Jerusalem, Israel (The Old City)

Damascus Gate in Old City - Jerusalem, Israel
Damascus Gate in Old City - Jerusalem, Israel
Haredi Jewish Family - Jerusalem, Israel
Haredi Jewish Family - Jerusalem, Israel
Pat in Old City Streets - Jerusalem, Israel
Pat in Old City Streets - Jerusalem, Israel
Restaurant at Night - West Jerusalem, Israel
Restaurant at Night - West Jerusalem, Israel
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Old City - Jerusalem, Israel
Old City - Jerusalem, Israel
Muslim Women in Temple Mount - Jerusalem
Muslim Women in Temple Mount
- Jerusalem, Israel
Mahaneh Yehuda Market - Jerusalem
Mahaneh Yehuda Market
- Jerusalem, Israel
Israeli Soldiers in Old City - Jerusalem
Israeli Soldiers in Old City
- Jerusalem, Israel
Bustling Market Area in Old City - Jerusalem
Bustling Market Area in Old City
- Jerusalem, Israel
West Jerusalem - Israel
West Jerusalem - Israel
Kosher McDonalds - Jerusalem, Israel
Kosher McDonalds - Jerusalem, Israel
Shawarma Meal in Old City - Jerusalem, Israel
Shawarma Meal in Old City - Jerusalem, Israel
Armenian Dinner in Old City - Jerusalem
Armenian Dinner in Old City
- Jerusalem, Israel
Jerusalem (The Old City), Israel (5/17-21/2010) - Jerusalem is  fascinating - one of the oldest cities in the world and now capital of Israel.

We stayed inside Jerusalem's fascinating in-your-face (and sometimes crazy) Old City with one of our first sites being the Damascus Gate (see photo).  

You are immediately introduced to a different world! Jerusalem's authentic, less tourist, market (Suq Khan es-Zeit), where we stayed in the Muslim Quarter, is a journey back in time. Arabs, along ancient stone paved narrow streets selling everything, watch you as you pass, especially the men looking at Pat.

In Jerusalem's Old City, the sights and smells of food and spices engrave a memory we will never forget. Thinking about how these streets looked like hundreds of years ago is not too hard. 

Jerusalem's Old City best exhibits Jerusalem role as the hot bed center of three of the world’s major religions (see the blog post Jersusalem Religous for details). Within a few blocks you see traditional Haredi Jews with their black suits and hats who live in the Mea Shearim community, Christians on pilgrimages singing and carrying a cross along the path that Jesus last walked, and Muslims in traditional dress (see photos). 

All this is surrounded (and controlled) by groups of armed Israeli soldiers - you can feel the tension! At times Christian church bells and Jews singing holiday songs compete with the 5-time daily eerie Muslim call-to-prayer blaring from sirens around Jerusalem's Old Town. Since we stayed in Jerusalem's Muslim Quarter, Pat will long remember the call-to-prayer waking her very early at 4am each morning.

It was also great to explore the newer parts of Jerusalem returning each day to our distinctive place in the Old City. We were invited for traditional Shevuot dinner at the home of Yael and Norman, a couple we met on the street. This Jewish holiday celebrates Moses receiving the Ten Commandments. This was a special night for us learning more about the Jewish faith and their role in Israel.

We took the Circular tourist bus for a view of West Jerusalem and other major sites around the new city - Mt. Herzl, Russian Orthodox Church, Mount of Olives, as well as East Jerusalem (see photos). Walking through the bustling Mahane Yehuda Market was an exciting adventure. Also fun was lunch in Zion Square, having a late night at Cat’s Square, and our hole-in-the-wall Shawarma lunch place in the Old City. The owner was very proud of his trip to Canada and showed us faded photos.

Some history... Jerusalem is the capital of Israel with a population, predominately Jewish and Muslim, of about a million in the area. Volumes have been written about Jerusalem’s history so to summarize it in a few sentences is beyond my ability. Despite Jerusalem's turbulent history starting over 4,000 years ago, the city looks pretty good considering Jerusalem has been destroyed twice, besieged 23 times, attacked 52 times, and captured and recaptured 44 times. First a Jewish city, then a Christian city, and until the recent migration of Jews from around the world, for 1,300 years Jerusalem was a city of Islam. Today it stills remains a keystone to the evolution of history on this planet.

For more about amazing Jerusalem, please see our other blog post: Israel Jerusalem - Religious. 

