Striking Features of Nazareth, Where Christ Spent Boyhood "DOC 1 r rxm zxx: 0 I ' , ? I r"'"""'"'""1"""''""" "n i liSnri iww i iiiitiasysiiMiajuuiuiuwuiiMJuassii i isiiinasHiwiM l: . , r -A - I.-- j '.-hnJ IL :0"lf " r g pi wv N jl :' -N X l '- A iv i i ti !, ... : . .fri - - I iW-v V- .0 t'h if . . -iJis- I tr. Vi Vi .-, , i I U i 1 .-, I !h tV v rr-H I'lli i :" ' " 1 ..'' ;.vAV.; , to I " 'i"J 1 ' ' ! ti msARsm zux or a UWf'' i Will ! ' c3 ! ' f Q i.WiM 1 : : 'P l W fif (Copyright, 1911, by Frank G. Carpenter.) AZARETH (Special Correspondence of The Bee.) This la the home of Christ's boyhood. Here He came as a baby after that long trip to Egypt, where He went to escape the blood-thirsty Herod, and here He spent all but about four years oi Hi life. I want to tell you how Nazareth looks in this year of our Lord, 1911. The town Is situated high up in the mountains of Galilee, within sixty miles of Jerusalem as the crow flies and sixty-seven miles from Bethlehem, where Jesus was born. It is within a day's ride on horseback of Mount Carmel, where Elijah slew the false prophets, and within four hours of Capernaum on the sea of Galilee, frm where our Savior took His apostles and where He first preached. Nazareth lies in a nest in the mountains. It la In a little amphitheater of hills with a rough and ragged arena. The houses run up the sides of the hills and there is hardly a level spot in the whole municipality. It is not a large town. It has alto gether less than 12,000 people, of whom about half are Mohammedans who look upon Christ as a prophet. The remainder Is made up of Greek Catholics, Latins and about 200 Syrians, of the Protestant faith. The town is one of churches 'and convents. It has some great monasteries and hospices where pilgrims are kept over Bight. The resiliences of the people are rectangular structures, which look more like great stone boxes than houses. They are usually of one-atory, with a door and two windows, and the most of them have flat-roofs, which In the summer form the resting and sleeping places at night. Many of the buildings are In gardens. Some have cactus hedges about them and others are shaded by cypress trees. There are many olive orchards, and figs grow here as luxuriantly as they did in the time of our Saviour. 9 Nazareth by Moonlight. The buildings of Nazareth are ugly, but as a whole the city la beautiful. The sky Is so blue, the air la so clear and all the surroundings are so picturesque, I shall not soon forget a bird's-eye view I had of the city last night. The moon was at its full and its. great round silver disk changed the night Into day. Its ray mellowed the yellow limestone of which the buildings art made, and transformed them into ivory. They softened the glare of the white, rocky roads, and made the mountains and valleys look like those of fairyland. From the top of the bills I could see the plain of Esdraelon, which in its fertility vies with the Nile valley; and away off at the west lay the mighty Mediterranean, which stretches on for 2,000 miles to Gibraltar and the Atlantic. Nazareth by moonlight Is wonderfully peaceful. At sunset all business stops and within an hour or so afterward everyone la in bed There are few places which are so far from the strife of the world, and business seems swallowed in the beauties of nature. The scenery Is that of old Greece, and the atars shine gloriously out of skies' which are perfectly cKar. The sunsets are turpaBslngly beautiful. I saw one the other night in which the silvery beams of the sun seemed to form a halo over this, the bom)( of our Saviour. There were many white clouds In the sky, which changed, first to rose and then became golden, the color growing stronger and stronger, until the whole west wan oue blaze of molten copper and fire. . Among the Na.arenes. Coming down into the town, after watching one of these sunsets, I saW many Nazarene children and stopped to make notes. The little ones gathered ' around me, and it was not hard to Imagine similar crowds which played In these streets 1,900 years since and of whom the boy Jesus was one. The little Nazarenes wore gowns of brown, red or yellow. The piost of them were in their bare feet; the boys bad caps of red felt, while the plrls wore handker chief or shawls tied around their heads. All were running and dancing and laughing and playing. Some were beautiful and especially the girls. I remember a roay-cbeeked baby which was carried by a roughlsh brtght-cyed maid of IS. I admired the baby and chucked It uudtr the thin, telling the girl I w(ould like to take It borne with me to America. She promptly said I could have it, and thrust it out toward roe. My face fell and I ran. -1 In t'ie Footsteps of Jesus. There Is no doubt tut that this is the Nazarwta of Jesus, and that the hills and valleys about here were hallowed by Ills fooutep. It was here that the angel Gabriel appeared unto Mary and told her that she would be the mother of Jesus, and it wad IX! I boyhood. Here He came as a baby after still an infant in arms. It was from Nazareth that Jf fl. K ESJLiT: W IV .Mt5r.