Yardenit

The Yardenit Baptismal Site near Bet Yerah

Yardenit (Hebrew: ירדנית), also known as the Yardenit Baptismal Site, is a baptism site located along the Jordan River in the Galilee region of northern Israel, which is frequented by Christian pilgrims. The site is located south of the river's outlet from the Sea of Galilee, near Kibbutz Kvutzat Kinneret, which owns and manages the site.

Background

According to Christian tradition, the baptism of Jesus (Matthew, 3: 13-17) actually took place in Qasr el Yahud, north of the Dead Sea and east of Jericho. For centuries, Qasr al Yahud was the most important baptism site for pilgrims, and monasteries and guest houses were established near it. Qasr al Yahud itself has been a sort of replacement site. Al Maghtas in Jordan shows the earliest Christian (and Jewish) religious structures connected with baptism or religious baths on the Eastern part of the Jordan, but reverence shifted to the West bank after the Muslim Conquest.[1]

After the Six-Day War Qasr el Yahud fell under Israeli occupation. Due to military activity and excavations, the Israeli Ministry of Tourism decided to establish this site in 1981 as a replacement site. [2] As a result, "Yardenit" became the first regulated baptism site on the Israeli side of the river. The Qasr el Yahud site reopened in 2011.[3][4] In 2015, the Unesco declared Al Maghtas together with Jabal Mar-Elias (Elijah’s Hill) on the East bank a world heritage site.[5][6]

The Yardenit Baptismal Site currently averages 400,000 visitors each year representing all faiths[7]

Gallery

See also

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yardenit.

Coordinates: 32°42′40″N 35°34′17″E / 32.71111°N 35.57139°E / 32.71111; 35.57139

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