• Bruce Winters
  • Karen Winters
  • Bruce Winters
  • Karen Winters

NY-Prague/Budapest-DC

We are finally getting Lee back to Prague after his semester overseas was cut short due to COVID. This time we are joining him in order to share the full experience with him. The trip is: 7 days-NY, 6 days-Prague, 6 days- Budapest, and 8 days-NY/DC. Læs mere
  • PRAGUE- Arrived and Dinner

    6. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌙 43 °F

    A mere 5 years and 8 months ago, Lee arrived in Prague. As soon as he got to the apartment where he was staying, while he was studying abroad in Prague, he ate his first meal at the restaurant that was on the first floor of his apartment - Pivovarsky Klub. ... Tonight, our first night in Prague, we just arrived, and again he ate his first meal there.
    https://pivo-klub.cz/menus/en_menu_2025-02.pdf
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  • Astronomical clock

    7. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☀️ 50 °F

    The Old Town Hall was established in 1338 with a beautiful Gothic tower with a bay chapel and a unique astronomical clock, the Orloj. An icon of the Czech Republic, a national cultural heritage asset, a symbol of Prague's history and the oldest institution of Czech self-government. Although the clock performs every hour between 8 am and 11 pm, as the twelve apostles appear (SEE VIDEO), and the astrology calendar appears below, the real show is the various clocks within the clock and viewing the various ways the clock tells time.

    Here is a somewhat "easy" explanation of these clocks created from this 1410 mechanism. There are three sets of numbers on the dial: Gothic numerals show Old Czech time in the outer black circle, Roman numerals show the current time and Arabic numerals show you Babylonian time in blue.

    Colors: Blue is the daylight when the sun is above horizon, Black field is the astronomical night Orange field represents the actual local horizon and dusk/dawn. The center of the whole clock (where all the hands cross) is the Earth and position of Prague on the Northern Hemisphere.

    One of the black poles carries a symbol of a golden hand (on the same pole is also a symbol of a sun). The symbol of the sun is moving up and down during the day – according to the real position of the sun in the sky above you: when it’s in the blue field, it’s a daytime, when the sun is in the red field it´s either dawn or dusk, when in the black field it means it´s night. It also shows you what zodiac sign we are in and also a date. The black metal ball is rotating according to the current moon phase.

    Inside the colorful dial you can also see another circle – golden one with black background – depicting all 12 zodiac signs. Around each sign you can also see such tiny golden beams, fields (each symbolizes 5 days).
    The Roman numerals and the golden hand will show you the current time.

    Old Czech time is the type of time used in the Czech lands when the Astronomical Clock was constructed (around 1410). The old Czech time shows you how much daylight is left until the sunset (since sunlight time was always critical to working). It had 24 hours but didn´t start with the midnight, it always started with the sunset. Babylonian time is one of the oldest times in the world and this clock is the only one in the world that can measure it. It´s calculated from the sunrise until the sunset (1 – 12 hours). How to read it? Search for the symbol of the sun and then look at the black Arabic number above it.

    The symbol of the sun is on the same pole as the pointing fingers. The sun is going up and down as the sun in the sky. It also sits in the current zodiac sign. For more info, go to Orloj.eu
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  • Prague-A City with a "Difficult" History

    7. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☀️ 50 °F

    11-17-25 Today seemed to be the appropriate day to be posting our first Prague trip footprint as the Czech Republic marks the commemoration of November 17, 1989 (8 days after the fall of the Berlin Wall), the Velvet Revolution, that brought freedom & democracy back to Prague after 41 years of communism and showed the power of society to stand up and fight for what’s right. On that day, Prague students organized a peaceful march that would not end until half-million Czechs filled the streets and finally did successfully overthrow the communist regime in Czechoslovakia. In 1990, the country’s first open and free national elections were held.

