Sunday, October 26, 2008

I LOVE JERUSALEM STUDY ABROAD


Image
This week we hit the eight week mark, meaning we are halfway through our adventure. The time is flying by and I am enjoying every minute! I thought this would be a good time to put up a list of just a few things I love about Jerusalem and reasons why this is the best semester ever!

This is the Hebrew version of the LOVE sculpture in NYC, at the Israel Museum. Ahava is love in Hebrew and here it is! (Aleph, Hey, Vet, Hey)




i love . . . 


the VIEW from the Center my beautiful balcony with the rose garden & pomegranate tree
Image
 Damascus Gate              the Old City!!!
our sweet security staff The Oasis (cafeteria)
chocolate pudding with whipped cream for breakfast everyday          PITAS (at every meal!)  
basically everything about the gorgeous Center that we live in  
Sunday Evening Classics Concerts
  Image  
the auditorium the organ the gardens  
professors who live just two floors up and hang out with us  
shawarmas Hebrew  
vendors who say “BYU!” and “Hey Mormons!”                     Elia Photo Service
Image  
Western Wall                 Jewish Holidays!                  
cute Jewish girls with their headbands, black skirts & flats                         kippas   
calls to prayer 5 times a day standing out from everyone on the street 

Ben Yehuda Street & West Jerusalem Image     
bad English spellings & grammar  
taking a week off of class and going to Egypt  
boats on the Nile & camel rides  
Pyramids  
Valley of the Kings mosques                                     Hard Rock Cafe  
fancy hotels and restaurants headscarves
 walking through history  
diversity of dress  
olive wood & Omar making olive oil
rockin awesome field trips                    Dramamine! 
rollin in Mercedes buses                       BYU-JC backpack  
1 shekel popsicles at Lana’s                   Augusta Victoria                 1.5-liter water bottles  
Tel Aviv & the Mediterranean  
shekels cleaning checks with treats   
service couples donkeys, horses and goats just hanging out around the city
internet- even if it is painfully slow student choir random schedule  
forums Hebrew U  
consulate families                       stellar movie collection in the library  
learning about different peoples and cultures
being able to drink the water in Israel Kibbutz Yotvata                 
being taught by and associating with people who are known worldwide         
official name-tags wandering and shopping  
Palestinian Costco   herding sheep  
tons of soldiers and people with huge guns everywhere
Image  
Dormition Abbey Aladdin Money Changer Shabban's 
BonBons, Ali Babas & Jericho Wafers Genie pants


. . . everything




Friday, October 24, 2008

Funny Egypt Items

So I realize that I have blogged a lot about Egypt and not much else lately, but I thought of a couple funny anecdotes that I wanted to tell people. 

In the markets the people are always saying "Welcome to Alaska!" -I'm still not really sure what that means. They're always talking about Ali Baba and telling you you're breaking their hearts as well. 
Groups have to have an armed security guard, and with good reason. You may have heard about the tourists who were kidnapped in September . . . yeah, pretty sketchy. 
Getting a carriage ride in Luxor is way cheaper than a taxi. They follow you down the street and harass you. I'll say one thing for these guys. Persistence is not lacking. 
They love the word Habbibi. I guess it means friend or buddy, but they use it all the time.
I can't say enough how incredibly slimy and sleazy the Egyptian men were. Yikes. There's the joke here that we were hit on more in that week than in a whole semester at BYU!

Driving there is insane. If they have driving laws, no one follows them. Lane lines are maybe kind of there, but no one stays in them. At one point we had like five and two-thirds lanes going on. Cars, bikes, motorcycles and wagons were just everywhere. Also, the funniest thing. The bus is driving us to the airport in Cairo and the guy misses the exit. He realizes he should have turned off, and what does he do? No worries, he just kicks it into reverse and we go backwards down the highway so we can get off at the exit. Sheer madness. 

Our group seemed to be a tourist attraction everywhere we went. Everyone on Sinai was taking pictures and videos of us. At the hotel in Luxor we were building towers and such in the pool. You wouldn't believe the numbers of people watching us and taking pictures. Weird. 

Belly dancing is one of the highest-paying jobs you can have in Egypt. I think being a tour guide must pay pretty well too, since our guide had a law degree. 

