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Sites And Insights: Jerusalem's Reunification

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  • Sites And Insights: Jerusalem's Reunification

    SITES AND INSIGHTS: JERUSALEM'S REUNIFICATION

    http://www.jpost.com/Travel/Jerusalem/Article.aspx?id=270848
    By WAYNE STILES 05/21/2012 15:11

    4 quarters of Old City represent ongoing contentions that still exist,
    in spite of city's reunification. Photo: Wayne Stiles Wayne Stiles
    has never recovered from his travels in the Holy Land.

    Follow him on Twitter (@WayneStiles) or on his blog at
    www.waynestiles.com.

    The celebration of Jerusalem Day commemorates the reunification
    of Jerusalem as a result of the Six Day War in 1967. After the
    liberation of the city, the Chief Rabbinate of Israel proclaimed the
    day a minor religious holiday in answer to the 2,000-year-old prayer:
    "Next Year in Jerusalem."

    Although Jerusalem enjoys a reunification of control, there remains a
    very disjointed set of worldviews among the population. The four
    quarters of Jerusalem represent, in small manner, the ongoing
    contentions that have existed for centuries.

    A crossroads that quarters Jerusalem

    In the second century, the Roman Emperor Hadrian got fed up with the
    reoccurring Jewish revolts and was determined to make Jerusalem a Roman
    city (actually, a non-Jewish city). He constructed a north-south road
    through the heart of Jerusalem, a street called the Cardo (related
    to the Latin term for "heart"). The east-west crossroad was called
    the Decumanus, a thoroughfare that stretched from the area of today's
    Jaffa Gate to the city's center. Archaeologists discovered the Cardo in
    the 1970s and the Decumanus in 2010 during the Jaffa Gate renovation.

    Whenever I visit the Cardo, I see a replica of the Medeba Map mosaic,
    a map that depicts the Holy Land as it was in AD 580 and shows the
    four quarters of Jerusalem sectioned off by the crossroads. The same
    divisions exist today.

    The Jewish Quarter contains, among many other significant sites, the
    excavated Cardo, the Western Wall plaza, and the costliest residential
    real estate in Jerusalem. To me, there is no more beautiful part of
    the Old City.

    The Armenian Quarter exists largely because the country of Armenia
    holds the distinction of being the first nation to officially adopt
    Christianity. Since the Edict of Milan in AD 313, Armenians have
    lived in Jerusalem. The Armenian Quarter is the smallest of the four,
    with the Monastery of St. James occupying most of its space.

    The Muslim Quarter takes the lion's share of the Old City, containing
    more than three-quarters of its population. The quarter also includes
    the Temple Mount and the beautiful Church of St. Anne.

    The Christian Quarter features, most importantly, the Church of the
    Holy Sepulcher, the traditional location of the crucifixion, burial,
    and resurrection of Jesus. The quarter also houses many shops, most
    of which are owned by Muslims.

    It's ironic that on the line between the Jewish and the Muslim
    Quarters, Jews bow in prayer at the Western Wall with Hebrew Scriptures
    in hand. And yet, on the Temple Mount just above, no Bibles are
    allowed. The Muslim call to prayer blares over the whole city multiple
    times a day, even across those quarters that ignore the call.

    And yet, inside St. Anne's Church in the Muslim Quarter, Christians
    from around the world sing praises to Jesus many times a day.

    The Division and One Solution

    With all this diversity in the Old City, it becomes clear that there
    is a difference between the "reunification" of Jerusalem and the
    "restoration" the Bible predicts.

    The Prophet Zechariah promises that even though "the nations" will
    attack Jerusalem, the Messiah will come and bring a restoration that
    includes complete reunification: "The Lord will be king over all the
    earth; in that day the Lord will be the only one, and His name the
    only one . . . and there will no longer be a curse, for Jerusalem
    will dwell in security" (Zechariah 14:1-11; see also Luke 21:20-27).

    Scattered across the skyline of the Old City today protrude all manner
    of crosses, crescent moons, and Stars of David-like a tangle of wheat
    and tares. No doubt, as Zechariah wrote, it will take a Messiah to
    sort it out.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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