Bowman family Israel

with the Marcus & Michelle Bowman family

Our family plus my parents recently had the joy and privilege of taking a two week trip to the Land, with the beginning of the trip being in the middle of Sukkot and ending at the beginning of November.  While we’ve been to the Land a couple of times, once right after Michelle and I were married in 2006 and once with HaYovel in 2016, this trip we elected to “do our own thing.”  There were parts of the land that we have never seen (and there still are), and we felt that because of that, and because we were traveling with seven children, doing this trip on our own might give us the opportunity to slow down (ha!) and have some flexibility in terms of what we would take time for.

                   In reflecting on the trip, I’m choosing to divide my report into places, experiences, and connections.  Of the three, connections continue to be our focus and nearest to our hearts; we’ll take about those last.  I acknowledge that the three are woven together and may be difficult to separate, but we’ll try.

                On places: the trip was filled with visits to new places for us (Arugot Farms, Mount Kabir, Caesarea Beach on the Mediterranean, the Ruthie Mann Horse Therapy Center east of Jerusalem, Kiryat Tivon where our second AirBNB was located, Zikhron Yaakov, Kibbutz Belt El, and Haifa) as well as many places we’d been before (Jerusalem, the Dead Sea, Ein Gedi, and the Galilee, to name a few).  Each of our family members would likely share different places that were particularly impactful for them.  For me, I entered the trip with a desire to get a better geographical grasp of the Land as a whole, something that I find to be challenging to do from inside a tour bus.  I also wanted to experience Israel more as a resident would, and less as a tourist does.  Mission accomplished, to some extent, as the locations mentioned above took us west to east and south to north throughout the land and due to our living arrangements, we were on the streets of the towns where we stayed interacting with Israelis as we procured food, pumped fuel, and completed other tasks necessary to daily living.  I was amazed by the incredibly diverse geography of what we took in, from the barren Jordan Valley along the Dead Sea (hard to put yourself in Lot’s shoes to see it as he saw it the way that it exists now, but we hope to someday see the renewal that Ezekiel 47 describes) to the somewhat less barren and magnificent Judean hills to the beauty of the Mediterranean and Sea of Galilee coastlines, to the rugged forested hills of northern Israel (my personal favorite).

                    On experiences: the trip was also filled with new experiences – driving in Israel for the first time (which is particularly challenging when you’re directionally challenged and they scramble the GPS such that your current location shows as the airport in Amman, Jordan), participating in releasing a young rehabilitated ibex out of its crate to rejoin its Ein Gedi herd, and, as mentioned above, interacting with Israelis going about their daily lives.  Buying fresh bread, pastries, and coffee in a bakery in Jerusalem and being informed later by Hanoch that those things we thought were kosher sausages in those pastries were in fact tofu, finding a bank to withdraw shekels from their ATM, observing (and hearing at 3 a.m.) the late night festivities during Sukkot, seeing the sukkot on the balconies and roofs of the old and new city of Jerusalem, taking a ramparts walk along the Ottoman-Turk era old city walls, the kids riding horses at the horse therapy center, swimming in the Mediterranean (while hearing what I’m pretty confident were explosions to the north in Lebanon), scrambling down a flight of stairs late at night to shelter in a safe room (only happened twice), ordering pizza and Thai food from local eateries in Kiryat Tivon and trying to explain to them (with a language barrier) why it was that we had chosen to be in Israel at this time, riding cable cars in Haifa, and many more things that I’m probably forgetting.  Did I mention driving and pumping fuel?  On the pumping fuel front, we were bailed out of our inability to make sense of the process by friendly IDF soldiers and members of the Magen David Adom service.  Side note: our 16-year-old taught me to use Google Translate as I went and things got a little easier after that. 🙂  And many more experiences that we had for a second time, some of them almost 20 years after the first time, such as swimming in the Dead Sea (we got to spend time in in the Dead and Med, but not the Red, as the kids like to say), wading in the Sea of Galilee, visiting the Western Wall and Tunnels and the Temple Mount, and others too numerous to mention.

