Trumpeldor cemetery, Tel Aviv, Israel - the country's pantheon. Tour guide: Zahi Shaked
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
+972 54 6905522 zahigo25@walla.com
צחי שקד, מורה דרך ומדריך תיירים. מצלם אותם בכל הזדמנות 0546905522
Trumpeldor cemetery (Hebrew: בית הקברות טרומפלדור), often referred to as the Old Cemetery, is a historic cemetery on Trumpeldor Street in Tel Aviv, Israel. The cemetery covers 10.6 acres, and contains approximately 5,000 graves.
The cemetery was founded in 1902 on a tract of unoccupied land in Jaffa, six years before the founding of Ahuzat Bayit, the first neighborhood of Tel Aviv. Buried there are the city's founders, early residents, and cultural and historical figures, including Moshe Sharett, the second Prime Minister of Israel. [1]
When the cemetery opened, its location was far from populated areas but today it is located in downtown Tel Aviv, north of Trumpeldor Street, between Hovevei Zion and Zion Pinsker streets, where its three entry gates are located. The eastern gate is the oldest. The main gate (center) was opened in 1926 with the interment of the remains of Max Nordau. Today, only persons holding plots purchased long ago and a small number willing to pay many thousands of dollars are buried there. The eastern section is the oldest and includes the tombs of the early leaders in Tel Aviv, and Jews from Jaffa. The remains of well known persons may be found in the southwest corner.
The Trumpeldor cemetery was the only cemetery in Tel Aviv until 1932, when the Nahalat Yitzhak cemetery was opened.
Trumpeldor Cemetery, Tel Aviv
The Trumpeldor Cemetery tells the story of Israel and of Tel Aviv, many of whose streets are named after those buried here. Walking among the graves, you can feel the echoes of Tel Aviv today.
Tel Aviv's first Jewish cemetery, established in 1902 and located in the heart of the city, Trumpeldor Cemetery is the final resting place of many Israelis who played a part in Israel's history and cultural development: from Zionist leaders Ahad Ha'am, Haim Arlosoroff and Max Nordau, to early Hebrew poets Hayyim Nachman Bialik and Shaul Tchernichovsky; from Meir Dizengoff, the first mayor of Tel Aviv, and Moshe Sharett, Israel's first foreign minister and second prime minister, to artists Nahum Gutman and Reuven Rubin, world-renowned humorist and playwright Ephraim Kishon, and singers Shoshana Damari and Arik Einstein, who died in November 2013.
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Trumpeldor Cemetery in Tel Aviv, Israel - Jewish gravestones - an obelisk and a harp
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
zahigo25@walla.com +972-54-6905522 tel
סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
My name is Zahi Shaked
In 2000 I became a registered liscenced tourist guide.
My dedication in life is to pass on the ancient history of the Holy Land.
Following upon many years of travel around the world, which was highlighted by a very exciting emotional and soul-searching meeting with the Dalai Lama, I realized that I had a mission. To pass on the the history of the Holy Land, its religions, and in particular, the birth and development of Christianity.
In order to fulfill this calling in the best way possible, I studied in depth, visited, and personally experienced each and every important site of the ancient Christians. I studied for and received my first bachelors degree in the ancient history of the Holy Land, and am presently completing my studies for my second degree.(Masters)
Parralel to my studies, and in order to earn a living, I was employed for many years in advertising. What I learned there was how to attract the publics attention, generate and, increase interest, and assimilate information. All this I use as tools to describe, explain and deepen the interest in the sites that we visit. From my experience, I have learned that in this way, the Holy Land becomes more than just history, and that the large stones that we see scattered about in dissaray, join together one by one until they become - a Byzantine Church. This also happens when I lead a group of Pilgrims in the Steps of Jesus. We climb to the peak of Mount Precipice, glide over the land to the Sea of Galilee, land on the water and see the miracle which enfolds before us. This is a many faceted experience. Not only history which you will remember and cherish, but an experience which I hope will be inplanted in your hearts and minds, and will accompany you all the days of your life.
Trumpeldor cemetery, Tel Aviv, Israel - the country's pantheon. Tour guide: Zahi Shaked
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
+972 54 6905522 zahigo25@walla.com
צחי שקד, מורה דרך ומדריך תיירים. מצלם אותם בכל הזדמנות 0546905522
Trumpeldor cemetery (Hebrew: בית הקברות טרומפלדור), often referred to as the Old Cemetery, is a historic cemetery on Trumpeldor Street in Tel Aviv, Israel. The cemetery covers 10.6 acres, and contains approximately 5,000 graves.
