It's Day 2. So far, so good.
Okay, the first day was busy and full and we were practically enjoying ourselves. The quiet is resounding. We looked at the freezer with satisfaction and the larder with joy.
We're set for self-isolation.
As a result, Day 2 was fine. We slept in, we relaxed with coffee and the news, and the paper came as expected. Self-Isolation isn't so bad.
Then came word that toilet paper was being hoarded. I'm not sure of the reason, but I can only think of one thing.
People are mistaking it for food.
via GIPHY
It has to be that, 'cus it's not that kind of bug, folks.
But, just in case, my husband has started a list of supplies we will need when certain people I know give up on the racketeering prices they're asking for toilet paper.
Me, I need nothing.
via GIPHY
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Showing posts with label peace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peace. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 18, 2020
Tuesday, March 27, 2018
From the peace of a garden to Iranian Drones
Our next
stop is the upper Garden of Gethsemane. Jesus went only that far that night he was betrayed, as the Sabbath law required him to go no
further. I wonder why he chose to break the law about working (healing) on the Sabbath,
but not the one about walking on the Sabbath. Was it because the garden was
simply closer and more private? Or work (healing) too important?
At this
high spot, it’s more rocky, with the occasional piece of garbage. The trek up here
is a single lane, either direction and very busy, not to mention a considerable
hike for some in our group. We pass a single, small piece of graffiti, a short
prayer for peace.
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Jerusalem wants peace |
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You can see the Old City in the background |
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The upper part of the Garden of Gethsamene |
We can see
much of the eastern wall, the Golden Gate and the Dome of the Rock. Rhonda
recalls a song about the Eastern Gate being closed up, but it’s not until later
that someone else recalls it and says it's the Golden Gate. I don’t remember learning it.
Our team leader talks about churches that have been built on important Biblical sites and how it’s both a blessing and a curse. But here in the garden, we can almost understand how exhausted the disciples were to have fallen asleep on the rocky ground so easily.
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A panoramic view of the Old City |
Our team leader talks about churches that have been built on important Biblical sites and how it’s both a blessing and a curse. But here in the garden, we can almost understand how exhausted the disciples were to have fallen asleep on the rocky ground so easily.
We climb down the hill, passing the cute sign that offers “In and out Coffee”, so similar to what a guide says as a delicate term for using the restrooms.
At another part of the garden, we visit the Church of All Nations, and discover that the olive tree there is not 2,000 years old as some claim, but only 1,200 years, as carbon dating has been done on it. This part of the garden is packed with people, and one can only walk the way the herd is going. So many people, with guides that are plying their trades, some yelling over the noise, some talking into the transmitters.
![]() |
copyright S.Soper |
At another part of the garden, we visit the Church of All Nations, and discover that the olive tree there is not 2,000 years old as some claim, but only 1,200 years, as carbon dating has been done on it. This part of the garden is packed with people, and one can only walk the way the herd is going. So many people, with guides that are plying their trades, some yelling over the noise, some talking into the transmitters.
![]() |
The Jerusalem cross on the gate into the garden. |
![]() |
Inside the Church of All Nations |
![]() |
One very old olive tree. |
![]() |
Inside the garden. |
![]() |
View from the front of The Church of All Nations |
We soon
escape down to the main road, where buses line up. We’re off to the panoramic
view, and on the way, our guide warns us that the best pickpockets in the world
are there.
There, the requisite photo is taken, but our tour is abruptly interrupted by our guide telling us that an Iranian drone was shot down after it entered Israeli airspace through Jordan. Also, 40 Syrian batteries were destroyed last night and one Israeli fighter jet shot down close to the Syrian border.
![]() |
Panoramic of the Old City |
![]() |
Up close. |
![]() |
The City of David |
![]() |
Our group, sans those enjoying a coffee out moment. Copyright Y. Paz. |
There, the requisite photo is taken, but our tour is abruptly interrupted by our guide telling us that an Iranian drone was shot down after it entered Israeli airspace through Jordan. Also, 40 Syrian batteries were destroyed last night and one Israeli fighter jet shot down close to the Syrian border.
Read about it here: http://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Israeli-Air-Force-strikes-Iranian-targets-in-Syria-542191
The pilots ejected to safety, and our guide reiterates how volatile the
situation is here. Some of the plane’s debris fell near where we’d spent our
lunch after visiting the Fortress Nimrod.
But I must reiterate: we never feel unsafe. Our guide and our driver take good care of us and to me, Israel is a safer country than parts of the US or Canada.
We climb aboard our bus and learn we're off to David's City.
The Upper Room is next!
We climb aboard our bus and learn we're off to David's City.
The Upper Room is next!
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