Please see our other 7 blog posts about this historical and interesting country:


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Jerusalem, Israel (Religious)

Temple Mount - Wailing Wall & Dome of the Rock - Jerusalem
Temple Mount - Wailing Wall
& Dome of the Rock - Jerusalem, Israel
Jews Praying at the Western (Wailing) Wall - Jerusalem, Israel
Jews Praying at the Western (Wailing) Wall
- Jerusalem, Israel
Stone of Unction - Church of the Holly Sepulchre
Stone of Unction in the Church
of the Holly Sepulchre - Jerusalem, Israel
Muslim Women at Temple Mount - Jerusalem
Muslim Women at Temple Mount
- Jerusalem, Israel
Pat Touching Where Jesus Died on the Cross - Church of the Holy Sepulchre
Pat Touching Where Jesus Died on the Cross
- Church of the Holy Sepulchre

Praying at the Wailing Wall - Jerusalem, Israel
Praying at the Wailing Wall
- Jerusalem, Israel
Jerusalem, Israel (Religious) (5/17-21/2010) - The Holy Land is here!! Jerusalem is the center (and hot bed) of religious faith.  

Because their most holy sites are located here (#1 Judaism, #1 Christianity, & #3 Islam), Jerusalem plays a very major role in three of the world’s major religions.

The 2000 Statistical Yearbook of Jerusalem lists 1204 synagogues, 158 churches, and 73 mosques within the city. 

Jerusalem has been sacred to the Jews since King David proclaimed Jerusalem his capital in about 1000 BC. Jerusalem was the site of Solomon's Temple and the Second Temple. Today, the Western Wall (sometimes known as the Wailing Wall) is a remnant of the wall surrounding the destroyed Second Temple, the most sacred site of the Jewish faith, where they believe is the location of Abraham’s near sacrifice of his son Isaac.

Synagogues around the world are traditionally built with the Holy Ark facing Jerusalem. We visited the Western (Wailing) Wall during a major Jewish holiday (Shevuot) - see photos. There is a feeling that comes over you about how sacred devout Jews consider this place. Jews come here to pray and place notes between the ancient stones (see photo) because they believe the presence of God resides here. Men and women must go to separate parts of the Wall to pray.

Christians also revere Jerusalem for its huge significance in the life of Jesus. According to the New Testament, Jesus was brought to Jerusalem soon after his birth in Bethlehem (see separate blog post). It is believed that Jerusalem is the location of Jesus’ last supper as well as his crucifixion and burial (the Golgotha, now the site of the Christians most sacred site, and the beautiful Church of the Holy Sepulchre completed in 335 AD – see photo). Jerusalem has been a destination for Christian pilgrimages for the past two thousand years.

Pat and I walked the mile-long last path of Jesus (Via Dolorosa - the Way of the Cross) and made wishes for our family at the Stone of Unction in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre where we also touched the place where it is believed that Jesus died on the cross and was laid afterwards (see photos).

In addition, Jerusalem is considered the third-holiest city in Islam after Mecca and Medina. Muslims believe that their prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven from Jerusalem in 620 after miraculously being transported in one night from Mecca to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Temple Mount is topped by two Islamic landmarks intended to commemorate the event - the al-Aqsa Mosque and the brilliant glistening gold covered Dome of the Rock (see photo) built in 690 AD. We visited the Temple Mount but non-Muslims (us) are not allowed inside these holy Muslim sites.

For more about amazing Jerusalem, please see our other blog post: 
Israel Jerusalem The Old City.

Please see our other 7 blog posts about this historical and interesting country of Israel:


For free travel tips and cost-saving bargains:
- Like us on our community Facebook travel page
- Follow us on Twitter:

Treat yourself and see many more photos (some winners of awards) of our worldwide travel adventures - click on our travel photo file: www.flickr.com/photos/unhooknow/sets.

Contact us to Arrange an inspirational and informative Plan Your Escape travel presentation for your organization about great travel tips, unique bargain-finding strategies, trip planning tools, and interesting stories.

From a travel TV host (Plan Your Escape), travel columnist for the Huffington Post, and experience traveler (100 countries), our popular 5-star customer rated groundbreaking and comprehensive how-to world travel book Plan Your Escape, Secrets of Traveling the World for Less Than the Cost of Living at Home reveals secrets how you can travel and see more for half the cost for all trips from weekends getaways to longer vacations and trips, experience more adventure and romance, safely realize your travel dreams with comprehensive planning tools and checklists, travel the world for less than $100/day for a couple, and much more! – for additional information and sign up for free travel tips and bargains, go to www.PlanYourEscapeNow.com