14th Mennonite Heritage Cruise in 2008
(also known as the Floating Mennonite University)
Odessa - Crimea - Kyiv
 
September 28 to October 14, 2008
Visit the download page to register for this cruise
The Frequently Asked Question (FAQ) page for the 2008 cruise may be useful to prospective passengers
What people have said about this cruise. Well over 2,000 pilgrim passengers have participated
The 14th Cruise   September/October 2008
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28  September  Sunday 29   Monday 30   Tuesday 1 October   Wednesday 2    Thursday 3    Friday
4    Saturday
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Passengers fly from North America
.Arrivals in Odessa
There will be an option to arrive on the ship a day earlier
Odessa city tour, Mennonite Archive exhibit onshore, Folkloric event on ship.
.Morning free in Odessa, sail to Crimea at noon, Mennonite lectures begin after a cruise opening  event. Crimea Day 1
Arrival in Sevastopol with day trip to Yalta & Russian Riviera, evening Black Sea Fleet  Revue
Crimea Day 2
Mennonite village bus  excursions or  tour of Crimean War sites & Balaklava harbour
Crimea Day 3
Morning walking tours of Sevastopol naval sites plus visit to nearby ancient Greek Chersonesus
Ship sails after noon
5   Sunday
6   Monday
7   Wednesday
8   Wednesday
9   Thursday
10   Friday
11   Saturday
On the River
World Communion Sunday is observed on the ship.
Mennonite lectures continue with a break to visit the old historic section of Kherson

Zaporizhia Day 1
Long day of bus and private trips to former Mennonite villages


 Zaporizhia Day 2
Long day of bus and private trips to former Mennonite villages


Zaporizhia Day 4
A final long day of bus and private trips to former Mennonite
 villages.


Zaporizhia Day 4
A leisurely day sees us all visiting historic Khortitsa-Rosenthal and a
Cossack equestrian show on Khortitsa Island. Ship sails 10 pm

Dnipropetrovsk
Morning visit to urban Mennonite sites.  An evening of sharing
Ship sails 11  pm


On the river -  Relaxing
We sail without stopping to Kyiv. Genealogy seminar & Evening memorial service

12  Sunday
13   Monday
14  Tuesday
15  Wednesday
16   Thursday
17   Friday
18   Saturday
Kyiv Day 1
Arrive Kyiv 11 am
Half day city tour of old Kyiv & Baby Yar holocaust site
Captain's gala dinner
Kyiv Day 2
Half day city visit including  Pechersky Lavra monastery
Evening Boyan Male Choir performance
Cruise ends in Kyiv
with morning and afternoon flights to Europe stopovers
 or home



C


Ship's route - 2008 cruise - starting in Odessa and ending in Kyiv - map courtesy Kenneth Ratzlaff

The cruise itinerary in narrative form
An old adage says: If you haven’t sailed the Dnieper, you haven’t seen Ukraine. The Dnieper is Europe’s third longest river, after the Volga and the Danube. It is the history of the nation immortalized in legend and song. It is the cradle of the eastern Slavic cultures. Today it is a cascade of five reservoirs and locks with asymmetrical banks, the right bank often high and steep, the left bank low and plain. We also sail the storied Black Sea to Crimea. For the fifth time, the cruise starts in Odessa and ends in Kyiv.

September 28
Flights from North America

September 29,30 Odessa
Lufthansa passengers take afternoon into evening buses from Kyiv to Odessa on the new freeway. Austrian Airlines passengers fly directly into Odessa.

Odessa, known as the Pearl of the Black Sea  has a decidedly international feel to it, having been founded in 1794 in large part by aristocratic emigres from the French Revolution. The wide boulevards, distinguished mansions and lovely interior courtyards, which we see in our city tour, give evidence of its former grandeur.

