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One Day Tour to Jerusalem

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This tour starts at  07:00 am from you hotel in Amman or Dead Sea & drive to King Hussein Bridge (Allenby)

After crossing Jordan – Israeli border, you will be met by your guide at the Israeli side and start your day tour with a panoramic view from The Mount of Olives which is part of the route from Jerusalem to Bethany and the place where Jesus stood when he wept over Jerusalem (an event known as Flevit super illam in Latin).

You will visit the holy sites of the three monotheistic religions, represented in Jerusalem starting from Wailing Wall – the surviving part of the defensive structure built by Herod the Great next to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Once near this place stood the Second Jerusalem Temple, which was destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD. The Wailing Wall was not part of the temple, and therefore, after the fall of the religious building, it turned into a shrine for the Jewish people, the significance of which increased from year to year.

Today, like many centuries ago, this place serves as a center of pilgrimage for believers and anyone can leave a message to the Lord here, regardless of nationality and religious beliefs.

Twice a year, religious ministers get messages from people, perform a special ceremony and bury them on the Mount of Olives.

If open to visitors, we will lead you in the footsteps of Adam to visit the construction of the temple of King Solomon, touch eternity and become a little closer to God – every stone here is saturated with history and holiness.

You will take a look at the third most important shrine of Islam – the Al Aqsa Mosque, consisting of 7 galleries and a majestic dome, as well as the Dome of the Rock hiding beautiful ornaments and patterns underneath.

It is believed that Dome of the Rock on the Temple Mount is the cornerstone of the universe, from which the creation of the world began.

Inside the temple, you can see the footprint of Prophet Muhammad and his three hairs. Among all the monuments of Islamic architecture, the Dome of the Rock is called one of the most ancient and beautiful.

We will be taken through Arab Market (“Souq”) and walk along the Path of Sorrow (Via Dolorosa), which has become the main sanctuary for millions of Christians all over the world. It was on this rocky road that Jesus Christ made his last earthly journey, carrying his cross to the place of crucifixion to today’s Church of the Holy Sepulcher.

Next, you will visit the tomb of King David, considered a holy place by Jews, Christians and Muslims and located on the ground floor and under the Last Supper room on Mount Zion.

 We will ascend to the upper Room of Zion or the Hall of the Last Supper where, according to Christian tradition, Jesus Christ spent the last Easter supper with his disciples on the night before being captured by the Romans and later crucified.

If time permits, we will take you to the Western part of Jerusalem to visit the famous “Menorah” (Candelabra) situated outside the Israel’s parliament “Knesset”. The “Menorah” shows us the history of the Jewish people from biblical times and until this day. Late afternoon drive to Allenby bridge to cross to Jordanian side where the driver will pick you up & drive you to your hotel in Amman or Dead Sea.

Rate per person in a group of:

Tour highlifgts:.

King Hussein Bridge (Allenby), The Mount of Olives, Jerusalem, Wailing Wall, Temple Mount, King Solomon, Al Aqsa Mosque, Arab Market (“Souq”), Path of Sorrow (Via Dolorosa), Church of the Holy Sepulcher, King David, Jews, Christians, Muslims, Last Supper, Mount Zion, Christ, Romans, “Menorah” (Candelabra), Amman.

Tour Highlights:

Amman Citadel, Roman Theatre, Rainbow Street, Jerash. Jerusalem, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Via Dolorosa, Western Wall, Dome of the Rock, Garden of Gethsemane, Church of All Nations, Church of the Holy Sepulcher, Mount of Olives, Church of St. Mary Magdalene.

The program includes:

  • Transfer by comfortable vehicle from Amman or Dead Sea hotels to King Hussein Bridge (Allenby) & back.
  • Transportation in Israel: 2 – 5 pax by driving guide, 6-18 pax by minibus – by16 – 20 seaters, 19 pax and more – by 35 – 55 seaters.
  • English-speaking guide border to border.
  • Parking fee

The program does not include:

  • Tips of any kind.
  • Border taxes.
  • Visa to Israel for restricted nationalities.
  • Personal expenses & travelers’ insurance, drinks etc.
  • Extra costs due to unanticipated changes in the itinerary for reasons beyond our control are not included.
  • Government Tax, Value Added Tax (VAT), or compulsory charges introduced after publication,
  • Any item not listed as “included”.

