Thursday, January 6, 2011

Kapasitas Armada Kami




Kami memiliki Pilihan Kapasitas armada sesuai kebutuhan anda :
Minibus (Inova, Avanza, APV) 4- 6 orang
Mikrobus (Elf , Dutro) 9-12 orang
Minibus 25-32 orang
Bus besar 40-59 orang

Untuk informasi mengenai program paket wisata dapat menghubungi :
Arief : 0813 1932 9392 / 0857 1678 1634

Spesial Promo
Overland Jakarta-Bali (7 hari)
Rp. 1.800.000,-/orang (40 Pax Group)

Overland Jakarta-Borobudur &Yogyakarta (3 hari)
Rp.750.000,-/orang (40 Pax Group)

Fasilitas :
Bus Air Conditioned, Audio-Video, Reclining Seat, Toilet (optional)
Seat 40-47, reclining seat 2-2
Hotel/Penginapan Full AC & service makan
Tiket obyek wisata
Tour Leader

GALERI BUS PARIWISATA






GALERI BUS PARIWISATA AMILIA TOUR AND TRAVEL
Partnership Transportasi yang Kami gunakan adalah :

BLUE STAR

DESIANA


KARUNIA PARIWISATA

CAHAYA PARIWISATA




SURYA PUTRA ADIPRADANA

ARDANA TOUR

CIPAGANTI

NIRWANA

AGRA MAS PARIWISATA

BUAH BATU

MARISSA HOLIDAY





TARIF SEWA BUS PARIWISATA


TARIF SEWA BUS PARIWISATA
AMILIA TOUR AND TRAVEL

0813 1932 9392/ 0857 1678 1634
TUJUAN MIKROBUS MEDIUM BUS BIG BUS
AC 15
SEATS
AC 32
SEATS
AC 40T/43/59
SEATS




  • TRANSFER DALAM KOTA ( 1 x Trip)
450.000
1.300.000 1.500.000




  • TOUR DALAM KOTA JAKARTA
800.000
1.600.000
1.900.000




  • BOGOR - CIKUPA - BALARAJA - CIKARANG - KARAWACI - TANGERANG
900.000
1.700.000
2.000.000




  • TAMAN SAFARI - LIDO- MEGAMENDUNG – GUNUNG MAS -
  • CINANGNENG - CIMELATI - KANZEBO - LEUWILIANG –
  • KARAWANG
1.100.000
2.100.000
2.400.000




  • CIPANAS - CIBODAS - CILOTO - SALABINTANA - CIMACAN -
  • SUKABUMI - PULOAIR - JATILUHUR - PURWAKARTA -
  • CIKAMPEK – QUILING
1.200.000
2.300.000
2.700.000




  • BANDUNG - DAGO - MARIBAYA - CIATER-
  • TANGKUBANPRAHU - SUBANG - INDRAMAYU -
  • TJ.LESUNG - BANTEN - LABUAN -
  • CITATIH - PELABUHAN RATU
1.550.000
2.600.000
3.400.000




  • MERAK - SALIRA - FLORIDA - CILEGON - SERANG - CARITA -
  • ANYER - P.MATAHARI - KARANGBOLONG – CIANJUR
1.300.000
2.350.000
2.850.000




  • CIREBON - KUNINGAN - SITUPATENGGANG - JATINANGOR -
  • GARUT - CIAMIS- PENGALENGAN - SUMEDANG -
  • TASIKMALAYA - GARUT -SURYALAYA -P.BAYA- CIWIDEY -
  • KARANGTARAJE - P. UMANG - P. BAGEDUR -
  • CILIMUS - MALIMPING
1.700.000
3.300.000
4.200.000




PER 2 HARI MENGINAP




PUNCAKPAS - T.SAFARI – LIDO 2.000.000
3.700.000
4.600.000
CIPANAS - SUKABUMI - CIBODAS – CILOTO 2.200.000
4.200.000
5.200.000
BANDUNG - CIATER - TANGKUBANPRAHU - TJ.LESUNG 3.000.000
4.650.000
6.300.000
ANYER - CARITA – CIANJUR 2.250.000
4.300.000
5.300.000
CIREBON - GARUT - TASIKMALAYA – SUMEDANG 3.300.000
5.600.000
7.100.000
LAMPUNG
3.800.000
5.900.000
7.300.000




