Ma’ale Adumim (Hebrew: מַעֲלֵה אֲדֻמִּים) is an Israeli settlement and a city in the West Bank, seven kilometers from Jerusalem.[2] Ma’ale Adumim achieved city status in 1991. In 2011, the population was 39,000.[2] Ma’ale Adumim is the third largest Israeli settlement in the West Bank after Modi’in Illit, and Beitar Illit.[3] The city is located along Highway 1, which connects it to Jerusalem and the Tel Aviv area. The international community considers Israeli settlements illegal under international law,[4] but the Israeli government disputes this.[5][6] Ma’ale Adumim is mentioned in the Book of Joshua as the border between the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. It also is the site of the Parable of the Good Samaritan in the Gospel of Luke.[7]
The town name “Ma’ale Adumim” is taken from the Joshua 15:7 and Joshua 18:17[8]: The boundary [of the tribe of Judah] ascended from the Valley of Achor to Debir and turned north to Gilgal, facing the Ascent of Adumim, which is south of the wadi. Literally “Red Ascent”, it takes its name from the red rock lining the ascent from the Dead Sea.[9]
“”Again, We find that these people (palestininans) and the world want to take away a site from Israel that is rich with their History. Not only theirs but ours as Christians as well. This area is talked about by Jesus, as it is referred in Luke with the parable of the Good Samaritan. And remember the story about woman at the well in John chapter 4! Jesus revealed Himself to the Samaritan woman at the well. The Samaritan’s rejected Jesus until they heard this woman’s testimony. But that is another story. Let’s look at the story from today. They hid this as far as I am concerned and called it hill E-1. Well it’s not just a hill!” The following article is from Arutz Sheva.”
A lowly mountain connecting Jerusalem with its eastern suburb is all the world has time for. Sorry, Syrians, step back and wait your turn.

Paula R. Stern
Paula R. Stern is the Founder and Documentation Manager of WritePoint, a technical writing company.
The world is up in arms, as it so loves to be. What is it about now?
No, no – not Syria and the violence there. Not Afghanistan; certainly not Iran. They aren’t condemning Turkish television fining the Simpsons for mocking God; or a social club at Harvard University saying Jews need not apply. No, it isn’t about Hungary cataloguing Jews as they would cattle and certainly nothing about Iranian warships sailing towards Sudan.
It’s all about a mountain that sits between Maale Adumim and Jerusalem. Even left-wing papers in Israel mistakenly write that Israel is threatening to “bisect” the West Bank and the news is filled with country after country condemning Israel for damaging chances for peace.
Chances for peace? We were at war two weeks ago and nothing has changed since then. There are currently NO chances for peace on the table. In fact, there is no table.
No, no, no – what we have is a mountain – not a very tall one, lower than the ones next to three of its sides.
It is barren, but for a road that snakes its way up to a midpoint where a large police station has been built – barren, but for that building. No one lives there – no one has.
The land was once part of the Ottoman Empire – no village, no homes, no dwellings on it. Sheep and goats might sometimes have grazed on the lower areas of the hills, but that’s about it. When the Ottoman’s made way for the British, it was under their rule, and still nothing there but the camels and the sheep and the goats and, perhaps, an occasional ground hog.
In the 1920s, England cut off 2/3 of the land that was called Palestine and gave it to the Hashemites – and thus Jordan was born. The remaining 1/3 was ruled by the British until 1947, including that land that today we call E1.
In 1948, the Arabs chose war over peace, death over life. They attacked and lost – but they got some land that the Jews could not defend, and that included E1 – the barren land between Jerusalem’s eastern border and the west bank of the Jordan River.
And then, in 1967, it was clear that Egypt and Syria were preparing for war – Israel launched a pre-emptive strike and sent a message to the Jordanians. We have no quarrel with you; stay out of the fighting. We will not attack you. The Jordanians sent back their message in two ways – in words and action, the message was the same – we fight with our brothers…and so they did. They attacked – as they had in 1948 and the result was the same – they lost.
This time, E1 came into our hands. State-owned under the Turks; state-owned under the Jordanians, and now state-owned under Israel. Never the home of Palestinian Arabs; no villages there, no buildings but for the one we built a few years ago…and the ones we will now build.
The history of E1 is very simple. It is but a mountain that lies between Maale Adumim, the thriving suburb east of Jerusalem and the Holy City. Arabs regularly travel on the highway between Maale Adumim and the Dead Sea – and the highway rwill emain. There is no bisecting, no blocking, no break in the passage.
It is a mountain, soon to be green and developed. That is the history of E1, except for one huge point that the world forgets. Before the Jordanians, before the British, before the Ottomans, before the Romans…the land was, as it is today – ours. It was the ancient land of Israel; it is the modern land of Israel.
As for the countries of the world who say Israel threatens the peace – where were you two weeks ago when I ran with my children to our bomb shelter? Why did my son have to leave his wife to protect Israel’s south from a thousand rockets?
It is too late now to tell us of peace – speak to Hamas first.
You support a Palestinian state? Clearly you do – but it is Israel that must live with it and so we shall – but only if it is such that we can live with it.
We will build and the world will scream. But we have learned that the world screams easily for that which is so minor and ignores that which really matters.
Dozens died today in Syria as they did yesterday and as they will tomorrow – but yes, certainly, let’s discuss a barren hill across from my back yard.
Categories: Prophecy
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