Tour options:

  • Optional activities are subject to availability.
  • Optional private or onsite local guides.
  • Guides in languages other than English are available upon request and subject to availability.
  • Optional special private vehicles are available upon request

Dress Code:

There is no strict dress code when visiting the temples of Jerusalem, as they are open to Christians of all faiths who have different traditions. For example, Catholic and Protestant women do not cover their heads in church. Orthodox Greek women adhere to the same tradition. In Russian tradition, it is customary to wear a headscarf in church. Therefore, in any of the temples in Jerusalem, you can meet women both with a covered head and with an uncovered one. The same applies to trousers and skirts. Feel free to dress how you feel comfortable. The only thing that is  inappropriate  when visiting temples is open knees and shoulders, so shorts and sleeveless jackets will have to be left for visiting another place.

Site topography:

All the visited sites are spread at a wide area at different locations and altitudes, and comfortable footwear is a necessity.

Walking distance

Moderate walking is required.

Changes overview:

The itinerary may change due to unanticipated circumstances, factors beyond our control, or at the guide’s discretion.

Important notes:

  • Staying Healthy
  • The time frame for this tour is approximate and subject to change according to the client’s preference.
  • The tour itinerary is subject to change due to factors beyond our control and event of unforeseen circumstances or at the guide’s discretion.
  • In the event of an increase in fuel prices, Via Jordan Travel & Tours reserves the right to raise the prices for its services without prior notice.
  • Optional excursions and activities are subject to availability.
  • Optional special private vehicles available upon request.
  • Copies of your passports are required in advance to issue port permits (if needed).
  • You need to take your passport or a good quality photocopy of it with you.
  • Reservations made less than 20 working days before the start of the service may be subject to change.
  • Your booking is confirmed only upon the provision of 50% prepayment.
  • Using sufficient amount of sun protection lotion is essential for avoiding sun burn.

Related Links:

Day Tours from Petra

Day Tours from Wadi Rum

Day Tours from the Dead Sea

Day Tours from Amman

Day Tours from Aqaba

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How to Get From Amman to Jerusalem

As the capital city of Jordan, Amman is the home of fascinating archaeological collections, delicious local and international cuisine and beautiful Roman architecture. Delve further into the ancient history and significant religious past of Jordan and its neighboring countries and you will discover Jerusalem; an Israeli city that is revered as one of the holiest sites on earth. It is difficult to choose between visiting Amman and Jerusalem as both cities have a unique charisma and a vast range of things to see and do. With a number of routes and good public transport connections, visitors can get from Amman to Jerusalem in one vacation.

As Jerusalem is situated within Israel, visitors from Amman will need to cross a border. In Jordan, there are three border crossings which cost around 8 JD (12 USD) per person to exit from Jordan or 100 ILS (30 USD) per person to exit from Israel.

Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem

The most convenient border crossing to get to Jerusalem is the King Hussein Bridge (Allenby) Terminal where buses operate directly to Jerusalem from the Israeli side of the border. Visitors cannot obtain a visa from the King Hussein Bridge and should ensure that they have the correct visas and paperwork before traveling from Amman to Jerusalem.

Opening hours for the King Hussein Bridge Crossing are: 08.00-22.00 (Sunday-Thursday) 08.00-13.30 (Friday & Saturday) 08.00-13.30 (Public Holidays)

Please note that the opening times of the border go by the Israeli clock and visitors should ensure that they arrive much earlier than the closing time and in accordance to the Jerusalem bus timetables (see below). Whether traveling by bus, private car or tour always expect long waiting times and security checks at border control.

