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Documentary Examines Jerusalem's History

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  • Documentary Examines Jerusalem's History

    DOCUMENTARY EXAMINES JERUSALEM'S HISTORY
    Michael Fox

    Jewish Times
    http://www.jewishtimes.com/index.php/jewisht imes/news/jt/local_news/documentary_examines_jerus alems_history/11423
    March 27 2009
    Baltimore

    'Jerusalem: Center Of The World' delivers the history and culture of
    the Israeli capital with nary a whiff of controversy.

    The most surprising aspect of the engaging, two-hour PBS documentary
    "Jerusalem: Center Of The World," which airs next Wednesday night,
    April 1, is how casually, yet completely, it sidesteps anything
    resembling controversy.

    Even a viewer with merely a superficial awareness of the Middle East
    saga and history has to wonder going in how American public television
    would confront the combustible themes of religion, power, geo-politics,
    conflict and land inherent to the region and the Arab-Israeli struggle.

    One can only conclude from Emmy Award-winning producer/director Andrew
    Goldberg's decision to condense the last 150 years of Jerusalem's
    history into the final five minutes of screen time that avoiding
    political sensitivities and hot buttons was an explicit and conscious
    goal.

    All we can say is, mission accomplished.

    It's a bit unfair, actually, to mock the program's evasion of the
    messy present situation, for it's clear from the outset -- and from
    the travelogue format -- that there is no urgent public affairs agenda
    propelling host Ray Suarez (co-anchor and senior correspondent of
    "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer") and company forward.

    This is simply a lucid, generous-to-all rendering of history for
    its own sake, filtered through three religions yet wrested free of
    the gut-wrenching emotion and dogma that colors most views of the
    Holy City.

    Conceived and presented as a chronological view that draws on extant
    biblical studies, archaeological analysis and historical research,
    the well-paced program evinces a catholic point of view. It shifts
    from Judaism to Christianity to Islam as Jerusalem -- the world's
    most sought-after piece of real estate -- successively shifted to
    the forefront of each religion over four millennia.

    It has a surprisingly relaxed tone, exemplified by Mr. Suarez's white
    chinos and pleasant interviews conducted outdoors in the open air
    (rather than in the experts' stuffy university offices or cavernous
    libraries).

    The documentary also embraces occasional moments of lightness, with
    "cameos" by such illustrious types as Indiana Jones, Mark Twain and
    (perhaps less amusingly) the queen of Sheba.

    Penniless Princes

    "Jerusalem: Center Of The World" begins with Abraham, the first
    monotheist (and first mega-church preacher, as one historian describes
    him). The already-sacred spot where Abraham went to sacrifice Isaac,
    Mount Moriah, soon became the city of Jerusalem.

    The next key figure (after Moses) was the warrior king David,
    who, seeking to unite the 12 tribes, took Jerusalem, made it the
    capital and drew up plans to build an edifice to house the Ark of the
    Covenant. It was left to Solomon to carry out the job, and his temple
    stood for more than 400 years, until the Babylonians conquered Judah
    and Nebuchadnezzer destroyed it along with Jerusalem.

    It was Herod who rebuilt the temple, on a vast mount. When Jesus,
    an iconoclastic Jew, came to Jerusalem, he was hailed as the messiah
    by his followers (although the belief that he was the son of God was
    certainly not a Jewish concept).

    After the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 C.E. by the Romans,
    and the end of the revolt three years later at Masada, Jews were
    expelled from Jerusalem. This tragedy inspired the Amidah, the
    three-times-a-day prayer recited by Jews asking God to rebuild
    Jerusalem and restore King David's throne.

    No Jews lived in Jerusalem for the next 500 years, until the Muslims
    gained control of the city and allowed 70 Jewish families to move
    in. The Crusades brought the Christian army to Jerusalem for a bloody
    battle that ended with the massacre of the defeated Muslims along
    with the comparatively small group of Jewish inhabitants.

    Over the ensuing centuries, Jews trickled back into Jerusalem, although
    it can't be said that the Chosen People prospered. They were supported
    by Jews in the Diaspora, who considered them "the guardians of the
    synagogue, the poorest of the poor, the penniless princes."

    Mr. Goldberg (who also produced the 2007 documentary "Anti-Semitism
    In The 21st Century" and 2006's "The Armenian Genocide") moves crisply
    through the shifting sand dunes of time and geography, avoiding the dry
    pedantry of arcane history. But no one will ever mistake "Jerusalem:
    Center Of The World" for adventurous filmmaking, analytical scholarship
    or, for that matter, a road map to resolving current tensions.

    The closest the documentary comes to editorializing of any kind is a
    lingering shot, in the waning moments, of the separation barrier in
    the sun-baked landscape.

    After two hours and 4,000 years, we're left to ponder if Jerusalem
    will last as long as the walls that Saladin erected around the Old
    City, or the temple built by Herod.

    "Jerusalem: Center Of The World" airs next Wednesday, April 1, at 9
    p.m. on Maryland Public Television, Channel 67. For information on
    the documentary, check out twocatstv.com/jerusalem/.
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