Albuquerque Journal

PILGRIMAGE FOR ALL

Come to Nazareth, a sprawling city that welcomes all travelers: Christian, Muslim and Jewish.

- BY JENNIFER MOSES SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON POST

NAZARETH, Israel — Although I’ve been to Israel many times, it wasn’t until this past December that I made my way to Nazareth, home town of Jesus, center of Christian pilgrimage, and, depending on how you cipher the archaeolog­ical record, some 3,000 years old. Today, the agricultur­al village of Jesus’s time, thought to have a population of 500 or so, is a modern, primarily Arab city of steeples and domes and the hurlyburly of commercial enterprise. It is home to the largest Arab community in Israel (both Muslim and Christian), with a secondary, smaller Jewish community in nearby, newer and slightly suburban Upper Nazareth.

And herein lies just one of the conundrums that confront even the most casual visitor to modern-day Israel: who lives where, and why, and at what social, economic, religious or cultural cost? But this is to get into a debate that has no end, when the pleasant reality is that the modern city of some 60,000 — sprawling, business driven, and nestled within a natural bowl of steep Galilean hills — presents itself as a place that primarily wants everyone to go along and get along. And if, while you’re at it, you can promote cultural understand­ing and sell religious tchotchkes to tourists, so much the better.

If what you’re hoping to find is a storybook vision of rusticity, complete with, say, donkeys, you may be disappoint­ed. Instead, as you approach the city from the west (the main route available from within Israel), you first descend into a shallow valley, and then enter a snarl of traffic and a cacophony of honking horns before ascending again through a crush of pedestrian­s, bicyclists and groups of tourists to reach the old town. This is where most of the religious sites are, and where I stayed, with my husband, in the Fauzi Azar Inn, a 200-year-old Arab mansion-turned-guesthouse and hostel.

But first we had to find it. Which

isn’t so easy given that, like those in most Arab towns in Israel, many of Nazareth’s streets lack names, not to mention numbered house addresses. (The streets are assigned numbers, which no one uses or remembers.) Also, you can’t drive a car through narrow streets built to accommodat­e, at most, pack animals.

So we parked, grabbed our bags and set off on foot.

But, as wandering is at least half the fun — not to mention that it’s hard to get seriously lost when there are signs all over the Old City with arrows pointing the way to the inn — the lack of on-site parking was hardly an issue. And the inn itself is a marvel of simple loveliness, a many-layered confection built around an open courtyard, designed to accommodat­e many generation­s or branches of a single family, with Ottoman arches, high ceilings, frescoes and — in the large room that now serves as the reception area — marble floors and elegant arched windows.

Like almost everything in Nazareth in particular, and Israel in general, the Fauzi Azar has a back story. Indeed, for two centuries before opening for business, the house was known as the Azar Mansion, but after the last Mr. Azar died in the 1980s, it fell empty. Meanwhile, an Israeli Jew named Maoz Inon and his wife came up with the idea of turning it into a guest house where Jews, Christians and Muslims could feel equally at home, and where even the poorest of cash-strapped students could find an affordable bed in a large dormitory-style room. Thus, the present total of 16 guest rooms (including the dorm-style room), most with a private bath, with simple furnishing­s punctuated here and there by brightly colored coverlets, pillows or area rugs. It’s an aesthetic charmer, all right, especially if you’re a sucker for Old World, slightly worn charm — and balconies. Depending on how you count them, there are three or four layers of them, some with running fountains, some under an open sky, some tucked away at the top of a steep flight of stairs, and all of them adorned with outdoor furniture, flowering plants and vines.

On top of serving as an inn, the guest house is the de facto starting-off point for another of Inon’s local endeavors, in this case the Jesus Trail (created in partnershi­p with David Landis), which opened in 2009. It links Nazareth to Capernaum via the backcountr­y where the New Testament records that Jesus preached and taught, healed the sick, fed thousands with only a few loaves and fish and turned water into wine. Today, the roughly 40-mile trail can be walked, hiked or biked in three or four days, through meadows, along ancient Roman roads, past archaeolog­ical wonders and modern-day Israeli agricultur­al collective­s, with stops in Cana, the traditiona­l site of Jesus’s first miracle; the tomb of Jethro (fatherin-law of Moses); among ancient olive groves and Crusader ruins — with a range of modern accommodat­ions along the way.

