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Mark Twain's Jerusalem
A renowned man of letters, a novelist, satirist
and essayist whose emancipationist sympathies, finely honed wit and
admirable mustache ensured him the title of "Father of American
literature," Samuel "Mark Twain" Clemens enjoyed a memorable visit to Jerusalem in 1867.
His tour of Palestine,
then a region within the Ottoman Eyalet of Syria, is today considered an historical footnote of curiosity, especially considering recent research which suggests that Twain's Jerusalem hotel, which also hosted luminaries including Herman Melville and Ariel Sharon over the years, was housed in the same building, known as the Wittenberg House, which today is home to the controversial ultra-Nationalist Ateret Cohanim organization's seminary.
According to historical records, though, Twain spent several days
poking about the religious sites of Jerusalem. His travels in the Holy
Land and Europe inspired the popular travel memoir The Innocents
Abroad or The New Pilgrims' Progress, published in 1869, and partly
informed the (for its time) remarkably philo-Semitic Concerning the
Jews, published years later in 1898 - although as his surviving
letters indicate, Twain's chief concern while he was actually in
Jerusalem was one that should be familiar to any modern Jerusalem
tourist, finding the perfect souvenir-trinket. From a letter to a Christian Quarter bookseller:
Mr. Esais — Fix up the little Bible I selected
(I don’t want any other) — the one that has backs made of Balsam-wood from
the Jordan, oak from Abraham’s tree at Hebron, olive-wood from the
Mount of Olives, & whatever the other stuff was — ebony, I think. Put
on it this inscription: “Mrs. Jane Clemens — from her son — Mount Calvary,
Sept 24, 1867. Put "Jerusalem" around on it loose, somewhere, in
Hebrew, just for a flyer. Send it to our camp, near head of the valley
of Hinnom — the third tents you come to if you leave the city by the Jaffa
Gate — the first if you go out by the Damascus Gate.
The Bible described in this letter is now stored at the University of California, Berkeley's Mark Twain archive.
Twain, when not pitching a tent in the valley that now houses the Sultan's Pool performance venue, was staying in the Mediterranean Hotel, then the preferred Jerusalem haunt of international intelligentsia, including Melville and archaeologist Charles Warren.
In the years that followed Twain's visit, though, the Mediterranean, on the Muslim Quarter's Hagay St. (also home to the beloved Abu Shukri hummus restaurant), was sold off and repurposed. It's named "the Wittenberg House," because one Moshe Wittenberg purchased the building from its Christian owners in the late 1880s, in a landmark real estate deal that was brokered by famed linguist Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, thanks, somewhat ironically, to his command of French. About a century years later, then-Member of Knesset Ariel Sharon bought one section of the building for his own residence, eventually selling the property to the like-minded ideologues of Ateret Cohanim.
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