Everyone and their dog and their grandma loves Bob Marley. I hadn't realized he was such a huge international sensation. Bob Marley is probably the most popular name for their horses too. It was so funny. 

Egypt is really dirty. Everything is dusty and germy, and everyone smells bad. Also, you generally have to pay to use a stinky toilet that doesn't even have toilet paper; you have to bring that with you. Even in really nice places we wouldn't dream of eating fresh fruit or vegetables that had been cut. And after you wash your hands with water to get the dirt off you still use hand sanitizer. 

Going to Egypt was such an experience. Man oh man! I love love loved it, even with the yucky men and pushy merchants and dirtiness. I was heartbroken to find out that the pyramids are not on the list of the Seven Wonders of the World, though. Egypt got jipped on that one, if you ask me. I saw some of the coolest things I will ever see there, and it is hard to imagine a better week than my week in EGYPT!

MORE Egypt . . .

Image

Sunrise from Sinai 9/28/08

Image
Muhammad Ali Mosque 9/27/08

Image
Luxor Train Station- waiting for the night train 9/25/08
Travel Dream #2 =)

Image
Luxor Temple 9/25/08

Image
Karnak Temple 9/25/08

Image
Habu Temple 9/24/08

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Great Day in Luxor 9/24/08

Image

Valley of the Kings

Image
Falukas on the Nile

Image
My camel, Ali Baba, and Amman

Image
The Old Bazaar 

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Some Egypt Pictures!

Image

Cairo 9/22/08

Image
Pyramids!!! 9/23/08

Image
The Sphinx 9/23/08

Image
Statue of Ramses II at Memphis 9/23/08

Image
Lady making pitas at Saqqara Restaurant 9/23/08

Image
Travel Dream #1: Stairs to an airplane! 9/23/08

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Let My People Go, Best Trip EVER continued

Wednesday, September 24- Tombs, Falukas, Camels, Kids and Creepers

         How can I even describe this day?! It was absolutely incredible. I've noticed that in the past month I have acquired the habit of describing everything as the BEST THING EVER, but this day was truly epic.

         In the morning we went to the Valley of the Kings, which was one of my favorite things I've seen. The first tomb we went in was King Tut's. His is the only tomb they have found that hadn't been raided at any time and the treasure from it is insane. Most of it is in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, but they left a golden sarcophagus and his mummy inside the tomb. We also went in the tombs of Ramses III and Ramses IV. The hieroglyphics and mural frescoes on the walls and ceilings were so interesting! I was amazed at how well many of the pictures were preserved and how bright some of the colors were. We also went in the tomb of Thutmosis III. It was a bit different from the other tombs and I loved it. It was one of the farthest tombs back and we had to walk up a ton of stairs to get to it. Inside there were stairs and different levels too.

         The major tragedy was that we weren't allowed to take any pictures inside the tombs. I've heard talk of people who were able to bribe the guards or who just took pictures anyway, but the guards we saw meant business. One girl in our group snapped a picture in Tut's tomb and got her camera taken away. She had to get our tour guide to pay the guy to get it back. I personally appreciated the spacious construction of the tombs; it was far more pleasant than inside the pyramid. Still, I swear it must have been 10 or 15 degrees hotter inside. It was sweltering, but made us appreciate the weather outside. 

         Next we went to the Habu Temple, the funerary temple of Ramses III. It was huge and really pretty. I thought it was so cool! Again, there were tons of hieroglyphics and murals painted or carved into the stone everywhere you looked. It would be amazing to see how it looked when it was built, before things were broken and colors faded.

         We stopped briefly to see a couple things on the way back, but I don’t really have time to mention them. I hope this is giving everyone an idea of how much we are able to see, and why I’m always so busy!

