Greek Isles
Costa Cruises: Fortuna
August 17-24, 2009
7 Nights
I T I N E R A R Y
| Mon. | Venice (Italy) | Departs | 6:00 PM | |
| Tues. | Bari (Italy) | 12:00 PM | 6:00 PM | |
| Wed. | Katakolon/Olympia | 12:00 PM | 6:00 PM | |
| Thurs. | Santorini (Greece) | 7:00 AM | 1:00 PM | |
| Thurs. | Mykonos (Greece) | 6:00 PM | 11:00 PM | |
| Fri. | Rhodes (Greece) | 8:00 AM | 6:00 PM | |
| Sat. | At Sea | |||
| Sun. | Dubrovnik (Croatia) | 8:00 AM | 1:00 PM | |
| Mon. | Venice (Italy) | 9:00 AM | ||
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C R U I S E S H I P I N F O R M A T I O N
Costa Fortuna
Costa Fortuna has drawn inspiration from the grand Italian steamships of yesteryear that provided regular passenger services between Italy and the Americas. Throughout this Costa cruise ship, scale models of historic cruise ships have been incorporated into the style and design of the Costa Fortuna’s various restaurants and other public areas. For more recent history of these cruise ships, guests can view a tribute to the first (and leading) Italian Cruise Company by glancing up at the ceiling of the main lobby known as the Costa Atrium where models of 26 past members of the Costa fleet are displayed. Get on board a Costa cruise ship today!
Technical Chart:
| Built in | 2003 |
| Passenger Capacity | 2,720 (Double Occupancy) |
| Number of Crew | 1,027 |
| Total Cabins | 1.358 (27 for Handicapped Guests) |
| Tonnage | 102.500 |
| Length | 890 feet |
| Beam | 124 feet |
| Decks | 17 (13 for Guests Use) |
| Cruising Speed | 20 Knots |
ITALY PRE CRUISE TOUR FOR GREEK ISLANDS CRUISE
Tour Price: € 1390 p/Person
Single Supplement: € 230 p/Person
Minimum 15 paying passengers
Itinerary
Day 1, August 11 2009, Tuesday Rome
We’ll meet in Rome. Upon arrival, transfer to our hotel. Day 2, August 12 2009, Wednesday Rome Madrid
Today we'll visit Rome. We will see the Vatican, the coliseum, Titus Gate. We'll continue to Tivoli gardens.
Day 3, August 13 2009, Thursday Orvieto - Pittigiano – Pisa – Firenze
This morning we’ll visit Orvieto & Pittigiano. We'll continue to Pisa, one of Italy’s wonders and we’ll see the leaning tower, built in 1173. It starting leaning soon after the third floor was built and has remained so ever since. we’ll continue to Firenze, capital of Tuscany.
Day 4, August 14 2009, Friday Firenze - San Gimignano - Siena
Today we'll drive to Tuscany area. We'll visit San Gimignano & Siena. Afterwards we’ll return to the hotel to prepare for Shabbat, Shabbat services and dinner.
Day 5, August 15 2009, Shabbat Firenze
After Kidush and lunch, we’ll stroll around the town to take in some of the local sites and sights. We’ll see the Duomo, Seniora Square, Michelangelo Square, the Ponte Vecchio Bridge, Giotto’s Bell Tower and more.
Day 6, August 16 2009, Sunday Firenze – Padua – Venice
Today we’ll travel to Padua, business and communications center of the Vento region of northern Italy. During the middle ages, Padua had a sizeable and well established Jewish community made up of Jews who had been expelled from Spain. The community was destroyed in the Holocaust. We’ll stroll through the town’s narrow streets and cobbled lanes. We’ll also visit the Jewish cemetery where Don Isaac Abarbanel and the Shadal are buried. We’ll continue to Venice, the charming city that is built on some 120 islands. Upon arrival we’ll visit the ghetto. We’ll continue to San Marco Square, the square of pidgeons.
Day 7, August 17 2009, Monday Venice - Cruise
After breakfast we'll see more sites of Venice like the Rialto Bridge, one of the three great stone bridges on Venice. Our tour will end at Venice port, where we’ll embark on our Greek Isles Cruise.
Price includes:
- 4 star hotels
- Kosher H/B + Lunch Box
- Comfortable air-conditioned touring coach
- Entrance to sites according to the tour plan
- Professional, experienced, English speaking Israeli guide from Shai Bar Ilan team
Price excludes:
- International Flights Including Taxes (as known at time of publication)
- Shows and evening outings not in the tour plan
- Tips for local service providers – 65 Euro P/P
- Travel and health insurance – can be purchased in our office
- Personal expenses

Major Cruise Questions
What is included in the price of my cruise?
