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Travel Discussion
Reply to "Herzliya/Tel Aviv for two weeks"
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[quote=Anonymous]Also, if you do visit a religious area/restaurant/café, the owners are usually very good about posting signs in Hebrew and English about which tables are which, etc. Fun fact: besides seeing lots of English signs (and of course Hebrew), you will see signs in many other languages all over Israel! Russian was one of the more common ones I saw, but there were many other languages represented too. Like the USA, Israel is an immigrant country and very multi-cultural. Its so multicultural in fact, that I met a young girl working in a shoe store in the Herzliya mall who had recently made Aliyah from Colombia, South America! She did not speak English (and I don't speak Hebrew) so we had to use Spanish to communicate. In Israel, it is even possible to find people - mostly older people - who still speak Yiddish, which has much in common with German. [/quote]
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