-- r-t'JkWI to escape the blood-thtraty Herod, and It was here that after He had begun His work our Wl'i, kS 7JC-"n. ) vT 1 here that she came with Joseph after the flight into Egypt. She waited only until King Herod was dead and then came to Nazareth, the child Jesus being still an infant in arms. It was from Nazareth that Jesus went to the Jordan to be baptized by John, and It was here that after He had begun His work our Lord came and preached In the synagogue, where upon the Nazarenes cried out: "la not this Joseph's son? . . . ,And they were filled with wrath, and rose up and thrust Him out of the city and led Him unto the brow of the hill whereon their city was built that they might cast Him down headlong. But He, passing through the midst of them, went His way." I was shown the hill to which the Nazarenes led the Savior, Intending to cast Him down. It is about a mile and a half from the town. The exact locality of this place, however, la questioned. There Is another spot In Nazareth, now owned by the Roman Catholics, which claims to be the original fte of the shop where Joseph worked as a carpen ter. The place is In the Mohammedan Quarter, not far from a bazar where the Turkish merchants sit cross-legged and sell to the Christians. When I vis ited It I met Father Kerstlng, who came here about three years ago, and Is now superintending some excavations which are being made. He has a number of Arabs working under bim digging up an old church which was built there by the crusaders. Where Joseph Worked. They have Just uncovered a grotto which Father Kerstlng tells me is undoubtedly the place where Jo seph bad his carpenter's shop, and where, If so, the little Christ must have played among the shavings. I took' a photograph of the excavations. ' The various sects here make all sorts of claims. The Latlna allege that they own the table upon which Christ dined with Ills disciples before and after the resurrection. It Is a block of hard chalk eleven feet long and nine feet In breadth. In another place In the Latin monastery Is what is known as the angel'a chapel and the chapel of the annunciation, where the Virgin received Gabriel's message. There la also an old cistern which is called the kitchen of the Virgin, and In the center of the town la Mary's well, or, as it Is sometimes called, Jesus' spring, tor Gabriel's spring. This Is undoubtedly authentic, for It Is the only spring or watering place that Nazaeth now pos sesses or ever has possessed. It is, therefore, certain that the child Jesus and the Virgin frequented It, and that Mary came here dally for water. This is a foun tain rather than a well. The water gushes forth In two streams Into a stone basin, and from there flowa Into a stone-enclosed pool. There are always women with water jars about it, and tho scenes of today are probably the same as they were in Christ's time. In the Bazars. Nazareth has thousands of pilgrims who come here every year to visit the places hallowed by the Savior, and it is also on the mail line here from the mountains of Lebanon to Jerusalem. Caravan routes from Damascus to Egypt wind about it, and It has always been a place of more or less traffic. The bazars, of today are of about the came char acter as they were in Christ's time. They are nar row, cave-like stores, lighted only from the front. The merchants sit there walled around with goods, and the customers stand out in the cobblestone road way end bargain as to their prices. The streets are dirty and camels and Bedouins are continually mov ing through them. The men wear turbans and gowns and the women are veiled or unveiled, according as they are Mohammedans or Christians. I was interested in the mechanical work going on in these bazars. I stopped In a carpenter'a shop and photographed a workman of just about the age Joseph must' bav6 been when our Lord was a boy and passed as his son. I asked as to carpenter's wages, and was told they ranged from 60 cents to $1 per day. In another business street I stopped awhile with the blacksmiths who were making knives, razors, plow points and the long, thin, crescent-shaped sickles used here for harvesting. The sickles bave teeth like a fine saw, the wheat and barley belug sawed off, as it were. I watched a blacksmith shoe a horse. He used a plate of iron of the shape of the hoof about an eighth of an inch thick. It was solid with the exception of a hole as large as a finger ring in the center. There were three small holes ou each side for the nails which were driven into the hoof. When shod the horse's foot was entirely covered by the iron, with the ex ception of the small hole In the center. The Iloyst (if Nazareth. During my stay here I have paid especial atten- U ! M!!WHfi JL MZARETU CARPENTER. A mZAEETK EAtUZT tion to the children. They are the best part of the Holy Land, and are as full of fun and as delightful aa our children at home. I have seen families which recall that of Joseph and Mary. Here In Nazareth I see the little ones everywhere playing. There is a threshing floor on one side of the town, a place where the earth hat been stamped down and where the grain is flailed or trodden out after harvest. This Is one of the