         Our hotel in Luxor was the Sheraton Resort, and it was right on the Nile River. It was beautiful! In the afternoon we headed down to the water and got onto the falukas that were waiting for us. They were pretty big, colorful sailboats, each holding about 20 people. We had a very leisurely ride to the other side of the river, just hanging out on the boats and enjoying how beautiful it was on the river. It was totally fun just to be floating down the NILE RIVER listening to Bob Marley, naturally. They love him in Egypt, and we loved partying to a little reggae on our ride. I dipped my fingers in the water and then promptly sanitized them. The Nile is just teeming with bacteria and diseases, but still I couldn’t resist just touching it a little. We were also feeling sorry for all our friends back in the states who were probably sitting in class around that time. =)

          The falukas dropped us off for our camel safari!! That’s right, I rode a camel! Approaching a crowd of 40 smelly and very loud camels was pretty crazy! There was a boy in charge of leading each camel and we climbed on to begin the trek. My camel was named Ali Baba and the boy who led my safari was Amman. It was really fun to go through the neighborhoods and see the people. All the little kids ran out waving and saying hello. We went through some farmland too, where we saw things like bananas growing. It was such a great experience! Camels are probably some of the grossest animals in the world. Man, they are dirty and seriously weird looking! It’s awesome! I was only sad I didn’t see any of them spit.

         That night after dinner a group of us went out to the Old Bazaar. There were tons of people out, and lots of kids begging. It’s a good thing they were so cute, or it would have been really annoying. Lindy was teaching them to say things like “I’m cute,” “You’re pretty,” and “I’m handsome.” It was pretty funny just having them walk along with us. At the Bazaar the Egyptian men certainly lived up to their infamous reputation. We got the big lectures before we went about never ever being alone and girls always having a boy with them, but I didn’t really believe it would be that bad. They like kissy noises and we think the favorite line was. “Hey spicy girl!” Creeptastic. Aside from being on edge because of scary males, the bazaar was super fun and totally crazy.

Thursday, September 25- Temple, Temple

         Thursday morning we took a boat ride to the Karnak Temple. It was huge and, again, full of drawings and hieroglyphics. Then we took a carriage ride to the Luxor Temple. It was cool too, but not as big. In the afternoon we walked through some neighborhoods over to the Bazaar again. Walking through the streets and seeing the people was really interesting. It is hard to believe how different life is!

         That night we headed to the Luxor Train Station for our night train back to Cairo. The train ride was one of the things I was really excited for. I had never been in a sleeping car before so I couldn’t wait! The train was totally disgusting and smelly, but we thought it was pretty much a party. Another one of my travel dreams come true!

Friday, September 26- Mummies and Hard Rock

         Our train pulled into Cairo a little after 5:00 am, so we were a little worried about the big day ahead but it turned out just great. We went to the Egyptian Museum, which was really awesome. The security there was way tighter than at the airport. Go figure. You aren’t even allowed to walk into the building with a camera. They have some pretty amazing things in there. One of the best things was seeing all of the treasures from King Tut’s tomb. Everything seemed to be gold and jeweled. It was beautiful! The other main attraction is the royal mummy room. They charge like crazy to get in too: ten dollars for students and twenty for adults. We saw the mummy of Hatshepsut, the female pharaoh, and Ramses II, who ruled for over 60 years, as well as others.

         Lunch at Hard Rock Café was a blast! It was so good to eat a hamburger. Mmmm! The festivities even included dancing to YMCA with the waiters. It felt the most like home of anywhere we had been.

         After lunch we went to the Khan al-Khalili Bazaar. It was huge and packed with people. It was our last shopping opportunity in Egypt, so everybody was frantically trying to buy their last souvenirs.

Saturday, September 27- Mosques

         Our last visits in Cairo were to the Cairo Citadel and Mosque of Muhammad Ali, and to the Ibn Tulun Mosque. The Mosque of Muhammad Ali was exquisite. Everything inside was so pretty. The decorations in mosques are all geometric instead of having paintings of people like in a lot of Christian churches. The Ibn Tulun Mosque didn’t have as many decorations as the previous one, but it was really cool. We were able to go up the minaret and the view was awesome. Before the days of microphones and speakers the Imam of the mosques would have to climb up the hundreds of stairs for the call to prayer five times a day. What a workout!

         On our way out of town we drove by the City of the Dead, a huge cemetery with a bunch of big tombs and mausoleums. Our guide said there are around one million or more homeless people living there- pretty hard to believe.