JATENG,JATIM,BALI,LOMBOK




  • JAWA TENGAH (YOGYA, SOLO, SEMARANG) - (3 HARI)
  • PANGANDARAN - PAMIJAHAN (3 HARI )
4.500.000
7.000.000
9.650.000
JAWA TENGAH (4 HARI) 5.200.000
8.700.000
12.400.000
JAWA TIMUR (5 HARI) 7.200.000
11.700.000
15.500.000
JAWA TIMUR + MADURA (5 HARI) 7.500.000
12.100.000
16.100.000
BALI (8 HARI) 10.500.000
18.400.000
25.500.000
LOMBOK (10 HARI) 13.200.000
23.300.000
31.500.000




OVERTIME
TAMBAHAN PER JAM 100.000
200.000300.000
TAMBAHAN PER HARI 1.200.000
2.200.0003.100.000




TARIF BERLAKU MULAI 01 OKTOBER 2009
Biaya sewa dapat berubah sewaktu–waktu tanpa pemberitahuan terlebih dahulu
Biaya sewa tidak termasuk karcis masuk obyek wisata, biaya tol, biaya parkir, retribusi daerah, penyeberangan ferry, tips pengemudi & kernet.
Semua penumpang dilindungi dengan asuransi jasa raharja.
Batas waktu pemakaian dalam kota pukul 20.00 apabila melebihi dikenakan tambahan
Pemakaian dalam kota hanya diperkenankan 1 kali trip ( satu lokasi hanya bisa dikunjungi 1 kali)
Batas waktu pemakaian luar kota pukul 23.30 apabila melebihi jam 24.00 dikenakan tambahan
Penyewa dianggap telah memahami ketentuan – ketentuan yang tertera di balik formulir pemesanan

Harga diatas adalah harga pemberangkatan dari dalam kota Jakarta, untuk pemberangkatan diluar kota Jakarta dikenakan biaya penjemputan sebagai berikut:

  • Bekasi/Depok/Pamulang Rp. 300.000
  • Cibitung/Cikarang Rp. 750.000
  • Balaraja/Karawang/Bogor Rp. 850.000
  • Serang/Anyer/Cilegon/Purwakarta Rp. 1.600.000

Dalam rangka promo, untuk semua tujuan sewa bus pariwisata kami memberikan discount 10%

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Kapasitas Armada Kami




Kami memiliki Pilihan Kapasitas armada sesuai kebutuhan anda :
Minibus (Inova, Avanza, APV) 4- 6 orang
Mikrobus (Elf , Dutro) 9-12 orang
Minibus 25-32 orang
Bus besar 40-59 orang

Untuk informasi mengenai program paket wisata dapat menghubungi :
Arief : 0813 1932 9392 / 0857 1678 1634

Spesial Promo
Overland Jakarta-Bali (7 hari)
Rp. 1.800.000,-/orang (40 Pax Group)

Overland Jakarta-Borobudur &Yogyakarta (3 hari)
Rp.750.000,-/orang (40 Pax Group)

Fasilitas :
Bus Air Conditioned, Audio-Video, Reclining Seat, Toilet (optional)
Seat 40-47, reclining seat 2-2
Hotel/Penginapan Full AC & service makan
Tiket obyek wisata
Tour Leader

Friday, December 31, 2010

Jews, Travel, Anti-Semitism?

By Ruth Ellen Gruber

Hilary Larson, a travel writer for the New York Jewish Week, has written an article about anti-Semitism and the Jewish traveler...
In Europe, I have found, ugly remarks about Israel and Jewish stereotypes surface as a matter of course, with the tacit assumption that everyone shares an anti-Israel viewpoint — and that nobody present is Jewish.
If it is unfashionable to say ethnically pointed things in historically multicultural America, it can sometimes seem the opposite abroad, at least with regard to Jews and Israel. And it can make traveling to otherwise lovely lands, filled with otherwise friendly people, very uncomfortable for American Jews.
 She also writes:
I’ve seen a lot of swastikas in my travels, and heard plenty of verbal equivalents. But I’ve also been surprised by the degree to which some Europeans are excited to meet a Jew (a rare specimen in some parts), or demonstrate genuine interest and enthusiasm over Jewish culture — like my German classmates in Italy who made a point of touring local synagogues.
Though anti-semitism is not the focus of this blog -- I'm wondering what readers have to say on the subject.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Eating Jewishly

