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text 2019-06-18 13:46
Explore the Holy Land of Israel with Top-Most Travelling Agency

Everyone once in their life wants to travel abroad. When you travel to any foreign land, you come across the infinite beauty of the nature. For experiencing a fantastic abroad travelling experience, you can choose to visit a holy land. The world is full with holy places and each year, various people travel to one or other holy place in order to attain spirituality. Pilgrimage tours channels a great positivity into your body and soul and thus, helps you to overcome the challenges that you are facing in your daily life. Travelling to holy sites also gives you an opportunity to meet sanity people and thus, marks an optimistic impact into your life. So, if you also want to cleanse your mind and soul by detaching yourself from the materialistic things then you must definitely go for Israel holy land tour. Yes, Israel is the perfect place as it offers you the complete package of spirituality as well as vast culture.

Amalgamating the culture of Christians, Muslims and Jews, this biblical holy land tells you the true meaning of pilgrimage. So, step ahead into this sacred land of spirituality and soak your mind and soul by walking into the path of divine. Pilgrimage tour also gives you an opportunity to establish a greater connection with god and helps you to heal and body. One of the prominent things that you should focus on is selecting the right travelling agency so that you can have a wonderful voyage experience. No matter if you are travelling alone or in a group, the prominent travelling agency will not let you down with its remarkable services and packages.

If you are travelling to Israel and are searching for the prominent travelling agency then you are advised to consider the service of Regina Tours. It is a well-known travel agency that not only gives you attractive packages to travel to Jerusalem but also gives you the opportunity to explore its neighboring countries like Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, Cyprus and Greece. Regina Tours is a full-service travel company that is known for organizing daily tours, weekly departures and city breaks so that you can witness the immense beauty thoroughly. Apart from this, Regina Tours also offers the service of airport transport, visa service, flight service, wine tours, tailored-made packages and much more.

About Regina Tours:

Regina Tours in an immensely trusted and professional tour and travel agencies that offer you prominent package for pilgrimage to Israel.

For more details, visit https://reginatours.com

Original Source: http://bit.ly/2Y4vmYY

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text 2019-05-14 11:01
6 Tips to Choose the Best Umrah Package

 


Umrah is one of the most important rituals in Islam. While Hajj is a mandatory pilgrimage for those who are physically fit and financially capable, Umrah can be performed in less than a few hours. Muslims across the world visit the sacred city of Makkah and Madinah to perform these sacred rituals. Whether Hajj or Umrah, while planning any of these religious journeys, one should know the importance of these rituals, special days for its performance, tips to choose the best Umrah/Hajj package and everything you should expect according to your demands and requirements.

 

 

If you are planning to perform Umrah and looking for the best Umrah package, better keep in mind the following factors to ensure your pilgrimage in a very appropriate manner.

 

 

Types of Umrah Packages

 

Like any other pilgrim packages, Umrah packages can also be categorized into two: group packages and tailor-made packages. While group packages are comparatively less expensive, customized Umrah packages that suit on your needs may vary on facilities and cost. In customised packages, you will be allotted luxury facilities in case of food, transportation, and other requirements.

 

Price of the Packages

While selecting an Umrah package, the very first thing you need to consider is the price of the package you wish to book. Depending on the facilities and the number of days you would like to spend for the Umrah, the price of the package also varies. While high-priced packages offer premium facilities, low-priced packages offer basic facilities. It doesn’t matter if you look for an Umrah package from UAE or UK, your budget and days of stay will decide the facilities you may receive.

 

Picking the Travel Agents/Tour Operator

You can find a good number of travel agencies which provide various types of Umrah packages. While choosing a travel agency for your Umrah tip, look for a better one with a good reputation. Check whether the agency you decide on is trustworthy and have considerable experience in tour arrangements. Always make sure that that the travel agency you choose is capable enough to make your pilgrimage smooth, easy and comfortable.

 

All-inclusive Packages

While many travel agencies provide Umrah tour packages, only a few provide the finest quality package inclusive of all the essential things you should consider such as visa, accommodation, transportation, etc. Flight booking is another major aspect for the Umrah pilgrims where the pilgrim should be keen on the fact that airline is booked well in advance because late bookings often have a chance of uncertainty. Booking one of the best travel agencies in UAE like houseoftours will ease your efforts making your journey comfortable giving complete peace of mind from the time you grab the deal.

