My friend had been wanting to take me to Jersey City for years. The conductor of a world-renowned choir and orchestra, he has met artists and benefactors in some of the most extraordinary restaurants in the world. But the one he has talked about the most is the Vu Restaurant at The Hyatt in Jersey […]
Category: Travel
The rock stars are absolutely right
“Giving a feckless person money,” goes the Chinese proverb, “is like pelting a stray dog with dumplings.” Nonetheless, I give money to panhandlers. Yes, I know it’s hardly sound philanthropy, but I have personal motivations for saying “yes,” when a stranger approaches me on the street with an outstetched hand and a pathetic plea. In […]
Travels in Africa
INTO THE ABYSS Four months after Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie jetted into Ethiopia’s capital city of Addis Ababa to pick up their adopted child, Zahara, a group of less celebrated Americans were circling the city in a Boeing 737, their noses pressed to the windows, marveling at the unexpected patchwork of lush, green fields. […]
Travels in Africa (part 2)
INTO THE ABYSS (Part 2) Our wild-eyed ride through Nairobi’s poor eastside ends abruptly as we pass through the gates of the Safari Park Hotel. Within minutes, we’re being handed hot towels to press to our travel-weary faces, sipping cold mango drinks and nodding replies to the hotel staff’s Swahili greeting: Jambo! The word means […]
Travels in Africa (part 3)
INTO THE ABYSS (Part 3) The region we are headed for is Quacha Birra, a remote, densely populated community that requires a more than 315-mile drive to reach. Nearly half of the drive is over dirt roads. The plan is for us to leave Nairobi at 8 p.m., for the two-hour flight to Addis, then […]
Travels in Africa (part 4)
INTO THE ABYSS (Part 4) The official language of Ethiopia is Amharic—an ancient Semitic language closely related to Hebrew. The problem is that fewer than one in seven Ethiopians speak their national language. The rest speak one of more than 80 languages, many of which are based only on oral traditions with no written roots. […]