Dual narrative tour exposes Jerusalem’s complex political realities
Palestinian and Jewish tour guides hope to encourage dialogue, as ailing Israeli tourism sector slowly comes back to life.
Palestinian and Jewish tour guides hope to encourage dialogue, as ailing Israeli tourism sector slowly comes back to life.
Ze’ev Elkin exclusively reveals his many ideas for the city's future.
As the World Cup kicks off, the famous diarist and the Holocaust have become an unwelcome focus of European soccer.
The relic, which is currently on display, is part of the Genesis Apocryphon, which contains a description, in Aramaic, of the lives of Noah, Abraham, Enoch and Lamech.
Over 150 Billboards were placed in recent days on buses and buildings throughout Jerusalem.
After 70 years, Israel has still not determined the future of its capital, leaving Jerusalem's residents with uncertainty and hurdles in their way to become citizens.
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if people around the world identified Jerusalem as the host of major sporting events, rather than as the location of the usual Mideast conflict-related news item?
"We are in very hard times in Israeli society; it is very tribal right now. We pretend that the other tribe doesn’t exist, that their needs don’t exist."
Animated figures, artwork and text danced across the walls as the show told the story of the biblical hero, famous for slaying Goliath with a single stone from his slingshot.
Orthodox Christians waving palm fronds and branches, mark their Palm Sunday at Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
"Israel is seen through a prism of so many filters and lobby groups – be it Israeli, Christian or Muslim advocacy groups. So it’s hard to get a clear understanding of what’s going on here from afar."