Love the lights as night falls
at Tower of David.
שבת שלום
Jerusalem, Israel – what is really happening
What a week in Jerusalem,
starting off with a fast day on Sunday.
At night there was an Iftar meal at Beit Hanasi.
President Rivlin hosted around 200 guests,
Muslims and Jews breaking their fast in the Presidential Gardens.
I love these new signs for the buses,
powered by a solar panel,
and how they look in a nighttime photo.
Nighttime in Jerusalem, Israel,
and this summer
the dinosaurs are coming out.
The Jerusalem Botanical Gardens
has a summer program at night
which features dozens of dinosaurs.
By day there have been conferences galore.
Part of a large international geneology conference
featured the story of the ‘Lady in Gold”
the painting and history,
the book and the lawyer who retrieved the work
that was stolen by the Nazis.
While at another Jerusalem hotel,
people were attending
the first International Bible Study Week.
Besides Bible scholars,
leading Israeli archaeologist Gabi Barkai
spoke about the Temple Mount.
One of his slides was of ancient coins found while sifting
the dirt removed from the Temple Mount,
but that is a story for another time.
The German teacher I met at lunch is visiting Israel
and in Jerusalem for the seventh time since 2004.
The more who come to visit, the more who can
appreciate what is really happening,
as there is so much more in Israel than conflict and violence.
The Tzohar rabbinical organization had its conference,
with dozens of speakers and sessions and panels.
And I met a Real Jerusalem Streets fan,
not sure who was more excited.
Being inside all day,
can make you feel wilted and faded like poor Varda,
that street installation on Jaffa Road.
After late nights and being inside all day,
taking a walk
through Gan Ha’atzmaut,
Independence Park in Jerusalem,
is a way to end on a bright note.
Summer nights and days,
so much going on in all the neighborhoods,
it is hard to keep up with it all.
Now that the latest annual Flotilla is another
#FlotilllaFail,
we can get back to more mundane topics
like the mail delivery service in Jerusalem, Israel,
which has been a topic of discussion lately.
Some sleek autopost marts are around,
but for awhile this was the Jerusalem post office.
I have been collecting photos of
Jerusalem letter carriers for years.
The only way to spot them is the navy bag over their shoulder.
Some carriers are young,
some are losing their hair,
while others have dreadlocks.
This woman wore a long skirt.
Red tee shirts were the thing for a bit,
and then there are the baggy shorts.
There used to be more trucks and postmen around,
but in May, local letter boxes were sealed.
Delivery of the mail has slowed down.
But just yesterday I spotted
these signs of activity
on two old post boxes.
Amazing, now if you want to mail a letter,
go to the Montefiore Windmill in Yemin Moshe.
Look for these newly active post offices
from the British Mandate period.
How is that for the ultimate in recycling
from the start-up nation?