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Why Jewish Heritage Travel Matters

Travel Insights

Jewish heritage travel to Poland and Israel has always been meaningful, but today it carries a special urgency. These journeys are more than visits to historic sites. They are opportunities to reconnect with identity, honor family stories, and stand with the Jewish people in a world that often forgets or distorts their history.

For many families, traveling to Poland means tracing the roots of ancestors who once lived in thriving Jewish communities across the country. Synagogues, cemeteries, and town squares remind us of the depth and richness of Jewish life that existed for centuries. Visiting places of memory, such as Auschwitz or Treblinka, ensures that stories of courage and loss are not erased. In an era when Holocaust education is declining, these experiences are essential in passing truth and remembrance to the next generation.

These journeys are not only for families. Communities, congregations, and schools travel together to strengthen collective memory and identity. Standing side by side at sites of remembrance, participants feel what it means to belong to something greater than themselves. For Holocaust educators, traveling to Poland is a vital act of witness. Walking through camps, cemeteries, and towns where Jewish life once flourished provides them with knowledge, perspective, and a responsibility they can carry back to their classrooms and communities. Firsthand encounters give educators a voice of authenticity that no textbook can provide.

Traveling to Israel offers a different but equally important dimension. Here the focus is not on memory but on resilience and continuity. Walking the streets of Jerusalem, hiking in the Galilee, or speaking with Israelis who have lived through times of hardship reminds travelers that Jewish identity is alive, strong, and creative. Since October 7th, visits to Israel have also become acts of solidarity. Travelers bear witness to resilience in real time, meet communities who are rebuilding in the face of loss, and express support simply by being present. For groups, visiting Israel together strengthens bonds and creates shared experiences that continue long after the journey ends.

What makes Jewish heritage travel powerful today is the way Poland and Israel complement one another. Poland offers memory and roots, while Israel embodies renewal and the living spirit of Jewish life. Together they tell a story of survival, strength, and belonging that resonates across generations and communities.

These journeys also highlight a quieter but equally important reality: Jewish heritage in Poland today is not entirely a thing of the past. Poles and Jews together are restoring cemeteries, preserving synagogues, teaching history in schools, and creating cultural festivals that honor Jewish life. For travelers, meeting people involved in these efforts can be both moving and hopeful, a reminder that memory is not static but continues to inspire.

Jewish heritage journeys matter now more than ever because they provide what books and classrooms alone cannot. They allow people to see, touch, and feel the reality of Jewish history and identity. They create space for families to share stories, for communities to reaffirm values, and for educators to carry lessons of remembrance and resilience into the future. In a world where antisemitism rises, memory fades, the Holocaust is too often denied and its education declines, and post–October 7th realities reshape Jewish life, traveling to Poland and Israel becomes not only a personal journey but also an act of responsibility. It ensures that Jewish life, history, and memory remain alive, rooted in truth, and carried forward with pride and strength.

Traveler Questionnaire

Shlomo Katz

Art of Light, Tradition, and Renewal

Shlomo Katz (1937–1992) was an extraordinary Jewish-Israeli artist whose legacy bridges Jewish tradition with striking innovation. Born in Łódź, Poland, and immigrating to Israel in 1945, Katz’s life and art reflect the story of the Jewish people—rooted in memory, faith, and renewal.

Educated on Kibbutz Mishmar HaEmek, Katz revealed his talent early and later studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where he developed a unique artistic style influenced by medieval icons and oriental miniatures. His work combined ancient motifs with modern sensibility, establishing him as one of the most respected Jewish artists of his time.

Katz became known for his groundbreaking technique of painting with oil on gilded metallic surfaces, producing works that shimmer with light and spiritual depth. This mastery reached its height in his monumental series for the United States Air Force Academy Chapel in Colorado Springs, where nine radiant paintings stand as a testament to his vision. He later refined this approach into advanced screen printing with metallic inks, creating celebrated works such as The Ten Plagues and the Passover Portfolio.

His art was exhibited worldwide and entered major collections, including the Wolfson Museum of Judaism in Jerusalem, the National Gallery of Australia, the Museum of Jewish Art in Paris, and the Jewish Museum of Australia in Melbourne.

Shlomo Katz’s creations embody art as a bridge between past and future, tradition and modernity. They remind us of the enduring beauty of Jewish culture and the human spirit. His legacy lives on in works that continue to inspire, connect, and illuminate.