By Ruth Ellen Gruber


A couple of months ago, Saveur magazine published a series of articles by David Sax about eating Jewishly in Budapest and Bucharest. I advised him on the piece and pointed out people to talk to in Budapest -- essentially the same people that I noted in my own article about Jewish food in Budapest for JTA.....
A visit to eastern Europe reveals the origins of the cured and smoked meats, matzo balls, pickles, and other beloved staples of Jewish delicatessens around the world. "It hit me that it's nothing short of a miracle that these foods, these traditions, have survived," writes author David Sax.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Ukraine --Design competition in L'viv


Starlings over the dome of the former Jewish hospital (now the maternity hospital) in L'viv next to the Besojlem site. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber

By Ruth Ellen Gruber
 
As I noted in earlier posts, I was in L'viv, Ukraine, this past week as part of  the nine-member international jury for an important design competition for sites of Jewish history in L'viv (or Lvov, Lwow, Lemberg, Leopoli, as it is called in various languages...) that was organized by the municipal authorities in association with the L'viv Center for Urban History and the German organization GTZ -- the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit. The idea for the competition goes back to an international conference held at the Center for Urban History in October 2008 on "Urban Jewish Heritage and History," at which I was the keynote speaker. (I have already posted the results  -- or see them HERE.)

The jury was composed of two eminent architects/urban designers from Switzerland and Germany, the L'viv deputy mayor, three local city architects/heritage experts, and three "Jewish representatives" -- myself, Josef Zissels (chairman of one of the main Ukrainian Jewish umbrella organizations) and Sergey Kravtsov, from the Center for Jewish Art in Jerusalem, who comes from L'viv and is an expert on all aspects of Jewish heritage there.  (See full list below.)

Our brief was to consider some 70 designs sent in from 14 different countries for projects marking three key sites, taking into consideration the following stated criteria:
The competition has two distinct, but interconnected purposes. First, the competiton seeks to respond to the growing awareness of Lviv's multi-ethnic past by contributing to the rediscovery of the city's Jewish history and heritage through creating public spaces dedicated to the city's historic Jewish community. Secondly, the competition also seeks ways to re-design these three open public spaces in such as manner as to improve the quality of life for the contemporary inhabitants and visitors of Lviv.


Our first order of business was to visit the three sites. (We got started late as two of us -- including myself -- got stranded overnight in Vienna because of the snow chaos, and we arrived a day late.)

     -- the "Valley of Death" that was linked to the infamous Janivski concentration, labor and mass murder camp  set up by the German occupation during World War II, where more than 100,000 Jews were killed;


     This site is a deep, rather narrow valley rimmed by steep banks.The site of the camp itself, atop a plateau overlooking the valley, is now occupied by a prison. In the valley there is a pond where bodies were thrown. For a full description, click HERE. Marking the spot is currently a memorial stone and a sign.

     -- the site of three destroyed synagogues in the center of the city's downtown Jewish quarter, just off the main market square, or Rynok;

Ruins of Golden Rose synagogue
Excavations for Bejs Midrash











    The site is an open public space located in the southeast part of Lviv’s historic inner city, which is included on UNESCO’s World Heritage List, on the site where once stood the Great Synagogue and a Bejt HaMidrash. They adjoin the still-visible ruins of the 16th century Turei Zahav or Golden Rose Synagogue. Some of the buildings in the immediate vicinity of the site date back to the 16th century. For fuller description click HERE. It is a sensitive area, where gentrification is beginning to clash with historic memory, preservation goals and potential Jewish restitution claims for communal property.

     -- and "Besojlem," the small piece of open ground that is the only section of the centuries-old Jewish cemetery (founded in late medieval times and closed in 1855) that was not built over -- virtually all the rest of the cemetery is now covered by a big market bazaar, the Krakovsky Market. Adjacent is the city's maternity hospital, a Moorish style structure with a dome that was built originally as the Jewish hospital. It occupies a part of the cemetery site where no burials took place.
 
This is a particularly sensitive site, given the fact that burials still exist here but exactly where is not known. Also, it is believed that a number of old tombstones also lie beneath the surface. There is a long and contentious history  regarding attempts by the Jewish community to regain the cemetery -- or at least have the market removed. Sam Gruber has posted a concise summary on his blog.

