|
|
|
| Go & Visit - St. Paul |
|
|
|
DAMASCUS...The Place of St. Paul's Escape
After his baptism, St. Paul devoted himself to preaching in the synagogues, saying that Jesus was the Son of Godähe confounded the Jews who lived in Damascus by proving that this one was the Messiah (Acts 9,20-22). In his biographical accounts, St. Paul tells us that soon afterwards he went to Arabia ‚ to the region south of Damascus called the Hauran‚ perhaps with the purpose of avoiding a confrontation with his fellow Jews. After one or two years he returned to Damascus, where he pursued his vocation to preach the Christian message. The first reaction of the Jews was one of surprise: is not he the man who persecuted those who called upon that Name? Little by little, however, this reaction turned into opposition, and the opposition grew so strong and dramatic, that one day the Jews contrived a plot against St. Paul and were supported by those governing the city on behalf of the Nabatean king, Aretas IV. St. Paul learned about this plot, but since the Jews were carefully watching the gates of the city all day and night, the Christians took him by night and let him down from the walls in a basket. Recalling this episode, St. Paul says that it was through a window that he escaped from certain death (2 Cor 11,32-33). In the same way the spies of Joshua, whom Rahab helped to escape from Jericho, were lowered from a window in the city walls (Josh 2,15).
Does
any place still exist that recalls this hasty escape of St. Paul? In those
days the city of Damascus was surrounded by a wall. Going out through the
Eastern Gate and keeping to the right, one passes a 400-metre stretch of
the ancient city wall, which stops at the Kisan Gate, in front of the
roundabout on the motorway to the airport. The lower layers of this
stretch of wall are composed of Roman-style blocks of stone, whilst the
upper layers are mediaeval or more recent. One can also see houses built
into the wall, with their windows and other smaller openings appearing in
it. It is easy to imagine the scene of the escape: how St. Paul, after
being lowered from the wall, fled in haste down the road that leads to
Jerusalem. This southeastern district of the city was not only very close
to the start of the Roman road that St. Paul would have taken, but was
also the part where, from the earliest times, the Christians used to live.
It is very probable, then, that the scene of St. Paul's escape was
somewhere along this stretch of wall. In fact, the Christian tradition
identifies a window beside the Kisan Gate, as the window from which St.
Paul was lowered. This gate, Bab Kisan, is one of the seven Roman gates of
the city and was dedicated to Saturn. It was given the name of Kisan in
memory of a slave who became famous during the Conquest, after being
liberated by the Caliph Mu'awia. The gate has been sealed and then
reopened and restored several times. It is to be noted that the blocks at
the base of the gate are Roman, whilst the style of the arch is clearly
typical of the Mameluke period. The Arabic historian, Ibn Assaker, says
that the mosque situated in Darb el Baia was formerly the church of the
Jews, and was converted into a mosque called Ibn Shahrazouri. This,
then, was one of the 15 churches in which the Caliph Omar allowed the
Christians to gather and worship.
|
|
Copyright © 2003 by traveldamascus.com |
|
Go & Visit: Monuments Museums Tours in Syria |