Do you know how many Americans die yearly in car crashes?...
...How many?
BostonWalksIntegrating the urban, modern Jewish American city experience with its historical sites and themes in such locales as Boston, MA, Portland, ME, East Bay and Providence, RI, and the Upper West Side of Manhattan, NYC.
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Now available!The Jewish Friendship Trail Guidebook6
Self-Guided Walking/Bicycling Jewish Boston History Tours Covers
Boston, Brookline, and Cambridge Softcover 198 pages with maps &
b/w photos Print out this |
Now available!
The Ten Commandments Guidebook Ways to Self-Struggle with
Classic Morals In Song, Poetry, and Prose
Covers 10 Commandments Plus One Other! Softcover 153 pages with
practical suggestions pages! Print out this |
An Introduction
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Email: BostonWalks' The Jewish Friendship
Trail
Telephone BostonWalks: 617-489-5020
Presented by BostonWalks, PublishersCheck out our available titles: Both Guidebooks available and referred to online in 10 Jewish Books! |
Once known as Newtowne, it wasn't until the mid-1800s - after various
legal and attitudinal barriers were lowered, that Cambridge
began to attract a community of Jews. During the years
1875 to 1925, approximately three to five thousand Jewish immigrants
arrived and stayed in Cambridge. The City - which, before the late 1800s,
consisted of three villages, East Cambridge, Central/Inman, and Harvard
Square (Old Cambridge) - by 1900, was becoming a unified city, linked
within (and without) by landfill, bridges, and the new, electrified,
public transportation system. The bulk of Cambridge's
three to five thousand Jewish immigrants settled
in the Central and Inman Square areas. A small but important
number of Jews affiliated with Harvard University, as students or as
faculty members, settled in the Harvard Square area.
This BostonWalks' "The Jewish Friendship Trail" in Cambridge is designed
as a 2.5 hour bicycling tour. It's best taken as part of
a large group (25-55 participants)
escorted tour.
Let's bike, then, to these sites of Jewish Experience in
Cambridge:
As we pass through Inman Square, we'll note (a) the large
Jewish style delicatessen there, a survivor in the spirit of two others
no longer extant in Brookline and Mattapan and (b) the old shop where
the Swartz family once maintained their furrier business.
We've been leading walking tours of Boston for about ten years.
So, when we were asked to devise a Jewish walking or bicycling
tour of Cambridge,
the home of Harvard University, we knew that we would walk many of
Cambridge's streets before suggesting this friendship trail.
Around Inman Square were located:
Now available!The Jewish Friendship Trail Guidebook6
Self-Guided Walking/Bicycling Jewish Boston History Tours Covers
Boston, Brookline, and Cambridge Softcover 198 pages with maps &
b/w photos Print out this |
Now available!
The Ten Commandments Guidebook Ways to Self-Struggle with
Classic Morals In Song, Poetry, and Prose
Covers 10 Commandments Plus One Other! Softcover 153 pages with
practical suggestions pages! Print out this |
Chazak Ve-ematz
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Boston Walks
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Sing Sense to America
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Question: What's a political mensch?
Answer #1 |
How do you imagine the relationship between freedom and responsibility within a democracy?Check out this poetic interpretation:
In Defense of Liberty and Democracy, Freedom and Responsibilityconsidering the parasha of the week, Yitro. |
Isn't it time to Attract Middle Class Families Back into Our Cities?
Here's 10 Ways to bring middle-class families back into cities like NYC:
10 Ways to Bring Middle Class Families Back into New York City, Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Washington, DC, Atlanta, and other Citiesconsidering the best of the suburban paradigm for our large cities. |
Are you curious about what are some of the ethical reasons for single-payer universal health care insurance?10 Moral Reasons for One Payer Universal Health Care Insurance for Americain light of Hillel's If I'm only for myself, what am I? |
We know that there are other belly laughs our there. |
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