My tours

My tours

home of the virtual tours

The type of tours I have

A live OUTDOOR virtual tour is a tour in which I guide you with my cell phone camera as I walk through the streets of the Old City of Jerusalem, while you sit in your living room in front of your computer of TV screen. During the tour you can talk with me, ask me questions, direct me in a specific direction and take photos as we walk. This is usually a tour of one hour.

This is the regular traditional type of tour in which you need to actually be here in Israel, and we visit some sites, cultures, experience scents and food and spend several hours of days doing so, or several days touring some of the many sites Israel offers.

These are my tours

Virtual tours

Jerusalem is perhaps the most sacred city in the World. It is so very important and significant to the three Abrahamic religions, and has therefore changed hands throughout its 3000 year of history.Read More


In this one hour tour we will visit the four quarters of the city – the Jewish, Christian, Moslem and Armenian quarters.
We start the tour starts at Jaffa Gate, enter the city and walk to the Armenian quarter where we see some of the Armenian art shops and visit Saint James Cathedral. Next we’ll visit the Jewish quarter, the Cardo (main street of the Roman and Byzantine eras), the Wide Wall built by King Hezekiah 2700 years ago. From there we will walk through the Moslem quarter to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the most sacred site to the Christian world.

Mount Olives is sacred to all three Abrahamic religions – Judaism, Christianity and Islam. In this tour we will visit Dominus Flevit Church and Gethsemane.Read More


In this one hour virtual tour we will visit some of the churches commemorating events from the New Testament. We start at the spectacular view point from which one can best see the Old City of Jerusalem. I walk alongside the most important Jewish cemetery to the Dominus Flevit Church (the Lord Wept) where Jesus wept for Jerusalem after predicting its destruction. From the church we will continue descending the mountain to Gethsemane where you will be able to see the ancient olive trees and visit the Church of All Nations or Church of Agony, commemorating the last night before Jesus was arrested. Throughout the entire tour we will be able to see in front of us the Old City as we come closer to it, to the Golden Gate of Gate of Mercy through which Jesus entered the Temple Mount.

In this one hour tour we walk the alleys of Ein Kerem, and while visiting two very unique churches, we will perhaps trully understand Johnas a child at the village of his birth and childhood.Read More

We start our tour at the Church of the Visitation which honors the visit paid by the Virgin Mary  to Elizabeth who is carrying John in her womb. And this is where Mary recited her song of praise of the Lord, the Magnificat, known as the Canticle or Song of Mary. 

On our way to Mary’s Spring we stop at the house of Saint Marie Alphonsine, a Palestinian Christian nun who was canonized (officailly diclared a saint) in 2015. We then pass by  the huge Mulberry tree planed by  Major General Charles Gordon in 1873. These  two adjacent houses provide us with two exceptional stories in Ein Kerem.

On our way to John Ba Harim Church, the birthplace of John, we will stop at Mary’s Spring, which is the source of life of this village that has been there for more than 3500 years.  

The church was built at the site where John the Baptist is beleved to have been born and raised. As told in the Godpel of Luke 1: 68-79 Zachriah, John’s father, regains his ability to talk once he writes the name of John at his Brith (when he was 8 days old and to be circumsised). Zachariah praises the Lord in what has become to be known as the Song of Zachriah or Benedictus.

PHYSICAL TOURS

The four quarters of the City of Jerusalem

The three Abrahamic religions – Judaism, Christianity and Islam – are all connected to Jerusalem. They either evolved in Jerusalem or had much of their history associated with the city.Read More

In this 4-5 hour walking tour, we will walk the four quarters, visit churches, synagogues and mosques (provided we’re allowed in), use all of our senses to see the buildings, hear the bells, smell the spices, taste the humus and touch the stones.

We will visit the Western Wall, the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, look at the Mosques on the Temple Mount, visit the Armenian, Jewish, Christian and Moslem quarters, and after about 5 hours come out of Jerusalem with an entirely different perspective of events than those we held coming in.

To register for this tour, please press the button below. It will transfer you to my contact page, through which we will converse to refine all the details – any limitations you may have, where and when we meet, etc.

In the Footsteps of the forerunner - Ein Kerem, home of John the Baptist

The highlight of our tour in Ein Kerem includes two very unique churches, but walking the alleys of the village we can trully understand John at the village of his birth and childhood.Read More

We start our tour at the Church of the Visitation which honors the visit paid by the Virgin Mary  shortly after the annunciation, to Elizabeth who is carrying John in her womb. We are told about this visit in the gospel of Luke 1: 39-56 which according to tradition is where Mary recited her song of praise of the Lord, the Magnificat, known as the Canticle or Song of Mary. 

On our walk to John Ba Harim Church we will stop at the house of Marie Alphonsine and the tree planted by Major General Charles Gordon both associated in some way with John.

On our way to John Ba Harim Church, the birthplace of John, we will stop at Mary’s Spring, which is the source of life of this village that has been there for more than 3500 years.  

John Ba Harim Church (John in the mountains) was built at the site where John the Baptist is believed to have been born and raised. Like the event at the Church of the VIsitation that gave rise to the Magnificat, here too an important event took place. As told in the Godpel of Luke 1: 68-79 Zachriah, John’s father, regains his ability to talk once he writes the name of John at his Brith (when he was 8 days old and to be circumsised). Zachariah praises the Lord in what has become to be known as the Song of Zachriah or Benedictus.

To register for this tour, please press the button below. It will transfer you to my contact page, through which we will converse to refine all the details – any limitations you may have, where and when we meet, etc.

The Dead Sea lives

The Dead Sea – one of the lowest point on the Globe – is very much alive. It boasts unique geological and natural phenomena and sites of outstanding historical events. Read More

Among the many sites to visit are the Ein Gedi natural reserve, a subtropical biologic island in the harsh desert environment with some of the purest natural waters in the Middle East, Mount Massada and its story of the Jewish revolt against the Roman Empire, the site of Baptism in the Jordan river where John baptized Jesus, monasteries and more.
We will also float in the waters of the Dead Sea, the saltiest body of the water in the World, and see the sinkholes – a testament to the Dead Sea’s revenge, striking back at humanity for what people have done to the Sea, making the entire region unfit for any physical economic development.
This is a day tour that requires a car for transportation.

To register for this tour, please press the button below. It will transfer you to my contact page, through which we will converse to refine all the details – any limitations you may have, where and when we meet, etc.

The HERSTORY of Jerusalem. The women of Jerusalem.

We always hear the HIS-story of Jerusalem, and in this tour I want to focus on the HER-story of Jerusalem, as there seem to be quite a few exceptional women that ruled, built and developed Jerusalem as we know it today.Read More

The picture above (courtesy of Tamar Hardeny) shows Melisanda, with her three sisters and their mother. Melisanda was for two decades an exceptional queen of Jerusalem in the 12th century was one of several women who ruled, built and developed Jerusalem as we see and walk it today. With her on this tour are Helen the mother of Constantin the Great who converted the Roman empire to Christianity. Helen commissioned the building of several churches in the 4th century, among them the most sacred to Christianity – the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. Less known but not less important is Eudocia and there are many more of which we will only meet some of.

To register for this tour, please press the button below. It will transfer you to my contact page, through which we will converse to refine all the details – any limitations you may have, where and when we meet, etc

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