great playgrounds, where the boys come with their marbles and where they play ball. They have a game in which the boys try to throw the ball so as to hit a stone mark set up for the purpose. They also stiike the ball with a club and send It beyond the threshing floor to be caught by the boys outside. They play blind man'a buff, leapfrog and hide-and-seek, and aa I went through the streets the other day I saw two little ones rising and falling on a board resting on the edge of a sharp stone making a seesaw. One of the games played is like our "Button, but ton, who has the button?" The boys stand in a row with hands folded and the one who Is it goes along The Anti-Modernist Oath OLLOWING is a translation of the Anti- F Modernist oath now being taken by Catholic priests, as directed in an en cyclical letter from the pope: "I accept and firmly embrace every thing that has been defined by the un erring magtsterlum of the church, what ever has been declared and promulgated, especially those doctrines which are directed against present day errors. "In the first place, I profess that God, the begin ning and end of all things, can, by the natural light of reason, be known and even demonstrated, through those things which have been created, namely the visible works of nature, as a cause through its effects. "Secondly I hold and admit the external argu ments of revelation, namely, Divine works, especially miracles and prophecies, as most sure signs of a Loafing 'Taln't no use complainln' 'cause the frost Is In the air And there ain't no birds a-singin' in the treetops anywhere; These modern institutions that the landlords all provide Have sweet and soothin' comforts, it will hardly be denied. There's a radiator boomln' with a warmth that's soft and mild And an easy chair in waltln' when there's time to be beguiled. The north wind shakes the shutters, then discouraged passes by. For loaflu' in December's Jest as good as in July. The city folks in summer to the farm come troopin' down An' when old winter's here it looks right pood to me in town; I miss the clouds a-drtftin' o'er the distant sky to blue; Hut the raier on the ceiling has a mighty pl?auini hue. And the window, when the climate has set in for now iu' hard. Is the frame around a picture prettier than a inail.n' card; And life seems kind and peaceful as 1 notice, with i, igh, That luatiu' lu December's Jctt as good as in July. -Washington Star. ZZT29JO -FFlaMiA fBUTO GRAPH and rubs hia two bands, holding the pebble over which pair of folded hands, endeavoring to drop the pebble into ono without being caught. It Is then necessary to guess who baa the pebble. We play the same game with the button. Another game la known as the "tied monkey." In this the boy who la "it" catches hold with one hand of a rope, which la fastened to a peg in the ground, while others beat him with handkerchiefs or ropes in which knots are tied. If he can catch one of them without letting go his hold on the rope the boy caught takes his place. 1 r Worth More Than Girls. I observe that the boys here usually play by them selves. They rather look down upon their sisters, and the ordinary family considers the girl of but lit tle account. When a girl Is born no fuss la made, but when a boy cornea the friends of the family run through the streets crying out, "Good tidings! Good tidings!" The father prepares a feast and all of the friends of the family give presents of money for the Christian religion Divinely established, and I bold those same things to be true for all ages and men, even of our own time, and tbey are strictly conforma ble to reason. ' "Thirdly I firmly believe that the church, the custodian and teacher of the Revealed Word, through tbe very historic Christ, when He lived among us, was proximately and directly Instituted, and this same church was founded upon Peter, the prince of tbe apostolic hierarchy and his successors to last forever. "Fourthly I sincerely accept the doctrine of faith In Its entirely as it has been transmitted to our times by orthodox preachers; and, moreover, I entirely re ject tbe heretical dictum of tbe evolution ot dogmas of those who transfer the meaning of thoso dogmas from one sense to another, differing entirely from that previously held by the church. "Fifthly I hold as most certain and sincerely profess that faith is not a blind result of a religion breaking forth from a darkened subconsciousness and proceeding from tbe heart and flexible will alone, but which is conformable to reason and has been revealed by a personal God, our Creator and Lord, and we believe it to bo true because of the authority of God, who is eminently truthful. "I firmly believe and with due reverence submit to all condemnationa and declarations which are contained in the encyclical letters Tascendr and in the decree 'Lainantablll,' especially concerning that which they term dogmatic history. "I likewise reject the error of those that affirm that the faith proposed by the church Is repugnant to history, and that Catholic tenets, In tbe sense in which they are now understood, cannot be reconciled with some reliable origins of