    Note: The students on November 17, 1989 were also celebrating that on that date 50 years earlier (1939) students who were protesting the Nazi occupation had been suppressed and subsequently, many universities closed for years and students sent to concentration camps. Sadly, in 1968, the communists took leadership of Czechoslovakia from Stalinists, with the people thinking it was “preferable”, but it just became more of an authoritarian communist regime until 1989.
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  • "Old Town" & Charles Bridge

    7. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☀️ 52 °F

    CHARLES BRIDGE
    Prague’s oldest bridge was built to replace the Judith Bridge that had been badly damaged by floods in 1342. Construction of the new bridge, originally called Stone Bridge or Prague Bridge, began in 1357 under the auspices of Charles IV and was finished in 1402.

    Since 1870 the bridge over Vltava River has been called Charles Bridge. It is built of sandstone blocks, flanked at each end by fortified towers (Lesser Town Bridge Towers, Old Town Bridge Tower). From 1683 to 1928, 30 statues of saints were carved to decorate the bridge.

    Palindrome
    The Charles Bridge was not "opened" on a single day but its construction began with the laying of the first stone at 5:31 a.m. on July 9, 1357, at the direction of Emperor Charles IV. Charles IV, a believer in numerology, chose this date and time because the sequence of odd numbers: 1357 (year) 9 (day) 7 (month) 5:31 (time), which by the way, forms a palindrome, which he believed would give the bridge strength (prior bridges had been flooded out). 1-3-5-7-9-7-5-3-1

    Charles Bridge Guarded by 30 Statues:
    One of the interesting Statues is The Calvary Sculpture (see photo):
    The sculpture from the 14th Century was the last item to be installed before the bridge’s opening, as a key sculpture for those to always see the crucifix when crossing the famous bridge. The statue and cross surrounded by sculptures evolved and was changed many times over the centuries. It is surrounded by the Hebrew words קדוש קדוש קדוש יהוה צבאות (Holy, Holy, Holy is Jehovah of hosts) from Isaiah 6:3. Sadly put there to embarrass Jews, one of the stories, is that in 1696, a Jewish communal leader named Elias Backoffen was forced to pay for the inscription after being accused of blasphemy. This prayer is very meaningful to all religions.

    Interestingly, on the “Lord God of Hosts” section of the Hebrew text on the cross there is one character which is upside-down. The א aleph (letter) in the word "Tzva’ot" is backwards, as the letter was removed by the Nazis during the occupation of Czechoslovakia, and later mis-placed after the war. In response to petitions from North American Rabbis regarding the inscription, in 2009, explanatory plaques were added in English, Czech and Hebrew.

    In Judaism, the Kedushah, the solemn Hebrew prayer incorporates verses from the Book of Isaiah, the Book of Ezekiel, and Psalm 146. In the silent Amidah part of Kedushah the prayer incorporates this important line. Liturgically for Christians this line is in the Sanctus and Benedictus at the Eucharist. This statue now becames a monument of the horrors of antisemitism and continues to be a great symbol of reconciliation according to the Bishop in Prague.
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  • Prague at Night & Interesting Kampa Isl

    7. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☀️ 54 °F

    - Prague at Night!
    - John Lennon Wall is the only historic wall with “legal graffiti used for demonstrations related to peace and local and global causes such as global warming. The wall had love poems and short messages against communism in the 60’s and later a tribute to Lennon after his death in 1980. The Czech secret police covered it up many times, but protesters came out and re-graffiti it with political messages.
    - Mission Impossible – In the Tom Cruise 1996 movie he is shot off the Charles Bridge after running up these steps onto Charles Bridge.
    - Historic Mill Water Wheel
    - Statue of Rabbi Judah Loew ben Bezalel, a Jewish philosopher, scholar and mathematician
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  • Choco Cafe

    7. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☀️ 54 °F

    In the historic center of Prague, Choco Cafe produces chocolate, cakes, macaroons, and cookies every day for 15 years. We had hot chocolates there that were made from chocolate that can only be found in Peru & Guatemala.

    https://www.choco-cafe.cz/?srsltid=AfmBOorj-1kq…
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  • Shabbat Dinner & Services

