
Ein Kerem is the only village within the Green Line that still is built around a spring at whose feet the remains of the traditional agricultural terraces that the spring once watered can be seen.
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Ein Kerem is the only village within the Green Line that still is built around a spring at whose feet the remains of the traditional agricultural terraces that the spring once watered can be seen.
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Fifty years have passed since Pessah Bar-Adon discovered, in a cave in the Judean Desert canyon of Nahal Mishmar, the biggest hoard of ancient artifacts ever found in the Land of Israel: 429 copper objects, wrapped in a reed mat. Five decades and dozens of academic papers after their discovery, the enigma of how...
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It may be best known for its flourishing Israeli-Arab community and its religious sites that attract Christian Catholics from near and far, but Nazareth’s food scene is truly a wonder of its own.
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Oscar Wilde once said, “If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all.” Nowhere is this truer than in secondhand bookstores, filled with customers who not only enjoy reading, but also love to collect books, hoard them, smell them, find rare editions and...
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The Tefen Open Museum’s latest exhibit is the first major retrospective of artist Franz Bernheimer’s work. Titled “A Man’s Table,” it focuses on the artist’s many works related to the theme of the table, a subject that enabled him to explore his preoccupation with forms and lines, which began in the late 1950s.
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