The cemetery was founded in 1902 on a tract of unoccupied land in Jaffa, six years before the founding of Ahuzat Bayit, the first neighborhood of Tel Aviv. Buried there are the city's founders, early residents, and cultural and historical figures, including Moshe Sharett, the second Prime Minister of Israel. [1]
When the cemetery opened, its location was far from populated areas but today it is located in downtown Tel Aviv, north of Trumpeldor Street, between Hovevei Zion and Zion Pinsker streets, where its three entry gates are located. The eastern gate is the oldest. The main gate (center) was opened in 1926 with the interment of the remains of Max Nordau. Today, only persons holding plots purchased long ago and a small number willing to pay many thousands of dollars are buried there. The eastern section is the oldest and includes the tombs of the early leaders in Tel Aviv, and Jews from Jaffa. The remains of well known persons may be found in the southwest corner.
The Trumpeldor cemetery was the only cemetery in Tel Aviv until 1932, when the Nahalat Yitzhak cemetery was opened.
A Tour in the Jewish cemetery in Holon (near Tel Aviv City), Israel
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
zahigo25@walla.com 972-54-6905522 tel
סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
My name is Zahi Shaked
In 2000 I became a registered liscenced tourist guide.
My dedication in life is to pass on the ancient history of the Holy Land.
Following upon many years of travel around the world, which was highlighted by a very exciting emotional and soul-searching meeting with the Dalai Lama, I realized that I had a mission. To pass on the the history of the Holy Land, its religions, and in particular, the birth and development of Christianity.
In order to fulfill this calling in the best way possible, I studied in depth, visited, and personally experienced each and every important site of the ancient Christians. I studied for and received my first bachelors degree in the ancient history of the Holy Land, and am presently completing my studies for my second degree.(Masters)
Parralel to my studies, and in order to earn a living, I was employed for many years in advertising. What I learned there was how to attract the publics attention, generate and, increase interest, and assimilate information. All this I use as tools to describe, explain and deepen the interest in the sites that we visit. From my experience, I have learned that in this way, the Holy Land becomes more than just history, and that the large stones that we see scattered about in dissaray, join together one by one until they become - a Byzantine Church. This also happens when I lead a group of Pilgrims in the Steps of Jesus. We climb to the peak of Mount Precipice, glide over the land to the Sea of Galilee, land on the water and see the miracle which enfolds before us. This is a many faceted experience. Not only history which you will remember and cherish, but an experience which I hope will be inplanted in your hearts and minds, and will accompany you all the days of your life.
ISRAEL: JERUSALEM: FUNERAL OF FORMER CHIEF RABBI JAKOBOVIT
Natural Sound
The former chief rabbi of Britain, Immanuel Jakobovits, was buried on Monday in a cemetery on the Mount of Olives outside Jerusalem.
Jakobovits, who was the first chief rabbi to be made a member of Britain's House of Lords, died suddenly at his London home on Sunday of a brain haemorrhage.
He was 78 years old.
The body of the former chief rabbi was flown from London on Sunday following a ceremony at the Hendon Synagogue.
He was buried in a cemetery on the Mount of Olives, overlooking the city of Jerusalem.
It is an area regarded as holy by both Jews and Christians, and in recent times has become the final resting place for distinguished Jewish spiritual leaders.
Lord Jakobovits was strongly conservative on political and moral issues.
He was a staunch supporter of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who gave him a life peerage, entitling him to a seat in the upper house of the parliament.
He was an outspoken opponent of homosexuality and criticised modern fertility treatments, demanding stricter controls over their use.
Jakobovits fled to Britain in 1936 to escape the Nazi holocaust - refusing ever to return to Germany.
He believed the destiny of Israel was to become a beacon of light to other nations.
After serving as Chief Rabbi in Britain, he went on to become Chief Rabbi in Ireland and First Rabbi at New York's Fifth Avenue Synagogue, before returning to live in Britain.
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Trumpeldor Cemetery in Tel Aviv
Trumpeldor Cemetery in Tel Aviv.
Video and Editing by Avi Kanner for ISRAEL21c
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Israeli police destroy Palestinian tombstones in Jerusalem cemetery
Earlier this month, Israeli police forces dressed in civilian clothes broke into the Palestinian al-Mujahidin cemetery and destroyed the tombstones of seven Palestinians killed by Israel.
