Saturday, June 30, 1990

Amman, Jordan 1987-90

 Highlights:

  • So many opportunities to travel in country besides going to the South by two different routes to Petra, Wadi Rum and Aqaba.  One by the busy more direct Kings Highway or the slower desert route passed the Dead Sea, Madaba and Kerak.   
  • Visits to Jerash the 2rd Century Greco-Roman site.  King Hussein's wife Queen Noor would host the annual Jerash Festival in the spring featuring several shows performed by Jordanian, Arab and foreign artists.
  • Queen Noor also hosted many charity events including several benefit walks       
  • Being so close to Israel and Jerusalem I was assigned to make the Diplomatic Pouch run every six months and travel over the Allenby Bridge to Jerusalem and Israel and end up spending a weekend in either Jerusalem or Tel Aviv.     
  • Travelling by rode through the border with Syria to Damascus for shopping at the Grand Bazaar and the Street called Straight. 
  • I was at the Embassy Amman American Club getting ready to watch the 1989 World Series between the Giants and A's when the Earthquake hit the Bay Area.     
Favorite Memories:
  • Among the many trips to Petra the most memorable was as Control Officer for the visit of the DOS Under Secretary for Management and his wife.  Because they didn't want to hike anymore I ended up having to commandeer a Ministry vehicle to exit from Petra.  Then when leaving country his wife had left her medications in her baggage so the airline had to recover her bag in order to get them which caused a delay in departure.  
  • Amman, Jordan was a popular site for soliciting support from King Hussein for peace between Israel and the Palestinians and consequently SECSTATE George Schultz had made several trips to Jordan.  It was always a pleasure to provide support for the visit be it for transportation or manning the control room in the hotel where he and his staff stayed.    

  • Favorite Arabic foods Kebab, Falafel and Shawarma and Mezze including Hummus, Mutabbal, Babaganosh, Tabbaouleh, Foul, Tahini.  Favorite site for Shwarma at 3rd circle near the embassy.  
  • Trip to Palmyra Syria with RSO Tommy Grey.  
  • Trip to Syria before leaving Jordan (See separate Blog Site)
  • Playing tennis with POL Officer Naim Ahmed at the Ambassador's tennis court.  


Ambassador Rocky Suddarth with my staff Jubran, Leila, Afaf, Ronnie, Roula, Nizar 

Royal Jordanian Softball Team sponsored our team to travel to Dubai, UAE for annual spring softball tournaments for teams throughout the Middle East and Gulf.

FMO Conference In Paris 

The Siq Entrance to Petra

The Treasury

Path leading up to another temple

Wadi Rum



Jerash Corinthian Columns of the Temple of Artemis

Amphitheater

Ruins of the ancient Greco-Roman City


Dead Sea

                                                                            
Stone Monument on Mt. Nebo

Plaque showing the distance to various cities in Jordan and the West Bank


From Mt. Nebo Moses viewed: The Dead Sea, the Jordan River Valley, Jericho, Bethlehem and the distant hills of Jerusalem.

Mosaic from Mt. Nebo Church

Kerak Castle

Remains of the Crusader Castle build in 1142









Monday, June 11, 1990

Tour of Syria before leaving Jordan

Merchant selling carpets
 The Bazaar was a centre of Syrian metropolis, it is rather   younger that the town itself. In fact, there were at least   thirty bazaars (markets) there, divided according to various   sorts of goods. Despite the fact that the buildings of   originally merchant and handicrafts´ quarter are not just   the right constructions of old Damascus, a life and   movement are pulsing inside covered streets now as well as   at any time before in past. A fascinating atmosphere of old   bazaar was preserved till now.  Merchant streets of   Damascus Old Town are magnificent and enchanting side-   scene for well paid tourists, on the other hand, just here,   there is a place of endless interchange of view in oriental   style and create some form of social life, where the people   meet and make acquaintance with novelties. A dominating   atmosphere, which just made famous old Damascus   (known as "Orient Eye“, in verses of Arab poets), revokes   as "Beauty Necklace“ or "Paradise Bird Feathers“. 