                 Finally, on connections, which are both most important and the hardest to describe in terms of their impact on us: in the words of Ephraim Frank, deep called to deep in our soul and spirit while we interacted with these our brothers and sisters on various levels throughout the trip, creating emotions and questions that we will probably be pondering for a long time. New and significant connections for us were Yishay Aveetal (and later his wife) who guided us through our tours of Shiloh, ancient Beit El, and Mount Kabir; Ruthi Mann and her husband Chaim at their horse therapy farm and retreat east of Jerusalem; the artist Udi Merioz of the Blue and White Art Gallery in Jerusalem; Hanoch Young (we knew Hanoch a little bit previously but got to spend significant time and have significant conversation as he toured us around Jerusalem one day); and last but certainly not least, Kibbutz Beit El elder Joachim Blind and his assistant Betty Strayle as they warmly welcomed us and gave us a virtual tour of their kibbutz and explained their long-standing service to the national and people of Israel.  We were also privileged to spend time and deepen our relationships with the Hayovel team as we spent a night and part of a couple of days on their base in Samaria, and Ephraim & Rimona Frank as they toured us through Zikhron Yaakov, made the connection for us at Beit El, and spent our second Erev Shabbat in the land with us, expounding on the continued revelation of the restoration of the broken down tabernacle of David in these our days.

                   An observation that Michelle and I have as we’ve discussed our several trips to Israel is how we have consistently encountered circumstances on those trips that test our ability to walk in the Spirit and not in the flesh.  Those circumstances have the potential to rob us of our joy and steal precious time from our visits, and have done that to us, historically.  We were in specific conversation and prayer about this as we headed into this trip, and while it was not without its challenging circumstances (a last-minute stomach bug that altered some of our travel itinerary as we were attempting to leave the US and a one-year-old that simply did not travel well for most of the trip as examples), we believe that our Father answered our prayers in giving us many meaningful experiences and connections in places old and new that we trust will endure as the memories of the less-pleasant moments fade.  I believe strongly that the enemy is doing everything that he can in this our day to distract us from what is important, particularly when we do spiritually significant things like visiting the land of our forefathers.  We pray for our Father’s continued grace and protection as we continue to go up to the Land in an effort to do what we can to further his present and coming Kingdom.  May its fullness be realized soon and in our days!

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One Comment

  1. Glenn Miller says:

    Toda rabba/תודה רבה/Many thanks to Marcus & Michelle Bowman and their family for writing of their recent trip to Eretz Israel. We enjoyed reading of doing your own thing rather than the bus tours and meeting with some of our friends living in the land too. Excellent. Some of your experiences remind me of ours. I first visited Israel during the Oslo War/2nd Intifada when tourism was at an all time low and terrorism was a high so now being in a war things are similar. I first visited during Sukkot in 2005 and it was wonderful…. Many beautiful people from all over the world to support the people of Israel. My wife, Amanda, and I got married during Sukkot in 2008 and went to Israel for our honeymoon where I first met and Amanda saw for the third time, the Wallers, who were gracious hosts to us. Amanda had been on her first trip the year before, 2007, with an Avi ben Mordechai tour. In 2009 we visited again on our first anniversary during all of the Fall Feasts and again walked in the Jerusalem March which I had done in 2005 and found it to be an emotional experience. Back in 2008 during our honeymoon the Torah portion for the day we left the land of our fathers in the USA the daily Torah portion was Day 1 of Lech L’cha where יהוה told Avram to leave the land of his fathers and go to the land He will show him. On the third day of Lech L’cha where יהוה told Avram to “Walk the Land, north, south, east, and west, is the day we flew across the Mediterranean and into Ben Gurion Airport, where we could see the Land far and wide. We don’t believe in coincidences, but hadn’t yet realized that we believe יהוה wanted us to also “Walk The Land”. I guess I should tell you that we finally figured that out and started walking the שביל ישראל/Shveel Israel/Israel National Trail starting on the Lebanese border at Kibbutz Dan and walking south southwest. We had many beautiful experiences with Trail Angels, who saw us and felt the need to help us. We were in our 60’s and not typical young hikers so they’d invite us into their homes, feed us and offer us showers and even bedrooms. Beautiful people constantly. יהוה always provided when we were wondering where we would sleep…. Sometimes late in the day as the sun was setting! That was all in the Spring of 2018 so we took breaks to go to the B’ney Yosef Congress in Ariel to see some of your friends like the Franks and Hanoch as well as meeting many new to us. We also took a Pesach break and went to Jerusalem. Our next visit was also mostly hiking, but this time in my first tour, but it our tour guide was a hiking leader in the Negev for a week. Great trip. We started in Sde Boker where the Ben Gurions retired and hiked to the Red Sea in Eilat. We tried, unsuccessfully, to hike the Golan Trail in both 2020 and 2021, but ran across to many obstacles due to Covid and have not made it back again yet, but still do want to hike the Golan Trail. Thanks again, Glenn & Amanda Miller

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