    7. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌙 50 °F

    We went to the High Synagogue for Services and V Kolkovne Restaurant for traditional Czech dinner (highly recommended). https://vkolkovne.kolkovna.cz/en/

    We arrived at the Jewish Quarter which still has 6 remaining working historic Synagogues within a few blocks (the Old-New, Maisel, Spanish, Pinkas, Klausen, and High Synagogues). Before experiencing their Orthodox Service, we did have some mystery finding the Synagogue. We had been pre-confirmed with the Synagogues' Security before leaving the USA but the Synagogue entrance was “difficult to find”. Finally, Karen went into a Jewish store to ask and after being grilled about how she knew there were Services and at what time and where, was told secretly in a whisper to go out and make the first two left turns and wait there. We found ourselves in front of the High Synagogue but no obvious way to get in. An armed Security person came up behind us, asked some questions, looked at our passports and then checked a list on his phone for our name, and then finally let us into another secure area inside and up to the Sanctuary for Services. Security is high but it was worth the effort and very interesting experiencing Services for Shabbat.

    The Synagogue was dedicated in 1568 and the original High Renaissance style was modified over the year to a more modern Gothic Revival look. After some period of reconstruction after a fire, it was opened in 1883 until 1941 when it started being used as a warehouse during German occupation and then communist rule. From 1950-1992 it was the National Jewish Museum and the chapel finally reopened in 1997 where Services are currently held.
    The building is also a midrasha, for post- high school woman to have a place to study Torah (like a yeshiva).

    https://www.kehilaprag.cz/en/page/rabbinate
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  • Prague CASTLE

    8. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☀️ 43 °F

    On our second full day in Prague we went on another walking tour, this time focused on the Prague Castle and Castle District. We began at the Josef Manes Bridge (the first downstream bridge from the Charles) named for the famous painter. His famous Czech paintings includes many landscapes of the bridge and the scenery across the river. We proceeded by tram across the river and up to the castle to spend a few hours on a walking tour exploring the grounds and the famous buildings build over centuries, built in many different styles by rulers and artists of the day. We also saw the castle and the changing of the guard and got wonderful views back of the Old City skyline. Some of the places that we visited included:

    Strahov (guard) Monastery and library: founded in 1143 at a site where guards stood watch and formed when a community of monks from Steinfeld in the Rhine Valley settled at Strahov. One of the oldest and most important monasteries in the Czech Republic, the Romanesque Basilica built in the 12th century and was one of Europe’s most extensive Romanesque buildings at the time and became a center of knowledge and spiritual life, with a Baroque library (see photo). Many prominent Czech scholars and intellectuals studied and worked there. It has also been the site of many important historical events, including the Velvet Revolution in 1989 (see yesterdays’ posting). In addition to the Gothic and Classical styles, there are Baroque style elements (ornate decoration, curved lines, and dramatic lighting) in the monastery’s design.

    St. Vitus Cathedral is the largest and the most important temple in Prague. Apart from religious services, coronations of Czech kings and queens also took place here. The cathedral is a place of burial of several patron saints, sovereigns, noblemen and archbishops. The precious Bohemian crown jewels, including the St. Wenceslas crown, royal scepter, and coronation cloak, are safely stored inside a chamber in St. Vitus Cathedral. NOTE: To ensure their safety, the chamber door and iron safe have seven locks, each held by a different key holder, such as the president and prime minister. Accessing the jewels requires the presence of all key holders, and only the president can authorize their public exhibition, which happens only on special occasions. The centerpiece of the cathedral is Alphonse Mucha's masterful 1931 Art Nouveau window depicting the saints Methodius and Cyril, widely considered the fathers of Slavic-style Christianity. The historic heart of the church is the fancy Wenceslas Chapel. St. Wenceslas, patron saint of the Czech nation united the Czech people back in the 10th century, developed art and culture here, and made Prague's castle a center of Czech government and he remains a icon of Czech unity whenever the nation has to rally.