Sunday, September 28- Sinai

         Unlike our other hotels in Egypt, the Morgenland Hotel in Sinai was really disgusting. People woke up with all kinds of bug bites. We were glad we didn’t have much time there. Wake up call (banging on our doors) came at 1:30 and we headed over to Mount Sinai. It was still pitch black and the stars were so bright. The hike only took about two hours and we got to the top before sunset. The main hazard was the camels making the trek to the top. The Bedouins in the area show up with their camels and tourists pay to ride them up. Seeing the sky light up as the sun peeked over the mountains was beautiful! Walking down in the later was fun because we got to see what we had walked up! It was such an amazing experience.

         Packing up was a little sad because it meant leaving Egypt, but it was sweet that going back to Jerusalem was like going home! This is the best semester ever. I can hardly believe what amazing things I am doing!

Friday, October 3, 2008

When Ali Was in Egypt's Land

I've been here in Jerusalem for a whole month now, and it just keeps getting better and better. It is totally surreal to be here. Our trip to Egypt last week was the coolest thing ever! So much awesomesness was packed into the week that a comprehensive description is pretty much impossible, so a bit of a week summary will have to do. 


Sunday, September 21- Still in Israel
I woke up early for 5:30 breakfast and loaded the buses at 6:15. We visited some cool sites in Israel along our drive. First was the ancient city at Tel Beersheba. We got to walk through the ruins and had to wear hardhats, which made it all seem very official. Then we stopped at the Wilderness of Zin Overlook and David Ben Gurion's Grave. The Wilderness of Zin is where the children of Israel wandered. After seeing it I think I can say that I definitely would have been murmuring too. David Ben Gurion was the first Prime Minister of Israel and he is super important here, so it was just interesting to talk about the things he did. Our next stop, at Tel Avdat, was the coolest. It began as a Nabatean city on the trade route through the desert from Petra. Most of what we saw was crusader ruins. It was big and so cool! Everything is so old. We stopped at Kibbutz Yotvata for a tour and dinner. Yotvata was the first kibbutz in Israel and is about fifty years old. It was interesting to see all the farm land and here about the kibbutz lifestyle. They basically apply socialist ideals on a small scale with people who choose to join. There are about 300 members of the kibbutz and it takes close to two years to get in. You have to go through a huge process. We stayed the night at Kibbutz Eilat. They get most of their income from tourism. 
Monday, September 22- Riding on a Bus Through the Desert
In the morning we got to deal with crossing the border into Egypt. We actually made it through in less than two hours, so we were lucky. There was some concern about how it would go because of Ramadan. We have learned that Ramadan changes everything. Things open late, close early, and are just a little crazy in general. Also, since Egypt is an Islamic country they had already turned back their clocks. We drove through the Sinai all day. I don't think I have ever seen so much nothingness. It is just desert everywhere you look, and we drove like that for I think about seven hours. We had two rest stops, but those really wouldn't even count as towns. It was sweet to see camels by the side of the road and a few Bedouin tents along the way. 
Driving into Cairo that evening was such an experience. The poverty there was unlike anything I've ever seen. I had thought that things were pretty bad here in East Jerusalem, but it was nothing like Cairo. All the houses/apartments were unfinished and I only saw a couple with glass in the windows. There seemed to be huge piles of trash and waste everywhere you looked with people walking through them and mangy animals roaming around. Actually seeing it is so much more powerful than the pictures and even videos. It was really humbling to see that, and seemed a little wrong to pull up to our 5 star hotel that night. 
We stayed at the Oasis Pyramid Hotel, and it was really nice. Water, fruit, vegetables, and anything not cooked are off limits in Egypt, so we mostly ate at our hotels and always at places that were very clean. I thought the food was delicious and I ate a ton! Luckily, I seem to have an iron stomach and didn't get sick like some people did. After dinner at the hotel we went to the Sound and Lights show at the pyramids! I like to call to it Egyptian Fantasmic. It was actually pretty cheesy, but so totally awesome at the same time. They just shined lights and pictures on the pyramids and went through some history of ancient Egypt. It was just fun and so exciting to be there!
Tuesday, September 23- Pyramids!!
The obvious highlight of this day was going to the pyramids! Everyone was so excited- we were difficult to contain. We took so many pictures and just walked, no- bounced, around them. We even got to go inside! That was really intense for me because it was tiny, but it was way too cool to pass up. The shaft going down was probably about four feet high so I had to crouch, and there would be people coming up at the same time. Luckily they had spots that opened up so I could stand for a minute. When we got to the room at the end there wasn't really anything to see, but it was just so awesome to be INSIDE a pyramid! Inside it was like a sauna. The heat was seriously oppressive and the air was sort of heavy and almost hard to breathe. Crazy! Going inside made the heat outside feel pretty pleasant. Just being at the pyramids was a total dream! Then we headed down to check out the Sphinx, and of course take the classic Sphinx-kissing picture. 
We ate a yummy lunch, complete with pitas cooked in a fire/oven contraption by a very native-looking woman, at Saqqara Restaurant before heading to see Zoser's complex at Saqqara. Zoser's step pyramid was the precursor to the great pyramids at Giza, so that was pretty cool to see. Next was a stop at ancient Memphis. The main event there was a huge statue of Ramses II. It is amazing how well-preserved it is. The face on it looks flawless! There are a lot of huge things around related to Ramses II. He was really into himself
The next event was the perfect conclusion to an absolutely fabulous day, fulfilling one of my transportation dreams! We made our way to the Cairo Airport to catch our evening flight to Luxor. The security there was ridiculous. We just had random boarding passes with names from various people in our group and no one checked our ideas. Security was pretty much a joke. Our bags were scanned and we walked through metal detectors, but I don't think anyone even paid attention. We all carried on 1.5 liter bottles of water too. It was so weird. The coolest thing was that we got to go out and walk up the stairs to the plane. I have seriously wanted to do that for so long. That's maybe a little lame, but I loved it! Getting off in Luxor was the most fun because when we walked off the stairs we were cheering and waving to no one. =) 
All in all, this day is just one example of why Egypt was basically the coolest week of my life!!

