Rue des Rosiers
Rue des Rosiers stretches just 400 meters through the Marais, but it packs centuries of Jewish history into every storefront.
About Rue des Rosiers
Rue des Rosiers stretches just 400 meters through the Marais, but it packs centuries of Jewish history into every storefront. You'll find L'As du Fallafel (the yellow storefront everyone photographs), traditional Ashkenazi bakeries selling challah and rugelach, and Sacha Finkelsztajn's century-old deli where pastrami costs 8 EUR per sandwich. Plaques on building walls mark deportation sites from 1942, while newer Sephardic restaurants serve Israeli-style shakshuka alongside old-world borscht.
The street feels like two different neighborhoods depending on when you visit. Weekday mornings bring elderly locals buying fresh bagels and discussing politics in Yiddish outside Goldenberg's. By afternoon, international food tourists queue at Du Loir dans le Théière for 4 EUR rugelach while vintage shoppers browse retro Levi's at Free'P'Star. The contrast works: kosher butcher shops operate next to trendy concept stores, and nobody seems bothered by the mix.
Skip the weekend crowds if you want authentic atmosphere, most visitors miss the residential courtyards at numbers 10 and 17 where you can peek into typical Marais living spaces. The falafel hype is real but overpriced: locals go to Miznon on nearby Rue Ecouffes for better value at 6 EUR per pita. Walk the entire street in 15 minutes, then circle back to actually shop and eat.
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