    Hradčanské Square consists of several historical houses and palaces. It is connected to the castle courtyards. The Prague Castle (actually a collection of palaces, churches and gardens) is the largest castle complex not only in the Czech Republic, but anywhere in the world covering approximately 110 acres (according to the Guinness Book of World Records, Prague Castle is the largest coherent castle complex in the world still in use). The castle (a UNESCO World Heritage site) was formerly the seat of the kings of Bohemia for over 1000 years and is currently the official residence of the president of the Czech Republic. Prague Castle was founded around 880 by Prince Bořivoj of the Premyslid Dynasty Prague is one of Europe's best-preserved cities, spared from any bombings.

    The castle has a 1,500-foot-long series of courtyards, churches, and palaces. The famous Slovenian architect Josip Plečnik was responsible for extensive renovations in the time of the First Republic (1918-1938). Prague Castle is home to four churches: St. Vitus Cathedral, St. George's Basilica, All Saints Church, and the Holy Cross Chapel. All four churches are paired with four palaces - the Old Royal Palace, Belvedere, Lobkowicz, and New Royal Palace. These palaces, constructed one after the other over centuries, are quite majestic and tied to religious power.

    The alchemical secrets of Prague Castle were important during the reign of Emperor Rudolf II in the late 16th century, Prague Castle became a hub of alchemy, astrology, and occult sciences. The emperor invited alchemists to uncover the secrets of transmutation and eternal life. Hidden chambers, cryptic symbols, and legends of the Golem add layers of intrigue, making the castle not just a royal seat but a center of mystical experimentation and mystery.
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  • Changing of the Guard at the Castle

    8. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☀️ 50 °F

    Changing of the Guard ceremony at the Czernin Palace is daily (yes, the guards are on duty for 24 hour shifts) and is a ceremony where they march from the Powder Tower to the Main Courtyard to swap places with the guards on duty (music too). We were told that the uniforms of Prague Castle Guards were created by Oscar-winning designer Theodor Pistek, who worked on the set of 1984's Amadeus.

    Changing of the guards includes a grand ceremony at the Czernin Palace, which was built in 1660 by Humprecht Jan Czernin, the largest of the Baroque palaces of Prague, and now serves as the offices of the Czechoslovak. Old Royal Palace is the original residence building, mostly wooden, and was built at the turn of the 9th and 10th century on this location. It was prince Soběslav in the 12th century who had a stone Romanesque palace built right next to a new fortification wall. Romanesque-style buildings from the 10th century with Gothic modifications of the 14th century, the Old Royal Palace, was the seat of Bohemian princes since the 12th century. Back in the day, the palace's large hall was big enough for jousts, Until the late 1990s, this is where parliament gathered to elect the president. (SEE 3 VIDEOS).

    We were told about the site’s “fame” as the world's most famous political defenestration When two regional governors for the Catholic Habsburgs clamped down on religious freedom in 1618, angry Czech Protestant nobles poured into their office and threw the two Catholic governors out the window. The two survived (many stories of how they were saved), but the incident kicked off the Thirty Years' War. This is where we get the term "defenestration," meaning tossing someone out of a window.

    All Saints' Chapel, was built on the eastern side which in 1185. The Lobkowicz Palace is a part of the Prague Castle complex and is only privately owned building and museum. This palace was built in the second half of the 16th century by the Czech nobleman Jaroslav of Pernštejn.
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  • Castle Grounds and Gardens

    8. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ⛅ 50 °F

    The Prague Castle ramparts are a series of fortifications that now form the foundation for the Gardens on the south side where we had views of the city. A tropical garden within the castle, in the 16th century, Emperor Rudolf II introduced tropical and citrus plants to Prague Castle.

