2013. március 27., szerda

Budapest transports

The simple way to sightseeing Budapest is using the public transportation. The network is really efficent. There are 3 metro line and over 30 tram lines. The most scenic tram route is the one that does the tram number two. It runs along the Danube river just in front of the Parliament and the Chain Bridge. Instead the most spectacular metro line is the yellow one that is the oldest metro in the European Continent apart from the one of London. From the three main rail station: Nyugati pályaudvar, Keleti pályaudvar, Déli pályaudvar is easy to reach all the others famous city in Hungary. Let's start your trip Hungary from Budapest!

2013. január 24., csütörtök

Holocaust Memorial

This sculpture of a weeping willow, designed by Imre Varga, was unveiled in 1991 in memory of the 600,000 Hungarian Jews killed by the Nazis in World War II. It was partly funded by the Hungarian-American actor Tony Curtis. religion. The Jewish community became well integrated into Hungarian society, until in 1941, a series of Nazi anti- Semitic laws were passed and the wearing of the Star of David was made compulsory. In 1944, a ghetto was created in Pest and the deportation of thousands of Jews to camps, including Auschwitz, was implemented. After heavy fighting between the Russian and German armies, the Soviet Red Army liberated the ghetto on 18 January 1945. In total, 600,000 Hungarian Jews were victims of the Holocaust. This fact is commemorated by a plaque at the Orthodox Synagogue on Rumbach utca in Budapest tours. In the late 19th century, three synagogues were built and many Jewish shops and workshops were established. Kosher establishments, such as the Hanna Étterem (see p197) in the courtyard of the Orthodox Synagogue, and the butcher at No. 41 Kazinczy utca, were a common feature. Shops are now being reconstructed to recreate the pre-ghetto character of the Jewish Quarter.