Like any tourist city, Jerusalem is full of misinformation. Stories about people and places pass through so many hands, and are filtered through so many minds or adapted for so many audiences, the truth of them can get lost.
Here's a story about a place.
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2/ There are many, many stories to tell about Jerusalem's Jaffa Gate. It's where the Roman army camped 2000 yrs ago. It's where in 1898 the Ottoman sultan punched a gap in the encircling city wall, already 360 years old, so the German Kaiser could ride through on his white horse
3/ Stand outside the gate and a road passes in front.
↙️ Look to the right, the road climbs the slope northward & bends west, continuing to Jaffa on the coast.
↘️ Look to the left, the same road drops to the valley floor & extends south to Bethlehem, Hebron & into the desert
4/In European langs & Hebrew you turn right—this is Jaffa Gate, Porte de Jaffa, Jaffator, Shaar Yafo, linking city w coast & world beyond
But in Arabic you turn left—it is Hebron Gate/Bab al-Khalil (also Bethlehem Gate), binding the city with hinterland.
Contrast is instructive
5/ Anyways, here's one story from when Suleiman the Magnificent built Jerusalem's city walls (incl Jaffa Gate) in 1537-41.
Just inside the gate on the left, in a tiny courtyard beside the Israeli govt tourist office, are 2 Ottoman tombs, one with a rather splendid marble turban
6/Tour guides will tell you
👉🏻 Suleiman was so furious his new walls didn't include Mount Zion—with Prophet David's tomb—he executed his 2 architects in punishment
👉🏻 Suleiman was so delighted with his new walls he executed his 2 architects to stop them building anything better
7/ "Cruel old Sultan Suleiman," you're supposed to respond. "So irrational, so bloodthirsty. But hey, that's Muslims for you."
8/ Even overlooking the crude stereotyping, the stories don't stand up.
If this was a burial of disgrace, why decorate the tombs?
If this was a burial of gratitude, why not in a sanctified cemetery?
9/ Suleiman’s walls followed previous walls, and Mount Zion had never been walled. Considering the mount's natural defences—steep slopes on three sides—there was no need for Suleiman's engineers to spend time and resources diverting the wall to include it.
So what's the truth?
10/ The real story of the tombs lies in the hands of this man, Fawaz Attiyeh, a judge in the Ramallah Appeals Court. His family has been intimately linked with Jaffa Gate's history for 500+ years, since a forebear, Nasreddin bin Dabbous, created a property endowment here in 1437
11/ Judge Attiyeh has looked into the family history. Nasreddin’s grandson Ibrahim Safouti (c.1519-1592), a merchant and property trader, added to his grandfather’s endowment with more land at Jaffa Gate, shared equally between two sons and four daughters
12/ Sultan Suleiman died in 1566. But we know no tombs existed inside Jaffa Gate on May 17th 1590, because that's when Judge Attiyeh's ancestor Ibrahim Safouti made an endowment covering 3 adjoining homes & a bakery on this exact spot
13/ Jerusalem historian Yusuf Natsheh has unearthed a document dated Oct 8th 1656 that DOES refer to the tombs, under the name “al-Safadiyya”—that is, related to the town of Safad in northern Palestine. He published his findings in @JQuarterly in 2005 palestine-studies.org/sites/default/…
14/ So some time between 1590 & 1656—at least 50 & perhaps 100+yrs after Suleiman’s city walls had been completed—this small part of the Safouti endowment was given over for the burial of, most likely, 2 scholars or nobles from Safad.
There they lie still, behind their railings
15/ No architects. No blood. No fury.
Maybe now Jaffa Gate’s tour guides & other unreliable narrators can retire the myth of the executed architects, and call these "the Safadiyya tombs" again.
Jerusalem's Islamic heritage is rich enough without making extra stuff up, right?
16/ Thank you to my dear friend @KhalilAssali, who put me in touch with Judge Attiyeh.
For a thousand more stories like this, my book NINE QUARTERS OF JERUSALEM is out in March next year with @ProfileBooks.
Exactly 54 years ago, 3 Aug 1968, Portugal's authoritarian prime minister, António de Oliveira Salazar, 79, slipped over in the bath & hit his head.
He seemed to be ok, but then complained of feeling ill.
In hospital he lapsed into a coma. It looked like he was about to die 1/4
Portugal's president appointed a new prime minister to replace Salazar, who had been in office since 1932
But Salazar woke up.
Rather than break the news to the dictator that he had been dismissed, his aides set up an elaborate scheme to fool him that he was still in charge 2/4
Ex-ministers held "policy" meetings with Salazar. Every night, the editor of Salazar's favourite newspaper printed a fake edition that removed mention of the new govt & substituted bogus stories as if Salazar was still PM.
The dictator read the fictional newspaper unawares. 3/4
A short thread about colonialism, and how reality can never match up to idealised fantasy.
150 years ago there was a revolution in time-keeping—in the 'East' as in the railway-dense 'West'. Civil authorities began wresting control of public time out of clerical hands.
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2/ Municipal clocktowers went up across the Ottoman-ruled Middle East. They were a symbol of change & modernity. They made calling the five-times-daily prayer more accurate. They projected the sultan's power & benevolence
⬆️ Jaffa
↙️ Istanbul
↙️ ↙️ Aleppo
↘️ Izmir
↘️ ↘️ Nablus
3/ The clocktower in Adana, built in 1882, featured an inscription by the poet Fani Efendi: "The clock bell rings but it is the sound of the state."
By 1901, the 25th anniversary of the sultan's accession, more than a hundred clocktowers adorned cities around the Ottoman Empire
Do you know how many posh, well-educated, white English-speaking men have written books about Jerusalem?
Hundreds. Thousands. A few are even worth reading.
So why have I—a (relatively) posh, well-educated, white English-speaking man—written another one?
Here's why.
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2/ I've been coming to Jerusalem more than 40 years. I first set foot in Jerusalem's Old City as a kid on Dec 24th 1980. I know because I typed a diary about it, with lots of !!! ⬇️
Since then I've lived, worked, visited, explored, over 4 decades.
But one thing bugged me
3/ Pretty much every map you ever see of the Old City divides the place into four: top left Christian Quarter, top right Muslim Quarter, bottom left Armenian Quarter, bottom centre Jewish Quarter. Some maps add lines between quarters. Some even colour-code the quarters
Jerusalem is full of stories. Here's one that was unknown when I first visited, but is now everywhere
If you look up at the facade of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre—the place (probably!) where Jesus Christ was crucified, aka Church of the Resurrection—you'll see a ladder 1/20
2/ It's a strange kind of ladder - wooden, short (only five rungs), wide and rickety-looking, standing on an upper ledge above the church entrance and leaning against the right-hand window.
Perhaps somebody cleaning the windows yesterday forgot to bring it back in.
3/ Nope.
The ladder's been there for 264 years. Maybe longer.
A retraction. Not long ago I wrote this ⤵️ thread about a meme featuring a suspiciously jazzed-up quote by Abdallah al-Tal, and the self-referential chain of citation surrounding it that has gone years unchallenged 1/6
Al-Tal’s memoirs were published in Cairo in 1959, translated into Hebrew in 1960, but have never been translated into English 2/6
My Arabic and Hebrew aren’t as good as they should be, but I’ve now found this line by al-Tal (p138 of Arabic ed): “Old Jerusalem was cleansed of the Jews and not a single Jew was left for the first time in more than a thousand years.” 3/6