Saturday, October 29, 2022

Saturday Sabbath was a big day!   Lots of music!  We had a completely full house for sacrament meeting.  Jim played a 20-minute prelude of hymn arrangements, “I Walked Today Where Jesus Walked,” Dale Wood, Sheep May Safely Graze, and much more. It was the Primary program, and they did a great job!  Deanne had worked a lot on that.  There are only 6 children in Primary (ages 3-11), but we have 12 students called to serve by teaching and helping with music. 

At 8:00 pm we had our big student musical talent show.  It was the second show this semester, and the students go wild.  Lots of good numbers, mostly sacred, but not all.  Patty joined us in our 6-hand arrangement of "Le Secret" with some shtick…  Patty and Deanne went up first and pretended like they were going to do a duet, then Jim butted in for the top part.  The students thought it was for real.  The whole program was a hit.

                                The Zimbelstern arrived by DHL—on Shabbat! 
Jim installed the Zimbelstern, which is a jingling bell device that has been found on organs for hundreds of years.  A fun addition for light-hearted pieces and Christmas music.  Got what we call "Chicken Lickin’" (local rotisserie chicken in Wadi Joz) for late lunch with the Barkers. We set up for Jim's evening concert and stuffed programs.  A singer had had to cancel, so Jim played his program on short notice, which was just fine with him.  Around the World with organ music!  Plus the debut of the Zimbelstern. Eric and Wendy Nelson, friends from the Christian Science church in Palo Alto, are touring Israel and came to the concert.  Very fun to see them.  There was a big audience.  
Note the reflection of the organ in the big glass windows

On Sunday, the students left at 5 a.m. for Greece.  (Yes--we wish we had been able to go, too!) The place is now quiet.  Barkers joined us on a walk to Dominus Flevit church because Jim wanted to check out an old pump organ there.  A nice priest was friendly and let us take pictures and try out the organ which barely works now.  It’s probably 100+ years old, French, sort of a treasure, but left outside to gather dirt and suffer from the weather.  We ran into Eric and Wendy Nelson again there!  

Back up the hill to the Tombs of the Prophets (Haggai, Malachi, and Zechariah) for a private tour by candlelight with Jamil, the local owner.  Very interesting big tombs carved into the hillside.  Then to 7 Arches area, great views, back to Mt. of Olives Bazaar, and to the Center.  

                                     Beautiful mosaic flooring of Dominus Flevit

 
 


Friday, October 21, 2022

 
Final fixes and tuning of the Marcussen organ with Bernd Lorenzen from Denmark.  Got permission to go to the Old City. It had been off limits to the Center for several days because of some unrest in the area, and the security department of the Center is very cautious.  We parked at Notre Dame de Jerusalem, found Father Cristobal, Jim played the organ; then a grand walking tour of the Old City:  St. Savior’s where we found Father Ferguson and got to play the Rieger; Holy Sepulcher; Coptic Christian; Little Western Wall; main Western Wall, many people in white at the wall; into the “library” for men by the Western Wall; Robinson’s Arch; Hurva Square; Cardo; Omar’s; and back to the car.  Drove to YMCA where Jim played the carillon for Bernd.  Drove to the Israel Museums, only to find they closed at 2:00 because of being a holiday.  They did see the outdoor model of Jerusalem and other outdoor sculptures, which was fine.  Then to Ein Kerem, explored the town, saw Church of St. John the Baptist, then Visitation Church.  Chatted with Brazilian tourists, and ran into Jon and Heather Farrell (our Branch President and wife) who had ridden their bikes there.  Dropped Bernd off at Dan Jerusalem hotel. Came home exhausted.



Jon and Heather Farrell with Bernd
The students did the olive crushing and pressing in three groups.  Very interesting to watch the big stone wheel crush over 200 kilos of olives.  Then the “mush” was put in thick burlap bags and into the screw press.  All of this will yield 1-2 liters of olive oil.  Eric Huntsman gave a spiritual thought concerning Gethsemane meaning the olive press, and related it to Christ’s atonement.  
Gathering
                               Crushing

Pressing
Olive oil!

In the evening we joined the students for an end of Sukkot and end of reading the Torah celebration at First Station (the Ottoman railway station built in 1892).  “Simchat torah HaQafot!” There was singing and dancing, a rock band, people waving around a fake Torah scroll holder, etc.  Very loud, very fun. 





Crazy, fun students
We and the Barkers joined the Seelys for a loop walk around Hebrew University and a tour of the British cemetery where many Commonwealth soldiers from WW1 are buried, including some German and Jewish dead. The epitaph inscriptions are heart-rending.  It’s a real oasis in the middle of East Jerusalem.  



Jim joined the students  on their field trip to a biblical nature preserve called Ne'ot Qedumim, which is between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.  Very interesting look at cisterns; the students had fun trying to herd sheep and goats.  They read Deuteronomy 8:8: (“A land of wheat, and barley, and vines, and fig trees, and pomegranates; a land of oil olive, and honey”—apparently they ripen in this order) and saw examples of each. Students crushed hyssop and sampled some tiny little apples—maybe this ancient species of tree was a tree of knowledge of good and evil?  The students made lentil stew ("a mess of pottage") and pitas over an open fire, and ended the tour with a demonstration by a Jewish man on how they write Torah scrolls. Jolani, one of the bus drivers, shared some of his homemade lunch with Jim—stuffed tomatoes, green olives just made a couple of days ago. 





Jim got home just in time to play the organ for a tour by the Voices of Faith choir from the US.  Dan Forrest is their composer in residence and was there.  It was nice to meet him.  They were giving a concert of Dan’s music at the Augusta Victoria church (Lutheran Church of the Ascension) in the evening, so Jim and the Barkers walked up there to hear them.  Dan played an electronic keyboard to accompany.   Then back to hear Jewish Forum speaker Yisca Harani discuss the Church of the Holy Sepulcher and the politics that go into dividing up the “real estate” between different Christian sects, etc.
Jim, Deanne, Patty Barker, Dan Forrest
August Victoria at night
We had interesting tours at the end of the week:  3 Israelis; a German Catholic priest who worked for a number of years in Uganda, now lives in Berlin; 4 Russians (2 of them from Canada).  Always interesting conversations. 20 people from a Church of God somewhere in NC, very fun group; 45 LDS members with Gary Gillespie, director; 2 Brazilians (Fabiano Gomes de Oliveira and his wife Juliane; he is a stake president in Curitiba); 2 nice Israelis (he is a skier, speaks German, his grandparents were from Stuttgart).
Fabiano and Juliane
The Concert Series continues with extraordinary musicians. So lucky to be involved with hosting them.
The Barkers having fun with the new scanner guns