Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/12/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]fascinating travel photos and narratives enjoying (though not commenting much) Regards, George Lottermoser george at imagist.com http://www.imagist.com http://www.imagist.com/blog http://www.linkedin.com/in/imagist On Dec 23, 2010, at 11:47 AM, Peter Klein wrote: > Thanks, everyone. Daniel, When I saw your first post, I remembered that > you and Ewa met in Israel. > > The landlocked Dead Sea is indeed dying--drying up. Parts of the highway > that used to be right at the shore are now some distance back from the > water's edge. The Jordanians have a plan to channel water from the Red > Sea into the Dead Sea, the Israelis concur and may help. It's in the > Wikipedia article you cited. We heard a bit about this during our trip. > > Masada has a spectacular view and an eerie history. After the destruction > of Jerusalem in 70 CE, nearly 1,000 people took the mountain fortress, and > held out there until the year 73 CE. They committed mass suicide the night > the Romans breached the walls, knowing they would be killed or enslaved > the next day. > > Most of the group were "Zealots"--religious fanatics who had actually > helped bring about the destruction of Jerusalem by refusing to compromise > in any way, even to save the inhabitants of the city. One faction (the > Sicarii) actually had made a practice of murdering fellow Jews who were > less religious than they, or who favored accomodation with the Romans. > While at Masada, they didn't just conduct raids against the Romans. They > supplied themselves by raiding nearby Jewish communities, often killing > the inhabitants. > > On the other hand, the Romans had been harsh rulers. Sometimes they gave > the Jews reasonable autonomy in their domestic affairs, other times they > imposed idol worship and worship of the person of the emperor, and put > down any dissent with killings and crucifixions. Jesus was one of > thousands of Jews who died on the cross. > > So Masada can be called both an example of heroic people willing to die > for their faith and freedom, or the Jonestown of the ancient world. > > There's some evidence that members of the nearby religious community of > Qumran--the people who wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls--also took refuge at > Masada. > > Last night I finished editing a group of pictures from both Qumran and > Masada, which I plan to post tonight. They include shots of the the Roman > seige ramp, and the legion camp Daniel mentioned.