Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Valentines and Yad Vashem




Happy Valentines Day from Israel!

 


These are our mail boxes at the Center. They are full from all the Valentines that everyone wrote. I seriously felt like I was in 5th grade again!
Me at the Garden Tomb. This is where they think the tomb of Josephus was. It is also the place that has a picture in the quad. Look at photo 14 behind the Bible Dictionary. Yeah, I'm standing right there!
View of the Old City
The view from the Center! It is so amazing to be here!
 Our field trip this week was to Yad Vashem, the Holocaust museum here in Israel. Photos were forbidden inside the museum proper, but here are some pictures of the memorials on the outside.
The pillar of Heroism.
 

  All around Yad Vashem there are groves of trees. It is called the avenue of the Righteous among the nations. Every tree is planted in memorial or memory of a gentile who sheltered and helped Jews during World War II. There are people in there that helped thousands of people and there are some that helped only one. There are so many trees there, it is amazing.








One of the girls here found out that she had a relative that had a tree planted at Yad Vashem. His name was Jan Giliam. He lived in Holland and was a member of the police force there. He helped many families find shelter and hide from the Nazis all through the war. He was eventually captured and taken to a camp where he was tortured and interrogated for their whereabouts. It was only after he received word that the families had moved and were safe that he gave in to the torture and said where they had been. By some miracle, he was released instead of being killed like so many others. He immediately went back and continued helping those Jewish families until the war was over. He is so cool, and it was amazing to be told the story by one of his relatives!


One of the most special parts was going to the childrens memorial. We couldn't take pictures inside, but it was an incredible experience. There are two rooms inside the memorial. The first room is very dark, and there are pictures of children who had died projected on one wall. There are mirrors or something embedded on the walls, so you can see the same photo four or five times as you walk through the room. The second room was so beautiful. It was really dark, and as you walked in, it looked like millions of starts were all over the walls and ceiling. There were three or four candles placed on the floor and the light from the candles was reflected all around the room, making it look like there were stars everywhere. As you walked through the room, you could hear a woman's voice reading a child's name, their age and their place of birth. I learned after getting out that they say one child's name every ten seconds around the clock. Even doing that, it takes six months to read all one and a half million names. It is so sobering. The memorial is so beautiful, but I wish that there wasn't a reason that it is there.

Going to Yad Vashem was such a good experience for me. I cried pretty much the entire time we were in the museum, but it was so special to learn and experience what had happened. It was horrible, but we have those museums so that we can remember. I will always remember.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

February!


There is a bell tower (a carillon) in Jerusalem, in the YMCA building. You can hear it playing if you are in the right spot in the city. The Center has connections with the people who own it and most Sundays a group of students is allowed to go up the tower, play the bells for an hour and then ring the bells for the noon hour. It was pretty much the coolest thing ever, and now I want to take the carillon class at BYU!

We took a field trip to the Shephelah (pronounced SH-vey-lah), which is the area after the coastal plains but before the hill country. We went to several forts from the time of the Assyrian and Babylonian conquests. It's really pretty here this time of year...everything is GREEN! It actually was pretty warm when we went, between 70 and 80 degrees Fahrenheit. It was lovely!

The ruins of a fort in the Shephelah.

We went to the site of David and Goliath. Yes, that's me slinging a rock where David slung his rock!! I felt super cool!

GREEN!

At one of the sites, there was a whole underground city...it was incredible!!


These guys are from the Al-Aqsa Mosque (located by the Dome of the Rock). They  read the Koran to us and recited the Call to Prayer

Awkward family photo at Arab night...I don't know whats up with the hand holding, it's just serving to make this picture as awkward as possible.

All the girls in the Center + 2 boys

One of the domes in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

Sharma!!

The spice tower. Pretty much the coolest thing ever

The spice tower is HUGE!