
Take these cases – sorry about the pun.
a) Husband and wife go to the airport with matching suitcases. Great idea. All my life I wanted matching suitcases. So smart. Never again. My husband arrives at his conference in Italy with a lady’s underwear and bikinis, as if he’s a closet transvestite. Not a single pair of socks. Just pink bras. I arrive for a press trip run representing Brides magazine and all I have is huge men’s shoes and bow ties like Marlene Dietrich in a musical.
b) I arrive at an airport and check in my black luggage. When I land at the other end of my journey in Florida, it has gone. My group is delayed waiting for me. I am not popular. Grand dinner - but I have no evening clothes. I am at reception trying to talk tohe airline. My black suitcase has been picked up by somebody else with identical black luggage. They are 100 miles away the other end of Florida. The airline won’t return my luggage until they have received the other person’s which they can collect next day. But I’m off on a day trip with the travel press. Half my luggage is the fancy dress costume which I hope will win me the prize of a free trip to the USA. My costume does not arrive until after the fancy dress competition.
c) On 9/11 I am in Singapore. After a bomb threat all the luggage is taken off the plane and spread out on tarmac safely away from the terminal. We are sent out in the tropical sun surrounded by the army with assault rifles and sniffer dogs, to identify our black suitcases amongst 500 other black suitcases. Not until the suitcases have all been identified can we return to the terminal.
d) My son has injured himself skiing and is in a wheelchair. The person looking after him has to fetch the luggage from the carousel. What does the luggage look like? It’s black. Yes, really helpful.
e) I am tired of black luggage. I arrive at an airport and wait by the carousel. After half an hour I spot it at the other side of the airport. I saw it only because it was bright pink. If it had been black I would have spent another anxious half hour, running up expensive time on the hire car waiting outside.
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Damaged Suitcases On Airlines - Advice
One wheel ripped off. Various other bits of damage.
They want to know
a) Why did I not report it at the airport?
I didn't notice. Just put the luggage onto a trolley and raced off. I had a hire car waiting.
Next time I shall inspect my luggage on all six sides at the airport.
b) As soon as I got home I found the problem. I had trouble opening the case. I photographed it with my mobile as evidence of the damage and date.
Next time I'll photograph my luggage as I check it in. To prove it was fine when it was put on the plane. And to show what it looks like if it goes missing.
Jews in China: Kaifeng, Shanghai before WWII and Beijing in 2008
I've recently visited Beijing and with the Olympics being held there later in 2008 many of you may be either visiting China or watching it on TV and reading about it.
KAIFENG
You probably already know about Kaifeng where a Jewish community existed in previous centuries but died out. The little that is left forms the basis of tours for visiting Americans. In London, England, a Chinese kosher restaurant was named after Kaifeng.
SHANGHAI
Beijing and Shanghai have Jewish communities. Shanghai's Jewish Museum in the former Jewish quarter has a permanent collection, temporary exhibitions, and can send you on a walking tour. In Shanghai if you contact a community group you can have a kosher meal at a group get-together.
The best known historic building with Jewish origins is the Peace Hotel on the bund (waterfront). It had a well-known Jazz bar for years. It's Chinese style restaurant featured in films.
A smaller - fewer than fifty bedroom and suites, but equally architecturally stunning hotel, is the Hengshan-Moller Villa, once home of Eric Moller, a British Jew. His daughter dreamed of a fairytale castle, so he built this romantic house to realize her dream. Outside it has gables and a tower with two levels of gables. Rather a surprise, alongside skyscrapers. I found it by accident. When our hire car drove past it, I insisted on stopping to take a look.
The family was originally in shipping so it's full of ship symbols. Later Eric owned a successful racehorse. You see a copper racehorse statue in the garden. I'm checking the facts from the hotel brochure. I brought the brochure back to England.
I had tea in the hotel with an ex-pat friend who has been living in Shanghai. Her American husband was working there.Shanghai has lots of buildings which were former homes of Jewish people or were built by them.
BEIJING
In the hotel I visited in Beijing was surprised to find on the Executive lounge a small library containing a handsome large hardback picture book about the Jews of China. It didn't tell me much I didn't know, although it had lots of good pictures.
You'll find lots of fascinating information if you do an on line search.In Beijing a kosher restaurant recently opened.
If you know any more about the past or future of Jewish communities in China or what tourists can see please let me know. Thanks.
Friday, February 1, 2008
CHINA - BEIJING - GREAT WALL - SHORT WALK
Beijing is big, huge. Ten lane highways leading to Tian An Men Square. Skyscrapers all the way from the airport to the centre, racing along the overpass into the evening traffic jams, or taking the modern toll road, through a gate which has a temple type tiled winged roof. That was the big surprise in January 2008. All modern. Yet so Chinese. Giant skyscraper with what looks like little ancient Chinese temples perched on top.
Fifteen million people. I can't be sure that number is accurate. When I tried to count, the people kept moving.
Skyscrapers Replace Slums
They were getting ready for the Olympic Games in August 2008. Around Tian An Men Square the old Hougangs or slums have been moved. You can still see a few. One storey shacks with winding alleys and scarcely room for one person to walk between. Claustrophobic. You can take tours. We just glimpsed them as we passed through the city on a tour bus.
The people have been moved out. To skyscraper cities on the outskirts of the city. Whilst they might prefer a modern building, it must be disconcerting to be so far from the city centre. Would anybody take the time and touble to match them up with the same neighbours? Or, like Singapore, install shops, doctors, nurseries, libraries and all you need on the ground floor of each development, like the old corner shop, to save travelling. To find out you would have to read magazines about the Asian economy, published in other countries in the region.
Hotels
Raffles Beijing Hotel
On Changan Road, which apparently means Perpetual Peace.
In China the media is censored. No time for dissent. It's a society which values obedience. When I researched the story of the Willow Pattern Plate on the internet, I found a collectors site which said that whilst Britain sees the story as one of romantic lovers reunited for eternity as love birds, orientals would see it as a cautionary tale of how the disobedient eloping couple were caught and condemned to an eternity of only seeing each other as birds.
Jianguogardenhotel.com
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