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    • Day 177

      Budapest —> Vienna, Austria

      September 10, 2023 in Austria ⋅ 🌩️ 30 °C

      We said goodbye to our hostel this morning and checked out before heading to the Grand Synagogue. We bought our tickets and entered the synagogue and Daniel was given a traditional Jewish head covering for the visit to the synagogue.

      As we had learnt a couple of days earlier, this is the largest synagogue in Europe and the second largest in the world, seating up to 3000 people. We had a 45 minute tour included in our ticket which was really informative. Our guide explained that the reason why such a large synagogue was built in a prominent catholic area is a very interesting story. In the early 1800s, Jews fled Jerusalem because of Roman attempts to conquer the city. Some fled south east towards Asia but most went northwest and many stayed in Hungary because the king at the time was accepting of Jewish people.

      The Jewish people had money and wanted to assimilate with the local Catholics and hence built a synagogue which looks very much like a church, with an altar at the front, lines of pews and even pulpits. This had the double meaning of wanting Roman Catholics to accept Jews because, if a catholic were to enter the synagogue, they would see that Jews are similar to Catholics and hence not the threat that many thought they were. For this reason, the synagogue is not a traditional Jewish synagogue.

      The construction of the synagogue only took 5 years from 1854-1859 and was funded by selling the 3000 seats before construction had commenced. We saw engraved names at the front of some seats which were sold at that time and passed down by generations of families.

      After learning the history of the synagogue itself, we learnt of the more devastating history associated with antisemitism. Next to the synagogue in the adjacent courtyard was originally a beautiful pool, but following WW2, been filled in to form the 24 mass graves containing over 2000 people killed during WWII in the Jewish ghettos due to the horrific conditions at that time. Over 1000 of these people are unidentified. Once the Soviet army liberated Hungary, the bodies were placed in these graves and have remained there for nearly 80 years. It was very sad hearing our guide speak about this history and the devastation that was caused.

      Behind this courtyard, there is a much more ‘traditional’ synagogue which was built to commentate Jewish WWI soldiers. Underneath the courtyard/synagogue, there is a very moving photo exhibition telling the story of Jewish growth, decline, oppression and liberation within Hungary. There is also a beautiful garden which honours people who helped Jewish people during the Shoah (the Holocaust) and contains a metal tree with leaves containing the names of Hungarian Jews who were killed during this terrible time period.

      We also visited a musesum which houses a lot of interesting Jewish objects across time and details the various festivals and traditions in the Jewish religion. It was very interesting.

      After finishing at the synagogue and musesum, we had some lángos and traditional goulash for lunch which was very filling and delicious!

      We headed back to the hostel to get our luggage bags and headed to the train station to catch a train to Austria! It was about a half an hour walk in the heat but we are very used to walking around with our big backpacks on by now!

      We arrived in Vienna around 8pm and made our way to our cool hostel. For the first couple of nights, we are staying in a Japanese-style space capsule near the train station! Such an interesting and unique experience! We had showers, got ready for lift off and went to sleep.
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    • Day 17

      Besuch auf dem Zentralfriedhof

      April 20 in Austria ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

      Heute bei noch kälteren Temperaturen und Wind 💨 mit der U - und S- Bahn nach Simmering zur Ruhestätte vieler berühmter Menschen…
      Sehr großzügig, weitläufig und doch auch beeindruckend!

    • Day 1

      Fahrt nach Ungarn

      May 18, 2018 in Austria ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

      Zsuzsi Oma's 70. Genburtstag fällt genau auf den Anfang der Pfingsferien. Daher geht es heute zuerst nach Ungarn, damit wir ihr morgen gratulieren und mit der gesamten Familie feiern können. Durch die Dachbox haben wir keine Platzprobleme - herzlichen Dank an den großzügigen Nachbarn. :) Die Fahrt ist länger als es uns lieb ist, aber die Kinder genießen es trotzdem.Read more

    • Vienna - day 17

      April 28, 2019 in Austria ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

      A bit windy, but around 18 degrees

      We have both been sleeping really well in Nico. I didn’t actually wake up this morning until 8am, so a 9 hour sleep with no pit stops. Pretty unheard of for me, and I was very surprised at the time. But feeling quite on the mend now, and didn’t take anything to help with symptoms today. So we left the campsite around 10 with our bikes all ready to catch the train – first time I have done that with a bike. It wasn’t too hard as the carriage that could take bikes was clearly marked. We had to change trains once, and then we were in Vienna. It was a bit different taking the bikes up and down the escalators too, but we coped admirably.