To be continued . . . 


Saturday, September 20, 2008

A Few Beach Pictures

Image

You can sort of see the pretty blue water in this one, 
and wind surfers.

Image
This was a fun beach, and I liked the soft sand!

Image
Heather and me with the Mediterranean in the background.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Mediterranean Magic and First Falafel

Yesterday was an awesome day! We organized a trip to Tel Aviv and spent a lot of the day at the beach. Tel Aviv seemed like a really cool, modern beach city- looking far more westernized than Jerusalem. We walked the city a little and went to one mall, but most of our day was centered on the beach.

I love the Mediterranean Sea! I thought it may have been just my limited beach experience that made me think it was so incredible, but even seasoned beach-goers in our group quickly fell in love. The white sand was really fine and soft, and the water was super clear, warm and calm. There were lines or rocks a little farther out that sort of blocked the big waves, and the water stayed pretty shallow all the way out- not really ideal if you want to surf or something, but still great. That made it really fun to just swim out there and stand on the rocks. I had never seen water like that before, so pretty and clear! I just wish all the men here wouldn’t insist on wearing Speedos. Nasty! In our walks, we also saw a separated beach. It is all blocked off, and has different swimming days for men and women. Very Israel. Later at night we made our way back and just sort of walked along the edge of the water and sat in the sand. We also saw a big, beautiful almost-full moon above the buildings. There are restaurant/bars along the beach and they have chairs and lights out on the sand, so that was fun to see. We also saw a group of people dancing on the beach, which may have been a dance class or maybe just a little party. It looked like a blast!

For dinner I had a falafel, my first one! Tragically, I think it may also be my last. People kept talking about how delicious they were, so I was really excited. I didn’t find it totally gross, but it wasn’t terribly appetizing either. Next time I’ll try a shawarma . . .

Another first for the day was that an Israeli guy at the beach asked me out. Yikes. It actually was not nearly as creepy as that makes it sound, but if you know anything about my dealings with males in general (Drew), you will understand how uncomfortable I felt. haha!

