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| North Israel Tours:
Tiberias - Walking with the sages in Tiberias
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| By: AVIVA BAR-AM |
Jewish legends, folk tales and anecdotes from King Herod Antipas's Galilean
Introduction
More often than not, as you near the southern end of Tiberias, steam
rises above you along the road. The explanation for this strange
phenomenon is simple: King Solomon once sent a group of devils into the
belly of the earth to stoke the fires of the Tiberias hot springs. As
they were deaf devils, they never heard the news of Solomon's passing
and are still fanning the flames to this day!
So famous for their healing powers that the sages decreed they could be
visited even on Shabbat, the hot springs are situated in Hamat Tiberias
National Park. Located directly across from a modern-day spa, the park
also houses a splendid mosaic floor from an ancient synagogue.
Make the hot springs the first stop on a Tiberias tour full of legends,
anecdotes and tales from ancient Jewish sources. Begin with the
National Park, at the southern end of the city, and end behind the
central bus station at the traditional final resting place of the
revered Maimonides.
Hamat Tiberias National Park
Tiberias is a relatively young Galilean city that was established by
King Herod Antipas (the son of Herod the Great) in 20 CE. Reared in
Rome and a connoisseur of Roman culture, Antipas was anxious to have a
Hellenistic-style bathhouse in the grandiose city he was planning.
Indeed, he probably picked this little strip adjacent to the Lake
Kinneret for his new city because of its wonderful, healing hot springs.
The plush bathhouse constructed around the springs was destroyed in an
eighth-century earthquake. Although it was rebuilt several times
afterwards, what you see at the park are remains of a sumptuous Turkish
spa completed in 1840.
A stunning mosaic floor from a synagogue dating back to the fourth
century - the era in which the Sanhedrin (Jewish courts) met in
Tiberias - is the main attraction of the Park. Considered the first of
its kind to have been installed in a Jewish house of worship, the
mosaic floor includes a Zodiac design with the Greek sun god Helios at
the center.
After examining the spectacular floor, walk to an exposed portion of
the hot springs, the source of the steam you may have seen swirling
above the road. That nose- wrinkling peculiar smell results from large
quantities of sulfur. Dipping your fingers briefly in the water will
make it clear why rabbis of the time called Tiberias the entrance to
hell!
The tomb of Rabbi Meir Ba'al HaNess
Leave the park, turn south and take the first right turn up the hill to
the tomb of Rabbi Meir Ba'al HaNess (Miracle Worker), situated above
the National Park and topped by two domes, one blue and the other white.
A favorite story about this rabbi concerns a woman who attended his
class on Friday evenings. One day the session lasted so long that by
the time she returned home the Shabbat candles had burned out. Since
they were the only source of light in the house on Shabbat, her husband
was furious, and locked his wife out.
When the woman knocked on her door, the husband opened it just a crack
and asked, 'Were you at Rabbi Meir's class?' When she answered in the
affirmative he declared that he wouldn't let her in until she spat in
the rabbi's face!
Word reached Rabbi Meir that his pupil had spent the night outside.
Next day he walked up to her in the marketplace and said, 'I have
something in my eye. Please help me by spitting into it and washing it
out.'
'What a coincidence,' said her companion. 'This is your chance to
return home.' But, unwilling to humiliate the rabbi, she hesitated,
agreeing to spit in his eye only after the rabbi begged again for her
help. In fact, under his pleas, she did so seven times! 'Now,' said the
rabbi, 'Go home and tell your husband you spat in my face seven times!'
Which she did, and the two made peace.
All of the anonymous works in the codified oral law called the Mishna
are attributed to this learned rabbi, who believed that Torah study was
as important as work and prayer. According to legend, Rabbi Meir Ba'al
Haness was buried standing up and ready to greet the Messiah.
Outside the large structure that houses his tomb, people light memorial
candles in a metal oven. And at the entrance, instead of the solemn
atmosphere you might expect, a bustling marketplace is going full
blast, offering religious books and compact discs, head coverings, wood
carvings, portraits of various important rabbis, a vast variety of
candles, tambourines, ice cream and vending machines! Inside, there is
a beautiful synagogue. On different sides of the tomb there are large
prayer sites for men and for women.
Tomb of Rachel – Rabbi Akiva’s wife
BACK ON the road, drive to Kever Rahel - the Tomb of Rachel: not the
famous burial site of the matriarch, near Bethlehem, but that of Rabbi
Akiva's longsuffering wife. Just continue north on highway 90 and
follow the signs pointing to the left.
Until a few decades ago, this spot was neglected and full of litter.
Then, one day, a hazy figure rescued a young man about to drown in Lake
Kinneret. That night, Rahel appeared to him in a dream, told him that
she had saved his life, and revealed the site of her grave. Armed with
this new knowledge, the swimmer built this impressive monument.
Rahel was the daughter of rich Jerusalemite Kalba Savua, while Akiva
was a poor uneducated shepherd who tended her father's flocks. The two
met, and fell in love. But Rahel, in awe of Akiva's vast but untutored
intellect, agreed to marry him only if he promised to go to school.
After wedding in secret, the couple was disowned by Rahel's father and
lived in devastating poverty.
Although Rahel insisted that Akiva keep his end of the bargain, he
scoffed, called her 'unrealistic' and claimed he was too old and set in
his ways for schooling. To prove a point, Rahel took her husband to a
spring whose waters had patiently, day after day and year after year,
worn a hole in a small rock. Suddenly Akiva understood that if a drop
of water could change a rock, he could absorb Torah studies.