    Our guide showed us drawings of the evolution of the Castle over the Centuries (see photos). And of course...on sacred Castle grounds there is a Starbucks. Note; the line for getting in and buying a drink was as long as some of those to get into the Castle!
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  • KAFKA & The NARROWEST Street

    8. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ⛅ 50 °F

    The Golden Lane in Prague Castle has rows of tiny houses. In the late 16th century, Franz Kafka lived here (1916-17). We spent 2+ hours in the Kafka Museum, which attempts to offer an insight into the world of the famous Prague native Franz Kafka (1883 – 1924), “some say” one of the most important figures in world literature of the 20th century. INTERESTING?!
    See 3 "Kafka Head" Videos.

    Lee “insisted” we explore the Vinarna Certovka, the narrowest street of Prague, which has a traffic light system and was a fun experience to walk through. (SEE VIDEO)
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  • Views of the Lights on the Vltava River

    8. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☁️ 43 °F

    We ate at the Bageterie Boulevard, the original Czech bageterie and one of Lee’s favorite lunch/dinner spots while going to school in Prague in 2020.

  • The Jewish Quarter- The Golden Age

    9. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌧 43 °F

    A recent report indicates that anti-Semitic incidents in Czechia reached their highest level in the past year with over an 8% increase over the prior year. We had a wonderful visit to the Jewish Quarter without incidence but as posted on Friday at Services, we saw increase security everywhere we went.

    This morning, we walked around Old Town getting an overview of the Jewish Quarter, seeing the Jewish Town Hall with the Hebrew clock that runs counterclockwise (right to left like Hebrew), Ceremonial Funeral Hall, and few of the Synagogues that we will visit tomorrow. Today, we went into the Maisel and Pinkas Synagogues and visited the Old Jewish Cemetery.

    Jews were in this area from the 9th century and although by the 12th century there was already a large Jewish settlement, it was in the walled off ghetto area, attempting to keep Jews separate. In the 13th century the Old-New Synagogue was built, but by the 14th century Jews had been expelled from Morovia and Bohemia (the Czech Republic). Finally the Jews returned and by the 16th century Prague had the largest Jewish population in Europe with many members of the Community in the money lending business. In 1781 the Emperor Josef II took down the walls and ended discrimination against Jews here. Many of the medieval buildings were eventually replaced with modern more affluent buildings but the old Synagogues remained with a Community population of over 55,000 Jews which grew to over 90,000. Sadly, only 10,000 survived the Holocaust with about 7,000 currently living in Prague.

    We visited the Maisel Synagogue built in the 16th century, established by the Maisel family who invested heavily in the Jewish Community during the growing Golden Age here. The building now provides an interesting history of Jews in Bohemia. Our photos show some of the items we have not seen in Jewish life in the US (i.e., the symbols of the Jewish Butchers and Cobblers Guilds). There was a useful interactive map that shows the changes in the Jewish Community over time after the pogroms, expulsions and fires that destroyed and rebuilt the Community. Many traditional Jewish objects and Torah mantels, havdalah sets, yads, etc are displayed in the showcases. Rare Rabbi transcripts (1570's) and books are also displayed. There is display on Jewish mysticism and the stories of the Golem. This Synagogue also became the “storage facility” for many Jewish objects in addition to Torah Scrolls during the Nazi time. [See the interesting discovery in our June 2025 trip blog to London and the Westminster Synagogue and Memorial Scrolls.]

    There were many stories about artifacts here. For example, the Torah ark curtain you see me with is Velvet, silk, appliqué, embroidered with river pearls and Bohemian garnets, refurbished in 1767. In 1664, Maisel's estate won a long-time legal dispute over property that had been confiscated by the state in 1601. More than 30 years later, the curtain and mantle were paid for by private donors to buy back from the owners for the Synagogue. Then during the Nazi period it disappeared again and was finally obtained after fighting for it after the war.
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  • PINKAS Synagogue- Memorial

    9. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌧 43 °F

    Immediately after German troops crossed the Czech-German border the early morning of March 15, 1939, Jews were treated poorly.. Of the total number of 118,310 persons that were registered as "Protectorate Jews" about 80,000 after the definitive shutting off of all routes of escape. From the first day in the "Protectorate" the Nazi authorities enforced a tough repressive policy against the Jews and as of September 1, 1941, all Jews were required to wear a yellow Star of David.