The Tel Aviv trip was lovely, and a great thing to do for the official two weeks in Israel celebration. I even managed to avoid sunburn for the most part, and our van driver narrowly avoided killing us on the ride back to Jerusalem. I’ll just say again, the Mediterranean was nothing short of magical! I was thinking last night on the beach about how I had this idea that being here might sort of satisfy my craving for travel, but in actuality it has made it lots stronger already! I think I have a problem. An addiction? Whatever it is, I’ve got the bug! I love being here and seeing this very different part of the world. Next week I’ll be in Egypt !!

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

One Week

Well I have now officially been here in Jerusalem for a whole week! That is pretty awesome to say, and today was a great way to mark the first day. We had a geography field trip just around the area to different points with good views of the city and everything around it. Riding on the bus around here is ridiculous because every five seconds the professor is on the microphone pointing out something that has major historical significance. They're trying to put in a light rail system in West Jerusalem but it's taking ages because everywhere they dig they pull up new archaeological things and then people have to come in to examine the area and stuff. Walking through the city really is just like walking right through history. The views today of the city from every side were pretty cool. What was really crazy was to look down over the West Bank, see the Separation Wall, and just think about all the wars that have been fought over this area and the struggle that is still going on. I think being here will actually make it virtually impossible to choose a side in this conflict because we see so much, and specifically get to know great people on both sides. It's a sticky situation with bad things coming from each group, which is something we talked about a bit today. The other thing we talked about was a TON of history. I can't keep it all straight. Brother Skinner knows so much! I don't know how it fits in his brain. 


My favorite thing today was Augusta Victoria. They have a hospital, school, church and a lot of things on the compound on the Mount of Olives. One of their objectives is to give aide to Arab Christians in the area, who struggle a lot because they are such a minority with persecutions and not really having anyone to be a voice for them. The Mount of Olives is where Christ ascended into heaven, so being in the chapel there and having the opportunity to sing was incredible! We got to sing a few songs, like How Great Thou Art, Love One Another and Nearer My God to Thee, as well as listen to Brother Squires play some Bach on their organ. Brother Squires and his wife are in charge of music and concerts and the center and he is an organ master, seriously. It is majorly impressive. Singing those hymns will probably be one of the most memorable things from this trip. It was absolutely beautiful and the feeling in the church was so great. 

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Hebrew U & Head Scarves

Image

This is one part of the Old City.
 In most places it's a lot more packed in, 
but this is probably the prettiest spot I've seen there so far.


Image
These are some houses across the street.


Yesterday we had a lot to study, so a group of us decided to take a short walk over to Hebrew University to look around and buy stamps. Hebrew U is really close to us, pretty much just up the hill and across the street. It is huge, and it's a fortress! We think the security we have here at the BYU Center is pretty intense, but the stuff they have surrounding that campus is crazy. We have two bomb shelters, and I'm sure there must be like ten at Hebrew U. We saw two just walking up a ton of stairs to get up from the entrance. It's surrounded by big walls and massive fences and there were even some guard towers. I don't think there was anyone in them at the time, but inside it looked like prison walls or something. There is only one place we can go in and we have to show our BYU security cards to the guard at the gate, who carries a gun, by the way. Inside the campus is beautiful! There is cool art and pretty buildings and lots of grass and trees. The students are really nice, and we think it would be a nice place to go and study when we need a change of scenery. All the signs were in Hebrew and there wasn't really anything in English. I was pretty impressed at being able to recognize a few of the letters. Our Hebrew professor, who actually teaches  English there, told us that many of the students come from all over and speak lots of different languages. At the school the teachers all lecture in Hebrew, but almost all of the textbooks are in English. Wow, that is some multilingual learning!

Today Heather, Kelsey and I just went out into the City for a couple hours. As we were heading down the street one of the men who works at the hotel across from the Center came out and said, "Good morning Mormons! Our nice neighbors." First we went to get some money at Aladdin's. The exchange rate was 3.55 Israeli Shekels to $1. After that we headed into the Old City again- this time on a mission of buying head scarves. We are all going to the Western Wall for the beginning of Shabbat on Friday night, and we heard that if you want to go all the way up to the wall you have to cover your head. I am so excited to see that! We're not allowed in the part of the city after dark, so this will probably be our only chance to be there for the beginning of Shabbat. I bought a pretty (GREEN!) pashmina to cover my head for 15 Shekels from this really nice guy. He had tons and tons of scarves! 
I was looking around today and seeing that the women in East Jerusalem are really so much more covered than we are, and that was while wearing long pants and a shirt with sleeves past the elbow. I don't know how they stand the heat because I was dying in light pants. Most of the women are covered from head to toe, often in a lot of black. They wear a lot of long black dresses with long sleeves and wrap their heads all the way around their faces. It looks miserable to me, but I guess there is an element of faith and I'm just hoping it's not as hot in there as it looks. 





