Saturday, August 9, 2014

My family in Italy

Christy at the Duomo in Milan
Christy in Milan
Christy and Noah at the polo fields in Molteno


Natan at the polo fields in Molteno
Christy in Varenna

Natan, who is usually # 95, chose #30, in honor of his three Carleton College friends who died this winter
Natan and the Us team with the Columbia team after the US quarter final victory
Christy in Lecco



Noah on a boat bus in Venice, standing next to a man with the exact same shirt
Natan, Christy and Noah with laundry in Venice
Christy and Natan in Venice
Noah on the train from Venice to Milan (he doesn't like his picture taken)

Friday, August 8, 2014

Laundry shots in Venice

Venice may be the best city I have ever been for photos of laundry.




















Thursday, August 7, 2014

Venice

Venice: July 27th through 30th
Beautiful city, great food, the perfect place if you like getting lost










at the Jewish Ghetto
The Venetian Ghetto was the area of Venice in which Jews were compelled to live under the Venetian Republic. It is from its name in Italian ("ghetto"), that the English word "ghetto" is derived: in the Venetian language it was named "ghèto". The Venetian Ghetto (incidentally, the first Ghetto) was instituted in 1516, though political restrictions on Jewish rights and residences existed before that date.

In 1516 the Venetian Government issued special laws creating the first Ghetto of Europe. It was an area where Jews were forced to live and which they could not leave from sunset to dawn. The area was closed by gates watched by guards (the marks of the hinges are visible). Jews were allowed to practice only some professions: they were doctors, because they were the most prepared and able to understand Arab writings, money lenders, because Catholic religion forbade this practice, merchants and "strazzarioli", ragsellers. The Ghetto existed for more than two and a half centuries, until Napoleon conquered Venice and finally opened and eliminated every gate (1797): Jews were finally free to live in other areas of the city.

Today, the Ghetto is still a center of Jewish life in the city. Every year, there is an international conference on Hebrew Studies held there. Although only around 300 of Venice's roughly 1,000 Jews still live in the Ghetto, many return there during the day for religious services in the two synagogues which are still used. (from Wikipedia and http://www.ghetto.it/ghetto/en/index.asp)