    We then went to the Pinkas Synagogue, also from the 16th century, a Gothic structure and now a memorial to the Holocaust victims from Prague. It is a beautiful building with vaulted ceilings and stained glass. In response to the Nazi's attempt to obliterate Jews, this memorial was created to save these names and remember them forever. All the walls are covered with the hand-written names of 77,297 Czech Jews lost with their birthdates and date of death. In the upper galleries there are some of the originally written names that are aged and/or worn off from the 1950s or when the Communists took over and removed some since this project began. In 1989, and post-communist times, these names were rewritten on the walls of the main Sanctuary. As you walk through the memorial, you hear the names read and a Rabbi singing Kaddish and El Maleh Rachamim (memorial prayer, God full of compassion).

    The town of Terezin - originally a military fortress from the period of Joseph II was converted at the end of 1941 by the Nazis into a transit concentration camp where Jews, primarily from the "Protectorate", were to be gathered before being deported further on to the ghettos and extermination camps of the East. The Nazis wanted to create at Terezín a "model ghetto" whose example would demonstrate their benevolence toward an "inferior race". Before the eyes of the international public they sought to conceal the road to death, and they presented it as an idyllic spa resort. Terezin appeared to be more bearable, primarily owing to its propaganda purpose, in comparison to the other ghettos in the eastern occupied territories, those imprisoned here were still exposed to all the hardships of camp life - starvation, malnutrition, poor hygenic conditions, infection and the tragic lack of medicine. On the upper floor there is a permanent exhibit of children’s art from the Terezin camp. Over 15,000 children passed through here and of the 8,000 very young children that were kept there 142 survived (not one under 14 years old). While they lived there, their teacher had them create this artwork (4,500 pictures) to be able to escape the camps … at least in their minds. The artwork was around themes such as dreams, memories and biblical scenes.

    In the courtyard there is also an old Mikva (ritual bath) from the early 16th century.
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  • Old Jewish Cemetery

    9. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌧 43 °F

    The Old Jewish Cemetery is an important historical monument of Prague’s Jewish Town and one of the oldest cemeteries in Prague. The oldest tombstone is the 1439 stone of Rabbi Avigdor Kar. The most recent and last grave was excavated for Mojžíš Lipman Beck in 1787.

    Next, we went to the Old Jewish Cemetery where there are 12,000 tombstones dated from 1439-1787. There are over 400,000 ritually buried graves and remains. So many times it had to gain space (since graves are not allowed to be dug up) by providing a new layer of soil here since they were often buried up to 12 people deep. At the cemetery, you are several feet above the street and medieval levels. Retaining walls are necessary to hold the soil and the graves in place. It is the resting place of many prominent rabbis and scholars. I don’t feel it is appropriate to mention any names since every name is important. As far as tombstone designs are concerned, the cemetery has a large range of styles from the 15th (rectangular and engraved), 16th (marble and relief lettering) and 17th (larger) centuries, from Baroque to those more common from the last half of the 19th century.
    The animal symbols often represent family names or metaphors for their abilities. Often professions are also represented for scissors (tailor), forceps (doctor), mortar and pestle, books and musical instruments.
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  • CHIMNEY CAKES ..."borrowed" from Hungary

    9. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌧 43 °F

    The Kürtöskalács, or chimney cake, is a traditional Hungarian pastry that is wrapped around a wooden spool and slowly turned over an open fire. Its origins are from Transylvania, but they’re now celebrated as the oldest pastry in Hungary, and they’re often served as street food. The dough is coated with oil and sugar, and when baked it creates a crunchy, sugary outside crust, not unlike a hot pretzel, with a soft doughy inside.

