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Healing Waters of the Holy Land
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16945 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
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4 / 1990 |
2,631 Words |
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Mindy Leaf Mindy Leaf, a free-lance writer based in North Palm Beach,
Florida, frequently reports on Israel. |
"After these things Jesus went over the Sea of Galilee, which is the Sea of Tiberias. Then a great multitude followed him, because they saw his signs which he performed on those who were diseased." (John 6: 1-2)
"One should praise the Dead Sea…Its waters float any heavy object; it is difficult to drown in it, even if considerable effort is made…In many places the sea spits out masses of salt…This salt brings healing to the human body and it is therefore mixed into many drugs." (Flavius Josephus, History of the Jewish War)
The Bible calls them seas, and so they are known and listed on maps. Geologically, however, the Holy Land's two most famous bodies of water - the Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea - are actually sister lakes formed five million years ago as part of the Great Syrian-African Rift Valley. Linked by the Jordan River along Israel's eastern border, they lie just seventy-five miles apart. But the Galilee's fertile plains and the Dead Sea's desert cliffs are about as different as two lake regions can be. As are their waters: The Sea of Galilee is pure and sweet, making it Israel's primary source of drinking water. In contrast, the Dead Sea, where the Jordan River empties, contains the saltiest water on earth. Drinking a mere cupful can be deadly.
With all their differences, the two seas possess blessings in common that tend to overshadow everything else. Each boasts an abundance of natural hot springs, special mud, and balneo-climatic (water and climate) conditions uniquely therapeutic in all the world.
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