Oded Feingersh

Painter of Color, Land, and Spirit

Oded Feingersh, born in 1938, is one of Israel’s most distinguished contemporary painters, carrying forward the legacy of his grandfather, Meir Rosin, the first sign painter and landscape artist in the Land of Israel. Growing up in Jerusalem’s Geula neighborhood, he developed a strong connection to the Hebrew language, the land, and above all, to art.

A graduate of the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in 1963, Feingersh studied under leading Israeli artists such as Mordecai Ardon, Isidor Ascheim, and Jacob Pins. His style blends realism with the influence of pop art, while his love of Israel’s landscapes, nurtured during his studies at the Avshalom Institute, shines through in his work.

In the 1960s, Feingersh traveled to France, where he joined the Belgian anarchist art group Mass Mobbing and later became the first Israeli artist awarded the LEFRANC Prize for Young Artists. Returning to Israel, he quickly gained recognition, with solo exhibitions at the Tel Aviv Museum and the Herzliya Museum, and in 1976 received the prestigious Dizengoff Art Prize.

Over his long career, Feingersh has exhibited extensively in Israel and abroad, illustrated books, and authored 13 volumes of poetry. In 2005, he marked 40 years of artistic creation with a major retrospective at the Givatayim Theater. Today, he is regarded as one of Israel’s most senior and influential living painters, whose work continues to bridge tradition and modernity, imagination and landscape.

Pinchas Shaar

Artist of Imagination and Memory

Pinchas Shaar, born in Poland as Pinchas Schwartz, was an extraordinary figure whose life and art reflect resilience, creativity, and a deep connection to Jewish culture. Growing up in a home that valued art and freedom of thought, he began painting and writing as a teenager, inspired by his artistic roots in the family of Yankel Adler.
The outbreak of World War II profoundly shaped his life.

After serving in the Polish army and being captured by the Germans, Shaar returned to the Łódź Ghetto, where he worked as an artist in the Office of Statistics until its liquidation in 1944. Surviving Sachsenhausen concentration camp, he was liberated in 1945 and soon began rebuilding his life through art, first in Germany and later in Paris.
His career spanned continents and decades, from designing sets for Israel’s Chamber Theater to presenting at major institutions such as the Jewish Museum in New York, the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, and the Linbach Museum in Munich.

In Jaffa, he established a permanent studio that became a hub of creativity and expression.

Shaar’s works are instantly recognizable: brightly colored, filled with whimsical figures, fantastical animals, and perspectives that feel like magical carpets. They balance innocence with depth, humor with pain, playfulness with reflection. Beyond paintings, he also created tapestries, mosaics, and reliefs, always weaving together fantasy and reality.
“I come to the audience with my world,” Shaar once said, “It did not exist until I took it out of the intestines.” His art embodies that vision—a deeply personal world offered to others, where imagination, heritage, and memory meet. To encounter Pinchas Shaar’s work is to step into a universe of color and emotion, an experience that stays with the viewer long after.

David Sharir – Artist of Stage, Wall, and Soul

A visionary of color, imagination, and heritage

David Sharir, born in 1938, is one of Israel’s most prominent multidisciplinary artists, whose work spans painting, stage and costume design, mosaics, and visual interpretations of literature and biblical texts. From his early recognition as a prize-winning young painter, Sharir went on to design for Israel’s leading theaters, including Habima, Cameri, and Batsheva Dance Company, creating productions still remembered for their creativity and color.

His artistic vision extends beyond the stage to monumental public works, such as the mosaic “Tower of Babel” at Tel Aviv University and “Tel Aviv–Jaffa Second Generation” at the Shalom Tower. These large-scale creations reflect his signature blend of humor, imagination, and storytelling rooted in Jewish culture.

Sharir’s art often explores the dialogue between literature, biblical texts, and visual form, with series inspired by the Book of Psalms and the writings of S.Y. Agnon. Since 2003, he has also served as curator of the Shalom Tower Gallery in Tel Aviv, continuing to shape and enrich the Israeli art scene.

Today, David Sharir is celebrated not only as an artist but as a storyteller whose works transcend canvas and stage, inviting viewers on a journey through heritage, creativity, and the soul.

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