I am writing this blog entry from my balcony from our hotel at the top
of Mount Olympus on what will be my last day and indeed Shabbat in the
galut. I have been thinking about this day for a very long time and how I
would be feeling. Well, quite honestly I do not know what it is that I am
feeling. I am neither happy or sad, anxious or excited, I am not emotional
or numb. However I have this quiet contentment and feeling in the back of
my mind that I am on the brink of one of the most important and defining
days of my life and that I have absolutely no regrets at all. Israel is
merely a coach ride and a quick flight across the Med; the rest of my life
living out my Zionist ideals and becoming the man I know that I can be is
literally right in front of my face and I am ready to embrace it.
Anyway, before I tell you of our past couple of days in Greece I
noticed that Moshe Levy and his incredible story somewhat overshadowed a
very random evening in Naples and so Aly did not mention it.
However I feel this record of our trip would not be complete without a
brief mention of our encounter with Rabbi Alexander and his family. As all
good Jewish boys like myself and Aly (more Aly to be honest with you) we
sought out a nice kosher meal on our arrival in Naples (although I am
quite miffed as to how I managed to spend a whole week in Italy and not
have a traditional pizza). Therefore we called the local Chabad house who
ran a 'restaurant' in the city for Jews passing through Naples and the
Amalfi coast. Myself, Aly and Mark Lewis (1932 Buick abandoned in
Switzerland), who himself also likes to seek out a kosher meal on his
travels, arranged to meet Rabbi Alexander who is the local Chabad
representative in the main piazza.
And so we met Rabbi Alexander and his three children David 3, Simcha 2
and Moshe who was just a couple of months old as well as a rather burly
looking Italian who's name escapes me that ensured that we were not to be
messed with on our whirlwind tour of Jewish Naples. Given ably if not
erratically by Rabbi Alexander with utter disregard for traffic, rules of
social interaction and actually explaining what it was we were looking at;
the tour ensured that we had easily built up an appetite by the time we
got to the restaurant at 9.30. Now I say restaurant, what I really mean is
a dining room in a flat on the top floor of an old apartment block in old
Naples. Rabbi Alexander's wife was preparing our meal as we sat in their
living room and were given an explanation into why a completely
assimilated Jew in his twenties turned to Chabad chasidut and becomes the
local representative in Naples. As we were listening/trying to get a word
in edge ways with a very excitable Rabbi, Simcha the two year old was busy
in the dining room eating and covering himself in our first course of
hummus and olives.

Much to our amusement our dinner was again prepared at about 10.30 it
was about time to eat. I advise anyone traveling through Naples to visit
Rabbi Alexander and his wife Sara and get in touch with me to compare
experiences and let me know if they also got horribly lost, taking an hour
to walk the usually ten minute trip back to the hotel.
Leaving Italy behind and after two hours sleep on the ferry from Bari
to Ingoumenitsa in Greece we were on our way to our final stop over in
Europe: Olympia and the lovely Olympus Asty hotel on the mountain side
overlooking some quite beautiful views. The route there (when I wasn't
fast asleep and supposed to be navigating) was breathtaking and made all
the more enjoyable by the challenge of avoiding all manner of wildlife on
the winding coastal roads. We passed goats, cows, tortoises and snakes but
finally made it to our destination where we would be staying for three
nights, allowing for the cars to be flown into Israel and for us to enjoy
a fantastic Greek shabbat by the pool.


The relaxation we have had is great and has ensured a calm before the
storm and craziness of arriving in Israel as olim with a four day tour of
the country in a 1948 Rolls Royce.
I must go now as we have to be up at four in the morning to catch our
flight to Ben Gurion. As I say goodbye to Europe and to 21 happy years
there, I am 100% sure that I am so ready to spend the next 21 years (and
of course hopefully more) in a country that I hope to see change and
develop in to the 'Light unto the nations' it was always supposed to be. I
can finally be a part of that light, as I will be there and ready to build
the life for myself I have always dreamed of in Medinat Yisrael.
Yan