 Not far from the main Hamadiyeh Souk lies   the   "The Street Called Straight" the old Via Recta,   a Roman street that runs from east to west   through the old city of Damascus. The name is   famous from the Bible as it was visited by St.   Paul as recorded in the book of Acts and contains   several interesting sights from the Roman,   Christian and Islamic periods.  When the Greeks   ruled the city they followed their usual grid   pattern that dated from Hippodamus’ time, then   under Roman rule the street was widened and   colonnaded; many columns can still be seen.

The streets starts at it’s eastern end with the Bab Sharqi, what was the Roman gate of the Sun and close by is St Ananias’ House: "So the Lord said to him (Ananias), 'Arise and go to the street called Straight, and inquire at the house of Judas for one called Saul of Tarsus, for behold, he is praying" (Acts 9:11).

Also close by is the window from St Paul was lowered: “At once he began to preach in the [Damascus] synagogues that Jesus is the Son of God. All those who heard him were astonished and asked, "Isn't he the man who raised havoc in Jerusalem among those who call on this name? And hasn't he come here to take them as prisoners to the chief priests?" Yet Saul grew more and more powerful and baffled the Jews living in Damascus by proving that Jesus is the Christ.
After many days had gone by, the Jews conspired to kill him, but Saul learned of their plan. Day and night they kept close watch on the city gates in order to kill him. But his followers took him by night and lowered him in a basket through an opening in the wall“. (Acts 9:20-25).
So, old Jewish Quarter (Bazaar al-Arvan) offers a space (in shade of citadel) to merchant (business) stands (kiosks) with donkeys and sellers of dirts serving as a combustible in Ali Pasha Bazaar. Here, there are offered, except other products, excellent peaches from orchards of outskirts of Damascus. You can buy here, for instance, olives, dried fruit, nuts or pistaches. All goods is exhibited in old chipped bowls or linen sacks.

Noisy praising of this goods, since a momemt when some potential client could appear, is mastered by fruit sellers as well as by merchants in An-Nahhasin Quarter, where coppersmith handicraft is concentrated. Immediately, when somebody could be interested in buying of some subject, the sellers do their best, with unusual mastery, and inimitable rush of words, to allure buyers from persons, passing by. Haggling regarding price of goods, this is natural matter.

Greatest danger in this respect is menacing, first of all, in Al-Hamidia Bazaar. It is true that antiquaries sell everywhere „genuine“ sabres or daggers from Damascus, but there are no valuable weapons, worked with immense skill sometimes in Middle Age time period. Ion this case, the products are manufactured in modern factories, situated in Syrian capital.

So, after Al-Hamidia Bazaar follow small shops and kiosks (stands) of many handicraft branches. Suleiman Pasha Bazaar gives a witness of especially admired Oriental handicraft: In small shops, in front of them, and everywhere, there are hanging or placed rare carpets of Syrian carpets´ binders.


The Krak des Chevaliers (Krak of the Knights), described by T.E. Lawrence as 'the best preserved and most wholly admirable castle in the world,' is the easternmost of a chain of five castles sited so as to secure the Homs Gap...

 The castle stands upon a southern spur of the     Gebel Alawi, on the site of an earlier Islamic   Castle of the Kurds.' In 1142 it was given by   Raymond, Count of Tripoli, into the care of the   Knights Hospitallers, and it was they who, during   the ensuing fifty years, remodelled and developed   it as the most distinguished work of military   architecture of its time.
 The Krak has two concentric lines of defence, the   inner ramparts lying close to the outer and   continuously dominating them. The single ward   of the original eleventh-century castle covered   about the same area as the later inner enclosure,   and some of the remains of the early work on the   crest of the spur are incorporated in the existing   building. ."

 The outer curtain is furnished on the north and   west sides with eight round towers, of which one   is later than the Crusader occupation, and of   which  two form the north barbican, also extended   at a later date


Ras Al Bassit Ancient Bystantine Remains




Latakia is Syria’s main sea-port on the Mediterranean (186 km) southwest of Aleppo). It has retained its importance since ancient times. Latakia was one of the five cities built by Saluqos Nikator in the second century B.C. He named it after his mother, Laudetia.
Not many ancient remains have survived in Latakia, but there are four columns and a Roman arch from the time of Septimus Severus ( circa 200 A.D.), in addition to a beautiful Ottoman construction called “Khan al-Dukhan”, which is now a museum.

