May 22, 2023 2023 - Israel and Jordan

Day 12: A Day in the Life”, Israel Museum

O.A.T. (Overseas Adventure Travel) sponsors a program called a Day in the Life. It gives an overview of the home life and the surrounding area of a person, family or group. Today, we drove to the Arab- Israeli village of Abu Ghosh, in East Jerusalem. Abu Ghosh has about 7000 predominantly Arab residents and has been described as a model of coexistence”. Arabs are about 20% of the population of Israel, about 2 million. During the 1948 war, the village remained neutral throughout the fighting and even lent support to its Israeli neighbors. Issa Jabber was our host all morning. A retired high school principal and former mayor of the town, he first met us at the Great Mosque. It is pretty unusual for a group to tour” a mosque, but we took off our shoes, women put on head coverings and we sat around in the nearly empty main area while he gave us a lecture 101 on Islam. We learned about the 5 pillars of Islam, about each section of the mosque and got a sense of the pride he has in his role in building what is now the second largest mosque in Israel. Onto the next stop, the very old Benedictine Abby of St. Mary with a below ground cistern, and incredibly resonant main area with portions of old frescoes still on the walls. He asked if someone wanted to try out the acoustics. Well, Jim volunteered Wendy who, after struggling to come up with something appropriate, sang Amazing Grace. It was very well received, and definitely proved the point. Next was a major spread of lunch at his home. It was quite a compound, as his sons and their families live in extended sections, and he takes care of his mother. We loved the way he insisted on the complete attention of our group before speaking. A true teacher! His last lesson was on the tradition of serving coffee. Coffee means farewell, if you offer it immediately when people arrive it can be an insult as it means leave, get out of here! The head of the family has to serve coffee to the guests. Sometimes it is a negotiating tool. He talked about marriage customs. When a man wants to marry (and also with arranged marriages), a delegation is sent to the brides home. Discussions follow, when they have come to an agreement to seal the deal, coffee is served. If they don’t, there is no coffee. Both the family and the woman in question get three days to consider the offer. Surprisingly, these marriages have a very high percent of being successful. There were many more questions about this, but we had to leave. Our last stop was the Israel Museum. Wendy wished she could be there for a week! Ibrahim gave us a history lesson in front of the model of the entire old city as it looked at the time of the second temple , explaining how each regime built it up or tore it down. It must be the largest model built, probably one- eighth of a mile on each of the four sides. It was brought painstakingly, section by section from another site about 20 years ago.

Then to the Dead Sea Scrolls! These were found in the Qumran caves in the 1940s and 50s and contain many biblical texts. Only fragments are actually in the museum, they were found rolled up and took years of patient work to get them preserved to a point when you could actually read them. Unfortunately no photography was allowed in this exhibit. Here’ll a published example: The originals are actually stored underground in the vast storerooms of the museum. Only 10% of the museum’s holdings, including the scrolls are actually on display. Ibrahim once worked here and said it would be memorable to stay underground for a week to marvel at all that is there.

We mostly visited the art section. There is also archeology, Jewish life and art and several temporary exhibits. Each section is vast and could easily take hours to do it justice. Here are about ten pictures of the 50 or so we took. We returned to our hotel and found a pub place, one of the few open for dinner. We were tired, if we had waited until after sundown, about 7:30 pm, everything would be open again.

#published #evernote

May 21, 2023 2023 - Israel and Jordan

Day 11: Traveling to Jerusalem through Christian Holy Sites, Shabbat dinner with friends

Our first stop after leaving the Golan Heights and our basketed” breakfast was to go down, down, down to the Sea of Galilee. This morning was a mini pilgrimage to three holy sites. All were crowded with real pilgrimages of people from all over the world, and a Babel Tower of languages. The Church of the Beatitudes, built near the site of Jesus’s Sermon of the Mount was beautiful, and grounds were well planted as well. The religious tour groups were gathered in several spots singing and praying. Capernaum is an ancient 2000 year old Roman fishing village was where Jesus spent much of his adult life and gained a following. It is also the site of St. Peter’s home. On top of it is built a beautiful modern church. There is also the ruins of an ancient synagogue from the 4th century built on top on an older one. We also enjoyed views of the Sea of Galilee which lapped the nearby shores.

Our last stop was in the ancient town of Tiberius, the second most important city in Judaism as it is the place where the Jews went after being banished from Jerusalem by the Romans. An ancient boat, nicknamed the Jesus boat’ was discovered on the shores of Galilee and we watched a fascinating video of how it was discovered in the 1980s, and, more importantly, transported to its present sight and maintained. The wood is so old that if not kept constantly moist and infused with preservatives it will disintegrate. Nearby are the only beaches on the Sea of Galilee open for recreation. And overlooking that area was the outdoor restaurant where we had St. Peter’s fish,a form of tilapia. The tens of feral cats enjoyed the remainders, despite the warning to not feed them.

After a very bumpy long ride, we reached our hotel in Jerusalem, the Leonardo Boutique. It is located close to both the old city and the Machane Yehuda, the huge market nearby. As everything was closing due to Shabbat, Ibrahim took us on a walking tour of the nearby area to get our bearings and for our fellow travelers to choose their dinner plans from limited offerings. We didn’t have that problem as tonight was our special Shabbat dinner at the home of Joe Federman and his lovely family. He is the son of friends of ours from Massachusetts and many many thanks to our good friend Rabbi Debby Hachen for arranging this! Joe gave us a running commentary from the time he picked us up at our hotel to the time he dropped us off. He has lived in Israel for over twenty years, has an Israeli wife and three children, two of whom live at home and shared a delicious dinner with us. He is the bureau chief of the Associated Press in the Mideast and shared many facets of his fascinating job. His wife Carmit is a social worker at the nearby Hadassah hospital. They were so very kind to open their home to us and share a delicious Shabbat dinner. We learned a lot!

#published #evernote


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