Virtually everything, with the exception of certain items of a personal nature, for which there is a fair and reasonable change.
Your cruise fare includes shipboard accommodations, ocean transportation, standard meals, services and onboard entertainment.
What's not included
Items that are of a personal nature, for which there is a fair and reasonable charge. Not included in the cruise fare are items that are of a personal nature including gratuities, shore excursions, airfare, telephone calls, faxes, spa treatments, salon services, photographs, laundry and valet service as well as wine, liquor and other beverages. .
Will I need a passport or visa?
You are responsible for obtaining all necessary travel documents and for complying with Customs and Immigration requirements. Guests with out proper travel documents will not be allowed to board the vessel. If for some reason you must leave the ship mid-cruise, you will be denied re-entry into the U.S. unless you possess a valid U.S. passport and no refund of cruise fare will be given to any guest failing to bring such documentation. Costa Cruise Lines encourages all guests to obtain passports as soon as possible to avoid backlogs.
For more information, please visit the U.S State department website at www.travel.state.gov.
Cruising Tips
Air Travel
Passports will be required for any air travel from the Caribbean as of January 23, 2007. ALL persons, including U.S. citizens, traveling by air between the United States and Canada, Mexico and South America, the Caribbean and Bermuda will be required to present a valid passport.
Cruise Travel
As early as January 1st, 2008, subject to U.S. Government amendment, ALL persons, including U.S. citizens, traveling between the United States and Canada, Mexico, Central and South America, the Caribbean and Bermuda may be required to present a valid passport or other documents as determined by the Department of Homeland Security.
Mediterranean and North Europe Cruises:
United States and Canadian citizens must have valid passports and necessary Visas. The expiration date of your passport must not occur within 6 months of the scheduled return date of travel. Naturalized U.S. citizens are advised to carry their naturalization papers. Aliens who are residents of the U.S. must carry their Alien Registration Card and passport. All others must have valid passports and necessary visas.
Please check current visa requirements with the appropriate embassies or consulates.
What clothing should I pack?
Most of the time, you'll feel comfortable in casual resort wear including light cotton clothing. Sweaters, lightweight jackets, raincoats and hats are also appropriate for Northern Europe. Tennis shoes or low-heeled walking shoes are recommended for exploring the ports of call. While most shore excursions do not have dress codes, some tours specifically prohibit shorts and sleeveless shirts, and require ladies to wear knee-length skirts or slacks.
There is usually two formal galas to which ladies will wish to wear long gowns or cocktail-length dresses; gentlemen may choose either tuxedos or dark suits. Number of formal nights may vary depending on cruise length and itinerary. On other evenings, resort attire is the norm.
What is the climate like?
Temperatures in Northern Europe and the Mediterranean (April through October) average 14 - 31 degrees Celsius; 57 - 88 degrees Fahrenheit. Of course, they may vary.
Temperatures in Caribbean: (November - April) average 72-85 degrees. Of course, they may vary.
Temperatures in South America: (December - March) average 71-84 degrees. Of course, they may vary.
Can I phone home?
Ship-to-shore telephone service is available 24 hours a day while the ship is at sea or in port from your stateroom. You'll find a telephone and dialing instructions in your stateroom.
If you need to be reached by people at home, have them call or fax the ship directly; or they can contact you via email through your own Internet Service Provider which you can then access via the Internet Cafe.
Is internet service available?
You can send and receive emails through your own service provider in the Internet Café for a nominal change.
How do I plan my on-shore activities?
Naturally, you are free to explore many of the ports of call on your own, however, Costa has arranged a variety of shore excursion for you convenience. Each excursion is carefully researched by our Shore Excursion Staff to ensure your experience ashore is as enriching and enjoyable as your stay aboard.
You may pre-book your excursions online by visiting www.costacruises.com and selecting . Personalize Your Cruise. . You will need to enter your booking number and your name as it appears on your reservation. The excursion selected will be debited to you onboard account . Or, if you prefer, you may purchase the shore excursion onboard at the Shore Excursion Desk. Shore Excursions are subject to availability and not available on all ships and sail dates.
What about laundry and dry cleaning services?
Complete valet services including laundry, pressing and dry cleaning, can be arranged through your stateroom steward/stewardess and billed to your shipboard account.
T R A V E L D O C U M E N T S
You are responsible for obtaining all travel documents as well as compliance with Customs and Immigration requirements. You will be required to comply with all government imposed security measures, which may change without notice.
Visa Requirments:
Please check current VISA requirements with the appropriate embassies or consulates prior to departing on your cruise vacation.