 

Travel Guide

 

If you are a first time traveller, getting the assistance of a travel guide would be highly beneficial to you. Ask your travel agency whether they will arrange an Umrah travel guide to assist or help you with your trip. Ensure the service of the travel guide even before the booking. If your trip group includes female members, ask for a female travel guide so that the whole family will be comfortable with the guide.

 

Points to Remember in your Online research

 

While doing online research to find the one of the best tour operators in Oman, UK, Bahria, UK or any other country for your Umrah trip, check even the minute details regarding the package to ensure optimal service. Also, make it certain that the tour company you associate is authorized to provide the package. Enquire about the price of the package and make sure that there are no hidden charges applicable on the same. Read all the terms and conditions on their website to clarify your doubts on price, travel policies and services they provide.

 

Conclusion

 

Umrah is a sacred opportunity for Muslims to strengthen their relationship with Allah. It should be performed with complete peace of mind to ensure that the pilgrimage takes place without any discomforts and all the rituals are done without any problems. Umrah is a pilgrimage that can be embarked at any time during the year. So you need not worry about the trip time. Just get in touch with the best tour operator or travel agent and book your Umrah packages to live up your aim of visiting the Holy Kaaba to perform the rituals in the best possible way.

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text 2019-04-15 14:18
Regina Tours: Give Your Mind Spiritual Elevation through Holy Land Tour

Going for a pilgrimage tour gives you immense spiritual and mental calmness. Pilgrimage tours are considered as one of the best ways to create spiritual belief. In an era of competition and fast-paced world, it is impossible for you to take time for relax. All your work and energy gets drain in your work and you remain stuck in the fast and competitive world. Hence, in such a situation, pilgrimage trip is highly recommended in order to take a break from your every day routine. A pilgrimage trip also helps you to take a break from all the materialistic things that you are occupied with and take you close to holy divine. So, now if you also want to take a break and go to holy land of Israel for the search of your soul then you should look for reliable travel agency. One such trusted and certified travel agency is Regina Tours which arrange pilgrimage to Israel.
                                
Regina Tours in one of the immensely trusted and professional tour and travel agencies that organize small and large travel tours and gives you an opportunity to explore the holy land of Israel. Regina Tours is a successfully running travel agency which is founded by Benji Shavit in order to provide and organize holy trips for you to give you spiritual satisfaction. Regina Tours has got numerous services to offer such as it offers airport transportation service, visa service; they offer their tour service in multiple languages, catholic pilgrimagesflights service for you so as to enhance and give you trouble-free pilgrimage tour experience. 

Regina Tours gives you an opportunity to establish a strong connection with divinity. Travelling to holy places with this trusted travel agency gives your soul enormous satisfaction and takes you near to spiritual belief. In additional to this, there are other various benefits that you get from a pilgrimage trip like you can meet different spiritual people, share your beliefs, etc. Spiritual tours provided by Regina Tours cleanse your inner soul and mind, it helps you to establish strong connection with god, and thus, it heals your mind and soul spiritually. Regina Tours offers a variety of spiritual trip programs including daily tours, weekly trips and city trip where you can choose the city you want to travel to. If you want to take a spiritual travel to Jerusalem then you can contact Regina Tours as it gives you an opportunity to select your travel plan based on your budget and interest.

For more details, visit reginatours.com

 

Original Source: http://bit.ly/2IyU3rI

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text 2018-11-21 23:45
24 Festive Tasks: Door 7 - Mawlid, Task 2 (Book Rescue & Book-Related Places of Pilgrimage) ... also, My Personal Literary Canon, Part 1

If I donate books, I usually put them into one of the little libraries ("open bookcases") around town, some of which are quite close to where I live:

 

As for book-related locations,  I try to include visits to the homes of any writers from the area whenever I'm traveling -- but there are a few places that I have visited / keep going back to not only out of general literary interest (or interest in that particular author and his / her works), but more in a genuine spirit of pilgrimage.  I've decided to use this post and Task 3 for Veterans' / Armistice Day (the question about "veteran" readership) to finally make good on my intention to follow up on Moonlight's "personal canon" post, with this one being the (very photo-heavy) pictorial part and the other post supplying the corresponding text -- for these and also a few other authors.  Consequently, I hereby give you ...

