Thursday, 7 April 2022

Engagement and Wedding Wishes

I met South African born Dani back in 1995 when we were both on the same ulpan (a school for the intensive study of Hebrew; the Hebrew word means studio or teaching, instruction) in Jerusalem. Roll on many years and Dani has moved onto pastures new in the US, whilst I am obviously still in Israel.
We have met up a few times over the years and social media of course means that we are able to keep in pretty regular contact. Recently I was excited to wake up to a Whatsapp from Dani telling me that she had got engaged to her partner of 7 years, Brendan. I know that she appreciates my handmade cards since she has ordered a few for her friends, so I decided to make the couple a card to mark their engagement.
I cut out their names and added some hearts and a banner marking the date of their engagement to the design. Of course, once I had finished, I realised that I had written the date using the British English format and not American English! Oh well, I guess I'm a Brit and that's the way I write the date.
I realise I forgot to share the card I made for my niece and her new husband when they got married last October. You may remember the trip I made to the UK and the lovely places we visited. The invitation we received for the wedding was in gold lettering, so I decided to create a design using white stock and a yellow (in place of gold) paper inlay. In fact, the colour scheme for the wedding turned out to be a gorgeous autumnal rust-brown. It was a beautiful wedding!
PoCoLo

Monday, 4 April 2022

Afeka Caves

The Afeka caves are located north of Ramat Aviv Gimel, a residential neighbourhood in Tel Aviv. The caves, a Samaritan cemetery, are carved into the kurkar rock, adjacent to the Ayalon highway, a major highway in the Tel Aviv metropolitan area. To the north of the caves are the gas facility of Pi Glilot and a military base.
The cave site was discovered in 1951 during the construction of the coastal railway connecting Tel Aviv and Haifa and was investigated by the field archaeologist Jacob Kaplan. The place was then re-explored in 1989 by the Israel Antiquities Authority, during the construction of the highway.
Known to many because of the parable of the Good Samaritan told by Jesus in the Gospel of Luke, the Samaritans are Israel's smallest religious community. They claim descent from the biblical tribes of Menashe and Ephraim, the sons of Joseph. Their religion is closely intertwined with Judaism. They believe that God chose Mount Gerizim near the city of Nablus in the West Bank as the site for his dwelling, while Jewish people hold that God chose Mount Zion in Jerusalem and built their temple there. Their name comes from the region called "Samaria" which contains Mount Gerizim.
The present-day population of Samaritans, numbering about 800 members, is divided between the village of Kiryat Luza, situated on Mount Gerizim, and the Israeli city of Holon. The Samaritans of Kiryat Luza hold dual Israeli and Palestinian Authority citizenship and speak Hebrew and Arabic, whilst those living in Holon primarily speak Hebrew. The area of the village and Mount Gerizim is under full Israeli control and can be accessed by Israelis.
A total of 8 caves with 15 individual burial sites were discovered at the Samaritan cemetery. It was used by the Samaritans in the 4-5th centuries CE. Burials stopped there after the Samaritian rebellion of 529 CE, when they launched a war to create their own independent state. By 531 the rebellion had been put down. The Byzantines destroyed the Samaritan settlement.
Memorial vessels discovered in the burial sites included decorated pottery candles, glass vessels, rings, pendants, coins and an amulet made from a thin plate of bronze bearing passages from the Bible in Samaritan script.
Outside one of the caves was a rolling stone, above. This heavy stone was used to seal the entrance after burial, in order to stop animals and grave-robbers entering, and also to prevent the "impurity" (Tumah) escaping.
Today the Afeka Caves and adjacent Drezner Grove offer a lovely hike close to Tel Aviv. We visited in March, when the red anemones and the dark purple Coastal Iris were at their best! If you visit during December and January, you will see Narcissus flowers, which I last went searching for in 2017. The Narcissus field is north of the caves.
A sign at the southern entrance to the park says that it is now called the Glilot Eco park (אקו פארק גלילות). There is some concern that the Tel Aviv municipality will build apartments here. It would be terrible to lose this special natural space. Along with the burial caves, signs told us that animals and birds such as the striped newt, Mediterranean chameleon, the Indian crested porcupine and the common kestrel can all be seen in the area. Instead of green fields, wild flowers and animals, how sad would it be to see only concrete, cars and buildings?
Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs

Thursday, 31 March 2022

We Can’t Keep Up!

Remember the birthday card I made for the Spurs supporter? I made one for the same customer's dad too. He loves fishing, tennis and whisky, his daughter told me. She also mentioned that he is a huge Zionist and asked me to include an Israeli flag somewhere on the card.
I showed my customer's dad wearing a bright red T-shirt (she mentioned that he likes to wear bright colours like yellow or red). He has a fishing rod, with a fish dangling from it, in one hand and a tennis racket in the other. A yellow tennis ball is flying off the racket.
Behind dad is the river he is fishing in. There are some reeds on the banks of the river and the Israeli flag stands in them! Finally, next to my customer's dad is a tumbler of his favourite tipple, whisky, along with a bottle of whisky too.
"We love you Dad, we can’t keep up!" was the greeting his daughter asked me to put on the front of the card. It does indeed sound like her dad is a busy man!
PoCoLo