Jerusalem besichen: Shabbat Shalom aus enger Stad déi Kierper a Séil ernährt

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schrëftlech vun Dr Peter E. Tarlow

“A cold rain fell all day Friday here in Jerusalem, yet we turned the dreariness of the day into a metaphor for the pains of the past and tomorrow’s dreams,” reports Dr. Peter Tarlow from Israel. Israel is the perfect place as a center of history and a place of great food.  

“A cold rain fell all day Friday here in Jerusalem, yet we turned the dreariness of the day into a metaphor for the pains of the past and tomorrow’s dreams,” reports Dr. Peter Tarlow from Israel.
Often I neglect to mention why I am here and so please permit a slight literary sidebar.   A colleague from Houston and I lead a group of Latino leaders each year to Israel. This bicultural visit is not meant to be tourism per se, but rather interactive cultural dialogue with modern and ancient Israel serving as our backdrop. Our center, called “The Center for Latino-Jewish Relations”, seeks ways for both Jews and Latinos to go beyond mere dialogue and create mutual respect and caring. The trip is apolitical and is meant to nourish both body and soul.  As such, the City of King David serves as a perfect location to explore cultures and create bonds of friendship and mutual respect
Israel is the perfect place.  It is a center of history and a place of great food.  Fruits and nuts and vegetables are so good that they are more than mere delights to the palate but transform the biological act of eating into a theological celebration of the senses.  As such, walking through the Machandh Yehudah market on a rainy Friday afternoon, as the market begins to close for the Jewish Sabbath is a journey into Jewish culinary history.  It serves as a reminder that truly good food not only fills the stomach but also interacts with the soul.
FOTO 2018 12 07 21 54 41 | eTurboNews | eTN
Friday was a day dedicated to the history of the millennia and of the decades. Beginning at the Israel museum’s Shrine of the Book, which houses the Dead Sea scrolls, and then moving onto to Yad VaShem, Israel’s national center for the preservation of the Holocaust one begins to understand the depth of Jewish history.  At first these are mere relics of the past, facts of history. Then all changes.  Upon entering the dark “hall of the children”, where a million and a quarter murdered children are symbolically represented, turns the horrors of yesterday into the pain of humanity.  The children are represented by flashing lights against the darkness of eternal night, and as the lights flicker we hear their names and countries of origin.  Their names remind us of new lives snuffed out merely for the crime of being born.  It is a moment that brings the strongest of us to tears.
Yet despite the cruelties of the past, life somehow continues. After lunch in the market our Latino friends visited the Church of the Holy Sepulcher and bought rosary beads to be blessed.
 
And then the shopping ceased and the peace of the Sabbath settled over the city washing away the pains of yesterdays with the tranquility of the soul and the common humanity shared by both groups. As we shared a Sabbath dinner with an Israeli family that ironically immigrated to Israel from Texas, we came to understand our common ties and the fact that in the face of past evils we must seek ways to dedicate our lives for blessings
Friday nourished both body and soul both are necessary and both are a part of the human story.
Shabbat Shalom from a city that nourishes both body and soul.
More eTN News from Israel click here.

WAT VUN DESEN ARTIKEL WEI HUELEN:

  • And then the shopping ceased and the peace of the Sabbath settled over the city washing away the pains of yesterdays with the tranquility of the soul and the common humanity shared by both groups.
  • Beginning at the Israel museum's Shrine of the Book, which houses the Dead Sea scrolls, and then moving onto to Yad VaShem, Israel's national center for the preservation of the Holocaust one begins to understand the depth of Jewish history.
  • As we shared a Sabbath dinner with an Israeli family that ironically immigrated to Israel from Texas, we came to understand our common ties and the fact that in the face of past evils we must seek ways to dedicate our lives for blessings.

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Iwwer den Auteur

Dr Peter E. Tarlow

Dr Peter E. Tarlow ass e weltbekannte Spriecher an Expert spezialiséiert op den Impakt vu Kriminalitéit an Terrorismus op d'Tourismusindustrie, Event- an Tourismusrisikomanagement, an Tourismus a wirtschaftlech Entwécklung. Zënter 1990 huet Tarlow der Tourismusgemeinschaft mat Themen wéi Reessécherheet a Sécherheet, wirtschaftlech Entwécklung, kreativ Marketing a kreativ Gedanken gehollef.

Als bekannten Autor am Beräich vun der Tourismussécherheet ass den Tarlow e bäitriedende Autor zu verschidde Bicher iwwer Tourismussécherheet, a publizéiert vill akademesch an ugewandt Fuerschungsartikele betreffend Sécherheetsprobleemer abegraff Artikelen publizéiert am The Futurist, dem Journal of Travel Research an Sécherheet Management. Dem Tarlow seng breet Palette vu berufflechen a wëssenschaftlechen Artikelen enthält Artikelen iwwer Themen wéi: "Däischter Tourismus", Theorien vum Terrorismus, a wirtschaftlech Entwécklung duerch Tourismus, Relioun an Terrorismus a Croisièretourismus. Tarlow schreift a publizéiert och de populäre Online Tourismus Newsletter Tourismus Tidbits gelies vun Dausende vun Tourismus a Reesfachleit ronderëm d'Welt a sengen englesch, spuenesch a portugisesch Sproocheditiounen.

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