Located just outside the Old City of occupied East Jerusalem, al-Mujahidin cemetery is the final resting place of several Palestinian “martyrs” who were killed by Israeli forces in the so-called Jerusalem Intifada that began in 2015.
A traditional Jewish funeral, a Jewish cemetery in Holon, Israel
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
zahigo25@walla.com +972-54-6905522 tel סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
My name is Zahi Shaked
In 2000 I became a registered liscenced tourist guide.
My dedication in life is to pass on the ancient history of the Holy Land.
Following upon many years of travel around the world, which was highlighted by a very exciting emotional and soul-searching meeting with the Dalai Lama, I realized that I had a mission. To pass on the the history of the Holy Land, its religions, and in particular, the birth and development of Christianity.
In order to fulfill this calling in the best way possible, I studied in depth, visited, and personally experienced each and every important site of the ancient Christians. I studied for and received my first bachelors degree in the ancient history of the Holy Land, and am presently completing my studies for my second degree.(Masters)
Parralel to my studies, and in order to earn a living, I was employed for many years in advertising. What I learned there was how to attract the publics attention, generate and, increase interest, and assimilate information. All this I use as tools to describe, explain and deepen the interest in the sites that we visit. From my experience, I have learned that in this way, the Holy Land becomes more than just history, and that the large stones that we see scattered about in dissaray, join together one by one until they become - a Byzantine Church. This also happens when I lead a group of Pilgrims in the Steps of Jesus. We climb to the peak of Mount Precipice, glide over the land to the Sea of Galilee, land on the water and see the miracle which enfolds before us. This is a many faceted experience. Not only history which you will remember and cherish, but an experience which I hope will be inplanted in your hearts and minds, and will accompany you all the days of your life.
June Flanders Jewish Funeral 1927 - 2017
Funeral of Prof. June Flanders from Tel Aviv University, Department of Economics, Ramat Hasharon cemetery Israel.
please do like to my video, it means you like the way I shot the funeral and not that you like Junes death.
was filmed by Tal Shachar a pro photographer from cameraora.com
Beehive-like cemetery in Jerusalem hailed as unique
(12 Nov 2017) An beehive-like structure built deep underground in Jerusalem is being hailed as the only cemetery of its kind in the modern world.
Tunnels running more than 1.2 km (0.75 miles) under one of the holiest cities in the world have been carefully excavated over the past two years to allow a unique burial site for some 22,000 graves.
In the walls of the tunnel there will be fourteen layers of burial slots in which bodies will be placed, and a 50-metre (164 feet) shaft will be fitted with lifts to connect the world above to the world below.
Arik Glazer, the Chief Executive Officer of Rolzur Tunnelling, described the project as unique and in keeping with ancient traditions.
Above ground, the Har Hamenuchot Cemetery in the Givat Shaul neighbourhood of Jerusalem is packed with tens of thousands of graves.
The tunnel will alleviate the land shortage in the cemetery, and provide a final resting place to thousands of people when completed late 2018.
The project is being paid for by Chevra Kadisha, a Jewish burial society, with the whole project costing approximately 50 million US dollars.
The unique tunneling project is on the list of finalists for the ITA Tunnelling Awards 2017, expected to take place Wednesday.
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Israel Raises The Dead With Skyward Cemetery
With real estate at a premium, Israel is at the forefront of a global movement building vertical cemeteries in densely populated countries. After some initial hesitations, and rabbinical rulings that made the practice kosher, Israel's ultra-Orthodox burial societies have embraced the concept as the most effective Jewish practice in an era when most of the cemeteries in major population centers are packed full. The Yarkon Cemetery on the outskirts of Tel Aviv has been his flagship project. As the primary cemetery for the greater Tel Aviv area, its traditional burial grounds are at near capacity with 110,000 graves stretched across 150 acres. But thanks to an array of 30 planned vertical structures, Tuvia Sagiv, an architect who specializes in dense burial design, said the cemetery will be able to provide 250,000 more graves without gobbling up any more land, providing the region with 25 years of breathing room.
Funeral for Israeli solider killed in Jordanian border battle.
1. Long shot coffin being carried to grave site
2. Family members crying
3. Various soldiers burying the coffin
4. People crying
5. Soldiers covering the coffin
6. Soldiers firing a salute into the air
7. Close-up sign on grave, pull out to mourners
8. Wide shot funeral
STORYLINE:
Hundreds of people attended the funeral on Wednesday of an Israeli soldier killed in a gun battle with armed attackers along the Israel-Jordan border.
