Saturday, May 30, 2009
Travel Day
The train ride was fun. It was actually on time! It was pretty amazing :) It was crowded too; I was surprised. I had to share a seat. I ended up sitting next to a woman from Illinois who had just graduated with an Art History degree. It was really interesting to talk to her because she had such a different life from me but was still interested in doing the same kind of work that I am thinking about doing (museum studies). She is about 4 years older than I am but had just graduated because she got married and that spread her education out a bit. He is in the Air Force, so her education will be even more spread out. Her husband is a dentist so she doesn't have to worry too much about getting things done quickly. In fact, she can't because they are going to be in Louisiana for a while.
That is the fun thing about mass transportation. You never know who you are going to meet.
I need to go now. I have a few things to get ready before I head to the airport! It is going to be a long day of traveling. We fly to Atlanta, then to New York before getting on a 14 hour flight to Tel Aviv. Should be lots of fun.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Israel Information!
So I guess the purpose of this blog can now be my trip to
A brief outline of our itinerary:
June 1-14
Working on the
There seems to be some debate about the actual number of Bethsaidas. It is mentioned several times in the Bible, and some scholars argue that there were two Bethsaidas, one north of the Sea of Galilee and one east of the
Each day we are working, we will arrive at the dig-site at 5:30 a.m. We will work until 8 and then break for breakfast. We continue working again until about 11 when we take another break before working until 12:30 before heading back for lunch and our afternoon activities. These afternoon activities include swimming in the Sea of Galilee and floating on the
In addition to working on this dig-site, we will be living in a kibbutz. I am pretty sure the kibbutz is the only successful form of socialism, or socialist living (there might be a difference), in the world. Probably because it is only on a community level, not a national level, and participation is voluntary.
The first kibbutz (again, according to Wikipedia (which is a fine source for a blog, but is inappropriate for academic papers)) was established in 1909, which I thought was very interesting (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kibbutz). They have been around longer than I realized. With my feeble math skills, I was able to deduce that they have been around for 100 years as of 2009. (Fun Fact I just noticed in the article: The Hebrew word for husband ba’ali literally translates as “my owner.” In the 1920s and 30s, the women on the kibbutz used the ishi instead which means “my man.”)
In addition to working on the dig and living on the kibbutz, we will be doing other fun things such as swimming in the Sea of Galilee, rafting on the
June 15-25
The next couple of weeks, we will be traveling around
After
The last leg of our trip consists of 5! days in
We fly home June 25, when I will start on the three papers I get to write by the end of July. Not the part I am looking forward to J.