In the new locker room of the gym, a glossy brown wig hangs among the jackets and scarves on the coat rack, while the resident babysitter wheels a…
Givat Shaul (Hebrew: גבעת שאול, lit. is a predominantly religious neighborhood in western Jerusalem, 820 meters about sea level, named after the "Rishon Lezion," Rabbi Yaakov Shaul Elyashar, the Sephardi chief rabbi of Eretz Israel, and not, as commonly believed, for the biblical King Saul, whose capital was probably located on a hill near Pisgat Ze'ev, on the way to Ramallah. It is located at the western entrance to the city, east of the neighborhood of Har Nof and north of Kiryat Moshe.






