Tradition holds that Akiva learned how to read at the age of 40
together with his little son. He then went on to a famous Jerusalem
academy and returned 24 years later, with 24,000 reverent students
following in his wake. Rahel went running out to greet him - but the
impoverished woman, dressed in rags, was rudely turned away by the
students. Akiva rushed to her side, declaring that 'Any wisdom I have
learned, or have imparted to you, comes from this woman, my wife!' Look
around for the famous rock that had such an influence on Akiva - and
watch how water continues its steady drip.
Grave of Rabbi Akiva
Now to the grave of the great man himself: Rabbi Akiva. From Rahel's
Tomb keep driving, swerving with the road. It becomes Hashiloah, then
ascends, changing names every few blocks. At a main street, Yehuda
Hanassi, turn left, then left on Trumpeldor to the gravesite of the
herdsman-turned-scholar.
While Rahel raised the children and struggled to make a living, Akiva
was busy becoming one of the foremost Jewish thinkers of all time.
Indeed, he was the very first sage to collect and simplify
interpretations of Jewish Law that are referred to even today.
Rabbi Akiva actively supported the Jews' second revolt against the
Romans, and its commander - fiery Shimon Bar- Kochba. Even after all
was lost, Rabbi Akiva continued to defy Roman edicts by teaching Jewish
law. For this he was martyred by the Romans in Caesarea, flayed to
death as he uttered the prayer 'Hear O Israel, the Lord our God, the
Lord is One.' Throughout the ages Rabbi Akiva has been a role model for
Jews willing to die rather than violate the laws of the Torah.
Grave of Rabbi Moses Haim Luzzato
BURIED NEAR Rabbi Akiva, Rabbi Moses Haim Luzzato (known as the Ramhal)
was born in Italy. His genius was recognized early on, for even as a
child he had amassed a fantastically wide body of both secular and
religious knowledge. He was also a mystic, and when he began recording
the divine words he heard in his head, Italy's rabbis went on the
warpath, accusing him of witchcraft and burning his works. He moved to
Israel in 1743, dying within a few years. Today his book The Path of
the Just - a guide to spirituality - is considered a vastly important
ethical writing.
Shrine of Rabbi Moses Ben Maimon
Return to Yehuda Hanassi, turn right and continue when it turns into
Elhadif. Go right on Yehuda Halevi, left onto Ben-Zakkai at the
roundabout and continue a few hundred meters to reach an open parking
lot. Look for the strange, metal-topped shrine of Rabbi Moses Ben
Maimon (Maimonides, or the Rambam) on the other side of the street.
Maimonides was a 12th-century Jewish legal expert, scholar, philosopher
and doctor and one of the greatest minds ever produced by the Jewish
people. His most comprehensive work on Jewish law was the 14-volume
Mishne Torah - considered a work of genius. Written on the wall is a
saying coined by his contemporaries: 'From Moses to Moses, there has
never been another Moses.'
Legend has it that when Maimonides's body was brought to Tiberias for
burial from his home in Egypt, the camel carrying his remains stopped
next to the grave of Rabbi Yohanan Ben-Zakkai. And that is where he was
laid to rest.
A member of the Sanhedrin, Ben-Zakkai was a famous rabbi in his own
right. While Jerusalem was under Roman siege, and just before the final
Roman assault, Ben-Zakkai was daringly spirited out of the city in a
coffin. He then climbed out of the casket to meet with Roman commander
Vespasian in the latter's tent. During their audience Ben- Zakkai
predicted that the commander would one day become emperor and asked
that the new ruler spare a small town called Yavne from destruction.
Soon afterwards Vespasian was indeed crowned emperor - and Jerusalem
fell to the Romans. Ben-Zakkai and his followers then set up a center
for Jewish study in Yavne.
Among the rabbi's learned teachings is my favorite: 'Whoever walks four
meters in the Land of Israel is assured of a place in the world to
come.'
Dr. David Torrance
When Dr. David Torrance got his first look at Tiberias in 1884 as part
of a Scottish missionary delegation to the Holy Land, he was appalled
to find the town awash with sewage and disease. He immediately began
treating patients with the tools he had available: Epsom salts, cod
liver oil, and his magically healing hands. Ten years later he erected
the town's first medical facility, where he cared tenderly for everyone
in need.
Despite a series of personal tragedies, and the fact that he failed
miserably in his mission to convert the Jews, Dr. Torrance provided
half a century of selfless service to the city and was universally
revered. After his death in 1946 the local chief rabbi remarked that
Tiberias had been triply blessed: it had a glorious lake, healing hot
springs and David Torrance!
The institution eventually began operating as a maternity hospital and
later as a simple pilgrims' hostel. But a few years ago it was
renovated and re-opened as the unique Scots Hotel: maternity wards are
now magnificent public rooms, the delivery ward a charming dining hall,
and stunning suites in the restored Old Manse and the Doctor's House -
dating back to 1891 - have retained the original stone interiors. A
completely new five-story building holds the hotel's standard, modern
rooms, while millennia-old antiquities line grounds scattered with
elegant English-style gardens.
I have been advised that, having been a guest at the hotel, my raves
would be more believable if I had something critical to say. Sorry! The
Scots Hotel experience is simply superb.
On 23 January The Scots Hotel is offering a special Burns Supper to
commemorate the Scottish national poet Robert Burns. NIS 250 per
person. Haggis is included. Not Kosher. |