HANDS-ON INSTALLATIONS
It wasn't easy to coax grain, wine, and oil from this rocky, semi-arid
soil! You can experience some of the tasks our forebears performed
at agricultural installations along the trails. Some are 2,000-year-old
evidence of the farming communities that once thrived here; others
are reconstructed; all are interactive.
Installations include:
Olive presses, Threshing floors, Winepresses,
Cisterns, Water wheels, Archimedes screw pump,
Water-operated flour mill, Sheep pen,
Cow shed, It's About Time: Calendar
and Clock
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Winepress
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"He will shout 'heidad' like the treaders
of grapes" (Jeremiah 25:30).
The ancient winepresses scattered throughout the reserve are
solid evidence that grapes were grown on these rocky hills.
The special "heidad" shouts of the grape-treaders,
silent for 2,000 years, echo here once again.
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Flour Mill
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"The sound of the millstones and the
light of the lamp" (Jeremiah 25:10)
Like the shouts of the grape-treaders, these age-old signs
of life and joy have returned to the once-barren hills.
This is, to the best of our knowledge, the only water-powered
flour mill in Israel that actually works.
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Olive Press
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Olives in ancient Israel were grown for oil, and oil was
used for light.
Pick ripe olives in the winter, produce oil in a reconstructed
ancient press, and kindle a clay lamp—the light bulb of antiquity.
Hanukkah, the Festival of Light, comes at the height of the
olive harvest—and we are located in the heart of the Modi'in
region, homeland of the Maccabees.
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Threshing Floor
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"Those who sow in tears reap with songs of joy"
(Psalm 126:5).
Experience the 11 tasks the Talmud (Brakhot
58a) lists to "bring forth bread from
the earth":
plow, sow, reap, bind the sheaves
thresh, winnow, seive, grind the grain
sift the flour, knead, bake
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Cistern
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"You shall draw water with joy
"(Isaiah
12:3).
Israel's ecological issues can be summed up in one word:
water. Rain is our only major source of water, and the rain
comes, at most, six months of the year. How did people survive
the dry months? Cisterns. Hewed laboriously out of solid rock,
the cistern functions as a bank. You deposit every drop in
the winter, and withdraw, very, very carefully, during the
summer.
Try drawing water from a restored, re-plastered cistern.
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And climb down into an empty one, like that where Joseph's
brothers deposited him.
"And they took him [Joseph] and cast him into a bor (cistern),
and the bor was empty; there was no water in it" (Genesis
37:24).
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Water Wheel
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"The land that you are about to enter
is not like
the land of Egypt, where you sowed your seed and watered it
with your foot" (Deuteronomy 11:10).
The foot-operated water wheel also appears in rabbinic literature
as a wheel-of-fortune image: one day you're full, one day
you're empty; one day you're up, one day you're down. If you're
the one on the top, help the ones on the bottom--for tomorrow,
the wheel will turn
(Ruth Rabba 5, 9).
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It's About Time
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The Mosaic of Time
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This 25-meter square mosaic calendar shows
the relation between the natural cycles of the earth and the
units of time determined by human beings—specifically, how
the Jewish calendar deals with the discrepancy between the
solar year and the lunar year. A revolving inner circle shows
the 12 lunar months of the Hebrew calendar. The outer circle
shows the months of the solar-based Gregorian calendar. Synchronizing
lunar and solar time is at the heart of the Jewish calendar.
Turn the wheel to rotate the inner circle and see exactly
how the rhythm of our year works.
Spring
2002 newsletter |
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Human Sundial
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The large mosaic tree set into a cement floor
is marked with the months of the year on the trunk and the
hours of the day on the branches. Stand on the appropriate
month, and your shadow will fall on the correct hour with
amazing precision. Not only fun, but illustrative of talmudic
discussions of the summer and winter paths of the sun.
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The Sundial of Ahaz
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A story related in both II Kings 20 and Isaiah
38 mentions "ma'alot Ahaz." These mysterious ma'a
lot have been widely interpreted as a time-measuring construction
of steps like those used, according to archaeological evidence,
in ancient Egypt. See how this step-based sundial actually
works.
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