the Christian religion. I likewise condemn the opinion it those who maintain that the learned Christian man possessea a double personality the oue a believer, the other an his torian. "I disregard also that system of Interpreting b&cred bcriinuie which prefers the methods of ration alists to the tradition of the church, the doctrines of the faith and the rules ot the Apostolic see. "Finally and in a word, I profess myself opposed to the error of tbe modernists, who hold that there is ijotbing Divine in sacred tradition, or what is still v.orbe, admitted in a I'anthebtlc sense, so that noth ing remains of it but the bare and simple fact, just as is tbe case with other historical facts. "1 proiuiso that I aball faithfully and in the bln cerity of my heart obbervc all these by never deviating from thrm in any way, either In teaching or in word or writing. So I promise, so I swear." Denefit ot the boy. Immediately after tho child la born It la rubbed over with salt; it is then wrapped In swaddling clothes so tight liat it cannot move and kept la that state for about a week; It Is then un fastened, washed with fresh oil, salted and bound up again. This wrapping, oiling, salting and rewrap plng goes on for about forty days, when the child la ready to wear the ordinary clothes of babyhood. This usually consists of ono garment, and in the summer If the child be poor that is omitted, although a naked baby may wear a skull cap. The ordinary garment ts a shirt which reaches to the knees, and as the chil dren grow older they may have a "Jacket over the shirt. One of the Important ceremonies is naming tho boy. In this the name of the father is always added. In olden times if the son of James was named John his name would be John, Bon of Jamos, but now tho words "son of" are omitted and he la known as John James. Pretty Little Nawuenes. I am surprised at the beauty of tho Nazarene girls, and especially of the little ones. They have rosy cheeks and bright eyes and are quite as good looking as our American bablea. They dresa in bright colors, some having rows of coins on their headdresses and rings on their fingers. I see many little girls at the fountain ot Mary, each carrying a jar in which to bring water home. This is the work of almost every woman In Syria. The little ones are taught by beginning with a tiny Jar which they steady on the head with the hand. As they grow older they use larger jars, until at last they are able to walk through the streets carrying four or five gallons of water on the head without touching the jar. This work gives them erect figures, and there are do stoop shoulders nor curved spines among them. When a girl reaches 10 or 11 years of age aha begins to think of marriage, and it is not an uncom mon thing for her to be a mother at 13 or 14. After marriage the wife becomes a member of her hus band's family, and, for a time at least, she Uvea with her mother-in-law. For this reason people .believe in early marriages, whereby the girl may be trained by her husband's mother Into a suitable wife when she grows up. -t A Look at the Schools. I wonder if the boys of our Savior's time studied aa do tho' Nazarene boys of today. Many of them are taught by the sheiks, as half the town is Moham medan. Tbey sit on tho floor and sway back and forth as they scream out the verses and texts they are trying to learn. The teacher Is sometimes blind, but he knows the voices so well that when one stops be can strike the place -where that boy should be sit ting with a stick to start him again. In our Lord's time the Scriptures were probably taught tbe samo way to tho Jewish children. The slates used here are largely made of cast-off coal oil cans, the tin be ing cut Into squares and pounded out flat. The Arabic characters are painted upon iuch tins with brushes and India Ink. The chief study of the Mohammedan boys Is the Koran, and of the Jews the Psalms. At harvest time tb icbools close and the children go out into the fields, gardens and vineyards. They are accustomed t0 work Bnd everywhere I go I ace them herding the sheep. Tbe boys use slings just as David did and thev r skillful in sending the stones where they P,ea8- Like Little Americans. Some of these Palestine children are polite and others are the reverse. When tbe good Arab boy comes Into a room full of older people he goes arouud and kisses the hand of each one and places it on bis forehead. He can be so sweet you might think him tbe soul of Innocence and piety, but take him out side and he will fight, kick and scratch with his fel lows. A great deal of slanj is used and in a quarrel the most common expressions are those of cursing your enemy's ancestors. One boy will say to an other, "Curse your father!" and the other will reply, "And your grandfather!" And so they will go on to the fourth and fifth generations, cursing the vari ous branches of the other's genealogical tree. Here at Nazareth we find the children very polite, but at Nablous tbey throw stones at me and railed me "a Nazarene," a contemptuous term which tbe Moham medans of Samaria use for all who are not of tbelr faith. FRANK G. CARPENTER. ti i i s