Tuesday morning, our we left our hotel and set off for Masada.
(note: more technical problems. Pictures will be added later. Come back to the blog to see them - there are some amazing things!)
On most occasions, a visit to Masada would be the high point of a day's touring. After all, what could possibly top it? This post will contain all of Thursday's activity, since breaking it into smaller pieces would not do justice to what a remarkable day it was!
For those unfamiliar with the remarkable story of Masada, here is the slimmed down version: It is a mountain in the Negev Desert, a most inhospitable location about a day's donkey ride from Jerusalem. King Herod - the Jew who cooperated with Marc Antony and Augustus Caesar who made him the king, and who oversaw the construction of Caesaria (see earlier post), and a massive reconstruction of the Temple in Jerusalem - chose this location for his winter palace. Like his other projects, this one spared no expense to be as magnificent as a Roman building could be - including baths, storehouses, several cisterns and ingenious channels to collect the rain into them, and others.
Herod died in 4 BCE, and Masada was largely unoccupied for many years. In the year 66 CE, a large group of Jews began rebelling against Roman rule. The rebellion started in the north, and spread south. While the Jews had some successes, the mighty Roman Empire had vast resources, and deployed them in putting down the rebellion. They defeated Jews in the north and headed south. In 70 CE, they surrounded Jerusalem and ultimately destroyed it, including the Temple. They continued south, defeating pockets of insurrection, and finally reached the southernmost point of the rebellion, in Masada. There, about a thousand Jews defended the fortress built generations earlier by Herod. They found the storehouses to be full, with enough food to feed them for many years. They found the water collection system working and the cisterns full. Thus equipped, they held out against a Roman siege for three years. The Romans built a ramp to bring their equipment to the top and finally breached the defenses. When they did, they found that the Jews had killed themselves the night before, rather than surrender and become Roman slaves - or worse.
The Snake Path at the eastern foot of Masada has been a "must do" for visitors since the 1960s. On my previous two visits, I did not have that opportunity; we took the cable car to the top. On Tuesday, we climbed up. It is not an easy climb, but it is manageable for hundreds of tourists (mostly young ones) every day and we made it to the top in about 45 minutes.
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Rose is most of the way up |
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Rita is near the top |
Once there, our guide Asaf showed us the wonders of 2000 years ago. The magnificent 3-level palace for Herod (a lot of slaves must have died building it for him). The bath-houses - turned into mikvahs (Jewish ritual baths) by the Jewish defenders. The walls defending Masada from above - and the Roman encampments below. And the Roman road which finally made the difference. The road was made largely of dirt and sand piled so as to enable the Romans and their equipment to reach the top. Much of it has been blown away by the wind over the years, so archaeologists have built much of it back together and the current ramp, also used by tourists, may be an easier climb than the original! The Snake Path, which we climbed, is probably much closer to the original one - although 700 steps and a few railings have been added for our convenience!
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Facing the upper palace |
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In one of the 16 storerooms |
After taking the cable car down, we were greeted by an ibex in the Visitor Center!
We left Masada before noon. For most tour groups, this would have been the highlight of their day and possibly of their whole trip. However, we were just getting started!
We drove deep into the Negev, over to the Makhtesh craters which are a unique geological formation found only a few places in the world. There are layers of sedimentary rock of different types, which were pushed up in the formation of mountains,, and then much of it was washed away - so the layers of sediment have been exposed. The "fins" at the top of the mountain resemble fish fins - so the hikes go along the narrow part both coming up and coming down! Don't look to closely to the right or to the left!
The climbs and descents were both quite challenging. We saw two groups of high schoolers while we were there - probably a hundred in each group! I doubt that American high-schoolers would have done this - the American legal system would make it cost-prohibitive, and all too many would not be in physical shape to do it. These children are facing army service in a few years, and were reasonably fit.
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Ron, Michael, Rita, Debbie, and Asaf at the top. Bob is behind the camera |
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Better than a classroom! |
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Someone's home |
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Beauty in the desert |
The climb and descent were both very difficult - but the rain started on the way down. Fortunately for us, it was not a heavy rain at first. However, the rocks became more slippery, and part of our descent was done crabwalking or sliding down on our rear ends, since the footing was treacherous. The descent was much steeper than the climb - the schoolchildren we saw must have had quite a time getting up!
If you have ever been in the Negev or any other desert - rain is the last thing you expect. When we began our hike, it looked like the last rain in the neighborhood floated Noah's ark. Although this is the end of the "rainy" season, that is a term more often applied to the North or to Jerusalem than to the arid Negev!
When we reached the bottom, we made a brief detour to a nearby spring. It was well-hidden, and the kind of place that probably only the Bedouins knew about until Israeli hikers and tour guides stumbled upon it and put it on the map. Upon returning to the bus, we had our next major surprise: an ice cream truck that makes the rounds of the hiking sites. Cool and refreshing!
But the biggest surprise was yet to come. As we drove to our hotel - another hundred kilometers or more - the rain got harder. And we saw a road that was flooded - with a car trapped in it - and we had to turn around! Our intrepid driver Hani was able to negotiate the puddles, and we got out at one time to take pictures of what was usually a dry stream bed, and was now a raging river! By this time next week, it may be a dry stream bed again, but for now, it was quite a site!
There are passages in the Bible that make reference to the floods in the desert. On my other trips to Israel, the idea looked laughable. They no longer do!