Recommended: Join an organized tour from Amman to Jerusalem

By far the most convenient option to get from Amman to Jerusalem is by joining an organized tour. You won’t need to worry about the logistics of crossing the border, but rather can just sit back, relax, and enjoy each part of the journey to the fullest. There are several options for tours to Jerusalem, depending on what you’d like to see and how much time you have. We recommend this one day Jerusalem Tour from Amman . This tour, which leaves every Sunday and Thursday, includes all transport, touring, and guiding for just $199. Reserve your spot for the tour now – it’s the easiest and most efficient way to see Jerusalem from Amman.

How to Get From Amman to Jerusalem By Car

Car rental in Jordan is another to explore this country. With over one hundred car rental companies based in Amman alone, visitors will never be short of options. There are a number of car rental companies located at Queen Alia International Airport and visitors should expect to pay around 25-30JD (35-40 USD) per day for a new model with air conditioning and insurance.

Those who have arranged a rental car for their Jordanian adventure can drive to any of the three border crossings where they can then park the car and take onward transportation. Rental cars from Jordan will not be permitted into Israel . It takes just over one hour to drive from the city of Amman to the border crossing. Those who own a private vehicle can drive across the border but should check that they have the correct paperwork and licensing first.

How to Get From Amman to Jerusalem By Bus

Getting a bus from Amman to Jerusalem is a very good option as both countries operate buses to and from the border crossings.

Amman-Allenby/King Hussein Bridge Crossing

There is only one bus which operates from Amman to the border crossing each day. The bus departs from the JETT office at 7 am.

Panorama of Jerusalem's Old City in Israel

Shuttle Bus at Allenby/King Hussein Bridge

Once you have passed security control at the border, visitors then have to board a shuttle bus to the Israeli Terminal. The journey from the Jordanian Terminal to the Israeli Terminal is 5km and it departs every 1-2 hours depending on how busy it is. Visitors must pay the shuttle bus fee of 7 JD (10USD) per passenger plus 1.50JD (2USD) per luggage item. Those who do not wish to wait for the shuttle bus to depart can take a VIP service which costs around 110 USD per person. At the Israeli Terminal expect further waiting times as visitors will need to go through a passport and luggage check.

From Hussein Bridge to Jerusalem

Once you have reached the Israeli side of the crossing and have made it through the security checks, visitors can take a privately scheduled minibus directly to Jerusalem. The journey is just under four hours and visitors should find a tour operator and book this bus in advance. Some hotels can also arrange a bus transfer.

How to Get From Amman to Jerusalem By Taxi

It is very easy to get a taxi from the city of Amman to the border crossing. A taxi ride to the crossing will usually cost around 30JD (44USD) or even less if sharing the ride with others.

From Hussein Bridge Crossing-Jerusalem

Once you have boarded the shuttle bridge and got through security at the Israeli Terminal you can get a taxi straight into Jerusalem. There will be a number of taxis waiting at the terminal and the journey usually costs around 150 Shekels (43USD) and takes just under four hours.

Best way to Get From Amman to Jerusalem

In order to get from Amman to Jerusalem, visitors will need to take multiple forms of transport. By far the best option is to join an organized tour. If you decide you go to Jerusalem by yourself, you should take a bus or taxi to the crossing and then a taxi from the Israeli side of the crossing into Jerusalem. The taxis in Israel are affordable and offer ease and convenience. Tourist Jordan also offers private transfers in Jordan and private transport in Israel once borders have been crossed.

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One Day Tour to Jerusalem from Amman

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

  • Transfers in private, A/C, new vehicles with English speaking driver
  • All Entrance fees to All Sites listed in the itinerary & sightseeing
  • Lunch in Jerusalem
  • Exit tax out of Israel / Palestine
  • Exit tax out of Jordan
  • Transfers between border terminals.
  • Optional VIP Crossing Service at border
  • Personal items and any item not listed under "Rate Includes"
  • We can pick up from any hotel in Amman
  • Infants must sit on laps
  • Infant seats available
  • Service animals allowed
  • Not wheelchair accessible
  • Travellers should have a moderate physical fitness level
  • This experience requires good weather. If it’s cancelled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund
  • This experience requires a minimum number of travellers. If it’s cancelled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund
  • This is a private tour/activity. Only your group will participate
  • All sales are final and incur 100% cancellation penalties.

