Jerusalem

The Eternal Capital

Jerusalem is the holiest city in Judaism, home of both the First and Second Temples (the religious and national center of the people of Israel). Currently, all that remains of the Temples is the Western Wall, known as the Kotel. Three times a day, all over the world, observant Jews turn towards the Western Wall and pray that next year will find them in Jerusalem.

Western wall

A Bit of History

King David made Jerusalem the capital of his kingdom and the religious center of the Jewish people in 1003 BCE. Forty years later, his son Solomon built the Temple and transformed the city into the prosperous capital of an empire extending from the Euphrates to Egypt.

Exiled by the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BCE, who conquered Jerusalem and destroyed the Temple, the Jews were allowed to return and rebuild the city and the Temple 50 years later by the Persian King Cyrus. 

Alexander the Great conquered Jerusalem in 332 BCE. The later desecration of the Temple and attempted suppression of the  Jewish religious identity under the Seleucid ruler Antiochus IV resulted in a revolt led by Judah Maccabbee, who rededicated the Temple (164 BCE) and re-established Jewish independence under the Hasmonean dynasty.

A century later, Pompeii imposed Roman rule on Jerusalem. King Herod, installed as ruler of Judah by the Romans (37 – 4 BCE), established cultural institutions in Jerusalem, erected magnificent public buildings and redesigned the Temple into an edifice of splendor.

After King Herod died, Roman rule in Israel became increasingly oppressive. As a result, Jewish revolt against Rome broke out in the year 66 CE. Four years later, Roman legions under Titus conquered the city and destroyed the Temple. Jewish independence was briefly restored during the Bar Kochba revolt (132-135), but again the Romans prevailed. Jews were forbidden to enter Jerusalem, renamed Aelia Capitolina.

After the Byzantine conquest of the city in the year 313, Jerusalem was transformed into a Christian center under Emperor Constantine, with the Church of the Holy Sepulcher the first of many grandiose structures built in the city. Muslim armies invaded the country in 634, and four years later Caliph Omar captured Jerusalem. Only during the reign of Abdul Malik, who built the Dome of the Rock (691), did Jerusalem briefly become the seat of a caliph.

The Crusaders conquered Jerusalem in 1099, and massacred its Jewish and Muslim inhabitants. They established the city as the capital of the Crusader Kingdom. Synagogues were destroyed, old churches were rebuilt and many mosques were turned into Christian shrines. Crusader rule over Jerusalem ended in 1187, when the city fell to Saladin.

In 1247 Jerusalem fell once more to Egypt, now ruled by the Mamluks, until the conquest by the Ottoman Turks in 1517. Suleiman the Magnificent rebuilt the city walls (1537). After his death, the central authorities in Constantinople took little interest in Jerusalem and the city declined.

Jerusalem began to thrive once more in the latter half of the 19th century. Growing numbers of Jews returning to their land, waning Ottoman power, and revitalized European interest in the Holy Land led to renewed development of Jerusalem.

The British army led by General Allenby conquered Jerusalem in 1917. From 1922 to 1948, Jerusalem was the administrative seat of the British authorities in the Land of Israel (Palestine), which had been entrusted to Great Britain by the League of Nations.

Upon termination of the British Mandate on May 14, 1948, and in accordance with the UN resolution of November 29, 1947, Israel proclaimed its independence, with Jerusalem as its capital. Opposing its establishment, the Arab countries launched an all-out assault on the new state, resulting in the 1948-49 War of Independence. The armistice lines drawn at the end of the war divided Jerusalem into two, with Jordan occupying the Old City and areas to the north and south, and Israel retaining the western and southern parts of the city.

When the Six-Day War broke out in June 1967, Israel contacted Jordan through the U.N. as well as the American Embassy, and made it clear that if Jordan refrained from attacking Israel, Israel would not attack Jordan. Nevertheless, the Jordanians attacked west Jerusalem and occupied the former High Commissioner’s building. Following heavy fighting, the IDF recovered the compound and removed the Jordanian army from east Jerusalem, resulting in the reunification of the city.

