My new book, edited with Stéphane Michonneau and @franckviltart, was published in late 2025. This multidisciplinary volume offers a new look at pilgrimages that occurred after World War I to the Western Front https://t.co/GjKVPSCxm5
Easter, Passover, and pilgrimages at "appointed times." See this week's Substack for my thoughts on these pilgrimages, and a roundup of pilgrimage news from around the world.
The Weekly Popper https://t.co/XNToH1oNQv
I am pleased to announce I have joined the Scientific Advisory Council of the 1914–1918 Heritage Mission for the UNESCO Funerary and memory sites of the First World War (Western Front).
https://t.co/eL7B9Xessx
There is still time to register for my talk on Saturday. The event is free but registration is required: New Hampshire Connections to Belleau Wood, France: World War I Soldiers and Marines and the Pilgrimages After the War https://t.co/0GB0Nt0S8M @NHHumanities
Are you curious about the ways pilgrimages lead to enhanced wellbeing? Pilgrimage is therapeutic in biological, psychological, social, and spir... https://t.co/AgeiucDRmA via @YouTube
As a pilgrimage site, The 'Devil Dog' fountain in Belleau, France has captivated me for years, and I'm thrilled to share what I've uncovered through years of research. My latest article on the fountain has been published by Marine Corps History https://t.co/OSn54EZTfT
1/ Thanks @zach_ota for sharing these photos. This is a glass vessel created to hold water from the “Devil Dog” fountain. The vessel is engraved with 1914-1918 to commemorate the years of WWI. The words Belleau Wood are also engraved,
Buried since the Roman destruction of the Hebrew capital, the ancient road once walked by thousands of pilgrims from the City of David to the Temple Mount is now open to the public.
Carved in stone, sealed under Jerusalem for millennia, it has been carefully uncovered step by step. Israelis can now walk the same stones as their forefathers.
📸 @cityofdavid
A truly historic moment - the newly opened Pilgrimage Road at the City of David is welcoming visitors for the first time in nearly 2,000 years.
This stone-paved path once carried pilgrims from the Pool of Siloam up to the Temple Mount for Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot, alive with shops and daily life during the Second Temple period.
Buried for centuries and uncovered stone by stone, it now offers the rare opportunity to walk the very road your ancestors walked, bringing history to life beneath your feet.
🎥 @sareltours@cityofdavid