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Jerusalem Report logo small (credit: JPOST STAFF) Climbing down five meters below ground level is perhaps a novel experience for viewing an art exhibition. Nevertheless, that’s what was needed ...
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The Jordan Times on MSNJordan welcomes UNESCO decision to keep Jerusalem’s Old City on Endangered Heritage List | Jordan TimesJordan on Tuesday welcomed taken unanimously by UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee to keep the Old City of Jerusalem and its walls on the List of World Heritage in Danger.The decision, adopted during ...
When is the last time you climbed down steep metal steps into a 2,700-year-old water system to look at contemporary art? If you can make it to Jerusalem’s Old City by Friday, you can see ...
In recent years, attempts have been made to revive history in the covered Cardo Street in the Old City, casting actual and contemporary content in 2,700 years of history. Today, visitors can find ...
In the walled Old City district of Jerusalem these days - the sounds of Hanukkah celebrations. This after the atrocities of the October 7 Hamas attack and despite the ongoing war in Gaza ...
Armenian Museum in Jerusalem’s Old City Reopens Amid Holy Land Conflict The Edward and Helen Mardigian Armenian Museum seeks to preserve 1,700 years of Armenian presence in the Holy Land.
Palestinian shopkeepers are closing early as ultranationalist Jewish teenagers fill the streets of Jerusalem's Old City for an annual march where participants typically chant racist slogans and ...
A 2,300-year-old ring has been discovered in Jerusalem’s ancient City of David, in the second such find at the same site within the last year, the Israel Antiquities Authority announced on ...
A 19th-century orphanage in Jerusalem’s Armenian Quarter has reopened its doors as a museum, a hundred years after taking in scores of children whose parents were killed in the Armenian genocide.
Old City is ranked #1 out of 13 things to do in Jerusalem. See pictures and our review of Old City.
A 19th-century orphanage in Jerusalem’s Armenian Quarter has reopened its doors as a museum, a hundred years after taking in scores of children whose parents were killed in the Armenian genocide.
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