      So then we were out in the sunlight deciding where to go. We had a few places in mind, and chose to go to the Hundertwasser village and museum. When I worked in Whangarei there was a lot of discussion about Hundertwasser as there had been fundraising for a building, and it was quite a contentious issue. I now have more of an appreciation of how wonderful his art is, and what an unusual approach he had to life. The toilets in Kawakawa are of his design, and I was asked if I had been to them today. We bought the audio cues at the museum, and that had heaps of information about him. It was great cos you could read it on the screen as well as listen to it (could scroll through it very quickly, and there were lots of pages). His art is very bright and vibrant, and not restricted to paintings. In Austria he has designed the exterior of a refuse incinerator plant which looks fantastic, and also came up with the concept of tree tenants which had some wonderful words with it which I can’t find – about having trees in your houses which don’t need to pay any rent as they pay in many other ways. We were there for quite a long time as both really enjoyed his art and concepts. His art reminds me a bit of Gaudi in Barcelona, and it was great to see examples of both everywhere in their home cities. We had lunch there – kumara chips with guacamole (odd, but nice), and some beef goulash with bread and a gherkin (yes, very odd!).

      Then it was off to try and find the Belvedere Palace and baroque gardens. It was a bit of fun riding around Vienna with one hand off the handlebars with googlemaps on my phone directing me left and right and all over the place. We stopped and took pics at a couple of places with stunning churches, and managed to find the gardens. That was pretty spectacular, and a very popular place for runners. We took lots of photos, and I have been trying to perfect my posing technique – there are lot of examples for me to follow! I think people think we are a bit mad, but it is a bit of fun.

      So after leaving the gardens, we went on a bit more of a tiki tour and saw a lovely fountain. Shortly after that as we were biking down a road, I chose to ride up a sloped path onto the footpath, while Jody thought she would be clever and jump her bike up a really high kerb. Unfortunately she was going a bit slow for that, and her front wheel landed in the dip, so she flew over the handlebars. After ascertaining that she was ok, I was convulsed with laughter cos it really was the most ill-timed jump. I was riding beside her at the time, so had a great view. Unfortunately when she got on her bike again, she realised that the derailer was poking into her spokes, so it wasn’t really rideable. So we found a place to lock the bikes up and went walking. Later on we devised a temporary solution with a New World bag and some dental floss to tie it up (kiwi ingenuity to the fore!).

      The we walked to Stephanplatz which is a bit of a big square with an extremely high church (maybe as high as the Sagreda Familia in Barcelona?). We walked around that, and had a look in the church. Then walked to another square and into another church where they were having a service. The priest was the one leading the singing which I thought was interesting. Then we decided to have an early dinner before taking the train. Jody had some enchilada type thingeys, and I had beef spare ribs which came with chips. Everything seems to be served with chips here. Last night we had Wiener Snitzel at the camp ground which came with a side of a potato dish as well as some chips. Then it was back to the bikes, and trying to work out how to get back to Nico. The train system here is similar to the London underground with a few interlinking lines. Our campground is beyond the Vienna lines so we had to take 2 Vienna trains, and then 1 regional one. It wasn’t too hard to work it out though, and we were back by around 8pm. Really enjoying the good wifi here, and are both downloading the NZDAC 2017 playlist form Spotify.

      There is a Giant bike shop next door, and that is our plan for the morning. It doesn’t open until 10am though, so we possibly might be staying here for another day. There are scooters for hire in Vienna, so maybe we could try them out – I have told Jody that if we do, I think she should take her bike helmet. She has chosen only to tell me now that she is a bit accident prone on holidays! Next time she looks like she is doing something unwise I might be yelling NEIN NEIN at her!
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    • Day 11

      15 minutos para Viena

      August 22, 2015 in Austria ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

      Vamos en el tren a Viena y llegaremos en un cuarto de hora. Es un tren alemán que va a Munich y que se puede coger sin reservar el sitio. Eso hemos hecho sobre todo porque no nos daba tiempo (las taquilleras húngaras son super lentas...) y por eso estamos pagando cuatro euros y medio por dos cafés asquerosos, así nos hemos podido sentar en el vagón cafetería. Esperemos que las maletas sigan vivas...Read more

    • Day 117

      Geocaching in Wien Tag 1

      December 8, 2023 in Austria ⋅ ☁️ 1 °C

      Ein verlängertes Wochenende in Wien genießen...

      Gestern gings hopphopp nach der Arbeit nach Wien und heute waren wir den ganzen Tag unterwegs...

      Haben die Augarten Manufaktur (tolles Porzelan, kennt man ja) von außen bewundert... okay ich konnts nicht lassen und hab durch die Fenster spioniert.. hab natürlich nichts entdeckt, aber cool wars schon. Ganz in der Nähe befand sich sogar das Filmarchiv. Klar Feiertags ist alles geschlossen, aber könnte man ja mal reinschneien und vorbeischauen. Immer wieder faszinierend wo einen die Labs so hinführen. Die Caches haben wir heute links liegen lassen, es war uns ein kleinwenig zu kalt 😁.
      Dann noch einiges abgearbeitet und eingesammelt... Hundertwasserhäuser lagen unter anderem auch auf unserem Weg. Thalia geht auch immer.
      Glühwein und Kiachl beim Art Adventsmarkt genossen und weiter durch Wien gestolpert auf der Suche nach Infos, Hinweisen und so.
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