disneysteve
DIS meet junkie
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2002
- Messages
- 16,200
I apologize if there is another thread on this topic but I didn't see one.
I have very mixed feelings about the discussion on the show about visiting Egypt, Tunisia, etc. Certainly, if any individual feels personally unsafe or uncomfortable about a particular place, by all means don't go there.
However, suggesting that Disney Cruise shouldn't stop in a port because guests were sent back to the ship to change their clothing kind of typifies the "ugly American" stereotype that causes other cultures to dislike Americans. There are plenty of places around the world, and even many places right here in the US, where visitors are expected to dress and behave a certain way. I think it is incumbent upon us to respect the views and beliefs of others even if we don't agree with them or practice them ourselves. In many churches, synagogues and mosques throughout the US and the world, visitors need to be dressed modestly, no shorts, no exposed shoulders or bellies, etc. When I visited the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, I removed my shoes along with every other visitor because that was the rule in that culture. In Orthodox synagogues, women and men are separated for services and events. I can't sit with my wife and daughter if we go to an Orthodox temple. Do we share that belief? Nope. But we honor and respect it when we are in their place.
I have not traveled to Egypt but I can tell you that many Jewish-run trips to Israel, including past trips sponsored by our synagogue, included visits to Petra (one of the Indiana Jones films was filmed there). So I have many Jewish friends and relatives who have been to Egypt, some of them multiple times.
So perhaps I read too much into the podcast comments, but it sounded like they were suggesting that ABD and DCL shouldn't go to ports and destinations where the cultures have different rules and expectations of visitors. I think visiting those places is very educational and eye-opening for a lot of people.
I have very mixed feelings about the discussion on the show about visiting Egypt, Tunisia, etc. Certainly, if any individual feels personally unsafe or uncomfortable about a particular place, by all means don't go there.
However, suggesting that Disney Cruise shouldn't stop in a port because guests were sent back to the ship to change their clothing kind of typifies the "ugly American" stereotype that causes other cultures to dislike Americans. There are plenty of places around the world, and even many places right here in the US, where visitors are expected to dress and behave a certain way. I think it is incumbent upon us to respect the views and beliefs of others even if we don't agree with them or practice them ourselves. In many churches, synagogues and mosques throughout the US and the world, visitors need to be dressed modestly, no shorts, no exposed shoulders or bellies, etc. When I visited the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, I removed my shoes along with every other visitor because that was the rule in that culture. In Orthodox synagogues, women and men are separated for services and events. I can't sit with my wife and daughter if we go to an Orthodox temple. Do we share that belief? Nope. But we honor and respect it when we are in their place.
I have not traveled to Egypt but I can tell you that many Jewish-run trips to Israel, including past trips sponsored by our synagogue, included visits to Petra (one of the Indiana Jones films was filmed there). So I have many Jewish friends and relatives who have been to Egypt, some of them multiple times.
So perhaps I read too much into the podcast comments, but it sounded like they were suggesting that ABD and DCL shouldn't go to ports and destinations where the cultures have different rules and expectations of visitors. I think visiting those places is very educational and eye-opening for a lot of people.