 

1.  The big WS: Stratford-upon-Avon, Globe Theatre (London), Kronborg Castle / Helsingør, Glamis and Cawdor Castles

 

Stratford-upon-Avon:


Shakespeare's birthplace in Henley Street and the Shakespeare coat of arms (left: portrait painting in a café opposite the birthplace)

Nash House (the home of Shakespeare's granddaughter Elizabeth and her first husband Thomas Nash) and, next door / in what is now the garden of Nash House, the location of New Place, Shakespeare's final (alas, destroyed) Stratford home

New Place memorial plate (right-click on the image to see a larger version) and, opposite Nash House and New Place, Guild Chapel and King's New School, the grammar school which Shakespeare is believed to have attended

Left: Hall's Croft (the home of Shakespeare's eldest daughter Susanna and her husband Dr. John Hall); right: Anne Hathaway's cottage home in Shottery village near Stratford

Holy Trinity Church, where Shakespeare was baptized, married, and lies buried
Facsimiles of the entries for Shakespeare's baptism ("Gulielmus filius Johannes Shakspere," April 26, 1564) and death ("'Wilh. Shakspere, gent", April 25, 1616) in the Trinity Church parish register
Shakespeare's gravestone and epitaph (written by himself)
Royal Shakespeare Theatre and view from the RSC Theatre tower, over the roofs of RSC and Swan theatres; in the background, the spire of Holy Trinity Church

Swans near the old footbridge crossing the river Avon near the RSC theatre, and Swan Theatre at dusk

The Globe, London:


Glamis:


Cawdor:


Kronborg Castle, Helsingør [= "Elsinore"]:
 

 

2. Jane Austen: Chawton, Bath, Lyme Regis and Winchester

Chawton:


Jane Austen's final home, where she wrote all of her novels

The dining room with Jane's writing table tucked away in a corner next to the window

Replica of the blue dress and bonnet in which Jane was drawn by her sister Cassandra (see image to the right)



Bath:

Left: the Austen family's first home in Sydney Place (recently converted into furnished short-stay apartments); right: near Jane Austen Centre

Jane Austen Centre: Cassandra Austen's portrait of her sister, and Jane depicted writing near a window (in the foreground, her writing paraphernalia)
The Assembly Rooms: focal point of Regency Bath society
Assembly Rooms: historic fashion exhibit (Regency dress and accessories)
The Circus and the Royal Crescent -- in Austen's time, part of the parade ground of Bath's genteel society

Lyme Regis:

The dreaded steps ...

The Cobb ... which of course not only plays a pivotal role in Jane Austen's Persuasion but also in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant's Woman

Winchester:

Winchester Cathedral, where Jane Austen is buried
Austen's tomb and memorial plate

 

3. The Brontës: Haworth and the Yorkshire Moors


Haworth Parsonage: The Brontës' home, where they would write in the living room after their daily duties were done

Haworth: near the parsonage, and St. Michael and All Angels Church, where all of the Brontës except for Anne are buried

The Brontë memorial plates in Haworth church

The North Yorkshire moors and the ruins of Whitby Abbey -- which yearly also engenders pilgrimages of a somewhat different nature, as it was one of the chief inspirations for Bram Stoker's Dracula (whose final churchyard scene is set in Whitby, too)

 

4. Sherlock Holmes: 221B Baker Street and Dartmoor


221B: hallway and (somewhat cramped) sitting room

Holmes's chemical paraphernalia

Holmes's desk ... and The Hound

Dartmoor: the moors and Princetown prison

... though actually, Baskerville Hall was reportedly inspired by this building in ... Norfolk!

