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May 23 - June 3, 2010
With tour leaders John Sharp and Fred Redekop
In 1880-81 five wagon trains of Mennonites left European Russia and headed east to Central Asia along the famous Silk Road. Seeking freedom from conscription and new economic opportunities, this group went east instead of west to North America as 18,000 did a decade earlier. In the last three years, new details of the Great Trek have emerged in the remarkable Silk Road cities of Khiva, Samarkand and Bukhara. John Sharp, history professor at Hesston College who has a passion for the Anabaptist story, and has studied primary and secondary sources on the Great Trek, will act as the storyteller on this trip. Fred Redekop, pastor of Floradale Mennonite Church in Ontario, will look after the tour logistics and your needs while traveling. Local guide Marina Allayarova, an expert on Uzbek life and culture as well as the Mennonite experience, will join us in Tashkent. Amidst the splendor of the Islamic architecture of the Citadel in Bukhara, the striking beauty of the mausoleums of Samarkand, or within the spectacular wall of ancient Khiva, the Mennonite Great Trek story will emerge through journals and letters of trekkers, archival documents, and current reflections. To read past blog posts from this tour, please click here. The tour departs Sunday night from Chicago on an overnight flight to Istanbul, Turkey, arriving late Monday afternoon. Enjoy a delicious meal together before going to bed for some much-needed sleep.
 Intricate Tile Work
Our tour of Istanbul today includes St. Saviour in Chora with its gold gilded mosaics of the 13th century; the Mosque of Sulelyman the Magnificent built in the 16th century; the famed Hippodrome Square; the Blue Mosque with six minarets and a middle dome of 109 feet; the Basilica of Saint Sophia, built in 532 AD, which at one time was the largest church in all of Christendom and the Byzantine underground cistern, built by Justinian the Great in the 6th century to reserve water against the threats of siege. Later, you will enjoy wandering through the Grand Bazaar District where you can find opportunity for shopping for jewelry, leather products and other souvenirs. On Wednesday morning we will visit Topkapi Palace, home of the sultans of the Ottoman Empire. In the afternoon you will enjoy the Spice market of the 17th century where you can still see a profusion of oriental herbs and spices. Following the market experience, we will head on to the Balat district to visit old Christian and traditional Jewish quarters and the Bulgarian steel church. Then we will board a private boat at Kabatas Pier to enjoy a cruise on the Bosphorus, the narrow body of water that divides the city and the continents of Europe and Asia. You will be escorted back to the old town and transferred to Istanbul Airport for a flight to Tashkent, Uzbekistan. It will be early Thursday morning when we arrive in Tashkent, the ancient capital of Uzbekistan. After collecting our bags, our guide Marina Allayarova, and the coach driver will take us to our hotel for a much-needed rest. We will enjoy our first lunch at an Uzbek restaurant followed by a tour of the City of Parks. We will see glimpses of Tashkent’s 2,000-year history that will include a statue of Tamerlane at the Amir Timur Square, the 16th-century Kukeldash Madrasah, and Independence Square. We will marvel at the cosmopolitan, multi-ethnic nature of the Uzbek people, a legacy of life at the crossroads of the greatest trading route in history. Mennonites who camped near Tashkent commented on its multi-racial character, and their children played with Chinese, Arab, and Cossack neighbors. In the evening we will learn about Mennonites in Khiva and Ak Metchet.
 Samarkand Mosque
This morning our coach will take us to one of the oldest cities of central Asia, Samarkand, Pearl of the East. Mennonite wagon trains took this route to Bukhara and Khiva by way of Samarkand. We will see the fertile oases of the Ferghana Valley that impressed Mennonite farmers in 1880 as we drive the most famous trading route in the world. The Silk Road connected China in the east to Rome in the west and to India in the south. Arriving in Samarkand we will have a late lunch, followed by an afternoon tour of the city’s famous madrasahs, minarets, and, of course, the celebrated Mausoleum of Tamerlane. (The journal of a 14-year-old Mennonite girl in 1880 described the beauty of this famous mausoleum as her horse-drawn wagon rumbled by.) Today we will drive to Serabulak on the way to Bukhara. It was in this stretch that the Mennonites were stranded between the Russian Empire of Samarkand and the territory of the Khan of Bukhara, who refused to grant them permission to settle, enter, or even travel through his territory. Here in the village of Serabulak, Mennonites spent nine months debating their final destination. The remarkable story here is that Muslim villagers invited pilgrim Mennonites to use their mosque for worship and community gatherings. In this mosque, called Kyk-Ota (Blue Grandfather), two Mennonite couples were married and twenty-one young people were baptized. We will stop in this village and savor that uncommon hospitality. While sitting in the coolness of the dome of the mosque we will read from the journals of our spiritual ancestors who sojourned here 127 years ago. And then it’s on to Bukhara, the Pillar of Islam, and our hotel.
 Bukhara Citadel
On Sunday we will visit the Citadel of Bukhara, where the Mennonites petitioned the Khan for permission to settle or travel through his territory. It will be hard to imagine plain Mennonite emissaries entering the magnificent throne room of the Khan, asking permission to travel through his land. We will also visit the monumental 150-foot Kalan Minaret, the elegant Ismail Samani Mausoleum, and ancient madrasahs and mosques, beautifully decorated with brilliant blue and green tiles. In the afternoon we will experience the first shopping malls of the Silk Road, the multi-domed markets along the route where merchants led their camels. Today, in these domes we can buy silk scarves, carpets, woodcarvings and jewelry. In the evening we will enjoy Uzbek cuisine and a cultural fashion show in an ancient caravansary. Today will be a traveling day through the Kyzyl Kum Desert to the walled city of Khiva, the most intact and remote city of the Silk Road. This was the most difficult part of the journey for many Mennonites of the Trek. In the comfort of our air-conditioned bus, we will read of their cantankerous camels, skilled guides, sandstorms, illnesses, the birth of a baby, the Great September Comet of 1882 and more.
 Parquet floor crafted by Mennonites
Near Khiva is the quaint village of Ak Metchet, the Khan’s Garden, where some 60 families of the Great Trek settled. Tuesday we will visit this settlement, listen to villagers, and see the well used by the Mennonites–one of the last vestiges of the Mennonites who were deported by Stalin in 1935. We can also see the 100-year-old desks made by Mennonite craftsmen still in use in the local school. Standing in the Khan’s Garden we will see the fields where Mennonite farmers introduced cucumbers, peas, tomatoes, and potatoes to villagers impressed by the strangers’ expertise. In the afternoon we will return to the walled city of Khiva and visit the Ichan-Kala Museum which features the Mennonites story. Just outside the inner wall, we will see the Nurullabai Palace with its parquet floor, doors, windows, and grand bed that Mennonite craftsmen built for the Khan of Khiva. In the evening we can stroll through the city on our own, bid its citizens a final Salaam Aleikum and watch the sun set over the shadowed minarets. On Wednesday morning a short drive will take us to the Urgench Airport for a return flight to Tashkent. Looking down from the plane we can contemplate the courage of our ancestors traversing the hot, arid sands of the desert on camels and horses. Back in Tashkent, Uzbekistan’s capital, we will transfer to our hotel, eat lunch and have a leisurely afternoon for shopping, walking, resting or swimming in the hotel pool. In the evening we will celebrate our “farewell dinner” over local cuisine and shared reflections. Very early on Thursday morning we will leave Tashkent for Istanbul, followed by our return flight to Chicago. Our Great Trek will be over, but the lessons from history and the friendships forged will long endure! For further information regarding the complete tour fare, please This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
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