Tel Aviv Beach. Israel 2000 Concludes.
This week's album is in two parts. The first part concludes our visit to the Holy Land after we vacated our hostel room in Jerusalem, and bused to Tel Aviv with all our luggage before making our way to the airport for our flight home. More accurately, with the large rucksack slung over my shoulders. With the national holidays now ended, everything in Israel was back to full operation. Buses ran. Shops were open and trading. The land was buzzing alive and vibrant. Nothing like when we were stuck on the summit of Mount Carmel as we travelled from Tiberias to Isfiya nearly two weeks earlier.
The journey was smooth and uneventful. After we arrived at Tel Aviv Bus Station, we made our way to the esplanade, where we would spend the rest of the day on the sun-kissed sandy beach.
The weather was warm and sunny, and very summery for the middle of October. As I sat on the beach, seeing Alex's pregnancy, I wondered whether we would set foot in the Holy Land again, or would everything take a turn for the worse. Not long after we took off for the UK, a project was underway to build a high, ugly wall on the border between Israel and the West Bank. Known as the West Bank Barrier, work on it began in 2000, and very likely was already underway by the time we stayed in Jerusalem.
However, around 85% of the barrier route is within the West Bank Territories, which means that there is a strip of the West Bank land that is inhabited by Palestinians within the Israeli side of the barrier. By staying in the vicinity of the Old City, one would be totally unaware of the project. The barrier loops eastwards away from Jerusalem and towards the River Jordan before swinging southwest to enclose the Yatta and the ad-Dhahiriya districts of the West Bank Territories, before swinging east towards the Dead Sea to end just north of Ein Gedi.
Therefore, our bus trips to Eilat and Ein Gedi in 2000 were timely. There were no signs of any construction work taking place along the journey. At present (2026), there is a need for the bus to pass through two frontier gates between Jerusalem and Ein Gedi, as the Dead Sea road to Ein Gedi, Masada, and Eilat passes through the Territories.
All that, along with the recent upsurge of Hamas against Israel on October 7th, 2023, has made the Holy Land unsafe to visit. Indeed, there has always been unrest between Israel and its surrounding Arab countries, including Egypt and Libya, going back to the withdrawal of the British Mandate on May 14th, 1948. But I had a wonderful opportunity to take advantage of this window that began at the 6-Day War of June 5th-10th, 1967. It was during this war that Israel defeated Jordan, Syria, and Egypt, and gained control of the West Bank, Gaza, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai Peninsula. But most importantly, East Jerusalem, with its Old City, was taken under Israeli control from Jordan. That meant the demolition of the barrier wall dividing Jerusalem between Israel and Jordan. The wall ran just west of Jaffa Gate, barring entry into the Old City from the developing Jewish New City.
One of my late window cleaning customers once told me about his interest in visiting Jerusalem before 1967. To visit the Old City, he, with his wife, had to fly to Jordan's capital, Amman, then bus to East Jerusalem. There was no access to Israel. In turn, had they landed at Lod Airport at Tel Aviv, they would have had no access to the Old City.
So why have I given a brief history of Israel's past? Because it had a direct effect on me, personally. After I was converted to Christ towards the end of 1972, I began to study the Bible. Throughout the whole book, Israel and Jerusalem seem to have taken centre stage. I read how Abraham, his son Isaac, and Abraham's grandson Jacob were given a new name of Israel, and his twelve sons became the fathers of the fledgling nation.
I read how the Jebusite city of Salem was conquered by King David, and made the capital city of Israel, and it was here, a thousand years later, that Jesus Christ was crucified, buried, and rose from the dead three days later. Indeed, according to the Biblical prophets, Jerusalem was to become the Cup of Trembling to all the nations.
The city and its history fascinated me. By 1976, I had already gained some backpacking experience after travelling alone through Italy in 1973 and 1975, looking for hotels as I arrived at each town, and I was never sent away when I asked for a room at the reception. With this experience, in 1976, I was ready to backpack the Holy Land in the same way as I did in Italy. Both in Jerusalem and in Tiberias, as well as in Tel Aviv, I was accepted at all three hotels directly off the street, with no pre-booking.
| The Dome of the Rock, 1976. |
In 1976, I spent three weeks in the Holy Land. During that time, in addition to the three hotels, I spent some time at a private Arab home in Silwan for a fee which was considerably cheaper than any hotels there. It was while I was staying at this home that I got acquainted with Hezekiah's Tunnel, also known as the Tunnel of Siloam, a site mentioned twice in the Bible.
Those were the days when the tunnel was virtually unknown to the Western tourist. I could go as far as to say that around the mid-seventies, tourism in the Holy Land was very low, due to a history of unrest. This is in contrast to tourism in the present day, when escorted groups now squeeze through the tunnel. But in 1976, with a cave-like entrance at the base of a cliff, anyone could just walk in. However, the younger son of my host took me to the Pool of Siloam, the exit of the Tunnel, and from there he asked me to lead, and so, we both waded into the 2,700-year-old conduit to the Spring of Gihon, and then we waded back to the pool. So fascinating was the experience that I was willing to pay for two more trips down there.
In 1993, I visited the Tunnel again. This time, I completed a one-way journey from the Gihon Spring to the Pool of Siloam. However, while the water in the conduit was only ankle deep in 1976, in 1993, the water level was above waist-deep, which meant that I had to swim out when the floor dipped just before arriving at the pool.
Wading through a 2,700-year-old still-functioning tunnel had an effect on the rest of my life, as did hiking the Grand Canyon in 1978, and snorkelling over the Great Barrier Reef in 1997. In the world of Travel. I call these the Big Three.
There are only twelve photos of us in Tel Aviv in 2000. Therefore, I have collected 29 photos of Israel that I took in 1976. Most of them you might have seen already in Part 1. However, I felt good about reposting them here.
Photos of Tel Aviv, 2000.
Photos of my 1976 trip to the Holy Land.
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Next Week. Is this the end of my Travel Biography and Photo Extravaganza? Find out then.