 

5. Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers: Torquay, Cholsey and London

The big one -- Christie's home at Greenway House in Devon -- is still on my must-see agenda; ditto the corner of the Fens where Dorothy L. Sayers grew up.  Meanwhile, I did manage to visit:

 

Torquay:


Agatha Christie's birthplace, which inspired several of her novels.  E.g., the large hotels at the very end of the promenade feature (under different names) in Peril at End House and The Body in the Library, and another hotel on a nearby tidal island is mirrored in the location of Evil Under the Sun

Left: Torbay Pavilion, where Agatha Christie met her first husband; right: the Yacht Club, where Christie's father was a prominent member

Don't ask me what an Agatha Christie Gallery is doing in a Natural History Museum (in the town where Christie was born, at that) ... but either way, here we are!  For fans of the David Suchet / Hercule Poirot series: Almost the complete interior set of Poirot's apartment at Whitehaven Mansions was given to the museum after the series was over and done with for good.  I guess it's time for another visit ...

 

Cholsey (Oxfordshire):

The Home Countries are not only a favorite filming location for Agatha Christie adaptations and other stories set in the first half of the 20th century, but they were actually Christie's final domicile as well.


Christie's grave, in St. Mary's churchyard

Left: "Marymead" nursing home ... Christie, Christie everywhere!  Right: Outside of Cholsey

 

London:

24 Great James Street, Dorothy L. Sayers's best-known London address
 
Left: Mecklenburgh Square (Bloomsbury), the location of Sayers's first apartment in London; right: the approximate location of 110A Picadilly (Lord Peter Wimsey's London address, across the street from Green Park)

 

6. Ian Rankin and Robert Louis Stevenson: Edinburgh

Though, of course I very much love Edinburgh for itself, too.  But I'd read Stevenson's and Rankin's books before I ever visited for the first time, and since Edinburgh is almost a character in and of itself in both of their books, it was actually quite a thrill to walk those streets after all and not only recognize place names but also recognize their distinct character, such as described by these two authors.


View(s) from Calton Hill: left, Old Town, Castle and Princes Street; right: Arthur's Seat and Salisbury Craigs, with the Scottish Parliament and Holyrood Palace in the foreground

St. Giles Church and the Royal Mile at Festival time (a time that Ian Rankin's John Rebus hates)

On and off the Royal Mile: Edinburgh City Chambers and the Heart of Midlothian -- both key features of Rankin's novels in particular, not only those featuring John Rebus (the Heart of Midlothian also because of the football / soccer club named for it)

The closes -- Old Town's warren of narrow alleys, many leading underground (Old Town actually consists of several layers of houses built right on top of each other over the course of its history); the most famous one being Mary King's Close, which was opened for guided tours in 2003 and leads to an area under the Royal Exchange, well-preserved enough to give an impression what city and tenement life in 18th century Edinburgh may have looked like.  The closes, including Mary King's Close, make repeated appearances in Ian Rankin's novels and are one of his key symbols for Edinburgh's character as a city.
Deacon Brodie's Tavern on Royal Mile -- Deacon Brodie's story of a respected citizen (a locksmith) who turns burglar by night reportedly inspired Robert Louis Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde -- and unsurprisingly, it, too, makes repeated appearances in Ian Rankin's writing

The "chasm" of the Cowgate, from George IV Bridge -- in the background the building serving for the longest time as Edinburgh's morgue
Princes Street in the throes of streetcar / tram construction (left: the monument to Walter Scott), and Edinburgh Castle seen from Princes Street Gardens
"At home": Left, Marchmont Street (John Rebus's and formerly also Ian Rankin's place of abode); right, the entrance of Robert Louis Stevenson's erstwhile home at No. 17 Heriot Row in Edinburgh's New Town (still in private ownership, now combining family residence, B&B and a hospitality / dining location)
And of course ... Hogwarts is not exactly in Edinburgh, but this post just wouldn't be complete without a bow to the place where Harry Potter and his world were created!

 

7. Brother Cadfael: Shrewsbury, Shropshire, and the Welsh Borderland


Shrewsbury: Abbey of St. Peter and St. Paul, and abbey foregate

Shrewsbury: the castle (left) and the battlefield of the 1403 battle between the Plantagenets (Henry IV (Bolingbroke) and Prince Harry, King Henry V-to-be) and the rebels led by Henry "Hotspur" Percy -- 2 1/2 centuries after the setting of the Cadfael series, but novelized by Ellis Peters under her real name Edith Pargeter as well (A Bloody Field by Shrewsbury) ... in addition, of course, to the play by William Shakespeare

"I am Hugh Beringar of Maesbury, (Under-)Sheriff of Shropshire ..."

