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JERUSALEM |
JERUSALEM. Three of the world's major religions regard Jerusalem as a holy city. The city has served as the center of Jewish life for 3,000 years. To Christians it is sacred because of its associations with Jesus. In the religion of Islam, Jerusalem ranks in importance as a holy city only after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia.
Jerusalem, known in Hebrew as Yerushalayim and in Arabic as Al Quds, is a multicultural city. Its importance as a religious center and its location at an ancient Middle Eastern crossroads have made it the prize of many conflicts throughout history. Its repeated destruction and rebuilding can be seen in the uncovered layers of buildings in the Old City. The Arab-Israeli war of 1948 left the city divided by an armistice line. East Jerusalem, including the Old City, became part of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, and West Jerusalem became part of Israel. East Jerusalem was taken by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War. Israel has declared Jerusalem to be its eternal and indivisible capital, and the status of the city has become a major point of contention between the Jewish state and its Arab neighbors.
Location and Climate
Jerusalem stands on a rocky spur of the Judaean Hills about 2,500 feet (762 meters) above sea level. On the west the coastal plain leads toward the Mediterranean Sea about 35 miles (56 kilometers) away. On the east the Judaean desert reaches toward the Dead Sea, which can be seen from Jerusalem's hills on a clear day. Jerusalem has warm, dry summers and cool, rainy winters. Snow falls only every two or three years.
Modern Jerusalem
The New City. Since 1975 unified Jerusalem has been the largest city in Israel. In the 1860s the first neighborhoods were built outside the walls of the Old City. Many of these, including Yemin Moshe and Mishkenot Shaanannim, have been rebuilt. Prominent Arab neighborhoods include Bait Hanina and Bait Safafa. The city has blossomed in Teddy Kollek's more than 20 years as mayor.
Jerusalem is an educational center and the seat of Israel's government. The Hebrew University has campuses at Givat Ram and Mount Scopus. Other educational institutions include the Bezalel Academy of Art and Hebrew Union College. The Israel Museum has an extensive collection of Near Eastern archaeological finds, as well as the Shrine of the Book, which houses the Dead Sea Scrolls. In the western part of the city are a Holocaust memorial called Yad Vashem, the Hadassah Medical Center, and the Kennedy Memorial and peace forest. The Jerusalem Symphony and other artists perform at the modern Jerusalem theater.
Highways lead to major cities in every direction. A railway still connects Jerusalem with Tel Aviv and Haifa, but faster and more inexpensive bus transportation has surpassed it in importance. The economy is centered in government, public service, and academia.
The Old City. Dominated by the raised platform of the Temple Mount, the Old City is divided into Christian, Muslim, Armenian, and Jewish quarters. It has the aura of many ancient cities, with narrow alleyways and labrynthine suqs, or bazaars. Most of the wall that now surrounds the Old City was built by the Turkish sultan Suleyman the Magnificent in the 16th century, largely on the foundations of earlier walls, some of which date back to the 2nd century BC. Eight gates open into a bustling world that seems centuries apart from the New City. The scent of spices and the sound of muezzins calling local Muslims to prayer greet visitors. Many churches feature architecture of the Byzantine and Crusader periods. The Cardo, an original Roman-Byzantine mall, has been restored, and is lined with expensive antique shops. Multicolored slabs of stone are often found in buildings of Mamluk origin.
On the site of King Solomon's Temple the center of Jewish life beginning in the 10th century BC stands the beautiful marble and tile mosque known as the Dome of the Rock, which was originally built in 691. Muslims believe that Muhammad was carried to heaven from here by the angel Gabriel. In Jewish tradition Abraham was said to have prepared to sacrifice his son Isaac at the site. Nearby is the silver-domed el Aksa mosque, built in the 8th century. Both mosques dominate the Temple Mount, also known as Haram esh-Sherif. The western boundary of the Haram is the Western Wall the retaining wall of Solomon's Temple known as the Wailing Wall until its recapture in 1967. The ancient quarter in which Jews once lived was destroyed in 1948 by the Arabs, who then built houses up to the wall. These houses were cleared after 1967 to form a courtyard for religious and national ceremonies.
North of the Haram begins the Via Dolorosa, or Street of Sorrows, also called the Way of the Cross. This is believed to be the path Jesus walked on his way to Calvary. It ends at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, built over the site of the crucifixion, burial, and resurrection. This is the place most visited by Christians. Part of it was built by the Crusaders in the 12th century. Various Christian groups, including Greek, Roman, Coptic, and Armenian, control parts of the present church. Just outside the walls to the east are the Garden of Gethsemane and the Mount of Olives.
History
There was a fortified city on the site of old Jerusalem at the beginning of history. It was destroyed and rebuilt under the rule of Egypt, Babylonia, Greece, and Rome. David, king of the Israelites, captured Jerusalem from the Jebusites in about 1000 BC. King Solomon, his son, extended the city and built the great temple that stood until 586 BC when it was destroyed by King Nebuchadrezzar II of Babylon. In the 50 years of their Babylonian captivity the Israelites remembered Jerusalem and sang the songs of Zion: "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning."
Rome conquered Jerusalem in 63 BC. From 40 to 4 BC its Roman ruler was King Herod the Great. Herod brought riches and fame to Jerusalem, putting up a palace for himself and constructing new walls with three great towers. He rebuilt the Temple, following Jewish laws. This was the Jerusalem that Jesus knew. In AD 66 the Jews revolted against Roman rule. In AD 70 the Roman emperor Titus crushed the rebellion and destroyed the city and the Temple. Jews were forbidden to live there or to visit the Temple site. The Roman emperor Hadrian built a new city, known as Aelia Capitolina, on the ruins and put up temples to Roman gods. The general layout of Hadrian's city can still be seen today. Constantine, Rome's first Christian emperor, put up the first Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem. Omar, the second caliph after the prophet Muhammad, entered the city and ousted the Romans in AD 638.
The Crusaders took Jerusalem in 1099, but the Muslim leader Saladin won it back in 1187. The city remained in Muslim hands, passing from the Arabs to the Turks, until World War I when the British captured it along with the rest of Palestine in 1917. After the war the British continued to administer Palestine under a mandate from the League of Nations. Jerusalem was its capital. About half of the city's population of 80,000 was Jewish, with the rest divided between Christians and Muslims.
After two decades of uneasy rule the British withdrew in 1948, and the State of Israel was established. The Arab states immediately attacked, and in the fighting Jordan captured the Old City, and the New City was divided between Jordan and the Israelis, who proclaimed it their capital. The United Nations voted in 1949 to make Jerusalem an international city. Jordan and Israel refused to accept this but agreed to accept an established boundary through the city's center, though Jews were thus denied access to the Western Wall.
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In June 1967, during the Six-Day War between Israel and the Arab states, Israel stormed the Old City and proclaimed a reunified Jerusalem under Israeli administration. The barriers dividing the city were removed for the first time in 20 years. Israel guaranteed the accessibility of religious shrines to members of all faiths.
Despite a United Nations resolution disapproving of unification, the Israeli Knesset, or parliament, declared unified Jerusalem its capital in 1980. This stirred international controversy, and many countries withheld recognition of the capital. In 1988 the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) declared Palestine an independent state with Jerusalem as the capital. Jerusalem was the only major Israeli city not struck by Iraqi missiles in the 1991 Persian Gulf war. Population (1989 estimate), 493,500.
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