For guests on itineraries visiting Russia and Ukraine, who wish to tour independently in these countries (not on a Celebrity shore excursion) will need to obtain a VISA from the respective embassy/consulate prior to travel.
All United States citizens traveling to Brazil must obtain a valid VISA from the Brazilian consulate or embassy prior to boarding the cruise.
Please note that additional restrictions and requirements may exist for entrance into other countries. You are advised to check with local embassies and consulates for their requirements.
For additional information regarding Canadian Visa click here (http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/visit/visas.html)
Barcelona General History
Barcelona is the capital and most populous province of Catalonia, as well as the second largest city in Spain. In 2006, its estimated population was 1,605,602. It is located on the Mediterranean coast between the mouths of the rivers Llobregat and Besòs.
Jewish History
According to archeological evidence there existed a sizeable Jewish community in the province of Catalonia, where Barcelona is located, from as early as the beginning of the Common Era. For centuries thereafter, the Jews of Barcelona managed their own local affairs and lived relatively well while confined to the Juderia (Jewish quarter). In 1263, King James I of Aragon convened a religious disputation in Barcelona with the aim of convincing the Jews to convert to Christianity. Nachmanides, the great Jewish sage and bible scholar, was called upon to represent the Jews of Spain. The disputation lasted four days, during which time Nachmanides argued passionately for the validity of Judaism, and the Jewish community of Barcelona waited nervously for the King’s reaction. At the end of the disputation King James I awarded Nachmanides a large some of money for his eloquence and famously stated that he had never heard someone argue so well for such an unjust cause. Yet, despite the King’s kind words, Nachmanides was later forced to leave Spain and eventually went on to settle in the Land of Israel. By the fourteenth century the situation of the Jews of Barcelona and all of Spain had worsened significantly. Numerous anti-Semitic decrees were enacted by the monarchy and Catholic Church, and many Jews converted to Christianity while secretly adhering to Judaism to escape persecution. While the Jewish expulsion from Spain did not occur until the reign of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella in 1492, all the Jews of Barcelona either fled or converted years earlier following the riots of 1391.
Barcelona remained devoid of any Jewish presence for more than five hundred years until several Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews came from North Africa and Eastern Europe at the beginning of the twentieth century. Today, an estimated 3,500 Jews reside in Barcelona, making it the largest concentration of Jews in Spain. In addition to its two functioning synagogues (one Ashkenazi and the other Sephardic), the Barcelona Jewish community also has a Jewish day school, old age home, Chabad house, and an annual Jewish film festival.
Visiting Today
What remains in Barcelona today is but a remnant of the rich Jewish culture that existed during the Golden Age of Spain. One of the main attractions that is still in existence is the ancient Call (Juderia, or ghetto) and the Sinagoga Mayor of Barcelona. Originally built during the fifth century, a new synagogue was later built on top of it in the fourteenth century and additional floors were added to the building in subsequent centuries. Despite perhaps being the oldest synagogue in Europe, the Sinagoga Mayor was forgotten and abandoned until the twentieth century until which point it was used for many purposes including a storage house and dry cleaner. Lying just outside Barcelona proper are two other ancient Jewish sites. The first is the ancient Jewish cemetery of Montjuic (lit. Jewish mountain) located on the western edge of the city. The ancient cemetery houses the last remains of some of the most notable members of the pre-expulsion Spanish community and is officially a city park. The second site of interest is the old city of Gerona, which is located approximately 60 miles northeast of Barcelona. While there are few, if any, Jews currently residing in Gerona, this small city was once the home of the great Jewish sage Nachmanides who defended the Jews of Spain in the thirteenth century at the Disputation of Barcelona.
Source: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/barcelona.html
Local Chabad:
Chabad Lubavitch de Barcelona
Rabbi Dovid M. M. Libersohn
Calle Joan Gamper 27
Barcelona, 08014 Spain
Ph: 34-934-100-685
Fax: 34-934-199-151
Kosher Food:
1. To order prepared food call:
Tel: 34-934-399-934
2. Isamar Kosher.
Avenir 29
(between Aribau y Muntaner) 08021, Barcelona. Map Email
Tels/Fax:
34-932-003-375
34-932-406-047
Barcelona Tours:
Barcelona is a great place to just stroll around. However, if you would like an organized tour we recommed contacting Dominique Tomasov Blinder at the Urban Cultours project. She can be reached by email at info@urbancultours.com or dtomasov@coac.net. Some of the recommended things to see in Barcelona are:
- El Call, Jewish quarter: visit a remnant of the city's Jewish past, with comments on the area's history from its origins until the present
- City History Museum: Wonder through the ruins of Roman Barcelona, under the present city, where some Hebrew inscriptions can be seen on the walls
- The oldest Synagogue in Barcelona reopened in 2002 after a long restoration process led by the Associació Call de Barcelona
- Visit the Holocaust Memorial, dedicated on the 50th anniversary of the Shoah by the Jews of Barcelona
- Visit Anne Frank Square, dedicated in 1998 by the City of Barcelona to the young writer
- Visit the newly established Chabad Lubavitch Center for Jewish Studies
- Participate in shabbat services
- Attend recitals of Ladino and Klezmer music
Local Hotels Near the Chabad:
| Name | Address | Tel | Cost (Euros) |
| NHNumancia | Numancia 74 | 34.933. 224.451 | 83 |
| NHLesCorts | Travessera de les Corts 292 | 34.933.220.811 | 83 |
| NHForum | Ecuador 20 | 34.934.193.636 | 83 |
| NHConstanza | Deu i Mata 66-69 | 34.932.811.500 | 150 |
| Hilton | Diagonal 589-591 | 34.934.957.777 | 268 |
| ReyJuanCarlosI | Diagonal 661-671 | 34.933.644.040 | 160 |
| Princesa Sofia | Plaza Pio xii | 34.935.081.000 | 160 |
| Meliá | Av de Sarria 50 | 34.934.106.060 | 150 |
| AparthotelAtenea | Joan Guell 207-211 | 34.934.906.640 | 85 |
| ApartmentsSants | Berlin 4 Bis | 34.933.238.790 | 65 |
| Husa l'Illa | Diagonal 555 | 34.934.103.300 | 82 |
| Derby | Loreto 21 | 34.933.223.215 | 75 |
| Abba Sants | Numancia 32 | 34.936.003.100 | 107 |
| HLG Citypark | Nicaragua 47 | 34.933.637.474 | 90 |
| Hostel pere tarres | Numancia 149-151 | 34.934.102.309 | 20 |
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R E G I O N A L H I S T O R Y
Bari, Italy
Trani Old Town and Jewish Quarter
Trani Old Town and Jewish Quarter

This Jewish Quarter is among the largest of the middle ages with 2 synagogues dating back to the 13th century. Today they are known as “S. Maria di Scola Noa” and “S. Anna”.
Rhodes, Greece
The Former Jewish Quarter of Rhodes
The Former Jewish Quarter of Rhodes
The Jewish Quarter, or “La Juderia” is located in the Old City. Here you will visit the Kahal Shalom synagogue and the Jewish
Museum. Around Lad Juderia, there are several stone plaque monuments reminding us of the existence of Jewish life in Rhodes. These plaques are written in Hebrew, Latino, French, and Italian.
Museum. Around Lad Juderia, there are several stone plaque monuments reminding us of the existence of Jewish life in Rhodes. These plaques are written in Hebrew, Latino, French, and Italian.Dubrovnik, Croatia
The Old Town sightseeing
The Old Town sightseeing

In 1870, Italy was united as a nation under King Victor Emanuel, who decreed that the ghettos be dismantled and gave the Jews full citizenship. Following the end of the papal states, Jews fully integrated into Italian society. They comprised a significant percentage of the university teachers, generals and admirals. A number of Jews were involved in government and were close advisors of Mussolini; they convinced Mussolini to intervene in the First World War. Five Jews were among the original founders of the fasci di combattimento in 1919 and were active in every branch of the Fascist movement. Both Mussolini’s biographers, Margharita Sarfatti, and his Minister of Finance, Guido Jung, were Jews.
Disclaimer: Kosherica Cruises and it agents are responsible for making arrangements for the services offered. The carriers, hotels, cruise lines and other suppliers providing services are independent contractors and are not agents, employees, servants, or joint ventureres of Kosherica Cruises or its affiliates. Airline alternative equipment and routings are subject to change by the Airline or the Operator and will not result in any refunds. Flight delays and changes are unfortunate, but are an inherent risk of air travel and are therefore outside the control and responsibility of Kosherica Cruises. All certificates and other travel documents for travel services issued by Kosherica Cruises are subject to the terms and conditions specified by the supplier and to the laws of the countries in which the services are supplied. Kosherica Cruises reserves the right to make changes to the itinerary or services whenever the company deems it necessary to the comfort, convenience, or safety of the participants and to cancel a cruise at any time. If Kosherica Cruises cancels a cruise, the company has no responsibility beyond the refund of monies paid to the company by the traveler. The participant agrees that neither Kosherica Cruises nor its affiliates shall be liable for any damage or loss including personal injury death, property loss, delay, change in air services, sickness, strike, war, quarantine, weather, upset, disappointment, inconvenience, or expense occasioned by any act or omission of any supplier or person providing services.