    "SOMEHOW" in the last 10-20 years or so, "Trdelník" (the wooden tool the cake ingredients are wrapped around during baking) became the name and popularity of a Czech treat when Chimney Cakes which arrived from Hungary and became a Czech sensation.
    SEE THE VIDEO!
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  • "ALTERNATIVE" City of Prague

    9. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌧 43 °F

    Art in Prague during the communist era was dominated by socialist realism, a state-mandated style that promoted communist ideology, but an underground and unofficial art scene also existed. Other artists found ways to continue their work in secret, which has lead to new art forms that were revealed in this fun tour today. Besides the 3 of us there were only 3 other people. The guide who has created and given this tour over 12 years was able to give us an in-depth view of the evolving art scene (and then we all went out for a beer).

    After learning about the art history in the City, the underground subcultures and street art, we began with some interesting art that still was left from the communist times. We saw a 120-year-old mural, the one store that sold art during these times and other murals and street art. We then learned about the local music scene and the current venues.

    Then we took a tram to Prague 7 – one of the coolest neighborhoods in Europe!
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  • Petr Sokol & Galleries

    9. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌧 45 °F

    Petr Sokol, famous left handed artist, who created much of the street art and was known for his style. He became very successful and gave back to the Community by creating galleries to display local art.

    Another visit was made to what was a former slaughterhouse complex now becoming artists galleries of all types. We visited a location with unique clay sculptures and a contemporary art gallery.
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  • Other Alternative Artwork of Prague

    9. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌧 45 °F

    We had a relaxing break at a hidden artsy cafe where Czech designers showcase their work. In this fun neighborhood there are creative factory spaces, cozy cafés, and working art studios. We continued our walk through the neighborhood with more street art, and interesting architecture.

    One unique place was Second Culture- A venue for alternative views of privacy and anti-establishment rheteric (the flicker between freedom and control). Events include: included the Black Swan Security Congress, Hackers Congress, Prague DeFi Summit, Web3 Privacy, as well as the location (since 2014) of Bitcoin Coffee (the only coffee shop in Central Europe that accepted cryptocurrencies exclusively). "This is where we examine systems — to dismantle them, fork them, or remake them."
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  • Cross Club!

    9. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ 🌧 43 °F

    We ended the tour at an original underground venue made from OLD BUS parts, a techno art spaces. We had a beer at the Cross Club with our guide!!!

    The Cross club is a uniquely designed multicultural center, a crossroads of cultures. In addition to a bar, there are unconventional music genres both in live and electronic form. The club presents bands and artists from the Czech republic as well as from abroad. In addition to theatrical performances here, authors read their works, there are screenings of alternative films as well as current movies, documentary films and discussions, and theatre performances for children.Læs mere

  • ALCHEMIST of Prague

    9. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☁️ 43 °F

    "Alchemist of Prague" typically refers to the period in the 16th and 17th centuries when Emperor Rudolf II's court in Prague was a hub for alchemists who sought the Philosopher's Stone (the secret to eternal youth) and were supported by the emperor.

    The Alchemist began to create cocktails for the Emperor. and just prior to his death, he had hidden the greatest secret in the world in his drinks. We went one evening to be tempted by these drinks and to try and discover the secret. This bar was one of Lee's favorite "hangouts" while living in Prague in 2020 but after many visits he still did not know th secret.
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  • Jewish Quarter-Klausen, OldNew Synagogue

    10. november 2025, Tjekkiet ⋅ ☁️ 45 °F

    We began our day early in the Jewish Quarter with a visit to the Klausen, Old-New and then the Spanish Synagogues. Although all three were within blocks of each other, they were very different and very interesting. Next, we were off on an adventure to see the school where Lee attended classes in the spring off 2020 during his college semester abroad in Prague. Our next stop was the famous Kafka monument and tribute … one of a kind. Our adventure continued when we went for a tour of Pilsner Beer.

