After coordinating them for eleven years, I truly believe in
the benefits and value of Road Scholar programs. They attract people—no longer
just seniors—who are intensely interested in the world around them. They are
generally well-educated, often with professional positions as doctors,
teachers, engineers. They want to learn and they want quality in their travel.
When I made the decision to go to Israel, my first thought
was to find a Road Scholar program to go along with the visit to Betty and
Doobie. The first one selected was a hiking adventure, based on the Israel
National Trail. That program cancelled due to lack of enrollments a couple of
months prior to departure. Although it didn’t seem so at the time, it was a
lucky break. The alternate proved to be an an even better bargain, including
both Israel and Jordan. It was called “Israel and Jordan: The Journey of a
Lifetime,” and the title proved prophetic.
I expected to be impressed by the tour guides, group
leaders, instructors and accommodations. I was.
I expected to bond with the group and find much in common
with many of them. I did.
We were a group of 22 individuals, a mix of singles and
couples, from all parts of the United States, along with a couple from Canada.
California, Texas, Oregon, Illinois, New
York, South Carolina, Florida, Ohio, Missouri, New Hampshire, Maryland were the
starting points. We all had varying reasons for doing this trek, but we all
wanted to experience and learn. Some
were religious, some especially interested in the archeological and
historical significance of this land.
Jill/Gila Rosenfield served as both tour guide and group
leader for the Israel portion of our journey, and I have never experienced a
better-prepared instructor nor a more caring group leader. She knew every step
we would take and the best manner to approach it. Originally from Zimbabwe, she’d
emigrated to Israel many years before and had been a licensed tour guide for
about eighteen years.
Instructors and group leaders often embody very different
functions. The duties of the instructor are obvious from the title. A group
leader is responsible for everything else from making sure that everyone
arrives safely, gets their housing, makes it to meals, understands the program,
makes it on and off the bus safely at each stop—and makes sure that everyone
has fun doing it. Gila accomplished all of the functions of both jobs with
aplomb. She made us all feel welcome and involved and was a gracious host at
all times.
When we appeared at the dining room for our first meal, I
knew I was in trouble. The Prima Kings hotel serves a splendid buffet for every
breakfast and dinner, and it was impossible not to load the plate with a little
of everything, so I did. I was already far off the diet I stuck to at home, but
it got even worse in Jerusalem with an array of meats, fish, the ever-present
salads—and desserts to die for. Diet be damned. It got to be a joke after a
while to see how many desserts could be crammed onto a plate.
At a brief meeting after dinner, we got further acquainted
with our companions and had an opportunity to introduce ourselves formally.
Gila gave us our instructions for the following day, which involved getting up
early enough to dressed, breakfasted and on the bus by 8:15 am. She even set up
wakeup calls for us to make sure we didn’t oversleep. A couple us had an
advantage that we’d been in Israel a few days and had managed to shake off any
jet lag already.
The next morning would begin our exploration of Jerusalem
with a side trip to Bethlehem.
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