Left: the tiny church of Maesbury; right: St. Eata's church at Atcham, another village close to Shrewsbury repeatedly mentioned in the Cadfael novels (typically as a way station on trips out of town, following the River Severn going east)

Oswestry: Castle Hill and St. Oswald's church

The Welsh mountains at / near the ruins of Valle Crucis Abbey (dissolved in 1537) -- and yes, Gwytherin is still on the agenda as well

 

8.  John Steinbeck: Cannery Row (Monterey, CA)

Steinbeck was one of my earliest literary obsessions ... maybe because we never discussed his books in school but I discovered them for myself, through my fascination with all things California and, um, well, the East of Eden movie starring James Dean.  So guess what was a must-see location to me on my very first trip to San Francisco!

 

9. Thomas Mann: Buddenbrookhaus, Lübeck



I've literally grown up with Thomas Mann's novels; Buddenbrooks in particular was a major "thing" in my family -- still, it took until well into the new millennium until I finally made it to the place that inspired the novel.

Lübeck's historic merchant houses and storage buildings -- the city landscape immortalized in Buddenbrooks

 

10. Elizabeth von Arnim: Rügen Island

... or actually, Elizabeth von Arnim and my grandpa, who (some 50+ years after the fact) published a short story about a ride to Spyker Castle on Rügen Island, which, though it is written in the third person, his family believes to be largely autobiographical.  After my grandparents' marriage they and their kids became one of thousands of families spending their summer vacations on Rügen.


(My grandfather a few years after the ride from his story would have taken place, and with my mom (on his knees) and her elder sister and brother on a Rügen beach)

 

So, Rügen had been on my "radar" long before the Wall came down and it finally became possible again for West Germans to travel there (easily, that is, without visa applications, fear of surveillance by a dictatorial regime, and ten times more bureaucratic hassle than a simple vacation should require).  Then I read Elizabeth von Arnim's Elizabeth's Adventures on Rügen ... and I knew I now seriously had to go there.  And since Spyker had, in the interim, been transformed into a hotel, why not make that my base of exploration?  I went in November, though -- which compared to the masses of people now flooding the island once more in summer made for a rather different mood; one that, honestly, I much preferred to the summertime crowds.


Spyker Castle: main building (= hotel), former stables (presumably the place where the mare from my grandpa's story was headed), and Lake Spycker at dusk

Binz, Rügen Island's largest and most important seaside resort

Sellin, Binz's slightly smaller and almost equally as important southerly neighbor

Rügen's famous white chalk cliffs -- the formation known as Königsstuhl ("royal chair", or simply "throne") in Jasmund National Park -- a UNESCO World Heritage Site ...

... and at Rügen's most northerly point, Cape Arcona

The Cape Arcona lighthouses (modern to the left, historic to the right) ... and a little Viking, reminding visitors that Rügen once used to be a Viking settlement

Jagdschloss Granitz was one of Elizabeth von Arnim's favorite spots ... and oh, look -- they're actually quoting her!  (Along with some 5 or 10 other famous writers who visited the place and likewise mentioned it in their memoirs.)

Jagdschloss Granitz: and if you thought you were exhausted by the time you'd reached the top of the hill where it is located, think again when climbing those stairs up to the observatory tower ... (also, suffering from vertigo makes trying to climb them an absolute no-go: they're not only steep and winding but also extremely narrow)

Putbus castle and park

Left: Uniting Rügen and Bonn: Ernst Moritz Arndt, who was born in this building on Rügen Island and later taught at Bonn University, where he became one of the leaders of the 1840s' democracy movement.
Right: near Arndt's birthplace -- colorful cottage overload!

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review 2018-04-16 16:25
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry - Rachel Joyce

Although I wasn't sure about this book when I was assigned it as a responsibility for the adult version of "Battle of the Books," I found myself oddly struck by its realness. Although Harold is portrayed as an awkward guy, he is remarkably humble, and many of his stories of inadequacy, heartbreak, and regret/chances not taken are something we all experience (albeit somewhat different from his).  Although it seems outlandish--his spur-of-the-moment pilgrimage--it actually makes sense and the ending is that much more believable.

 

I just found out there's a sequel, but it's written about Queenie, the woman for whom he starts this journey.

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