Tour stickers! |
If tourists are to go anywhere in Israel, I cannot think of anywhere more religiously pertinent than Jerusalem. Paul and I had originally planned to see Jerusalem Monday but, bless my husband, he decided to cancel Monday’s trip to leave time for rest and free roaming. At first I was relieved yet disappointed that we were going to miss an entire tour day, but by this tour’s end, I was beyond thrilled that we had not hit the ground running.
Tuesday began early with a 6:30 breakfast and then a rush to
be outside before our scheduled 7:15 coach….that ended up being a half hour
late. Paul and I were joined by his colleague, LeeAnne.
We were taken from our hotel to another location where several coaches gathered to divide passengers according to tour locations and then gather them into the respective vehicles. This cattle call process was the most unorganized thing I have witnessed. It didn’t take long for us to realize that the tour company we used for booking purposes didn’t actually run the tours – apparently a commonality among tour agencies. We also realized once we got started that booking with a Christian tour company does not mean that we will participate in a Christian tour.
We were taken from our hotel to another location where several coaches gathered to divide passengers according to tour locations and then gather them into the respective vehicles. This cattle call process was the most unorganized thing I have witnessed. It didn’t take long for us to realize that the tour company we used for booking purposes didn’t actually run the tours – apparently a commonality among tour agencies. We also realized once we got started that booking with a Christian tour company does not mean that we will participate in a Christian tour.
As Paul, LeeAnne and I made our way onto another coach, we
squeezed into the last three available seats. LeeAnne took one in the middle so
that Paul and I could take the two in the back. My eyes caught sight of a young
mother with baby in tow seated in the back, so I offered Paul the window,
saving my seat next to the baby. We each made jokes about me getting my baby
fix while keeping Paul away from the child throughout the remainder of the day.
Our drive from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem was roughly an hour. Looking
out the windows, I expected to see desert, much like I saw in Dubai:
Instead, I saw green – lots of green: trees,
grass…evergreens! Israel has evergreens!
“Well,” Paul said at my amazement, “it is the land flowing with milk and
honey.” Oh….yeah. Of course there would be fertile land in what God presented
to his people as the Promised Land. Duh.
When our driver got word of traffic ahead on Highway 1, we
took a detour into Palestinian territory. Paul and I were slightly nervous
because we did not have our passports in our bag; we earlier confirmed with our
first coach driver that the passports would not be necessary. His response,
“No, you won’t be going into Palestine.” So he was wrong on one account. We did
easily pass through the border back into Israel a while later so passports were
not needed.
Border crossing |
For our first stop, we drove to an observation point, only
narrowly escaping large tour buses and hundreds of people hoping to see what we
were about to see: the holiest site on earth.
A view of Jerusalem - click the photo to enlarge it |
A Christian history we did not get but it was quite
insightful to learn why everyone in Israel has been fighting over a certain
piece of land – this piece of land – for millennia.
The plateau on which the buildings stand is known as the
Temple Mount and holds religious significance to Christians, Jews and Muslims.
That hill, now flattened and built upon, is Mount Zion. Technically speaking,
the area outside the wall is now known as Mount Zion but that’s way too much
history to explain.
Now, when Paul and I thought about Mount Zion, we ignorantly
expected to see an actual grassy mountain. I don’t think either of us realized
Mount Zion was settled. How did we not know that Jerusalem was built upon Mount
Zion? This just proves that the more we think we know about our own religion,
the more we realize we just don’t know.
The view was beautiful on a sunny, nearly cloudless day. We
stood along a hill with desert behind us to our left and all of Jerusalem in
front. After a few minutes of awe-inspiring gazes, our tour guide announced
that we were not just standing on any hillside – we were standing on the Mount
of Olives.
The Mount of Olives, now a popular cemetery |
Did you get the chills? I did. Sadly, that was my only
chill-inducing moment but, like I said, just because the tour company has
Christian in the name, doesn’t mean one actually attends a Christian tour. We
did, however, get a history lesson.
The wall outside Old Jerusalem was constructed 500 years
ago. The wall, like everything else in Jerusalem, has been built and destroyed
twice, maybe three times due to territorial and religious wars and an earthquake in the late 1920s. Since the beginning of time, people have fought over
this piece of land now called the Temple Mount.
Way, way, way back
in the day, when Abraham walked the earth, he is said to have walked on Mount
Zion, then called Mount Moriah. It was on that mountaintop (actually a grassy
mountain at that time, I imagine) that he set out to sacrifice the son he so
longed to have. And here began the controversy.