The Israeli military says 23-year-old Michael Sitbon died on Tuesday after gunmen on the Jordanian side opened fire on an Israeli border patrol.
It says Israel called in reinforcements and Sitbon died in a second exchange of fire when two other Israeli soldiers were wounded.
Later, Israeli soldiers found the bodies of two armed attackers.
They weren't identified.
During the clashes, Israeli helicopters sprayed the thick undergrowth along the border with machine gun fire.
It was the biggest military operation along the Israeli-Jordanian frontier in decades.
Even before the two countries signed a peace treaty in 1994, the Jordanian military repelled would-be infiltrators trying to sneak into Israel.
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Israel - Canaanite cemetery discovered
T/I 11:02:09
Archeologists have discovered a Canaanite cemetery 4,000 years
old in the sand dunes of the coastal region south of Tel Aviv.
It's a discovery which Israelis and Palestinians had hoped would
solve once and for all which of the two groups descended from
the bronze-age Canaanites who populated the area known today as
Israel.
SHOWS:
RISHON LEZION, ISRAEL, 31/12/97
0.00 ws pan excavation site
0.11 ms unearthed skeleton
0.15 cu skeleton
0.21 cu artefact
0.24 cu artefact
0.27 ms archaeologist uncovering skeleton.
0.30 ms archaelogist picking away bits of dirt
0.33 ms archaelogist brushing skeleton
0.36 tilt up from skeelton chest to skull
0.39 SOT unidentified archaelogist (in English): The people
were living close because they cut a whole in the ground and
worked very hard to build this place. And it is a massive
graveyard, so there has to be a town somewhere but we still
haven't uncovered it yet.
0.54 ms pan archaelogist in pit to skeleton.
1.09 End vision
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Israel - Canaanite cemetery discovered
T/I 10:24:50
Archeologists have discovered a Canaanite cemetery 4,000 years
old in the sand dunes of the coastal region south of Tel Aviv.
It's a discovery which Israelis and Palestinians had hoped would
solve once and for all which of the two groups descended from
the bronze-age Canaanites who populated the area known today as
Israel.
SHOWS:
RISHON LEZION, ISRAEL, 31/12/97
Ws pan excavation site;
CU unearthed skeleton;
Zoom out to show child's skeleton lying next to mother;
Archeologist working on uncovering skeleton;
VS of archeologist at work;
CU brushing and picking away bits of dirt from bones and pottery;
WS woman at work in a pit;
CU unearthed skeleton;
Woman brushing away dirt from another skeleton,
CU skull being cleaned;
CU ribs being picked at;
SOT unidentified archeologist; Here it is the latest period
which is the invasion of the Egyptians which were ruling here
and it also implies they where living close, they cut down deep
into the ground and it was very hard to build in this place, it
is a massive graveyard and there has to be a town here somewhere
but we still haven't uncovered it.
WS archeologists at work under a tent;
Pan man taking buckets of dirt out of tunnel to archeologist brushing away dirt from a pot;
CU dirt being brushed from pot;
Pan women working in a pit, sifting through buckets of dirt;
CU bracelet;
cu artefact;
Man digging out fragments of pottery;
CU pottery being cleaned,
CU bronze trim on pot;
MS pan archeologist to skeleton.
Runs 2.34
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A memorial ceremony at a Jewish cemetery in Holon, Israel
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera zahigo25@walla.com +972-54-6905522 tel סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
My name is Zahi Shaked
In 2000 I became a registered liscenced tourist guide.
My dedication in life is to pass on the ancient history of the Holy Land.
Following upon many years of travel around the world, which was highlighted by a very exciting emotional and soul-searching meeting with the Dalai Lama, I realized that I had a mission. To pass on the the history of the Holy Land, its religions, and in particular, the birth and development of Christianity.
In order to fulfill this calling in the best way possible, I studied in depth, visited, and personally experienced each and every important site of the ancient Christians. I studied for and received my first bachelors degree in the ancient history of the Holy Land, and am presently completing my studies for my second degree.(Masters)
Parralel to my studies, and in order to earn a living, I was employed for many years in advertising. What I learned there was how to attract the publics attention, generate and, increase interest, and assimilate information. All this I use as tools to describe, explain and deepen the interest in the sites that we visit. From my experience, I have learned that in this way, the Holy Land becomes more than just history, and that the large stones that we see scattered about in dissaray, join together one by one until they become - a Byzantine Church. This also happens when I lead a group of Pilgrims in the Steps of Jesus. We climb to the peak of Mount Precipice, glide over the land to the Sea of Galilee, land on the water and see the miracle which enfolds before us. This is a many faceted experience. Not only history which you will remember and cherish, but an experience which I hope will be inplanted in your hearts and minds, and will accompany you all the days of your life.
“Gaza is a graveyard,” sing joyful Israeli Extremists
his video shows an Israeli mob actually singing in celebration of children’s deaths in the style of a soccer fans’ song: “In Gaza there’s no studying, No children are left there, Olé, olé, olé-olé-olé.”
The mob also incites directly against Ahmed Tibi and Haneen Zoabi, two prominent Palestinian citizens of Israel who are members of the Knesset, Israel’s parliament.
The video of the 26 July event in Tel Aviv was published by Israeli journalist Haim Har-Zahav.
The words of the repulsive song have been translated for The Electronic Intifada by Dena Shunra:
Tibi – Ahmed Tibi
I wanted you to know
The next kid to be hurt will be your kid
I hate Tibi
I hate Tibi the terrorist.
Tibi – is dead!
Tibi – is dead!
Tibi – is dead!
Tibi is a terrorist.
Tibi is a terrorist.
Tibi is a terrorist.
They’ll take their papers away.
They’ll take their papers away.
They’ll take their papers away.
Olé, olé, olé-olé-olé
In Gaza there’s no studying
No children are left there,
Olé, olé, olé-olé-olé,
[Three lines, not entirely clear]
Who is getting nervous, I hear?
Zoabi, this here is the Land of Israel
This here is the Land of Israel, Zoabi
This here is the Land of the Jews
I hate you, I do, Zoabi
I hate all the Arabs.
Oh-oh-oh-oh
Gaza is a graveyard
Gaza is a graveyard
Gaza is a graveyard
Gaza is a graveyard
Ancient Jewish gravestones in the cemetery of Kafr Yasif, Western Galilee, Israel
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
zahigo25@walla.com +972-54-6905522 tel סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
My name is Zahi Shaked
In 2000 I became a registered liscenced tourist guide.
My dedication in life is to pass on the ancient history of the Holy Land.
Following upon many years of travel around the world, which was highlighted by a very exciting emotional and soul-searching meeting with the Dalai Lama, I realized that I had a mission. To pass on the the history of the Holy Land, its religions, and in particular, the birth and development of Christianity.
In order to fulfill this calling in the best way possible, I studied in depth, visited, and personally experienced each and every important site of the ancient Christians. I studied for and received my first bachelors degree in the ancient history of the Holy Land, and am presently completing my studies for my second degree.(Masters)
Parralel to my studies, and in order to earn a living, I was employed for many years in advertising. What I learned there was how to attract the publics attention, generate and, increase interest, and assimilate information. All this I use as tools to describe, explain and deepen the interest in the sites that we visit. From my experience, I have learned that in this way, the Holy Land becomes more than just history, and that the large stones that we see scattered about in dissaray, join together one by one until they become - a Byzantine Church. This also happens when I lead a group of Pilgrims in the Steps of Jesus. We climb to the peak of Mount Precipice, glide over the land to the Sea of Galilee, land on the water and see the miracle which enfolds before us. This is a many faceted experience. Not only history which you will remember and cherish, but an experience which I hope will be inplanted in your hearts and minds, and will accompany you all the days of your life.
Israel: Jerusalem to host underground cemetery with 20,000-capacity
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Israeli engineering firm Rolzur and Jerusalem's largest burial society, Kehillat Yerushalayim, have devised a plan to radically change how Jerusalemites dispose of their dead by building a modern system of burial caves, a throwback to a practice discontinued some two millennia ago, as shown in footage from Wednesday.
Planners of Jerusalem's newest necropolis, a massive underground complex, say it will eventually hold more than 20,000 bodies.
We had a big problem of places to be buried in Jerusalem, said Kehillat Yerushalayim Funeral Director Uri Miller. You can imagine that if we have around 2000 burials a year and each grave takes around 70 centimetres (27 inches) multiplied by 2 metres (6.6 feet), then after [a] few years there is no place in Jerusalem to be buried.
It's an environmental solution and it also saves a lot of place, you know, instead of having new cemeteries it's a good solution, said Rolzur CEO Ari Glazer. And we hope also [that] it will be around the world because it suits many cities around the world.
Video ID: 20191030-053
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Trumpeldor Cemetery Tel Aviv
The Pardes team visits the hardest place to get in Tel Aviv