Similar experiences

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

  • You'll get picked up See departure details
  • 1 Jerusalem Stop: 9 hours Pick up from your hotel at the Dead Sea/Amman / Madaba and transfer to King Hussein / Allenby Bridge Israeli Terminal . We Drive to the Mount of Olives for a wonderful view of Jerusalem. Then go to the Pater Noster with the Lord's Prayer in different languages. After that From the Mount of Olives the traditional Palm Sunday route takes you to the foot of the hill and sees the Garden of Gethsemane with its ancient olive trees. Then Enter the Old City through the Dung gate to visit the Wailing (or western) Wall and view the Haram Al Sharif with the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. Walk the Via Dolorosa with its Stations of the Cross till you arrive at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, where Jesus was crucified and buried, and then rose again. Then Leave the city through the bazaars to the west by Jaffa Gate. Finally Drive through West Jerusalem to see the various landmarks. After this full day Return to King Hussein / Allenby Bridge and then to Dead Sea/Amman or airport for drop off at your destination . Read more
  • You'll return to the starting point

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

  • aidad460 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Best agency This is the best agency there can be, everything is fast, high quality, at affordable prices, thanks a lot to the organizers, especially to the best agent Aida and the best driver Aladdin Read more Written 28 February 2024
  • firsto2024 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles The First caring Company in Jordan , really ! Thank you JHT for making my dream come true , I felt safe & with the much care you give to details I thank you. Jordan is a safe place and with JHT you are never worry because from the first you meet the airport person till you depart they care . I very much enjoyed seeing Petra and Wadi Rum desert with enjoying the jeep ride with Bedouins , Which is the most exciting. Also food is gorgeous , never miss tasting all delicious food of Jordan. Thank you again for Aida , Mohammd the airport person , Hisham was my driver also. I was a solo traveller and felt like in my home & family. Read more Written 23 February 2024
  • Frank d 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Petra is one of the must see places in the world. Jordan Horizon did a wonderful job in arranging a trip to Petra and the Dead Sea for a group of us. I highly recommend their services. And I highly recommend a visit to Jordan. Petra has become one of my favorite places in the world. Read more Written 23 February 2024
  • Road41327090780 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Amazing 5 day trip to Jordan with Hasan! Hasan was fantastic! He brought us to so many wonderful locations and was really wonderful to talk to. We learned a lot about Jordan. Thank you Hasan! شكرًا We will certainly contact you when we return for another trip to Jordan. Read more Written 14 February 2024
  • Excursion790386 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Hasan is wonderful! We had an unbelievable time in Jordan largely due to our driver, Hasan. He was funny, generous, patient, and solicitous of all of our needs and wants. Very safe driver who took great care of us. Can't wait to come back to Jordan to bug him some more 😂 Read more Written 14 February 2024
  • GrandTour760123 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Don’t miss this trip! What a great trip! JHT provided us with a fantastic driver, Alladin, who was not only an excellent driver but a wonderful companion, very knowledgeable and considerate. Our guide through Petra, Moumoud, was exceptional. He showed us sites within the gorge that would easily be missed by others. The Dead Sea experience should not be missed! Thank you Jordan Horizons. You were completely reliable and we appreciated everything!! Read more Written 13 February 2024
  • Mark P 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Wonder-filled visit to Jordan with JHT My wife and I visited Jordan for 5 days after 2-weeks in Egypt. JHT arranged a care-free tour of Petra, Wadi Rum, and the Dead Sea ( illness curtailed our planned visit to Jerash). Our drivers Ahmad and Himash were professional and very helpful. They adapted to our needs and kept us on track. JHT arranged for an excellent guide at Petra, Mamoun, with a PhD and deep research experience of the site. He significantly enhanced our experience of this fascinating site. Altogether, in spite of some travelers illness, Jordan was a lovely place to visit with friendly people, amazing sites, and ease of getting around with JHT’s arrangements. Read more Written 1 February 2024
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  • 992cecyd 0 contributions 5.0 of 5 bubbles Great time exploring Jordan The tour was amazing, Hasan showed us around the most important cities and explained a lot of history while we were traveling between places, he was very welcoming and friendly. Would recommend this tour to get to know Jordan. Read more Written 25 January 2024
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More to explore in Amman

