Wednesday, December 4, 2013

19th Century Photos of Jerusalem Now Digitized by New York Public Library

Israel's History - a Picture a Day (Beta)


Posted: 03 Dec 2013 

The digitizing of vintage photographs continues in archives
and libraries around the world. Last year the New York Public Library
digitized its photographic collections and posted them online.
The photos in the Library's Dorot Jewish Division include
hundreds of 19th Century pictures of Jerusalem and Palestine.

Below we post several of the pictures taken in the first
years of photography by pioneers such as Félix Bonfils
and Auguste Salzmann.


The images were captured by their early cameras while the
region was under Turkish role, and years before World War I,
the emergence of the Arab nationalist movement, Theodore Herzl's
Zionist movement, and the creation of the State of Israel.


Rare picture of Jews at the Western Wall,
with signature of Félix Bonfils
(NYPL Digital Gallery,1894).

Most early photos of this area were taken at ground level 
and did not show the tiny area where Jews were permitted to pray.


Inside the Jaffa Gate of the Old City of Jerusalem.


Other collections possess this photograph, but few are of similar 
quality and clarity. (NYPL Digital Gallery, circa 1870).

Another view of the inside of Jaffa Gate
by Auguste Salzmann
 (NYPL Digital Gallery, 1856)

Damascus Gate by Auguste Salzmann
(NYPL Digital Gallery, 1856)



Zion Gate, also known as David's Gate,
by Salzmann  (NYPL Digital Gallery, 1856)
Lions Gate, also known as St. Stephens Gate,
by Salzmann  (NYPL Digital Gallery, 1856)



























Jews praying at the Western Wall
by Robertson, Beato & Co.
(NYPL Digital Gallery, 1857)

 Click on photographs to enlarge.  Click on the captions to view the original pictures.

Responsible Archivists Preserve Their Photographic Treasures

Archaeologists Uncover First-Ever Find in Jerusalem

Archaeologists Uncover First-Ever Find in Jerusalem








Israeli archaeologists have uncovered a first-ever find in Jerusalem: an impressive building dating to the second century B.C., the time period of the famous Maccabee family, the Israel Antiquities Authority announced this week.
The family is associated with the holiday of Hanukkah.
The discovery is from the Hasmonean Period, when the Hasmonean Dynasty ruled ancient Judea and surrounding areas from 141-37 B.C. It began with a descendant of the Maccabees, Simon Maccabaeus, some two decades after his brother, Judas the Maccabee (hammer) defeated the Seleucid army in a rebel revolt.
The Seleucids imposed their Greek culture on the Jewish people and forbid them to keep the Sabbath and circumcise their sons - both Biblical commandments.
They also defiled the Temple in Jerusalem by erecting idols and sacrificing a pig on the altar of God.
The Maccabees led the revolt against the Seleucids and eventually rededicated the Temple in Jerusalem. Hanukkah means "dedication."
Despite more than 100 years of excavations, this is the first time such a building was found.
"This discovery bridges a certain gap in Jerusalem's settlement sequence," excavation directors Dr. Doron Ben Ami and Yana Tchekhanovets said.
"The Hasmonean city, which is well-known to us from the historical descriptions that appear in the works of [the Jewish historian] Josephus, has suddenly acquired tangible expression," they said.
Numerous pottery vessels and more than 40 silver and bronze coins were also found in the building.
The building in the City of David just outside Jerusalem's Old City Walls is about four meters (about 13 feet) tall and covers an area of around 64 square meters.
It's walls are more than three feet thick and are made of roughly hewn limestone blocks arranged as headers and stretchers.
"These indicated the structure was erected in the early second century BCE and continued into the Hasmonean period, during which time significant changes were made inside it," the IAA said.

Hanukkah's Last Night - the 8 Candles Lit by the Server (Shamash) Candle - The Light of the World

Hanukiyah on the 8th night

The Light of the World
Jesus Christ
Yeshua HaMashiach
The Eternal Oil
The Everlasting Messiah

We lit the eight candles 
with the shamash candle,
the Server, 
in celebration of this 
last night of Hanukkah.

May Yeshua (Jesus) be the 
Light in your world.

Blessings and ahava,

Steve & Laurie Martin
Love For His People


TBN Plans Celebration Program on Paul Crouch's Life

TBN Plans Celebration Program on Paul Crouch's Life


The life of Trinity Broadcasting Network co-founder Paul Crouch will be celebrated publicly on television this coming week.
The program will air from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. PST this Sunday and on Monday at 2 p.m. PST.
Crouch died Saturday at the age of 79 from heart problems.
Friends of the Christian television pioneer said he never let his health problems slow him down in the work he believed God called him to do.
Condolences are still pouring into TBN.
"I'll miss my friend, but there is joy in heaven where millions of people are thanking him for sharing Jesus with them," Evangelist Arthur Blessitt wrote.
CBN Founder and Chairman Pat Robertson expressed sadness at his friend's passing. He said Crouch's ministry will have a lasting impact around the world.
"Paul was a pioneer in Christian television; the channels and studios that Paul built around the world are an incredible achievement and will live on as a permanent legacy," Robertson said. "All of us at CBN mourn his passing and our prayers are with the Crouch family."
Website: CBN News

