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Julie Carbonara

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Julie Carbonara,

Julie Carbonara

Opinion

Distance learning, food parcels and dressing up: Italian Jews find ways to adapt

One Italian expatriate considers how her country has been transformed by the coronavirus outbreak

March 26, 2020 13:30
But Italy's Jewish leaders are using web services to keep in touch with their congregants
2 min read
 
 
CORONAVIRUS
OUTBREAK

It was a mild early summer evening and Venice’s ghetto quarter was pleasantly busy, rather than packed to the gills like the more touristy sites.

It was early Friday afternoon and the ghetto was winding down when a bearded man honed in on me and my companion and said: “My friends, would you like to celebrate Shabbat with us at Chabad House?”

I thought of that unexpected invitation — from a stranger to two strangers — a couple of days ago when a friend sent me a video of a Venice I struggled to recognise: its narrow lanes usually teeming with tourists and the odd local eerily empty, shops and restaurants shut, visitors gone, all life sucked out.

So empty it felt dead; a splendid museum rather than a living city.

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