Showing posts with label Shan Overton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shan Overton. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

The Dome of the Rock & Al-Asqa Mosque


Damascus Gate
By MacLean Cadman

This morning, we found ourselves entranced as we climbed the cobbled roads of Jerusalem's Old City through shafts of light filtering into the narrow openings along the street-side markets and cafes. We entered the Old City through the Damascus Gate and swiftly wound around in the bustling maze along the Via Dolorosa, where Jesus walked his last steps before his crucifixion. Our goal was to arrive at the Dome of the Rock on time--having been granted access, just this morning, to both the shrine and the Al-Asqa Mosque, something that does not happen very often these days.

After passing through the crowds and the rush of the Old City, we passed through a security checkpoint and entered into a very quiet Temple Mount, where we could hear birds sing and feel the breeze blow. It was a beautiful morning in Jerusalem. Just across the courtyard, we saw the 7th century golden dome rising above the sacred Islamic shrine, and it took our breath away.

Dome of the Rock
By MacLean Cadman

Once all the women in our group had covered our heads with scarves and put on large, flowery skirts over our jeans, we were escorted up the marble staircase to the Dome of the Rock, a magnificent octagonal structure built using a Byzantine architectural style for the dome. Below the dome, the building is covered in colored porcelain tiles to create engaging geometric patterns that are echoed in the interior. We took off our shoes and entered the shrine, first built as a resting place for pilgrims to the mosque next door.


Scarves & Skirts
By MacLean Cadman

In the shrine, we saw men, women, and children at prayer, study, and rest. We had the opportunity to go down below the dome into one of the niches beneath the rock to touch the holy rock and observe prayers taking place in this holiest of sites for Muslims. The experience was truly breathtaking for many of us. The calm beauty all around us--gorgeous, intricate stained glass windows; thick carpets donated by the King of Jordan; an ornate ceiling held up by wide marble columns. We wished we'd been able to stay longer to soak up the spiritual energy of the place.
After leaving the Dome of the Rock, we walked across the plaza to the Al-Asqa Mosque, which means "the Farthest Mosque from Mecca," our guide told us. Another beautiful structure, the mosque was surrounded by groups of men and women studying the Koran and was filled with people in prayer. Our experience of this place included a profound sense of devotion to God and to living a good and peaceful life, which made it as hard to leave the mosque as it had been to walk out of the Dome of the Rock.

Inside the Mosque
By MacLean Cadman

In my Father's house, there are many mansions. ~ John 14.2

~ Shan Overton
PhD student, Theology and Education
Boston College

Yad Vashem & East Jerusalem

A country is not just what it does--it is also what it tolerates.
--Kurt Tucholsky, German essayist of Jewish origin
Quotation from Vad Yashem, the Holocaust Museum

Vad Yashem, the Holocaust Museum
Monument at Vad Yashem
by Paulina Muratore


At the Children's Memorial
By MacLean Cadman
A view of the valley from Yad Vashem.
Paulina Muratore


East Jerusalem
A market in East Jerusalem.
by Paulina Muratore

The Winding Wall
By MacLean Cadman


A Bedouin encampment outside of East Jerusalem.
by Paulina Muratore

A Demolished Palestinian Home
By MacLean Cadman


Walking down the hill to the Peace Center of
the Israeli Committee Against Home Demolitions (ICAHD)
with our guide, Yahav.
by Paulina Muratore


Mural at ICAHD's Peace Center.
by Paulina Muratore



Maqluba (a.k.a. Upside Down), a traditional Palestinian lunch. YUM!
by Paulina Muratore

Monday, January 3, 2011

Ramallah & the Dead Sea

Dear Friends, 
We spent today in Ramallah in the West Bank and on the Dead Sea. It was another intense but fruitful day. We offer to you the Scripture passage we carried with us for the day and reflected upon at evening's end, followed by several photographs of our journey.
~ Shan Overton


Because of the Lord's great love we are not consumed, for His compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness.
~ Lamentations 3.22-23

Visit with The Rev. Manuel Musallem
in Ramallah
College Pilgrims with The Rev. Manuel Musallem,
Roman Catholic priest who served in Gaza for 14 years
and current Director of Christian-Islamic Peace Center
by Judith Stuart


Meeting with Hanan Ashrawi
in Ramallah
Diocese of Mass College Pilgrims with Hanan Ashrawi,
Founder and Secretary General of MIFTA,
the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
by Judith Stuart


The Rev. Judith Stuart with Hanan Ashrawi
by MacLean Cadman

Playing in the Dead Sea
Bobbing in the salt water!
by Judith Stuart


A bunch of us in the mud!
by Judith Stuart

Because of the Lord's great love we are not consumed, for His compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness.
~ Lamentations 3.22-23

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Going There: Aida and Hebron

Today, we visited Aida Refugee Camp and Hebron in the West Bank. Our own words cannot possibly describe all we have seen and heard, so we share with you several photographs because a picture is worth a thousand words. But first, a poem by R.S. Thomas, which articulates both the suffering and the grace we have witnessed.
 