Poll: Israelis Want to Reduce Dependence on US - Israel Today

Poll: Israelis Want to Reduce Dependence on US

Wednesday, December 04, 2013 |  Israel Today Staff  
Nearly half of Israelis believe it is time to reduce their nation's dependence on America and seek new allies, according to the latest edition of a monthly poll conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute.
While 71 percent of those polled labeled America as Israel's truest ally, a 49 percent plurality said it was time to find a new national benefactor, though less than 30 percent believed Israel would be successful on that front.
Most Israelis view America as a diminishing ally for two reasons:
  1. The Obama Administration is viewed as overtly hostile toward the Jewish state, a perception only enhanced by Secretary of State John Kerry's recent remarks that Israeli concerns over Iran's nuclear deal were secondary to America's agenda; and
  2. Washington's failure to correctly gauge the "Arab Spring," punish the Assad regime for using chemical weapons against Syrians, and leverage economic sanctions to bring an actual end to Iran's nuclear program make America look weak in the Middle East.

Over the past year, Israel has been seen cozying up to Russia, which has been all too happy to fill the void left by America, not only in Israel, but around the region.
Israel has also boosted relations with China of late, sending several delegations aimed at involving Beijing more directly in the Middle East peace process.
Burgeoning Israel-China relations and cooperation on diplomatic issues like defensible borders is all discussed in greater depth in the upcoming issue of Israel Today Magazine.
DON'T MISS IT - SUBSCRIBE NOW >>

Dachshunds rule on Hanukkah's last night!






Zoe driving to the party for the final night of Hanukkah.
She will get an extra doggie bone and treat tonight!
(Photo courtesy of Hannah Martin Avalos!)


Netanyahu Challenges the Pope - Israel Today

Netanyahu Challenges the Pope

Wednesday, December 04, 2013 |  David Lazarus  
What was Netanyahu thinking this week when on an official visit to the Vatican he presented the Pope with a book his father wrote about the Inquisition? Doesn’t he understand that proper edicate requires presenting expensive gifts? Was it such a good idea on their first meeting to give the newly-seated Pontiff a $42 book reminding him of the Church’s torture and destruction of the Spanish Jews?
Netanyahu’s father, Ben Zion Netanyahu, wrote the hotly debated book “Origins of the Inquisition in Fifteenth Century Spain” in 1995. Netanyahu’s history of the Inquisition was so controversial that an April 2012 obituary in the New York Times highlighted his perspective of the notorious destruction of Spain’s Jewish community. From the Times:
"As a historian, Mr. Netanyahu reinterpreted the Inquisition in 'The Origins of the Inquisition in Fifteenth Century Spain' (1995). The predominant view had been that Jews were persecuted for secretly practicing their religion after pretending to convert to Roman Catholicism. Mr. Netanyahu, in 1,384 pages, offered evidence that most Jews in Spain had willingly become Catholics and were enthusiastic about their new religion.
"Jews were persecuted, he concluded — many of them burned at the stake — for being perceived as an evil race rather than for anything they believed or had done. Jealousy over Jews' success in the economy and at the royal court only fueled the oppression, he wrote. The book traced what he called 'Jew-hatred' to ancient Egypt, long before Christianity."
Netanyahu is arguing in his book that it was not religion per se that initiated the brutal massacre of Jews, but rather an inherent "Jew-hatred." While the Church must certainly be held responsible for her role in the many atrocities against the Jews, the book which his son presented to the Pope this week tries to show that the roots of anti-Semitism run far deeper than Church doctrine.
In recent years the Church has made significant strides in reconciling itself with the Jewish people. Christian and Jewish dialogue is improving. The violent and unmitigated anti-Semitism of the past is in recession in the Church. The new Pope inviting Netanyahu to the Vatican is clearly another step in pursuing friendly relations with Israel.
But giving the Pope his father’s book was not only conciliatory. With all these positive moves in the right direction, radical anti-Semitism continues to be on the rise, especially across Europe. A recent survey by the European Agency for Fundamental Rights concluded that one quarter of all European Jews are afraid to publicly identify themselves as Jewish.
Like father like son, Prime Minister Netanyahu wants people to realize, and the new head of an estimated 1.2 billion Catholics to understand, that modern, radical and secular anti-Semitism is still very much alive, with or without Church involvement. More than that, the book now in the Pope’s hands ought to stir him and his Church beyond mere reconciliation toward active participation in the struggle against anti-Semitism.
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Hanukkah's last night in 2013 - the 8th candle is lit!

 On the 8th day of Hanukkah...




 





The Lion of Judah
- Yeshua HaMashiach
- the Light of the World