From the IDF website:

The eagerly awaited command to take the Old City was given at sunrise on the third day of the war, 7 June 1967. The Command assigned this task to the paratroopers, who started with an attack on the Augusta-Victoria hills and the Mount of Olives, overlooking the Old City. After firing in the direction of the breakthrough path, the Lions Gate, the force from the east advanced forward very quickly and broke through into the Old City. The paratroopers ran towards the Dome of the Rock, located next to the last remains of the Temple, the Western Wall, where, in the presence of the sector commander and the deputy head of the armed services, General Rabbi Shlomo Goren, the chief chaplain of the IDF blew a long blow on the rams horn, announcing the release of the Western Wall and the Old City of Jerusalem. Jerusalem, the divided and split capital of Israel, was reunited.

After the liberation of the city by the IDF, the walls dividing the city were torn down. Three weeks later, the Knesset enacted legislation unifying the city and extending Israeli sovereignty over the eastern part of the city.

The reunification of the city was also a fundamental moment in the history of religious tolerance, opening the city of Jerusalem to worshippers of all faiths, permitting Jews to return to the Western Wall and other holy sites, and allowing Israeli Muslims and Christians to visit those sacred places in eastern Jerusalem from which they too had been barred since 1948.

One year later, in 1968, it was decided that the day marking the liberation and reunification of Jerusalem – 28 Iyar according to the Jewish lunar calendar – would be national holiday in Israel. On Jerusalem Day we celebrate the reunification of the city and the Jewish people’s connection with Jerusalem throughout the ages.

Jerusalem Today

Jerusalem’s current population is approximately 725,000, more than 70% of which are Jews. The Old City is divided into four quarters: Jewish, Christian, Armenian and Moslem. Between 1949 and 1967, while the Old City was controlled by Jordan, Jews were prevented from approaching or praying at the Western Wall. After the Six Day War, Israeli united the entire city and opened it to all religions. Under Israeli sovereignty, all religions have the right to pray at their holy sites. The Temple Mount is currently under the control of the Arab Wakf, a religious body that determines many of the rules of conduct on the Temple Mount. At the present time, Jews who ascend to the Temple Mount are not allowed to say any prayers openly, nor are they allowed to even whisper them. Those thought to be praying are quickly removed from the Temple Mount, lest they injure the sensibilities of the Moslem Wakf.

Far from the Old City, is the Knesset, Israel’s parliament. It sits at one end of a long corridor that also includes the Foreign Ministry, the Ministries of Finance, Industry and Trade, Science and Technology, Interior, and others key governmental offices such as the Prime Minister’s Office, the Supreme Court, the Bank of Israel, the Israel Lands Administration and the National Insurance Institute head offices.

In the same area, you can also find the Israel Museum, and the Givat Ram campus of the Hebrew University, as well as the Bloomfield Science Museum and the Bible Lands Museum.

Yad Vashem Memorial Museum is Israel’s national museum and memorial to the victims of the Nazi Holocaust in Europe. Hundreds of thousands of testimonials and evidence has been collected to bear testimony to what was done, to help educate each generation and to answer those who would deny.

There are seemingly as many neighborhoods in Jerusalem as there are people in the city. Each neighborhood reflects the local founders or group that took up residence there. From quiet residential to pleasant commercial to religious, Jerusalem can be secribed as vibrant and alive.

Not as fast moving as Tel Aviv, Jerusalem has a character all of its own With int plenty of good restaurants, pleasant nightlife, and lots of tourist attractions, Jerusalem is a very interesting place to be.

For more great information, see the Jerusalem Website.

Jerusalem Attractions

There are so many attractions in Jerusalem that it is almost impossible to list them all. But here are some, If you have a site that you think is worthy of the site, contact us!