According to our tour guide, “God asked Abraham to sacrifice
his son. The Bible clearly states that he was to sacrifice his beloved son, but no name was
mentioned…It’s true, it’s true. So the Christians and the Jews believe he was
to sacrifice Isaac, who came from Sarah, and the Muslims believe Abraham was to
sacrifice Ishmael, the son of Abraham’s and Sarah’s maidservant, Hagar.”
Now, when the guide said that the Bible did not mention
Isaac’s name, I shot him a confused, I-think-you’re-wrong-there,-buddy look,
which is why he paused and then twice said that he was correct. For my own
sanity, and for blogging purposes (because I do my best to ensure that when I
write things as true, they actually are verifiable), I did some research.
Thanks to Bible Gateway, I was able to consult various text translations, including the New International Version, the Amplified Bible (my translation of choice), the Young’s Literal Translation (meaning, literally every word translated from the original text), the King James Version, the Authorized King James Version (no idea what the difference is there) and even an online Torah. All versions specifically state Isaac as the son who was to be sacrificed.
Thanks to Bible Gateway, I was able to consult various text translations, including the New International Version, the Amplified Bible (my translation of choice), the Young’s Literal Translation (meaning, literally every word translated from the original text), the King James Version, the Authorized King James Version (no idea what the difference is there) and even an online Torah. All versions specifically state Isaac as the son who was to be sacrificed.
Based on my uneducated Quran research, I have concluded that
the Quran does not mention a named son regarding the sacrifice. My research
indicates that there are many debates as to the validity and the origins of the
story and, after doing a keyword search in an online Quran, I was not able to
find the story of the sacrifice. I know basically nothing about the Quran and
the Muslim faith so please don’t hold that against me here. I did my best.
In the Old Testament, Mount Moriah/Mount Zion is also where
King Solomon built his temple. Both the temple and the city of Jerusalem have
been destroyed over centuries due to religious and territorial wars.
One of the biggest disappointments, in our opinions, was not
actually being able to see actual sites of religious significance. Saint
Helena, mother of Constantine the Great, in the third century took a tour of
holy sites in order to find religious artifacts.
To make a really long story short, she ordered that a church
be built on any piece of land holding religious significance in order to
preserve the land. Thousands of years later, we were sad that the land was not
actually preserved but I suppose I see her point.
What we did see was a beautiful old city with a lot of scars
amidst ruins.
One of the first rooms we walked into was, according to our
tour guide, “the site of the Last Supper. Now, of course this isn’t the actual room because the building was
destroyed, so this was recreated, but this is what we believe the room to have
looked like.” I don’t have many pictures of the room because, if it was the
room, it was bastardized as features of a mosque and a random tree were
incorporated into the room; the bronze olive tree was a gift from the Pope and
the Catholic Association, which provided funds for the room’s restoration.
The Upper Room |
Random bronze tree |
Behind the bars is the room of the descent, which we neither saw nor learned about |
After viewing the upper room, we went into the lower room
where a large coffin believed to be King David’s resting place was installed.
There were two entrances, one for men and one for women. Though the room was
open to both men and women, a wooden divider approximately 6 feet high
separated the two from seeing each other. Prayer books were aligned on a
bookshelf opposite the tomb.
Half of King David's tomb; the other half continued onto the men's side |
A woman reciting prayers beside the tomb |
One of many shelves filled with scripture and prayer books |
A man, visible above the room divider |
A man in the courtyard outside the tomb |
The courtyard |
As we entered through the Zion Gate, I stopped for a moment
to notice all of the holes in the walls – bullet holes, we were advised – and not small ones, obvious signs of five centuries of struggles and disagreements.
The Old City seemed somewhat surreal as we walked through
the narrow stone-lined passageways. To me the city was reminiscent of walking
through Disney World’s Hollywood Studios – bear with me here – in that it
almost seemed staged as if no one actually lived there. But people did…do…live
and work and eat and sleep and learn and converse and worship inside the walls.
I watched women carrying strollers down stone stairs and thought about the
families who lived inside. I thought about what it must feel like to live
inside walls.
The wall's interior |
Then I turned a corner and saw something so familiar, I
laughed.
We toured one Christian church that I believe was labeled as
an orthodox church, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The church is set on the
traditional site of Jesus’ burial and contains what is said to be his tomb,
along with several other markers including Cavalry, the spot where Jesus’ cross
was found by St. Helena, Adam’s burial and many chapels dedicated to several
churches including the Armenians, the Greeks and the Franciscans.
