On Monday, June 14th we woke up bright and early (and with this I ought to say that my disposition wasn’t very bright because it was way too EARLY) and boarded our minibus for a long drive north. Our first stop was of Akko (Acre), a city on the Haifa Bay. The site was of interest for our course because it was a particularly important fortress during the Crusades. To be honest, the city has a very rich history, most of which I read about and honestly, did not pay attention to enough to remember anything of great significance. But the scenery was beautiful!
We had the opportunity to tour the Hospitaller Compound, which was built by the Hospitallers of St. John, a religious community founded during the Crusades to care for poor, sick, or injured pilgrims to the Holy Land. In our modern day, we can jump on a plane and go anywhere in the world in a matter of hours; during medieval times, the journey to the Holy Land was an arduous one, and oftentimes people got sick or died along the way. During the Middle Ages, particularly around the time of the Crusades, there was a sharp rise in interest in visiting the Holy Land, and so droves of pilgrims and Crusaders left continental Europe and made the journey eastward. The Hospitallers, for their part, cared for the weary pilgrims and soldiers at their compound in Akko, which served as a stopping point where they could be nursed back to health before making the final leg of the trip to Jerusalem.
Being at this place made me think about what kind of difficulties these individuals were willing to endure to make pilgrimage to the sites associated with the life of Jesus and the Scriptures. By comparison, my journey had infinitely more comfortable. I wondered to myself if I would have been willing to make the journey back then, knowing the hardship it would entail.
At the same time, my journey was not without hardship – but they were of a different kind. Traveling to the Holy Land – both then and now – has always been somewhat of a dangerous undertaking. Given the political instability of the Middle East, many of my family members were concerned about my travels. While it is generally very safe (and I did not at any point feel unsafe) there, before leaving I did have to do some soul-searching about how I felt about the possibility of putting myself in a potentially volatile situation. Though it was unlikely anything would actually happen, I had to confront the reality that something could happen. Thinking about these things, I realized that I had two choices: I could fear, and allow that fear to paralyze me and prevent me from taking the risk of traveling to the Holy Land, or I could go despite my fear and trust that God would be with me, and would not allow anything to happen to me on this journey which was not God’s will. I also realized that I had to come to terms with the fact that something seriously bad could happen while I was there. This made me think about how vulnerable we are as human beings, how dependent we are on God for even our own existence. It dawned on me – that I am no less vulnerable, no less dependent here in the USA than I am in Israel; God is in charge in each situation. Why should I fear more there than here? Am I not in God’s hands wherever I am? Is God not trustworthy? Did God not say to us that we are worth more than a whole flock of sparrows, and not one of them falls to the ground without God taking notice? Did He not say that He has counted each hair on our head, and that no harm will come to a single one?
After Akko, we headed to Nazareth. Our first stop there was the Orthodox Church of the Annunciation.
A thought which I had immediately before leaving for the Holy Land was one of amazement – I was going to walk in the places where Jesus walked! Later, I recalled too, that I would be walking in the footsteps of Jesus, but of the Blessed Mother as well. Throughout my time in the Holy Land, even as I marveled at the sites associated with the life of Jesus, I could not help but sense Mary’s quiet maternal presence in my journeys. To visit Nazareth, and sites associated with her life – made me more aware of her role in the plan of salvation, and also, of my own need to rely more and more upon her intercession in my life.
I have to say that this was an unexpected grace of my pilgrimage. Even though I grew up attending St. Mary’s (Immaculate Conception) Parish, was a member for a year or so of the Legion of Mary, took a course on Mariology in undergrad which was one of my favorite courses of my entire college career – and as a result, made the total Marian Consecration according to St. Louis Marie de Montfort in my Junior year at Franciscan, and now attend “Our Lady’s University’ – Notre Dame, it seems my once fervent devotion to Mary has as of recent not been as strong as it once was. And so it was a welcome but quite unexpected grace to feel her presence with me walking the streets of the Holy Land. Though I have generally stopped wearing external signs of my religious devotion, during the trip I often wore a small miraculous medal as a reminder to myself of her maternal presence and protection over the whole journey.
Next, we visited a small Church – called the Synagogue Church – the site of the ancient Synagogue in which Jesus stood up and proclaimed that the fulfillment of the promise to the Prophet Isaiah (Isaiah 61) had come in Him. (“The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor, to bind up the broken hearted, to bring release to the prisoners…”)
After that, we traveled to the Catholic Basilica of the Annunciation, one of the most stunning (and perhaps the largest) Catholic Churches in the Middle East.
Outside the Basilica were countless images of Mary from many nations, reminding us that as the mother of Christ, she is the mother of all humanity. Here is just a sampling of my favorites:
America's, by the way, was embarassingly ugly!
In the afternoon, we went out to the Galilean countryside to see a mountaintop called “the horns of Hittin” which was the site of the Battle of Hittin on July 4, 1187, an important battle between the Crusaders and the forces of the Ayyubid dynasty. Here, the Muslim armies under Saladin captured and killed many of the Crusaders. As a result of the battle, Islamic forces once again became the eminent military power in the Holy land, and went on to recapture Jerusalem and several other Crusader-held cities. (Thank you Wikipedia!).
Our professor briefly explained this much to us, but I was too taken by the beauty of the surrounding country side to really pay attention. Instead, I allowed myself to space out a bit, and found my mind drifting off to the parables of Jesus. It dawned on me here that Jesus was, to put it colloquially, a country boy. Jesus was a Galilean, a man from Nazareth, and the land that I was looking at was where Jesus came from. From what I saw, it made perfect sense that he would speak often about the land, about vineyards, and fields of wheat, and sowers, and shepherds, and all that farm-ish stuff.
One passage that came to mind and really struck me this day was the passage from Matthew’s Gospel in which Jesus and his disciples are going through a field of grain on the Sabbath, and since the disciples were hungry, they began to pick the heads of grain and eat them. The Pharisees, seeing them do this, said to Jesus, “See, your disciples are doing what is unlawful to do on the Sabbath.” Jesus responds to them, “Have you not read what David did when he and his companions were hungry, how he went into the house of God and ate the bread of offering, which neither he nor his companions but only the priests could lawfully eat? Or have you not read in the law that on the Sabbath the priests serving in the temple violate the Sabbath and are innocent? I say to you, something greater than the temple is here. If you knew what this meant, ‘I desire mercy , not sacrifice,’ you would not have condemned these innocent men. For the Son of man is Lord of the Sabbath” (Matthew 12:1-8). I spent the rest of the time reflecting on this- and how this again was another passage which seemed to resonate (and rhyme!) with everything else it seemed that God had already been saying to me so far on this pilgrimage. And just as Mary did, I tried to ponder these things in my heart.
That evening, we went to where we were staying (which happened to be an old Franciscan monastery which had been converted to a home for pilgrims) which was in Tiberias. Right behind our ‘hostel’ – was the sea of Galilee! It was so beautiful.
After getting settled in and after we had rested for a bit, we went out to dinner where we each got St. Peter’s fish, a white-fish (similar to Tilapia) which is native to the Sea of Galilee and which is the type of fish which Peter supposedly caught that had the coins in its mouth (Matthew 17:27).
The fish was great! As were all of the appetizers we had with it (Falafel, Pita, salads, hommus, etc.), as well as a famous local liquor our professor insisted that we try. The liquor was called Arak (Araq), and is very popular in Israel, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon. It’s clear, colorless, and tastes like Anise (Licorice). It’s very similar to Ouzo, and is wonderfully refreshing! Needless to say, we had quite an enjoyable evening!