Sunday, September 7, 2008

Pictures!

Image

Now that is an outfit for walking the city!


Image
Heather and Kelsey on our rockin balcony!

Image
Million Dollar View

Image
Heather and I after a long trip to Jerusalem

Exploring the City

            Today was a pretty busy day, but it was sweet! We started off with breakfast at 7:00 and then our Jewish Civilization and Arabic and Islamic Civilization classes. Those were intense! There is a whole ton of reading, and it is super hard to understand. Class is really interesting, but a lot of it goes over my head. I hope I will start to understand better and I’m excited to learn all they have to teach us. The professors are so awesome and knowledgeable. After lunch I had my first Hebrew class, which was so fun! The alphabet is ridiculous, but it is really cool. Our professor is so fun and she kept telling us that Hebrew makes so much more sense and we will learn how to write and read and speak and translate. I’m thinking that will be just a few phrases . . . Today we just learned 2 letters, a couple expressions and a song, which was stuck in my head all day!

            After class we went and walked around the city for a few hours and that was really cool! We walked through the Old City and went to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. It is considered one of the most important places in the Christian world, and definitely the holiest Christian site in Jerusalem. The different parts of the church are controlled/maintained by six different religions, and apparently that causes issues sometimes. The Armenians might get upset if the Catholics sweep some of their stairs and silly things like that. Inside the church they have all kinds of things related to the end of Christ’s life and His resurrection. The main thing we saw was the Anointment Stone, where it is believed they laid Christ’s body after the crucifixion and anointed it for burial. We didn’t get to really see the other things because it was packed with people, so we will go back. People also believe that the church also houses the site of Christ’s crucifixion and burial. Protestants generally accept the location of Christ’s burial at the Garden Tomb in another location in the city.

            After coming back today people were saying that if there was one thing they could have right now it would be a lot more money. I’m pretty impressed with myself that I didn’t buy anything today- I think I need to hold off for a while and make sure what things I really want. There are so many cool/cute//hot/rad things. The merchants in the city are hilarious and we were wondering where they have learned some of their English. One guy called everything radical or rad and told a girl she had a “hot smile.” They all tell you they will give you a special price because of your beautiful eyes or hair. And they all ask us about Utah/Salt Lake City and try to get the Mormons to come to their shops. I’m thinking they know from experience how much money the students tend to spend on souvenirs in the Old City.

It is pretty stinkin hot. They keep talking about the dry, desert climate, so I can understand where the heat thing comes from but I’m left slightly confused about the 84% humidity we had goin on today. Despite all our security warnings and such, being out in the city feels mostly safe to me. The people have all been nice so far. Pickpockets are supposed to hang around, but my nifty fanny pack seems pretty secure. I’d say the biggest threat is probably the maniac drivers speeding around and honking their horns constantly. 

I was thinking that everything here was completely different from the United States, until I noticed some interesting similarities!

1. Thank goodness most people speak English pretty well. Arabic and Hebrew are pretty crazy, and I will probably only be able to speak a few words of Hebrew by the end.

2. The kids are totally cute, and they like a lot of the same things. I saw like five little girls today decked out in Dora the Explorer gear. The boys seem to like Spiderman and soccer. I saw some Sponge Bob toys, and in our cafeteria we have yogurt with Sponge Bob on the package. (It’s pretty gross)

3. You can find Coke, Fanta (orange, to be specific), and Snickers, along with a few other American foods.

4. In West Jerusalem on Ben Yehuda Street they have at least one McDonald’s and two Burger Kings. Have you ever seen a kosher Burger King before?