We visit the Regional History Museum as part of a city tour. We have plenty of opportunities to climb the great Potemkin staircase, walk around the city to shop for souvenirs. Before we sail for Crimea we see a special exhibit from the Peter Braun archive, miraculously rediscovered in 1990 & displayed for us onshore, along with the Board of Guardians Collection. This is an excellent entry into the Mennonite story, followed by an evening folkloric event on the ship

September Oct 1 Sailing to Crimea
As we set sail the Mennonite historical lectures begin, given by senior historian Paul Toews and architect, Rudy Friesen..

October 2,3,4 Crimea
We are docked for three days in historic Sevastopol, traditional home of the Black Sea Fleet. We will see a  command performance of the virtuosic Russian Black Sea Fleet musicians, singers and dancers.

Our quay is conveniently located in the heart of the city, near an amazing public food and clothing market. We are docked within twenty minutes drive to one of the world's great panoramas - depicting a day in the Crimea War (1854-56).

We are also close to the site the famous ancient Greek ruins of seaside Chersonesus.

Crimea is a fascinating place with its varied geography and historical sites. Most of the peninsula is flat, fertile. arable land, much coveted by 19th century land-starved Mennonites from the Molotschna. We visit the former Mennonite villages. These will likely include Spat, Karassan, Annenfeld and Tschongrau.

Across the lower centre are ranges of foothills which culminate in a dramatic range of seaside mountains, creating the "Russian Riviera". Here are the fabled resort palaces of Greater Yalta, such as Count Vorontsov’s Alupka Palace and the Romanov’s Livadia Palace, pebbled Black Sea beaches, exotic semi-tropical gardens and historic cliff-side houses of the famous, including playwright Anton Chekhov. Chekhov’s house is of particular interest because it gives us a rare glimpse into a modest sized dwelling of the late 19th century, in contrast to the grand and ornate palaces.

Not far from where we are docked in Sevastopol lie the grand ruins of Greek & Byzantine Chersonesus. Its 25 centuries are wonderfully preserved, including the Roman and Byzantine periods. From here Christianity spread to eastern Slavic lands over a thousand years ago.

October 5  Kherson
We enter the fabled Dnieper river and make a short stop at Kherson to visit the old historic section of this shipbuilding regional centre. As the ship continues upstream to Zaporozhye, the Mennonite history lectures continue, refreshing our understanding of the story of the Russian Mennonites. During spare moments on this transition day, we will be finalizing choices of bus routes and private trips to the Mennonite villages, with the help of the Zaporizhyia guides and tour manager, who have joined the ship as it sailed from Odessa.

October 6-9 Zaporizhia
The heart of the Mennonite Heritage Cruise experience then finds us docked at Zaporizhia (also known as Zaporozhye and formerly Alexandrovsk), for four days.

During our Zaporizhia stay, everyone sees famous Khortitsa-Rosenthal, now a suburb of Zaporizhia, including the oak tree, the Mädchenschule and other well known sites. 

From Zaporizhia we visit the parent Khortitsa and Molochna colonies via bus routes reflecting passenger requests. Individual trips can also be arranged to specific villages and outlying daughter colonies such as Schlachtin-Baratov, Fürstenland, Borozenko, Memrik, Sagradowka, etc.

The village excursions are often long and always eventful. Dinner on the ship is served when the buses return. During our  stay at Zaporozhye we enjoy a virtuosic Cossack Equestrian Show on the island of Khortitsa.

October 10  Dnipropetrovsk - a day of important historical ironies
After a short overnight sail, we arrive at Dnepropetrovsk, formerly Ekaterinoslav, an Imperial Russian centre well known to our Mennonite ancestors.  A walking tour of the old city centre reminds us of the influence of entrepreneur and mayor, Johann Esau, politician Hermann Bergman and other Mennonites in this region. We see the still functioning  Fast Mill and the ruined Red Cross Hospital where many  young Mennonite men and women trained for and served in the Sanitätsdienst (Medical Service) in World War I. Their work and witness spawned many Mennonite relief projects globally. Around the corner ironically are the infamous KGB dungeons where many Mennonites were later interrogated and sentenced, often shot within days, in the Soviet era . We also see sites associated with the anarchist, Nestor Makhno, scourge of Mennonites during the confused Civil War of 1919. An emotionally charged room in the regional museum is devoted to the millions of people who perished under Stalin. Representative photos of faces, including a Mennonite face, form a candle-lit pyramid.

