FOR AS LONG AS THE HOLY LAND HAS BEEN HOLY, pilgrims have made their way to Jerusalem. They have come to offer sacrifices to God, or to bear witness to his suffering. They have come to pray and to contemplate their place in God's creationand to buy cheap souvenirs, including T-shirts freshly made with the emblem of their colleges back home.
The point is, they have always come.
But since October 7, they haven't.
"Work stopped instantly," after October 7, said guide Dvir Hollander of Just Jerusalem Tours, sitting in his kitchen at Kibbutz Ramat Rahel, just outside Jerusalem. A fixture leading tours of the Old City for many years, Hollander has spent the last months largely at home, picking cherries and teaching tennis.
The Hamas militants from Gaza who killed nearly 1,200 people in Israel-and kidnapped 251, including Ofir Engel, Hollander's teenage nephew-were accompanied by rocket attacks that reached far into the country, with some aimed at Jerusalem. Rocket attacks on other parts of Israel have long been common, but because Jerusalem is holy ground for Muslims, too, relatively few missiles are aimed there.
Major airlines don't fly in war zones, so flights were canceled by the thousand, and for many weeks. Even now, 10 months after the attacks, commercial flights are relatively few and very expensive.
For people like Hollander, who count on a slice of the $6 billion Israeli annual tourism pie to provide for their families, it has been devastating.
Shuttered Stores
In Jerusalem's Old City, a strange new sound has emerged instead of the usual cacophony: quiet. In place of the typical din of tourists and religious pilgrims, the listener can hear shoes on stone in the middle of the day.
This story is from the August 16 - 23, 2024 (Double Issue) edition of Newsweek US.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the August 16 - 23, 2024 (Double Issue) edition of Newsweek US.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Wendi McLendon-Covey
AFTER 10 YEARS OF PLAYING BEVERLY GOLDBERG ON THE GOLDBERGS, Wendi McLendon-Covey was not eager for a break. \"I need to go do a job where I can just throw everything at it and then come home totally exhausted.\"
'I'm the Highest Earner in Esports'
Johan \"NOtail\" Sundstein has won over $7 million but says, \"I don't really crave that status.... I play for my own reasons\"
AMERICA'S BEST Weight Loss CLINICS & CENTERS 2025
WHETHER IT'S FOR MEAL PLANS, PROFESSIONAL guidance or access to medications like GLP-1s, weight loss clinics can offer personalized assistance for those hoping to make sustainable lifestyle changes.
AMERICA'S MOST ANTICIPATED NEW VEHICAL 2025
WHETHER IT'S A NEWLY IMAGined sport utility vehicle or the re-emergence of a highly regarded halo car, the vehicles coming to market in 2025 prove that Americans' attitudes about personal transportation are diverse and are being served from all angles.
'THIS IS WHAT DEMOCRACY LOOKS LIKE'
What Donald Trump's historic U.S. presidential election victory means to America - and the world
Trump Won, Mainstream Media Lost
A broken business model exacerbated by a collapse in influence has the Fourth Estate entering another Donald Trump term in trouble
Can Alternative Therapies Treat Cancer?
Doctor and breast cancer survivor Liz O'Riordan addresses misinformation around managing the disease
Falling for Romance
A new book, Nora Ephron at the Movies, celebrates the writer/director best known for her iconic rom-coms and strong female characters
Cracking the Norse Code
Walrus DNA has shown that Vikings were likely the first to have encountered Indigenous North Americans
Monumental Shift
The discovery of 165-million-year-old crystals Easter Island has upended the longheld notion of how the Earth's \"conveyor belt\" moves