5. People wear Crocs. They’re all over. Is anyone else to find out that Crocs and their imitations have made it to the Middle East? I sure am!

6. Some of the early teen-age boys were walking around playing American music- very different from the music played in the shops!

I will have to continue with lists as I see more funny things=)

Friday, September 5, 2008

Locked In

Well today we are on lock-down in the Center. Security is concerned about the mass of pilgrims coming into the city for the first Friday of Ramadan. They are expecting about 100,000 people to come in today who will overflow from the Dome of the Rock and Temple Mount. Apparently the sermon on Temple Mount tends to get pretty fiery and is generally quite anti-American. We're never allowed in East Jerusalem or the Old City on Fridays before 3:00 because it is their holy day, but today we can't go out at all. I think most of us want to go out and see all the people, so it's probably a good thing Tawfic said we have to stay in. Somebody would probably go do something or go somewhere dangerous, and we don't know the city yet. 


We started classes today so the plan is to finish up the my homework so I can go out and play later! It is awesome to sit out on the balcony and read about things that happened right in the area that I'm looking out! Living with our professors is a little strange, and I think that adds to the feeling that we're not in school. Even studying and being in class didn't feel much like school, maybe because I'd eaten dinner at the same table as my Ancient Near Eastern Studies professor the night before. It's pretty cool to be able to be that close with them and ask them for questions and help at any time! I'm sure as the work picks up and we head into tests it will feel very much like school, but so far it is just fun!

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Arrival!

We made it! Our trip started out Tuesday when we met at the Salt Lake airport at 7:15. My bag weighed in at 52 pounds so we had to do a bit of rearranging. Our flight left SLC at 9:50 and then we had a layover at JFK for about 4 hours. We went to Chili's for lunch and had some of America's favorite yogurt (TCBY) before leaving the good ol' US of A. We had to go through security again before getting on the plane- only annoying if you had just spent 3 dollars on a bottle of water for the flight and they make you dump it out. Yep. We arrived in Tel Aviv at the Ben Gurion airport at about 3:00 in the afternoon yesterday- 6:00 a.m. MST. The bus ride to Jerusalem was less than an hour, and it was so cool! Every couple minutes along the ride they were pointing out important historical places and sites of battles. Coming up the hill and seeing the city was incredible! Heather was sitting next to me and we both just gasped, while I was bouncing up and down in my seat. We were excited to see the sign pointing toward "Mormon University." The entrance to the Center was beautiful and the view through the windows when you go inside is incredible! We had dinner, some orientation and a tour of the Center before I semi-unpacked my things last night but was a bit too tired to feel like organizing, even though the jet lag wasn't nearly as bad as expected. I felt pretty well rested! I'm thinking late afternoon is the perfect arrival time. 


The Center is in East Jerusalem, which is the Palestinian area. This month is Ramadan, so it is a big celebration. There were lots of Christmas lights up and they were shooting off fireworks in the street. The call to prayer this morning at 4:30 woke most of us up I think. They played a loud prayer that went on for about a half an hour. 
This morning we got to go out into the city for the first time. We split into small groups and the professors and directors took us into East Jerusalem, through Damascus gate into the Old City and then through Jaffa gate and over to West Jerusalem. West Jerusalem is the Israeli/Jewish area and it is much more modern and European. It is also so much cleaner. East Jerusalem is a lot dirtier and louder, maybe because of the partying. We met Aladdin, the money changer, and Omar, who sells olive wood carvings, in the city today. They were great! Everybody knows the "Mormons" here. People were saying "Hello Mormon people! You from Utah? We saw some of your Mormon friends. They went that way." It is so awesome to be here and almost hard to believe that I get to stay for more than three months! We start our official classes tomorrow, so it will be busy and we will learn a lot. I am so excited to get to know this city and the history of the area!

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Jerusalem Dreamin'

Image

Our future residence on Mount Scopus
(Near Augusta Victoria Hospital. haha!)

We're going to Jerusalem!! 
The letter came today, and Heather, Kelsey and I are going to 
BYU Jerusalem Center for fall semester. 
We're just bubbling over with excitement and can't wait to spend a whole semester there!!  
Israel, here we come!!!