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

Most Recent: Reviews ordered by most recent publish date in descending order.

Detailed Reviews: Reviews ordered by recency and descriptiveness of user-identified themes such as waiting time, length of visit, general tips, and location information.

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one day tour from amman to jerusalem

One Day Tour to Jerusalem from Amman provided by Jordan Horizons Tours

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  • +962 6534 4996
  • DAY & MULTI DAYS TOURS TO JERUSALEM, ISRAEL AND PALESTINE
  • JORDAN AND ISRAEL/ PALESTINE TOURS
  • TRANSFERS BETWEEN JORDAN AND ISRAEL/ PALESTINE
  • CROSSING THE BORDERS
  • VISA & PASSPORTS
  • ISRAEL / PALESTINE

Visit Israel and Jerusalem from Jordan

Sightseeing Tours, Transfers & Travel Advice

We provide sightseeing tours and door to door transfers for ـIsrael, Jordan and Palestine. In addition, we also assist travelers with all information they need for crossing the borders.

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

We are more than an agency, we’re a team of professionals who strive to create the perfect travel experience for you. All of our tours are private and will be perfectly customized to your flight details; however, you are able to design or modify and existing tour according to your specific needs. Feel free to ask for a customized tour, designed just for you.

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Transfers and ground transport between Jordan and Israel/ Palestine

Make Your Ride Smother with our Transfers!

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Transfer from Jerusalem to Amman via Allenby/ King Hussein border

price from $245

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Transfer from Amman to Jerusalem through Allenby/ King Hussein border

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Private transfer from Amman to Jerusalem via Sheikh Hussein/ Jordan River Crossing border

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Private transfer from Jerusalem to Amman via Sheikh Hussein/ Jordan River Crossing Border

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Private departure transfer from Jerusalem to Queen Alia Airport via Allenby/ King Hussein Bridge

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Private arrival transfer from Queen Alia Airport to Jerusalem via Allenby/ King Hussein Bridge

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Private transfer from Amman to Tel- Aviv via Allenby/ King Hussein bridge

Tours to jordan and israel/ palestine.

Experience the beauty of Jordan and the Holy Land

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5- Day Tour of Jordan and Jerusalem Amman | Petra | Jerusalem | Bethlehem |

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one day tour from amman to jerusalem

Booking Form

P.O Box 755

19374 Ain al- Basha St. Amman

Tel. +962 6 534 4996

Fax: +962 6 535 3509

Email: [email protected]

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Day Trips & Sightseeing Tours to Israel & Palestine

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one day tour from amman to jerusalem

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Tours to Jerusalem, Israel/Palestine from Amman

2 day tour to jerusalem from amman & jordan (1 free day) (jr-jht-002).

This is a Two Day tour to Jerusalem from Amman or other points in Jordan visiting the main sites of this special city.  It starts and ends in Amman or elsewhere in Jordan. It includes the Mount of Olives, Gethsemane, the Old City of Jerusalem with the Via Dolorosa, Church of Holy Sepulchre, Al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock and Wailing Wall. The second day is free for you to explore Jerusalem on your own.