Not many ancient remains have survived in Latakia, but there are four columns and a Roman arch from the time of Septimus Severus ( circa 200 A.D.), in addition to a beautiful Ottoman construction called “Khan al-Dukhan”, which is now a museum.

Latakia is the sea-gate to Syria. It is well-provided with accommodation, and is well-placed as a base from which to explore the coastal regions of the country.

There are beaches, mountains, archaeological sites and many relics of the Crusaders, all within a few hours from each other.
 
Museum of Latakia

Meridien Hotel Latakia



















Salah El Din Citadel

Al Samra Beach


Jableh is another Syrian seaside town, 28 km to the south of Latakia. has a theatre built to accommodate 7,000 to 8,000 spectators. Close to Jableh is Tel Sokas, where archaeological relics were recently found, now on exhibition at the Damascus and Tartus museums. 

            

             
Aleppo, Syria

This is the second capital of Syria 350 km north of Damascus, and one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in history. Abraham (pbuh) is said to have camped on the acropolis which, long before his time, served as the foundation of a fortress where the Aleppo citadel is standing now. He milked his grey cow there, hence Aleppo's name "Halab Al-Shahba".

Ever since the 3rd millennium BC, Aleppo has been a flourishing city, with a unique strategic position. This position gave the city a distinctive role from the days of the Akkadian and Amorite kingdoms until modern times. It was the meeting point of several important commercial roads in the north. This enabled Aleppo to be the link in trade between Mesopotamia, the Fertile Crescent and Egypt. The Amorites made it their capital in the 18th century BC. This position also made it subject to invasions from various races; from Hittites, Egyptians, Assyrians, Persians, Greeks and Romans.
Aleppo was prominent in the Christian era; it became a Bishopric and a huge cathedral was built in it, which is still standing.


The conflict between Byzantium and Persia, however, resulted in the latter's occupation of Aleppo in 440 AD. The Persians robbed the city, burned considerable parts of it and damaged many of its features. Though expelled by Justinian, the Persians still threatened Aleppo and frightened its inhabitants until the Arab Islamic conquest came in 636 AD.


                             
Allepo Citadel

The city then regained its status, both cultural and commercial. Apart from the Umayyad and Abbasid periods in which Aleppo flourished, the Hamadani state established by Sayf Addawla in 944 AD made Aleppo the northern capital of Syria. Sayf Addawla built Aleppo's famous citadel, and in his days the city enjoyed great prosperity and fame in science, literature and medicine, despite this leader's military ambitions. Mention should be made of the two most prominent poets, Al-Mutanabbi and Abu Al-Firas Al-Hamadani; of the philosopher and scientist, Al-Farabi; and of the linguist, Ibn Kahlaweh, all of whom lived in Sayf Addawla's court and were renowned for great knowledge and scholarship.

Aleppo was famous for its architecture; for its attractive churches, mosques, schools, tombs and baths. As an important center of trade between the eastern Mediterranean kingdoms and the merchants of Venice, Aleppo became prosperous and famous in the centuries preceding the Ottoman era. Many of its khans (caravanserai) are still in use even today; one of them is called Banadiqa Khan, Banadiqa in Arabic being the term for inhabitants of Venice.



The Mosque of Abraham Aleppo

In the Ottoman age, Aleppo remained an important center of trade with Turkey, France, England and Holland. This caused various types of European architecture to be adopted in Aleppo which can be seen in many buildings today.

Nowadays, Aleppo is famous for its ancient citadel with medieval fortress, the great Umayyad mosque, and the extraordinary souqs (bazaars) with every conceivable kind of article for sale. It was and still the far distant trade center when Shakespeare mentioned it in Macbeth and Othello.
The old city was surrounded by a wall incorporating defense towers and fortified gates built during the Islamic period. A large part of the wall still standing.

The Archaeological Museum of Aleppo contains exhibits from the stone age to modern times.
It has particularly interesting collection of antiquities from some of the most ancient sites in Syria including Mari, Ugarit, and Ebla, as well as objects found in the Euphrates Basin, Hama, Tell Halaf and Ayn Dara, in addition to remains from Greek, Roman, Arab and Islamic periods.
                               

Archaeological Museum of Aleppo




Al-Madina Souk