Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Jerusalem, How oft

Well, it was a real heart tugger but I did cut down on the number of my Jerusalem old city pictures. News break: Our missionaries, Sister Diana and Elder Lee Freeman arrived home yesterday after serving so well in Hawaii Honolulu Mission. Welcome Home. 



We were met at the Tel Aviv Ben Gurion Airport by our enthusiastic and lovely Russian Jew guide who had a car at the curb ready to take us to our Ramat Rachel hotel in Jerusalem a one hour journey. The scenery has changed drastically since my visit in 1973. The desert has blossomed like a rose. . .date palm and other orchards, flowering bushes on both sides of the beautiful highway.

 We arrived at  the hotel 5pm, dropped our luggage, found a taxi and headed directly to the Old City and wandered the warren of tangled streets until late in the evening. We entered through the Jaffa Gate.    Want to see what we saw?

We are in Jerusalem for sure at the beginning of
Shabbat.

 The vendors were very much like the Bazaar in Istanbul. The had wares drapped on the front of walls and occasionally there were small shops filled with EVERYTHING!


At every corner there were lovely arches and stairways which made for attractive pictures without much effort on the part of the photographer.

                                 
 The Church of the Holy Sepulcure is considered to be the actual site of the crucifixion and burial of the Savior by many major churches including Roman Catholic and Russian Orthodox. The church is administered by six churches with not
                                       much  Christian love between them.


Roman Catholic mass before the place believed to have been the tomb. Worshippers were invited one or two at a time into the small burial room directly behind the large
                                                    fascade above.

                                          Another view of the Mass.


This is believed to the unction stone upon which the body of the Savior was cleansed and then received the oil and the wrapping in linen bands before burial. We watched the women wipe the stone with different pieces of cloth I suppose these were kept as
                                               carriers of special blesssings.



Two interesting faces of Greek Orthodoxy


                                                We passed on this one.


                        Many such groups were intensly engaged in something.

                                

I was interested in the floors with  these stone slabs which we saw later were used   
                        to push wheeled wagons loaded with all sorts of goods.
                                    
                                          
                      
                           We caught a glimpse of a Minneret and the Dome of the Mount     
                                            which I layered with a telephoto lens.

                                    
                      
                 And this was the gorgeous skyline view of Jerusalem from our Sacrament
                  service at Shabbat Saturday morning in the Jerusalem Center
              

                 

The very attractive Jerusalem Center sprawls across the top of Mount Scopus.

         

Above is a telephone pix of Dome of the Mount from Jerusalem Center

        

Guide Steven Rona and John on Sunday morning have the Dome to themselves.
Interesting history and religious significance at this place ie Abraham's sacrifice
of Isaac, Mohammed went to heaven from the rock inside the Dome 


                                  Beautiful tile work on the outside. The Third Temple on
                       this spot will send out the law to all the world according to the Jews.
(Mormons as well?)


I like this shot framed by the palm tree and the wall
on the right.


A fact of life is the ever presence of the military.


Way of Sorrow taken by Jesus bearing his cross. This is the
fifth station where Simon the Cyrene took the cross. 



Wailing or Western Wall remains of the Second Temple
which was destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD is the
most sacred spot of worship to the Jews


                              
                               We joined a large family group to help celebrate a
                      Bar Mitzvah entrance into manhood for a 13-year-old Jewish boy.

                                   
                                        The ritual shofar or ram's horn
                             
                             

Reading from the Torah as part of the ceremony



                                        Chests which hold the holy Torah



  John and I wrote our prayer for world peace etc. and
 placed it in acrack between the blocks of stone.


St David's Tower





                                    Arab and Jewish children are beautiful

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