One Day Tour to Jerusalem from Amman or Dead Sea or Madaba (01 Day Tour ) (JR-JHT-001)

This is a Full Day tour to Jerusalem for those staying in Amman, or other points in Jordan, visiting the main sites of this special city. It starts and ends in Amman or elsewhere in Jordan (supplement applies). It includes the main sites of Jerusalem including the Mt of Olives, Gethsemane, Old City of Jerusalem with the Via Dolorosa, Church of Holy Sepulchre, Al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock and Wailing Wall. Back to Amman via Allenby/ King Hussien Bridge. This tour is not available on Fridays and Saturdays. 

02 Days - 01 Night Tour to Jerusalem & Bethlehem from Amman & Jordan (2 Full Days) (JR-JHT-003)

This is a Two Day tour to Jerusalem and Bethlehem from Amman or other points in Jordan visiting the main sites of this special city.  It starts and ends in Amman or elsewhere in Jordan.  It includes the Mount of Olives, Gethsemane, the Old City of Jerusalem with the Via Dolorosa, Church of Holy Sepulchre, Al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock and Wailing Wall.  It continues the next day to Bethlehem and the New City of Jerusalem.

02 Days - 01 Night Tour to Jerusalem, Nazareth and Galilee from Jordan (JR-JHT-004)

This is a two Day tour to Jerusalem and Bethlehem from Amman or other points in Jordan visiting the main sites of this special city.  It starts and ends in Amman or elsewhere in Jordan.  It includes the Mount of Olives, Gethsemane, the Old City of Jerusalem with the Via Dolorosa, Church of Holy Sepulchre, Al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock and Wailing Wall.  It continues the next day to the North to visit Nazareth and Galilee/Tiberius, before returning to Amman.

3 Days - 02 Nights Tour to Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth and Galilee from Jordan (JR-JHT-005)

This is a Three Day tour to Jerusalem and Bethlehem from Amman or other points in Jordan visiting the main sites of this special city.  It starts and ends in Amman or elsewhere in Jordan.  It includes the Mount of Olives, Gethsemane, the Old City of Jerusalem with the Via Dolorosa, Church of Holy Sepulchre, Al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock and Wailing Wall.  It continues the next day to Bethlehem and the New City of Jerusalem, and on the third day takes you to the North to visit Nazareth and Galilee/Tiberius, before returning to Amman.

03 Days - 02 Nights Tour to Jerusalem , Jericho, Qumran and Masada from Amman & Jordan (3 Full Days) (JR-JHT-006)

This is a Three Day tour to Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Jericho from Amman or other points in Jordan visiting the main sites of this special city.  It starts and ends in Amman or elsewhere in Jordan.  It includes the Mount of Olives, Gethsemane, the Old City of Jerusalem with the Via Dolorosa, Church of Holy Sepulchre, Al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock and Wailing Wall.  It continues the next day to Bethlehem and the New City of Jerusalem. On the last day the tour includes Jericho, Qumran, and Masada, before return to Amman.

4 Days - 03 nights Tour to Jerusalem , Jericho, Qumran, Masada , Nazareth and Galilee from Amman & Jordan (JR-JHT-007)

This is a Four Day tour to Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Jericho from Amman or other points in Jordan visiting the main sites of this special city.  It starts and ends in Amman or elsewhere in Jordan.  It includes the Mount of Olives, Gethsemane, the Old City of Jerusalem with the Via Dolorosa, Church of Holy Sepulchre, Al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock and Wailing Wall.  It continues the next day to Bethlehem and the New City of Jerusalem. On the third day the tour includes Jericho, Qumran, and Masada, and the final day concludes your tour with a trip to Nazareth and Galilee/Tiberius before returning to Amman.

