A few fun bloomers were mentioned when I donned my technical writing hat this week.
Category: Israel
A-Z Challenge: Z is for Zoo


.
.
.
I had planned a trip to the zoo with my friend, Marallyn. Sadly, that hasn’t worked out yet. However, I found some photos hubby took years ago when the children were small.
.
.
.
.
.

The Tisch Family Zoological Gardens started out in 1940 as the Jerusalem Biblical Zoo. The current location has been open since 1993 and stretches over 62 beautifully landscaped acres.

With this post, I come to the end of the A-Z Challenge. It has been fun but exhausting! I hope those of you who found me through it will come back. Sometimes I blog about Jerusalem. Other times I blog about writing, or social anxiety, or bullying, or anything else I feel like talking about.

A-Z Challenge: Y is for Yad Vashem

I can’t do better than to quote from the website:
As the Jewish people’s living memorial to the Holocaust, Yad Vashem safeguards the memory of the past and imparts its meaning for future generations. Established in 1953, as the world center for documentation, research, education and commemoration of the Holocaust, Yad Vashem is today a dynamic and vital place of intergenerational and international encounter.
A-Z Challenge: X is for Xanadu

I have to admit I had a bit of trouble with X. Until I discovered Xanadu.
Xanadu, or Shangdu, isn’t actually in Jerusalem. It’s not even anywhere near Jerusalem. It’s in Inner Mongolia, China.
But… there’s a link. Marco Polo, the Venetian explorer (or should that be x-plorer?) is alleged to have made a journey from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem to Xanadu.
So what?
Good question. I don’t have an answer. I suppose in the 13th century it would have been a fairly difficult journey.
Anyway, it gives me an X word and an opportunity to post a couple of pictures of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

Two places today. I couldn’t leave either of them out.
The Western Wall (or Wailing Wall) is the holiest site in Judaism. It is a remnant of the ancient wall that surrounded the Second Temple, and is known to have been a site for prayer and pilgrimage since the 4th century.


The windmill in the Mishkenot Sha’ananim neighbourhood was built in 1857 by the British Jewish philanthropist, Sir Moses Montefiore. Unfortunately, Sir Moses and friends failed to take local conditions into account. The mill was hardly used, mainly because there was not enough wind on most days. Now (or at least until recently) it houses displays showing the achievements of Sir Moses Montefiore.
The windmill is currently undergoing renovation. Apparently they’re turning it back into a working mill.
Fortunately, we have an older photo.

A-Z Challenge: V is for Via Dolorosa
A-Z Challenge: U is for University
A-Z Challenge: T is for Tower of David

Very close to Jaffa Gate is the Tower of David, a citadel built over 2,000 years ago, destroyed and rebuilt four times. It is now a museum with exhibits depicting the four thousand years of Jerusalem’s history. Sound-and-light performances are held there, as well as other cultural events.
A-Z Challenge: S is for Souq/Shuk
A-Z Challenge: R is for Roses

The Wohl Rose Park is a public garden located between the Knesset and the Supreme Court and is one of the few such parks in the Middle East. Over 400 varieties of roses are grown here.

The park’s Garden of Nations consists of sections donated by other countries. Each section contains roses that grow in the relevant country.

When I returned home with my camera after visiting the park, I had to snap the roses in our garden. Sorry I can’t post their heavenly fragrance.
.

.

.Sorry