The columns and doors to the church |
An arch over stairs leading to Cavalry on Golgotha |
The station of the cross. The people are lining up to kneel at the feet of Jesus and kiss a circle on the floor depicting the place where Jesus' cross was positioned at his crucifixion. |
The Stone of Unction, believed to be the table where Jesus was placed when he was taken from the cross. |
Pilgrims, specifically Russian Orthodox Christians we were told, come to touch and oil the slab for healing. |
A mosaic on the wall behind the stone |
Lanterns and the ceiling facing the church's entrance |
The ceiling in the orthodox chapel |
The dome above the tomb |
I learned last night that there were many places inside the church that we did not see, so we know what to hit next time. We had lunch in a little cafe where our options were falafel or schwarma, which were the same thing (pickled vegetables held inside a pita), except the schwarma came with chicken. After, we walked the Via Dolorosa from the site of the crucifixion
out to the Western Wall, the holiest site for the Jewish faith. The wall is the
only remaining structure that originally outlined the courtyard of the Jewish
Temple and is a holy landmark for Jewish pilgrims.
Station 7 on the Via Dolorosa, marking where Jesus dropped his cross a second time on the walk to Golgotha |
Our group, our leader in the blue plaid, walking down the Via Dolorosa |
The fourth station, depicting where Jesus met Mary on his walk |
Stairs leading down to the Western Wall |
The Wall |
Paul observing the Wall |
The Dome of the Rock behind the Western Wall |
We had one more stop that afternoon – Yad Vashem, the World Center
for Holocaust Research, Documentation, Education and Commemoration. We
were advised to leave cameras behind as no photos or videos could be taken on
the premises. We would have an hour and a half to move from one end of the
building to the other. Looking at the museum from the opening, I figured we
would be done in half an hour. We stood on one end of a triangular tunnel with
concrete floors and walls, lit by glass sky lights and doors at the opposite end.
Along the tunnel were openings for rooms depicting different
phases of the Holocaust. Unlike most displays, this museum, sponsored by a family
in New Jersey, did not boast gory photos or graphic accounts. Instead, this
museum focused on the facts, portraying a Jewish history from the days of the
Roman empire to the years following the Holocaust. Children of the Holocaust
era tell stories on numerous television screens placed on walls in each room;
artifacts from families affected by the Holocaust are placed in display cases;
placards recount the history in countries and specific neighborhoods across the
globe.
Stories from Hungary, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Croatia,
Poland, Turkey and others fill the rooms. Letters from countries like the
United States and Australia, stating the countries would not admit Jewish
refugees; at the time the U.S. was in the midst of the Great Depression.
Before we knew it, we were a little more than halfway through
the rooms when we realized we only had 20 minutes left. From what I saw, I feel
the exhibits were much more informative than exhibits I had previously seen –
and these were much more tasteful. Yad Vashem focuses on portraying history,
not in-your-face awfulness. Yes, what happened was tragic on many levels and
for many years, and walking through the exhibits released emotions in both Paul
and in me, but the museum promoted a balance of emotion and historical
education that I had not until then witnessed.
The museum floor dips in the middle, literally taking guests down
into the tragedy. The floor begins to rise as the history takes a positive turn
and focuses on the end of the war and beyond. In the final room, images of
those lost in the Holocaust are displayed in a remarkable fashion and books
dedicated to each of the known victims are displayed around the room. I highly
encourage you to view Yad Vashem’s website to see pieces of what we were able
to see in person: YadVashem.
Once through to the other side, with many displays quickly
viewed due to timing, we were able to take a few deep breaths as we looked across
the grounds to something beautiful, a view I never imagined we would
experience. Let me just say that this photo does not do the view justice. Again, we were not allowed to bring the camera so this was a last-second camera phone shot. What we really saw was a complete, panoramic view of this, for miles. It was just beautiful and refreshing to see after experiencing most of what the museum had to offer.
The most moving display, in my opinion, was a separate
building dedicated to the children whose lives were lost during the Holocaust.
We entered a room where a single light was lit in the darkness. With the help
of specially placed mirrors and reflective elements, the single light casts
thousands of flames representing each child lost while sounds of children
singing echo through the hall. I do not have children and I don’t know that I
ever will but in that moment, I could not help but imagine what it must feel
like to have a child and lose that child, no matter what the circumstance.
By the time we drove the hour back to Tel Aviv and dropped
off everyone at their respective hotels, we were exhausted. We cancelled dinner
plans with LeeAnn in favor of room service, and I nearly fell asleep before our
food arrived. We were under the covers mere minutes after we finished dinner
(wrong, we know but we did need to eat), with the knowledge that the next day
would be filled with another tour.
As we prepared to sleep, lying in the dark, I heard Paul
chuckle while he said something he had said earlier in the day: “I can’t wait
until the real tour.”
1 comment:
Thanks for the great pics, good camera work, and commentary
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