But although December in Nazareth isn’t December in Vermont, and in fact was warm and sunny, I was more interested in losing my way through the valley of the souq (an open-air Arab market), with its hawkers of everything from toy trucks to fragrant spices, than embarking on any kind of real hike. And then there’s this: Nazareth has more than its share of holy places.

Nazareth sprawls, but all the sites are well within walking distance, and as we left the souq, we stumbled into the main entrance of the large and looming Roman Catholic Basilica of the Annunciati­on, built on the site of what is thought to be Mary’s childhood home, and where, according to the Gospels, she received the news that eventually changed the world. Built in the 1960s, and topped by a soaring dome, the building is, er, architectu­rally eclectic, mixing marble with concrete, modernist with mosaics. While in Nazareth, you can’t not see the place, but I preferred the Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciati­on, marking the spot that the Eastern Church believes is where Mary encountere­d the angel Gabriel while fetching water from the spring that still runs beneath the crypt. The crypt was originally constructe­d during the time of the Roman emperor Constantin­e, though the rest of the magnificen­tly frescoed church dates from the 17th century. And yes, the faithful were lined up to fill their water bottles from the same yearround spring where Mary and no doubt most other ancient Nazarenes drew their water.

I honestly didn’t know what to expect at the Mary of Nazareth Internatio­nal Center, but four separate multimedia rooms designed to replicate ancient gathering spots, and presenting what I can call only a hokey and simplistic version of the life of Jesus, wasn’t it. On the other hand, upon entering the center, we came across an archaeolog­ical site of ruins from a 1st-century house, and, as we exited the last of the multimedia onslaughts, we ascended to a lovely garden with astonishin­g views of the hills above the town. There, as if on cue, there was the clap of a thunderbol­t, followed by a brief rain, followed by the sound of bells ringing along with the Muslim call to prayer.

You’re more likely to hear Arabic than Hebrew, but Nazareth is both English-friendly and friendly, period. Tension between Israeli Arabs and Jews? You don’t feel it here, or at least I didn’t. That may be in large part because Nazareth, despite being a significan­t town in its own right, is also, obviously, a draw for tourists both religious and secular.

Interestin­gly, despite the fact that almost all the literature indicates that the Nazareth of biblical times was so small as to barely count as a village, at least one important archaeolog­ical site indicates otherwise. While renovating their gift shop in 1993, a couple by the name of Elias and Martina Shama came across the remains of an ancient bathhouse.

Thus the modern-day Cactus gift shop sits atop a network of terra-cotta pipes that may be at least 2,000 years old, and some that may date back to 320 years or so before the common era, similar to those found at Pompeii. For about $7 per person, you can take a 30-minute tour of it. There are fan and palm tree motifs typical of the Hellenisti­c period, and more than 3,000 square feet of the bathhouse itself, making it one of the biggest in the world for its time, according to Shama, who led the tour my husband and I were on. He explained how the discovery of the bathhouse, with its motifs, artifacts and pipes characteri­stic of ancient Roman times, suggests that the facility was in use at the time of Jesus and perhaps for some decades or centuries before.

 ??  ??
 ?? GINA TORRALBA CALIPES/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Almost all of the literature indicates that the Nazareth of biblical times was a hamet. It’s now a sprawling commercial city of about 60,000.
GINA TORRALBA CALIPES/THE WASHINGTON POST Almost all of the literature indicates that the Nazareth of biblical times was a hamet. It’s now a sprawling commercial city of about 60,000.
 ??  ?? The lobby of the Fauzi Azar Inn, which its owners intend as a guest house where Jews, Christians and Muslims can feel equally at home.
The lobby of the Fauzi Azar Inn, which its owners intend as a guest house where Jews, Christians and Muslims can feel equally at home.
 ??  ?? A view of the Al Babour spice market in Nazareth.
A view of the Al Babour spice market in Nazareth.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States