The Coming
by R. S. Thomas
 
And God held in his hand
A small globe. Look he said.
The son looked. Far off,
As through water, he saw
A scorched land of fierce
Colour. The light burned
There; crusted buildings
Cast their shadows: a bright
Serpent, A river
Uncoiled itself, radiant
With slime. On a bare
Hill a bare tree saddened
The sky. many People
Held out their thin arms
To it, as though waiting
For a vanished April
To return to its crossed
Boughs. The son watched
Them. Let me go there, he said.
Aida Refugee Camp
Entrance to Aida
by Paulina Muratore

 A wall in Aida listing refugees' home villages.
by Paulina Muratore

Our lunch hosts at the Lajee Center in Aida.
by Paulina Muratore

 The Wall, sometimes called the Apartheid Wall, sometimes called The Fence.
by Paulina Muratore 

Children in Aida.
by Paulina Muratore
 

Ibrihimi Mosque
The beautiful room for prayer.
by MacLean Cadman


Several of us prepared for entering the room for prayer.
by MacLean Cadman

The 1,600 year old minbar, where the imam stands to deliver sermons.
by Paulina Muratore

Sarah's Tomb
by Paulina Muratore


Meeting Israeli Soldiers
At the checkpoint near the Ibrihimi Mosque.
by MacLean Cadman


Getting a little exercise!
by MacLean Cadman


Soldiers at our last checkpoint leaving Hebron.
by MacLean Cadman



Saturday, January 1, 2011

Seek Peace and Pursue It

This entry is part two of two entries for Saturday, January 1.

Barbed Wire Fence on Olive Tree Terrace
by Paulina Muratore
Class of 2013, International Relations
Boston University

One of the gifts of coming to a disputed land is meeting people who want to resolve conflicts not with violence but with civility, creativity, and a concern for the common humanity of everyone involved. Today, we met two such people, one a university professor who left a job at Yale University to focus on empowering non-violent approaches to the Israel-Palestine conflict from his home in Bethlehem; the other, a farmer committed to establishing good relations with his neighbors, to creating beautiful art, theater, and music with children in order to promote peace, and to making a space where people of all traditions and backgrounds can come together in peace. These men, Mazin B. Qumsiyeh, professor at Bethlehem and Birzeit Universities and a leader in several civil and solidarity movements, and Daoud Nassar, owner of Daher's Vineyard and director of Tent of Nations, are Palestinians with a passion for justice and peace. Their long-term dedication to the creation of opportunities for mutual respect between Palestinians and Israelis, despite the ongoing discord about land ownership and use, water access, human rights issues, and much more, was both a sobering and an energizing aspect of our journey today.

We met Qumsiyeh after spending the morning at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. He welcomed us with hospitality, including a delicious Turkish coffee, and talked to us about his activist work. Qumsiyeh is deeply concerned about what is happening to Palestinians as Israelis build more walls, annex more land, uproot profitable and very old olive trees and vineyards, tap water resources underneath Palestinian-owned property, require Palestinians to carry special IDs, and control Palestinian movement throughout the region. It is clear that, despite his concerns for these and many other problems, Qumsiyeh follows the lead of globally-respected persons such as Mohandas Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Desmond Tutu, as he tries to respond in a non-violent manner that still makes his political points. He told us what it means to him to be a Palestinian at this time, saying, "to exist is to resist." Resisting, for Qumsiyeh and the people he works with, does not mean violent acts; instead, resisting means farmers picking olives in front of bulldozers and women taking sheep to pasture in forbidden areas, children going to school in the streets when their schools are blocked off by Israeli military units, writing books and talking to groups about peace and justice, hugging trees about to be torn down or burned, refusing to pay taxes without representation, and other similar kinds of actions. His message is a message of hope and empowerment, one that draws inspiration from the anti-Apartheid movement, women's suffrage and feminist movements, and the like.

