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Haifa; or, Life in modern Palestine cover

Haifa; or, Life in modern Palestine

Chapter 3: INTRODUCTION.
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About This Book

A collection of letters written during several years' residence in Palestine that combine travel narrative, archaeological reporting, and social observation. The writer describes exploration of ancient sites and ruins around Haifa, Mount Carmel, Galilee, Jerusalem, and surrounding plains, summarizes recent excavations and identifications, recounts encounters with diverse communities — Jews, Druses, Samaritans, Melchites, Circassians, and Christian pilgrims — and records local customs, religious festivals, domestic life, and progress such as rail and settlement initiatives. Interwoven are reflections on topography, historical associations, and the possibilities for future research and large‑scale excavation.

INTRODUCTION.


The chapters which compose this volume originally formed a series of letters, all of which passed through my hands. I prepared them for their first appearance in print, and corrected the proofs afterwards. Finally, it was at my suggestion and advice that they were gathered together in a book.

The deep interest which the land of Palestine possesses for every thoughtful mind makes us all greedy for fresh and truthful information, alike concerning its present condition and the discoveries which new researches add to our knowledge of the past. From this point of view, many of the pages which follow are of exceeding importance. Every Christian will read with deep attention the author's description of the present state of places connected with momentous events of New-Testament history; and when, as in the present instance, the traveller and investigator is one whose judgment and whose accuracy may be entirely relied upon, the value of the report surpasses every careless estimate.

It is with this feeling that I have urged my friend to complete his work for publication, and with this feeling I earnestly commend it to the reader. Nor is its interest confined to historical and Biblical questions alone; the ethnologist examining the races of modern Syria, and the philosopher contemplating the marvellous processes of Asiatic transformation, will also find here material which will repay their most careful study.

C. A. Dana.

New York, November, 1886.