 All the submitted designs were hung in the city's drafty, Soviet-era Palace of the Arts and were on public display as of December 16.


Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber

Our deliberations took place here -- in a vast hall that was freezing!

Sofia Dyak, the director of the L'viv Center for Urban History, at our work table. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber

The jury included a varied group of experts from several countries, and we each looked at the sites and projects from different viewpoints and experience. This made our deliberations  extremely intensive, thoughtful, thought-provoking, exhaustive -- and exhausting. We examined the displayed plans, as well as other information, and discussed each not just on its design, but on its  feasibility of implementation and sensitivity to place.  The concerns of the Jewish community were also taken into consideration, even though (aside from L'viv native but current Jerusalemite Sergey Kravstov) there was no representative of the local L'viv Jewish community on the jury. All of the submissions were anonymous, so we had no idea where they came from -- in the end, it turned out that there were submissions from 14 countries.

In addition to myself, the Jury members were:
Oksana Boyko (Ukraine, Lviv), architectural historian, research fellow at the institute “Ukrzakhdproektrestvratsia,” author of the monograph “Synagogues of Lviv” (2008)
Bohdan Cherkes (Ukraine, Lviv), professor for architecture, director of the Institute of Architecture at the National Polytechnic University in Lviv
Carl Fingerhuth (Switzerland, Zürich), architect, city planner and author, advisor to the city governments of Bremen, Salzburg, Halle, Karlsruhe, Cologne, Stuttgart, Heidelberg, Regensburg; Chief Architect Basel 1979-1992, since 1995 Honorary Professor for Urban Planning at the University of Darmstadt, private projects in Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary and China
Vasyl Kosiv (Ukrain, Lviv), Deputy Mayor for Humanitarian Issues of Lviv, Director of the Department of Graphic Design at the National Academy of Arts in Lviv
Sergei Kravtsov (Israel, Jerusalem), architect, historian of architecture, researcher at the Center of Jewish Arts at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Yuriy Kryvoruchko (Ukraine, Lviv), head of the Department of Urban Planning of Lviv City Council, Chief Architect of Lviv, professor for architecture at the National Polytechnic University in Lviv
Ingo Andreas Wolf (Germany, Leipzig), architect, Urbanist, advisor to city governments; Professor for urban planning and design, University of Applied Sciences in Leipzig
Josef Zissels (Ukraine, Kyiv), Chairman of the General Council of Euro-Asian Jewish Congress, chairman of the Association of Jewish Organizations and Communities of Ukraine (Vaad Ukraine), executive vice-president of the Congress of National Communities of Ukraine and the Jewish Confederation of Ukraine

Discussing one of the designs. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber


In the end, we were were almost totally unanimous in choosing the three designs that we awarded the first prize in each category. For each of them, however, we appended recommendations as to changes or amendments we felt needed to be taken into consideration before implementation. (I'm not sure these have all be made public yet -- I will append them when so.)

The first prizes went to:

    -- Ronit Lombrozo, from Jerusalem, for Besojlem. A landscape architect and exhibition designer who often deals with heritage issues, Lombrozo submitted a design that envisages a raised walkway and also the use of unearthed tombstones as part of the memorial.

    -- The design team of Ming-Yu Ho, Ceanatha La Grange, and Wei Huang, from Irvine, California, for the Janivski concentration camp site. Their design was radically different from most of the others. Most of the others envisaged the area as a sort of park. The winning team's idea was to turn it into a form of land art -- a raised walkway leading to and curving around a slope covered with slabs representing symbolic tombstones.

    -- The Berlin, Germany team of Franz Reschke, Paul Reschke and Frederik Springer for the synagogue square site, a design that incorporates the archeological excavations of the Bejs Midrash and also traces the form of the Great Synagogue. One of the things that we liked is that it leaves the way open for modifications in the future, should the site be restituted or other excavations be foreseen.

Other prizes and honorable mentions went to designs from Italy, Poland, Germany, Austria and Ukraine.

I was particularly pleased to see how young the Ukrainian winners were -- some in their early and mid-20s, even students -- and to witness how thoughtful and sensitive their approaches were to reintegrating and restoring a component of local history that has for far too long been suppressed, ignored, forgotten and/or distorted.

L'viv deputy mayor Vasyl Kosiv announces the awards at a public ceremony. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber
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