After we left Qumsiyeh, we had much to ponder on the short bus ride and walk across the terraced fields and up the hillside to Daher's Vineyard just outside of Bethlehem. We arrived at the farm to a delicious lunch prepared for us by Daoud Nassar and his family, after which Nassar told us his family's story of land ownership in a rich farming area where Israelis are currently annexing land and building new settlements very rapidly.

Lunch in a Cave at Daher's Vineyard
by Paulina Muratore

 The Nassar family bought their land in 1916 and have been farming it continuously in vineyards and olive trees and living in the caves on the land for three generations, but they have had to mount an extraordinary legal battle with Israelis for more than ten years in order to keep it despite having clear title to the entire property. The family was offered a large sum of money to give up the property rights to their 100 acres, but they refused because, Nassar said, "The land is our mother. We cannot sell our mother." They have endured nine demolition orders, all rescinded thus far, but they fear that the bulldozers could arrive at any time to destroy the few structures on the property. In addition to fighting the battle in court, the Nassar family's response to this situation has been to make something good come from the conflict. They host a summer camp for children and youths from the area; invite people, including Israeli settlers, to join them in working the land and sharing meals; and have been inventive in creating a self-sufficient farm with solar energy, rain water tanks, organic farming techniques, and good use of the natural caves on the property. They are not interested in theoretical peace-making but try to live it every day, from the grassroots up, whether they are engaged in hosting visitors like us or crossing through an Israeli check-point. As Nassar told us, "We refuse to be enemies." His goal, and that of his family and Tent of Nations is to develop friendships that will enable them to cross boundaries and solve problems together.

 Peaceful Resistance, Daher's Vineyard
by Paulina Muratore

As we said our goodbyes to Nassar and headed back down the hill and across the fields to the bus, we were struck by how these two good men are, in their own ways, seeking and pursuing a future of peace. Both want unity with their fellow human beings, and one approaches it by researching and writing books and engaging in non-violent political actions while the other plants olive trees and invites everyone to participate in the planting and the playing afterward. Their kind hospitality, their honesty, their diligence in the face of many obstacles, and their humor will stay with us through the rest of our journey and as we return home to all of you.

~ Shan Overton
PhD student, Theology & Education
Boston College

Behold, how good and how pleasant it is 
for brethren to dwell together in unity!
~ Psalm 133 (KJV)

Most of Our (Very Unified) Group at Church of the Nativity!
by Paulina Muratore













Friday, December 31, 2010

Safe Arrival in Paris

Dear Friends,

We have arrived safely in Paris after an easy flight from Boston. It's cold here and still very dark despite being almost 8 am--the French seem to like the moody nighttime a great deal. Because we flew into the city in fog, we couldn't see much, which was a minor disappointment. However, all of the duty-free shops in the Charles de Gaulle airport have thrilled and amazed us.  Plus, we're all wired after the strong French coffee we enjoyed on the plane with our festive breakfast.

We board our plane to Tel Aviv in about an hour and will have a few more hours in the air until we are in Israel. Once on the ground there, we will travel by bus to Jerusalem, where we'll be staying for the next few days and nights. We will post another entry once in Israel, so check in later in the day. This evening, we will celebrate the New Year in the heart of Jerusalem. Simply unbelievable! 

May you enjoy this last day of 2010!

Peace,
~ Shan Overton
PhD student, Theology and Education
Boston College

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Walk With Us, Pray With Us

Welcome to the blog for the Diocese of Massachusetts' College Pilgrims!

We are a group of students, clergy, and staff from Boston University, Harvard, MIT, Northeastern University, Brown, and Boston College, and we are leaving on Thursday for the Holy Land. This blog is a record of what we have seen and heard; it is our effort to share our witness of the truth and beauty we encounter on the journey.

As we prepare to depart Boston on Thursday and arrive in Jerusalem on Friday, we offer the following prayer from the Book of Common Prayer:


For the Human Family
O God, you made us in your own image and redeemed us through Jesus your Son: Look with compassion on the whole human family; take away the arrogance and hatred which infect our hearts; break down the walls that separate us; unite us in bonds of love; and work through our struggle and confusion to accomplish your purposes on earth; that, in your good time, all nations and races may serve you in harmony around your heavenly throne; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Walk together with us as we make this pilgrimage by reading our daily blog and praying for us and for all of God's beloved children living in the Holy Land.

~ Shan Overton
PhD student, Theology & Education
Boston College

~ The Rev. Judith Stuart
University Chaplain
Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts