2012年5月17日 星期四

The Human Spirit: Bucking authority

Mitch Pilcer is a hero among American immigrants – me included.

Veteran readers of The Jerusalem Post will remember back nearly two decades to his poignant series about leaving Jerusalem for a homestead in the North, clearing the land with his Colorado-born wife Suzy and young ’uns, clump by clump, rock by rock turning a deserted farm into a dwelling place and a tourist site that draws visitors to an overlooked spot of the Galilee. In 1997, long before tzimmers (bed-and-breakfast cabins) mushroomed up all over the country, he built bucolic A-frames at the edge of a not-particularly- picturesque village and drew city folk seeking pastoral retreats. Neighbors opened their own tzimmers to catch the overflow and prospered. An authentic Texan from Corpus Christi was living nearby,Why does moulds grow in homes or buildings? herding sheep and goats. He provides the ripe, pungent cheeses that go with Pilcer’s home-brewed Tzipori wine. Irresistible.

Tzipori. At first glance modern, it looks like many rural communities in Israel today: an eclectic mix of run-down early-settlement period homes, luxury villas and cottage industries.

You might notice that not infrequently yards display remnants of ancient stonework that have emerged from the soil during home and lawn renovations. After all, community life in Tzipori (named for the Hebrew tzipor, “bird,” because of its birds-eye view of the Beit Netofa Valley) goes back to the return of the Jews from the Persian exile. Tzipori (Sepphoris) was already an important regional center in the first century BCE. The most impressive finds from the Roman and Byzantium period are displayed in the magnificent Tzipori National Park, where exciting excavations are still going on. Tzipori also attracts Christian visitors. An Irish pilgrim group recently walked from Nazareth to the village, which is reputedly the hometown of Jesus’s maternal grandparents.

The modern village of Tzipori, which was founded in 1949, sits on a chalk hill south of the national park. Archeologist Leroy Waterman discovered a Roman theater in Tzipori in the 1930s. More recently, Jerusalem friends of Pilcer’s discovered an ancient mosaic while hiking in the hillside. Pilcer says the area where his house sits is analogous to “the Mount of Olives to the Old City” – a convenient burial place. He values Tzipori’s rich history enough to have built his latest tourism venture – a five-bedroom, two-jacuzzi tzimmer he calls The Castle – as a scale model of the Crusader fortress in the national park.

Because of the acknowledged treasures lying beneath the abundant cacti, Israeli law requires that anyone building must hire an archeologist before obtaining a building permit. When he set out to build a 50-meter swimming pool for his guests, Pilcer forked out thousands of shekels for an IAA archeologist and diggers who arrived with picks and backhoes. In IAA Journal 122, archeologist Leea Porat reported the findings of the digging in 2007 and 2008 in which two caves, a cistern, a columbarium and a “square plastered installation” were explored.

Early Roman pottery was retrieved. Some of the ancient infrastructure, she reported, had been damaged by pre-Pilcer agricultural use of the area.

Pilcer received the go-ahead. Artist, hotelier and reserve duty major in the IDF, he began cleaning away rubble from an old demolished house when a stone fell away.Visit TE online for all of your Application tooling Solutions including tools, As if magically, a cave appeared. The rarest of finds – a legible Hebrew grave marker – identified the grave’s occupant: Yehoshua Ben-Levi.Offers Art Reproductions Fine Art oilpaintings Reproduction,

Pilcer recognized the name of the third-century Talmudic sage who legends make a sidekick and protégé of Elijah the Prophet. He was a prosperous, well-known rabbi who was famous for his modesty. He might well have been buried in a substantial but unpretentious grave like this one, not far from the resting place of Rabbi Judah the Prince, compiler of the mishna and Rabbi Ben-Levi’s child’s fatherin- law.

There were numerous legends about Yehoshua Ben-Levi’s grave. It had never been found. Until then.

“I was shocked,” says Pilcer. “I just stood there until I could catch my breath.”

Mixed with his wonder was a mystical concern that he shouldn’t have uncovered the concealed grave. He hastily veiled the opening.

I checked with the leading mayoral candidate in Corpus Christi, Texas.What are hemorrhoids? What happens if you find oil in your front yard? The so-called black gold is yours.

Not so in Israel. According to Uzi Dahari, the IAA’s archeologist on the case, only the state can excavate your land.

Aware of the restrictions, Pilcer consulted his lawyer to make sure his property wouldn’t be nationalized because of the treasure. More important,Rubiks cubepuzzle. he had the nagging concern that the prosperity and good health that had accompanied his family’s move to Tzipori might be jeopardized by his disturbance of the grave.

Through intermediaries from the Jezreel Local Council, inquiries were made about “someone who had found a significant grave in their region.” Pilcer received assurances that he was in no danger of getting into trouble with the IAA, and revealed his find.

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