As we sail up the Dnieper, we have an evening of sharing and singing.

October 11  On the River to Kyiv
As we continue up the river non-stop to Kyiv, Alan Peters conducts a computer-assisted genealogical seminar. In the evening  we invite passengers to a special Memorial Service on the ship - the lighting of candles in memory of  relatives and all who perished in the aftermath of the Russian revolution and the Stalin inferno with its horrific gulag exile.

October 12, 13  Kyiv
The voyage ends in Kyiv with a population of over 3 million. It is one of Europe's most famous cities with a rich 1400 year old history. We visit Old Kyiv Hill strategically located above the Dnieper, St. Sofia, a wonderful late medieval copy of the famous basilica in Byzantium, the Jewish holocaust site at Babi Yar, plus the huge complex of monastic buildings known as Pechersky Lavra. The cruise ends with two special evening events: the Captain's Gala Dinner which is also the concluding session of the "Mennonite Floating University" and finally a command performance at the University of Kyiv by Ukraine's outstanding Boyan Male Voice Chamber Choir.

.Blac Sea EnsembleBoyan Choir
                         Black Sea Fleet Ensemble in Sevastopol                              Boyan Male Chamber Choir in Kyiv                               
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October 14 Kyiv  - flights home or stopovers in Europe

Notes on Individual Arangements

We can help you with your individual travel needs.
.
A. Private Excursions in Ukraine.
In due time we will publish a bus schedule, reflecting passenger requests for villages in the former Khortitsa, Molochna and Crimea colonies. These are included in the cruise price. We can also book private trips, at modest extra cost, to more distant destinations within Ukraine such as villages in the former Volhynia, Sagradowka, Fürstenland, Borozenko, Schlachtin-Baratov, Memrik & Ignatievo colonies or remote places in Crimea. Please have a look at how we organized bus and private trips for the 2007 cruise

B. North American connecting flights.
We use the best possible fares offered by scheduled airlines.

Note about post-cruise stopover options:
C. Transatlantic Flights & European Stopovers.
Our two major air carriers are Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines for Canadian departures and Austrian Airlines for U.S. departures. Lufthansa allows one free stopover in Frankfurt pre-cruise or post-cruise. Austrian Airlines allows one free stopover in Vienna post-cruise. Weekend surcharges and restrictions may apply. Vienna is the cultural centre of central Europe. In mid October the concert and opera seasons are in full swing. There are wonderful museums and art galleries. Marina has long standing contacts with a family owned hotel in the historic Vienna city centre.  Walter has special hotel and cultural contacts in Germany, including Berlin, Dresden (city centre recently and magically rebuilt) and the Bach city of Leipzig.

Please visit this page from time to time to learn more about scheduled events in Europe in mid to late October, 2008
You can also find out directly from Germany and Vienna on the web. The recommended supplier of day tours from Vienna to Budapest, Prague, etc is Royal Tours. Deutsche Bahn (German Rail) has a very useful search engine for European trains.

For further information contact
Marina Unger, Cruise Organizer:   toll free 1-800-387-1488 ext 2827 or direct office line 416-915-2827    e-mail:  marinau@vision2000.ca
Jane Clemens, Cruise Administrative Assistant:  toll free 1-800-387-1488 ext 2243 or direct office line 416-915-2243    e-mail:  janec@vision2000.ca
for both  Fax (416) 221-5605
Conference World Tours/Vision 2000
1200 Sheppard Avenue East  Suite 201
Toronto, Ontario, Canada   M2K 2S5

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