02 Day Tour to Al Aqsa Mosque, Dome of the Rock, Hebron & Bethlehem (Islamic Tour ) (JR-JHT-009)

This is a Two Day tour to Jerusalem starts and ends in Jordan. Experience the top sights of Jerusalem. See popular Holy Land places such as the Mt. of Olives, Maqam Salman Al- Farisi, RabiatulAdawiyah and NabiDahoud. The Old City of Jerusalem, Al Aqsa Mosque, Dom of the Rock, Haet Al Boraq, and Khalif Omar’s Mosque. Next day, to Bethlehem to see the Nativity Church and the Shepherd Field before returning to Amman

03 Day Islamic Tour to Jerusalem & Holy Land (Islamic Tour ) (JR-JHT-010)

This is a Three Day tour Day tour to Jerusalem, Hebron and Bethlehem, starts and ends in Jordan. Experience the top sights of Jerusalem, Hebron and Bethlehem on these three days. See popular Holy Land places such as the Mt. of Olives, Gethsemane, the Old City of Jerusalem, Via Dolorosa, Al Aqsa Mosque, Dome of the Rock, Wailing Wall and the Holy Sepulchre. Next day, to Hebron to visit Masjed El Ibrahimi and Bethlehem to see the Nativity Church. Third day return to Amman.

Our Clients & Testimonials

Jordan Horizons Tour Company is Awsome! "We want to let everyone know that this company's customer service is wonderful. We had booked a Tour to "Petra" during a cruise. Unfortunately due to Corona Virus closures our trip was cancelled at the last minute. We contacted JHT to let tell them of the cancellation and requested a refund. Working with Andrea and Mohamed made things move smoothly. Even though the company was overwhelmed with other cancellations we received a full refund in a timely manner. We will certainly use this company when we get our cruise rescheduled." Terry R., TripAdvsior
Excellent, honest company during virus crisis "for a private tour with guide to Petra. We were already in Dubai when USA requested citizens come home immediately or be quarantined in Europe. We were touring Middle East and ending in Amsterdam. Of course, plane tickets had to change and we returned home. JHT was so kind to return our deposit without our requesting. That is sign of excellent company. Andrea and staff helped us immensely plan our tour. Thanks again and we are planning for next year and definitely we will do a ditto of this years plan but with extra days! Thanks again and Inshallah next year!" MoghaniALABAMA, TripAdvsior.com
Holiday "We had an amazing trip! We felt relaxed a looked after. Thank you to our driver Romi Badarneh. He was not only a driver, he also took care of us, made us feel welcomed and happy. He did above and beyond to ensure that we are feeling comfortable. We would recommend to travel to Jordan with this company. Ask for Romi" Gitana, TripAdvisor.com
Wadi Rum-Petra-Amman-Dead sea "We were really excited with our choice to book the in land activities with Jordan Horizon Tours. We were a company from 5 friends from Greece and Romi the driver made our trip excellent. Romi made us feel safe through our road trip and he deserves special thanks. You have to choose him if you decide visit Jordan. His driving skills are great, we had interesting conversation through travelling and he find us exceptional traditional spots for shopping and to try Jordan traditional cuisine. Generally it is a high standard company and the can create your schedule as you wish. We met Wadi rum, Petra, Dead Sea and Amman in 3 days!!! Thank you very much! A must go experience!!" John (the_Locophysio), TripAdvsior.com
Perfect Tour "Thank you to Andrea at Classic Wadi Rum Tours for contracting Jordan Horizons Tour! Our border crossing from Eilat - Aqaba was very quick and easy with a guide. Our driver Faed was great - he took us to Wadi Rum, then Petra, then to Amman. Having a private driver/tour not only saved us time, but he got us quickly through checkpoints, ordered us food, bought us tickets, and connected us with local tour guides (in Wadi Rum & Petra). Kimd Ahlgren, Tripadvisor.com
Wonderful experience "Excellent arrangement of the trip, very professional and kind driver, high quality of the local guide in Petra (speaking surprisingly good Italian!) and of the lunch (delicious!). Absolutely wonderful jeep tour of the Wadi Rum with an amazing guide. Last but not least, great customer care from the booking via email to the absolutely wonderful before and after our trip, always careful and supportive. We will surely ask JHT to organise the trip. Highly recommended!!" Claudia R, TripAdvsior.com
Excellent experience! Would recommend to everyone. "Jordan Horizons set the bar high from the start. Their professionalism is unmatched. Andrea helped us to organize a custom tour for our short stay in Jordan (4 days) at the last minute because our cruise ended up getting cancelled. Hisham (our driver) met us at the airport and took care of us very well for our entire stay. He was super friendly and informative, provided us with water, coffee and tea throughout our journey. He took excellent photos of us, and pointed out views/monuments throughout our trip which helped us capture our valuable memories. Mymapstoexplore, TripAdvisor.com
Petra and Wadi Rum Private Tour from Aqaba Port "This was a day we looked forward to and the company, guide, and drivers did not let us down. We were a party of 4 and had planned a day to see both Petra and Wadi Rum. Making reservations online was very easy and the company was very responsive to all of my questions prior to scheduling the day long tour. We were met right as the instructions said at the port and met our driver Youssef who drove us to Petra. He was very good about telling us about his country and things we saw along the way. Mary L., TripAdvisor.com
Blown away by the hospitality and kindness of Jordanians "This trip has been very unique and exceeded our expectations in different ways. From vast landscapes to a narrow siqs, from beautiful sunsets to a beautiful night skies, from deep valleys to high mountains and from cities to a local Bedouin camps, everything was mesmerising. Both Hisham and Suleiman are our friends now and we are happy to have come across these two beautiful souls. Inshallah we will meet soon again." Ronald D., favthemes.com

