Two Holidays: Ramadan and Rosh Hashannah

Sitting in the pre-holiday traffic that seem to be everywhere  in Jerusalem,

 it is hard to believe that anyone is home cooking or cleaning for the holidays.

With the long school holiday over and children now in a full day of school,

 working parents are finally a bit less stressed,

unless they were late for pick up time because their car was not moving.

Rosh Hashana, the New Year begins Wednesday at sundown,

 and preparations for the three-day holiday fill the streets.

  Meanwhile, the Ramadan holiday is nearing its end,

for some it was difficult working in the heat and  fasting until sundown.

 For Friday prayers,

 Muslim worshippers

came by way of Mamilla Mall

and from all directions outside the walls of the Old City:

 by way of the Jaffa Gate,

towards the Arab market, the old shuk

some went thru the Jewish Quarter.

Others came alone,

 in groups,

women and children,

young men

and old.

 Over the four Fridays of Ramadan,

hundreds of thousands of Muslims came to pray in Jerusalem.

 A blimp hovered overhead

and extra police were on hand.

   The month of Elul, which precedes Rosh Hashana, the New Year,

is also coming to an end, thousands of Jewish worshipers came to the Kotel,

the Western Wall for selichot, special prayers.

 Thousands and thousands of people were in the Old City for the holidays.

May this example of peaceful co-existence continue

throughout the new year and beyond.

Shana Tova,

a good  New Year

and

 Happy Holidays to all!

Friday at the Market

Quite a roller coaster week! Funerals for the four people  murdered by Hamas terrorists,

a huge end of summer concert in Gan Sacher, Sacher Park,

and the beginning of the new school year.

A girl just off a plane from Eilat, feeling the cooler air as the airport van ascends the mountain road

to Jerusalem, tells the driver as he opens the windows:  “it feels like winter”.

All summer, in spite of the heat, a real Jerusalem experience was spending Friday afternoon in

the Machane Yehudah Market,

the Shuk, which is celebrating its 100th year.

A great place to find the basics:

meats,

cheeses

and fish.

Everything from the pasta

to the people

add color to the the Shuk.

The variety of

sweets,

olives,

and nuts can make it difficult to choose  just one.

Serious shoppers push to get their selections of vegetables,

and then have to decide which bread

or pita

or cake.

Even in the summer heat, the number of boxes,

tourists,

bus passengers,

shopping bags and cars can be overwhelming.

You never know who

or what you will find at the Shuk on Friday afternoon.


Scenes from the Wall

The northeastern United States did not see the sun for most of this week,

in Jerusalem it is hard to even imagine so much rain:

all the thousands of visitors just get the expected sunny days.

At the Kotel, the Western Wall,

there are old stones

and new signs.

Some days much is

black and white,

but not all is black

or bar mitzvah white,

or army green.

In winter

and in summer

there is color, too.

Pink shirts

and blue hats,

color from balloons

and costumes from around the world

are at the Kotel.

The month of Elul before Rosh Hashana, the New Year,

is an especially colorful time of the year

with even more visitors, and the blasts of the shofar heard every morning.

However, getting to the Kotel

can be very difficult because of the many flights of stairs.

Construction of an elevator has recently been proposed.

Not having to climb the difficult steps will be a great thing for many people

and make the site accessible to many who now cannot enjoy the scenes.