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Dnepropetrovsk! Who will be visiting Israel in the near future? I beg you, please take a note to the Wailing Wall
Thank you in advance!
Translated automatically from Russian. View original
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5 subscribers  • asked 2016-04-258 years ago
Answers  •  5
аватар staruha_izergil
There is a synagogue in Dnepropetrovsk (Dnepropetrovsk, Demyan Bedny square, Sholom Aleikhama street, 4). Surely pilgrimage tours are organized from there to the promised land. The easiest way is to look for the messenger there.
аватар kolyan_cat
The questioner, apparently, from the Orthodox, therefore, will not go to the synagogue - this is not Orthodox, the Orthodox God will disdain a note transmitted in this way))) Yes, and Jews do not go on pilgrimage tours, this is the prerogative of the Orthodox.
Therefore, it is much more likely to find a messenger - to turn to the church. At our stand near the church, for example, there are often announcements about the recruitment of the next group of pilgrims (at a price higher than a regular tour, however, you see, due to the fact that communication with God is included)))
аватар Alex_classic
Firstly, an Orthodox (an educated Orthodox who knows what the Old and New Testaments are, of course) can go to the synagogue and the mosque without any problems.
Secondly, "Orthodox God" is something new, I haven't heard about it yet :)
God is one, only they call Him differently ...
As for the pilgrimage among the Jews (believing Jews), then you, kolyan_cat, are absolutely right. A trip to the Holy Land is not a pilgrimage.
Pilgrimage tours for Christians of any denomination are more expensive than secular tours due to the higher cost of such components as:
* dinners included in the price
* daily guide and bus
* distribution of expenses for the priest accompanying the group if the group is up to 20 people. (if more than 20, then hotels provide 1/2 rooms for free and pilgrims only need to pay the difference for a room for one)
аватар mishatour
Kolyan, you have a good sense of humor and I like it). These topics can always be discussed in an ironic form, the main thing is not to offend anyone. You seem to be getting everything right. It just seems to me that the one asking for it is very necessary and there is only hope for ..... If he believes in this, then let the note be heard and everything will work out for him ...
As for "Orthodox will not go to the synagogue," Alex is right here. The one who has a cross on his entire chest, and has not yet had time to read the Bible, this one will definitely not go.
If you happen to visit Israel, or rather Nazareth, there is a Synagogue Church. It was there that Jesus proclaimed himself the Mission, for which he was expelled from the city. It was there that the phrase was first uttered - "There is no prophet in his own country." So, if HE was allowed to go to the synagogue, then the Orthodox from Dnepropetrovsk is also allowed. All Christian pilgrims (including the Popes) go to the main synagogue - the Wailing Wall, go to the grave of King David - also a Jewish synagogue.
аватар mishatour
Of course, there are pilgrimages for both Jews and Muslims. Alex simply by the nature of his activity is not familiar with this phenomenon, since there really is no Jewish pilgrimage from the CIS countries. Every Jew from the CIS has an aunt Raya or uncle Senya in Israel who will tell and show everything))
And American Jews have pilgrimage tours, they include visits to Jerusalem, Safed, Hebron and the graves of the righteous on Mount Myron. The Jews even have three pilgrimage holidays - Pesach, Shavuot and Sukkot.
Happy Orthodox Easter to all Orthodox, good luck and prosperity!!!
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