The Jewish Chronicle

Israelis ignore politics to visit the Balkans

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northern Slovenia. Who would have thought?

Bumping into Israelis became a pattern on our eight-day holiday last month to this small, picturesqu­e country that is perhaps most famous these days for being Melania Trump’s birthplace.

Wherever we went, we encountere­d Israelis and heard Hebrew. We saw people eating Bisli snacks, a couple on honeymoon cooking kosher food by a lake and a group of men with kippot.

A quick look online confirmed our experience that Slovenia has become a popular destinatio­n for Israelis. A survey two years ago revealed that the numbers of Israelis visiting this central European country has increased by a greater percentage than for any other.

Slovenia, which gained independen­ce from Yugoslavia in 1991, has a burgeoning tourist industry. Its ski resorts and mountain hiking are increasing­ly popular.

The ubiquity of Israelis is wellknown in certain countries — India, Thailand and Greece among them — but clearly this has spread to the Balkans.

Our pre-visit research had not led us to expect this. Before the trip, my e-mail exchange with one of the leaders of the small Jewish community had highlighte­d the challengin­g circumstan­ces facing the community. His tone was downbeat: he had told me the shul and mikvah in the capital Ljubljana were permanentl­y closed and there were not enough regular congregant­s for a minyan.

More alarmingly, he reported that shechita and brit milah are prohibited and, sadly for Jewish tourists, there was no kosher restaurant. He had also warned that the Jewish Cultural Centre in Ljubljana, despite its benign name, was home to far-left activists.

Our research showed Israel-Slovenia relations are not particular­ly strong either after a row broke out over proposals for the Ljubljana government to recognise Palestine. A parliament­ary vote was later suspended.

The experience of our trip showed that while geopolitic­s is one thing, a good holiday destinatio­n is another. Given the numbers in which they have come, Israelis are nothing if not pragmatic.

Wherever we went, we met Israelis and heard Hebrew

 ?? PHOTO: FLASH 90 ?? The church in the centre of Lake Bled, a popular Slovenian hiking spot
PHOTO: FLASH 90 The church in the centre of Lake Bled, a popular Slovenian hiking spot

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