Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Jerusalem Revisited (11-12 July, 2008). Dont miss the New Blog.

Can't believe I finished the maximum permissible size of a blog so early!!!! Outcome of 877 posts with 2593 photographs blogged in 219 days (7 months and 6 days). Consequence? Had to start a new blog by the name 'Through the Land of Israel II'. Here is the link http://www.lajupaulk2.blogspot.com/. Don't forget to see blog archive (March) for earlier posts on Jerusalem.

Sataf Nature Trail

Sataf is an ancient agricultural site west of Jerusalem and almost 10 min drive from the Holy City. Rich with many water caverns, caves and archaeological sites, Sataf  region practices a mountainous agriculture method, thousands of years old.



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The Tunnel of Sataf Pool




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Ein Kerem (2P and 3P) and Monastery of St. John in the Desert (1P)

Ein Kerem is the birth place of John the Baptist, forerunner of Jesus Christ. The monastery of John in the desert is believed to be the place where he hid from King Herod, later to be beheaded by the same. These valleys and plains are considered by many as the place where John spent his childhood and youth....away from human presence as mentioned in Bible.

see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ein_Kerem and http://www.goisrael.com/Tourism_Eng/Tourist+Information/Christian+Themes/Details/Monastery+of+St.+John+in+the+Wilderness.htm


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The Israel National Museum

Founded in 1965, the national museum of Israel is spread in an area of 47,000 square meters on a 20-acre site. The museum boasts the possession of the priceless Dead Sea Scrolls, one of the greatest archaeological discovery of all time. The other major attraction is the famous Second Temple Model of Jerusalem which has been shifted to the museum from Holyland Hotel and being on display since 2006. Here is the link to the official site of Israel Museum http://www.english.imjnet.org.il/HTMLs/Home.aspx
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1:50 Scale Model of Jerusalem at 2nd Temple Period (AD 70)

Constructed between 1964-1967, the Holyland Second Temple Model offers a glimpse at Jerusalem before its destruction by the Romans in 66 AD. This modern Jerusalem cultural landmark, built to a 1:50 scale, depicts the Second Temple and the surrounding Jerusalem cityscape of the period. The model was built by the late proprietor of the Holyland Hotel, Mr. Hans Kroch, with the guidance of the late Prof. Michael Avi Yonah of the Hebrew University. In the course of time, the Model has both been renovated and brought up to date archeologically.The entire complex is about the size of a tennis court (http://www.imj.org.il/model/index.html). This unique model is built with authentic construction materials - Jerusalem stone, Marmor, Steel all based upon historical material - the Mishna, the Gemara, Josephus Flavius' accounts, and more, all meticulously carried out. see also http://www.holylandnetwork.com/temple/model.htm.


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The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Shrine of the Book

The 2,000-year-old scrolls were found in the late 1940s and contain the earliest known copies of every book of the Hebrew Bible (missing only the Book of Esther), as well as apocryphal texts and descriptions of rituals of a Jewish sect at the time of Jesus. Separated into 15,000 fragments that make up about 900 documents, the scrolls date from the third century BC to the first century AD. In January 1947, Juma a Bedouin shepherd boy of the Ta'amireh tribe was searching for his missing sheep in the limestone cliffs of Qumran, a deserted place in northern Dead Sea area. He threw a stone into the dark interior of a cave and heard something shatter. The unexpected cracking sound surprised him and increased his curiosity in finding what lies in those remote caves? May be there lies some treasure? He told this incident to his cousins, Khalil and Muhammed. But it was getting late, and the goats had to be gathered and they decided to explore next day. The youngest of the three, a fifteen year old Muhammed Al-Dhib, rose the next day before his two fellow “treasure-seekers” and made his way to the cave. He came back disappointed and told his friends that inside the cave there was no treasure of gold but only a few bundles wrapped in cloth and greenish with age. Little did Muhammed realize that those dirty bundles wrapped in linen and blackened with age were going to be “the greatest archaeological discovery in the twentieth century?” The greatest manuscript treasure ever found—the first seven manuscripts of the Dead Sea Scrolls! The oldest manuscript of Bible available today! Before the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the oldest manuscripts of the Bible were from 9th century AD. The Dead Sea Scrolls pushed that date 1000 years back. By 1956, 10 more caves and more than 220 biblical and 700 non-biblical manuscripts/scrolls were discovered from this area. Fragments of every book Old Testament have been discovered except for the book of Esther. The most famous is however the "Great Isaiah Scroll" which contains the entire book of Isaiah exactly in the same way as we read today with all 66 chapters!

The story of how those scrolls traveled from the hands of young Bedouin goat herders to the Book of Shrine in Israel Museum is even stranger than fiction. The seven scrolls they found were sold to a cobbler and antiquities dealer called Kando. He in turn sold three of the scrolls to Eleazar L. Sukenik of Hebrew University, father of Yigal Yadin (a general in the Israeli army who later became a famous archaeologist and excavator of Masada and Hazor) and four to Metropolitan Mar Athanasius Yeshue Samuel of the Syrian Orthodox monastery of St. Mark. Mar Athanasius in turn took them to the American School of Oriental Research, where they came to the attention of American and European scholars. The great archaeologist William F. Albright soon announced that the scrolls were from the period between 200 BC and AD 200. Unable to find an interested buyer, Metropolitan Athanasius placed an ad in the Wall Street Journal. Yigal Yadin happened see this ad and purchased these priceless scrolls for around $250,000 through a third party. In February of 1955, the Prime Minister of Israel announced that the State of Israel had purchased the scrolls, and all seven were to be housed in the Shrine of the Book, where they can be seen today.

The Dead Sea Scrolls were written by Essenes, a monastic-like group of ultra-orthodox Jewish celibates who lived in Qumran during 200 BC to AD 70. Since the destruction of Israel in AD 70 by Romans, the precious library of Essenes disappeared from history only to be rediscovered 1900 years later in 1947, exactly a year before modern Israel was formed; appears to me nothing short of a miracle and indeed a divine guidance .

Shrine of the Book (1P) where Dead Sea Scrolls are kept








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1P and 2P: The main attraction of Shrine of Book is the Isaiah Scroll. But the one displayed on 1 and 2P is a facsimile. Orignial Isaiah Scroll in 4P.




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1P: Woman with toga/Ashkelon (1 cent AD). 2P: From Synagogue/Chorazin/Galilee (4-5 cent AD). 3P: Lintel from Synagogue/Nabratein/Galilee (3 Cent AD).







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1P-3P: Mosaic Floor of Churches excavated from Galilee and Bethlehem (5th to 7th cent AD)




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