Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Maps and Photographs
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: From the Particular to the Global and Back to the Project
- Part 1 THE LAND AS PLACE
- The Land of Israel/Palestine
- Jerusalem
- The Ownership of Land
- The Theology of the Land
- Generations of God Gifting the Land
- Conquering in the Name of God
- One God: Three Faiths
- The Word of God
- Scripture from a Palestinian Christian Perspective
- Scripture from a Muslim Perspective
- Scripture from a Jewish Perspective
- A Timeline from 1840–1967
- The Land and Population in Modern Day Israel/Palestine
- Settlers and Settlements
- Zionism: Secular and Religious
- Politics, Wars and New Beginnings
- Peacemakers: Jewish, Christian and Muslim
- The Wall, the Fence, the Barrier
- The Law Ancient, the Reality Today
- Part 2 LIBERATION THEOLOGY
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- General Index
- Scripture Index
Jerusalem
from Part 1 - THE LAND AS PLACE
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Maps and Photographs
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: From the Particular to the Global and Back to the Project
- Part 1 THE LAND AS PLACE
- The Land of Israel/Palestine
- Jerusalem
- The Ownership of Land
- The Theology of the Land
- Generations of God Gifting the Land
- Conquering in the Name of God
- One God: Three Faiths
- The Word of God
- Scripture from a Palestinian Christian Perspective
- Scripture from a Muslim Perspective
- Scripture from a Jewish Perspective
- A Timeline from 1840–1967
- The Land and Population in Modern Day Israel/Palestine
- Settlers and Settlements
- Zionism: Secular and Religious
- Politics, Wars and New Beginnings
- Peacemakers: Jewish, Christian and Muslim
- The Wall, the Fence, the Barrier
- The Law Ancient, the Reality Today
- Part 2 LIBERATION THEOLOGY
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- General Index
- Scripture Index
Summary
Jerusalem is a city divided. That seems clear enough even to someone not conversant with the political geography of the city. Jerusalem is divided. Although the United Nations (UN) in its first act as a body, on 29 November 1947, established Resolution (II), which was a plan for the governing of Jerusalem that would make, as Naim Ateek states in Justice and Only Justice, ‘Jerusalem as a corpus separatum, internationalized’ (Ateek 1989: 173), belonging to and serving both Arabs and Jews as a common capital city of the Holy Land. The reality of this hoped for act has never been realized, enforced or enacted. Just looking within the walled city of Old Jerusalem one can see an intricate, tightly compressed, overlapping and intermingling of sacred and historical places that are divided, though one, within the walls of the Old City.
The Old City of Jerusalem is a walled city, enclosed and divided into sections or quarters. The present day walls and gates were built between 1537 and 1542 BCE, during the reign of the Turkish ruler, Suleyman the Magnificent. They have been modified in ensuing centuries, but in essence remain the same. Within the Jewish Quarter, which is found in the southeast sector, there are six synagogues and many areas of archaeological interest including a Hasmonean Walk, left from the time of the Hasmonean Kingdom (167–63 BCE, when Pompey took control of the region).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Shalom/Salaam/PeaceA Liberation Theology of Hope, pp. 17 - 25Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2008