    Jews were in this area from the 9th and 10th century and by the 12th century there were large Jewish settlements in the royal areas. In the 13th century the Old-New Synagogue built, but by the 14th and 15th century Jews were expelled from Morovia and Bohemia for the first time. Fast forward to 1867 when the Medieval Jewish ghetto was the hub of Jewish life with hundred of homes. Jews were considered equal in the Community in the Old Town until the ghetto became rundown and then in 1897 it was destroyed and rebuilt into new streets and neo-Baroque buildings. Most of previous quarter had been eliminated in the process including 3 Synagogues and 10 other Houses of Worship. What remained was only the 6 Synagogues we visited and the Jewish Town Hall. In the writings of Kafka, he talks about walking through this changing neighborhood mostly half built in his time, but finally at a time when persecution had changed seemingly forever against Jews. Who knew what was about to happen in the 1930’s with Nazi control and then later communist control until 1989!

    The Jewish Townhall is the center of the Jewish self-government of the Jewish Community of Prague and the seat of the Chief Rabbinate of Prague supporting and providing education for the youth of Prague.
    In our visit to the Klausen Synagogue we saw artifacts of the Jewish Community and history of Jews in the region. A very interesting exhibit on The Golden Age of the Jews of al-Andalus' is here (I have 9 pages of notes but too much to post here, call if your interested) about the daily life of Jews in medieval Europe. Between the 10th and 13th centuries, the Iberian Peninsula experienced an exceptional growth in culture and economic prosperity and religious tolerance. This led to the philosophical and poetic works by Jewish authors we still read and admire (such as Shlomo in Gabirol, Yehuda Halevi, and Maimonides).

    The exhibit traces the Jews on the Iberian Peninsula from the Almohads (12th century) with valuable items from the Cairo Geniza, a collection of 400,000 documents about life of medieval Jewish communities (Geniza means treasury, and is a place for storing sacred Jewish texts that can no longer be read, because they are too old or have fallen out of use). The Geniza of Cairo Synagogues included items of everyday life: shopping lists, marriage contracts, divorce deeds, children's school exercises, Arabic stories, Muslim philosophy, medical books, magical amulets, business letters, and accounts from across the Islamic world..

    Maimonides (1138-1204), is the most important figure of Andalusi and medieval Judaism, where he learned the principles of Judaism from his father, Maimon, judge of the Jews of Cordoba. After the Almohad invasion, the family moved to Fez (Morocco). The poetry of the Jews of al-Andalus is among the richest in the history of Hebrew culture in particular and of Iberian culture in general. The Hebrew language and its poetry had always had religious associations. However, the Jews of al-Andalus used Arabic poetry techniques making Hebrew an important part of the culture. In al-Andalus, Hebrew was reserved for poetry, while prose was written in Judeo-Arabic.

    The Old-New Synagogue Gothic medieval built in 1270 is the centerpiece of the Jewish Community and other additions until 1732 after several fires and floods. According to many accounts, the stone of the Temple in Jerusalem were brought here by angels and excavated here and were to be the base of this Synagogue until the time when a 3rd Temple is built in Jerusalem. The name OldNew or alt-neu-schul (German and Yiddish) means “on-condition” of the 3rd Temple. It suffered from pogroms in the14th and 15th centuries and as a refuse for Jews that were caught and sometimes killed there. Ironically it survived the Nazi era because this was to be the museum of the “Extinct Jewish Race”. The money box at the entrance, used to collect “special” taxes from Jews, was from the 17th century. Interestingly, the “awkward” ceiling has 5 ribbed vaulting because although the architects of the time were experts at building 4 ribbed ceilings, there was concern that it looked like a cross.

    The Golem- 15th century Rabbi Lev came from the Vitava river clay, the parchment inserted in the Golem had the name of God and gave it its power. Many stories exist regarding the Golem and all are interesting. where the Golem when the prayer was not removed on Shabbat and the Golem created havoc and had to be turned back to clay and stored in the attic for protection. This artificial being of miracles is about protecting Karel Capek wrote R.U.R. about the Golem and created a Robot. The Golem legend is widely considered the inspiration for Frankenstein.
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