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Secrets And The City

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  • Secrets And The City

    SECRETS AND THE CITY
    By Calev Ben-David

    Jerusalem Post, Israel
    Sep 11, 2007 9:21 | Updated Sep 11, 2007 9:21

    Secrets of Jerusalem

    Gate on Hananya Hill

    Around the corner from my home in Talpiot stands an old war memorial
    in the midst of a small, immaculately maintained lawn. A sign on the
    surrounding fence identifies it as "Commonwealth War Graves." Even
    though I've walked by the spot countless times, I too, as Tzvia
    Dobrish-Fried has noted of other neighborhood residents, have gazed in
    "wonderment about how well the spot is kept and the way the locked
    site is maintained," without ever bothering to find out who exactly
    is interred in this unlikely location and why.

    Now, thanks to her coffee-table book Secrets of Jerusalem, I finally
    know the answer. This is the burial spot for the Indian soldiers who
    fought and died with the British forces in their conquest of Palestine
    during World War I. Because of religious issues involving the largely
    Muslim and Hindu soldiers buried there, they were left in Talpiot
    when the British Mandatory government later decided to reinter most
    of the other Commonwealth war dead in the large memorial cemetery on
    Mount Scopus.

    Entertainingly informative and handsomely illustrated with photographs
    by Uriel Messa, all the entries in this present-worthy tome are worth
    reading. Not all of them though, really qualify as "secrets." Included
    here are places that even casual visitors to Jerusalem are likely
    to already know about, such as the transplanted Italian Synagogue
    on Rehov Hillel; the illustrated stretch of the security barrier
    between Gilo and Bethlehem; and the "Noah's Ark" sculpture garden
    by Nicki de St. Paul in the Biblical Zoo (even though Dobrish-Fried
    improbably asserts of the latter that "despite its size and color,
    not many people visit the work or even know of its existence").

    Other spots covered in the book may be familiar to the city's long-term
    residents, but will indeed prove revelations for most tourists. This
    category includes the charming strudel cafe atop the Austrian Hospice
    in the Old City; the Hellenist-era Jason's Tomb tucked away on a
    Rehavia back street; and the charming pool in the central courtyard
    of the Rockefeller Museum.

    Fortunately, there were still plenty of revelations in these pages
    for even this veteran Jerusalemite - who should probably do more
    walking tours. Nope, I didn't know that the large sundial that sits
    atop a building on Jaffa Road opposite the Mahaneh Yehuda market,
    has a "twin" built by the same man (Rabbi Moshe Shapira) on the Gra
    Synagogue in the Sha'arei Hessed neighborhood. Or that the space
    between two old olive trees on the lot behind the former Edison
    Cinema on Mea She'arim's edge has long been considered by Jerusalem
    kabbalists as the location where the messianic prophet called the
    Son of Joseph will one day make his appearance.

    And now, having finally seen in these pages the impressive
    sixth-century CE Armenian mosaic floor found at 18 Rehov Hanevi'im;
    the luxurious Suite No. 6 (the "Fourth's Wife Room") at the American
    Colony Hotel, where Richard Gere and several other celebrities have
    slept; and the dazzling array of fabrics on display in the second floor
    of Ibrahim Abu Khallaf's store at 18 Rehov Hanotzrim in the Old City,
    I'm determined to make more of an effort to see these hidden treasures
    of Jerusalem with my own eyes.

    Indeed, my only real complaint with Secrets of Jerusalem is
    that it's too short, given the wealth of hidden treasures in this
    city. Hopefully, a sequel is in the works - and if so I'd be glad to
    offer Dobrish-Fried my help.

    For example, in its entry on the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, she
    highlights the Ethiopian monks' "village" on its rooftop, which is
    not all that much of a secret. Instead, why not alert readers to the
    fact that in a nearby monastery you can see the only visible remains
    of the ancient Roman temple upon which the church was built? That's
    a secret of Jerusalem I'm gladly willing to share.
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