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Israel’s war on Gaza updates: Sexual violence no excuse for more violence

UN official says report finding “does not in any way legitimise further violence”, as Israeli continues to bomb Gaza.

Palestinians check destruction after an Israeli strike on Rafah, Gaza Strip, Monday, March 4, 2024. [Fatima Shbair/AP]

This live page is now closed. Following along with our continuing coverage of Israel’s war on Gaza here.

  • UN report finds credible reports sexual violence occurred on October 7, and in the occupied West Bank, but official says findings do not “in any way legitimise” further violence, calls for ceasefire and release of captives.
  • The number of children who have died as a result of malnutrition and inadequate medical care in Gaza has increased to 16.
  • Israel has arrested 55 people during several overnight raids across the occupied West Bank.
  • The Gaza Health Ministry says it has detected about one million cases of infectious diseases, as it described the medical situation in the Strip as “extremely catastrophic”.
  • At least 30,534 Palestinians have been killed and 71,920 wounded in Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7. The revised death toll in Israel from the October 7 Hamas attacks stands at 1,139.

Thanks for joining us

The live page is now closed. You can continue to follow our coverage of the war in Gaza here .

To learn more about how Israel has pushed more than 1.5 million Palestinians into Rafah in southern Gaza, read this interactive story .

And you can find more news, features and videos on the conflict here .

WATCH: Released Palestinian prisoners say they don’t feel free

Al Jazeera’s Bernard Smith reports from Ramallah in the occupied West Bank on how one young Palestinian woman recently released from Israeli prison is adapting to life back home.

Watch the video below:

Biden says will continue to push for six-week truce deal in Gaza

Biden says he is determined to continue advocating for a truce deal that would secure the release of Israeli captives held by Hamas and the establishment of a six-week ceasefire deal to allow a surge of aid.

The Biden administration has come under severe criticism for its unwavering support of Israel, with his administration vetoing a ceasefire resolution at the UN Security Council three times since the war in Gaza began.

I will not let up pushing for a deal that secures the release of the remaining hostages held by Hamas, brings an immediate ceasefire to Gaza for at least six weeks, and allows for a surge of aid to the entire Gaza Strip. — President Biden (@POTUS) March 4, 2024

Attack on Gaza healthcare facilities ongoing: Canadian doctor

During a week-long mission in Gaza, Dijeng Peng says the attacks on healthcare institutions in the coastal enclave were ongoing.

“Only in the past two days, I had to check in to see if my colleagues at the Emirati Maternity Hospital were alive – because the gates of that hospital were struck by a drone strike,” the Canadian doctor told Al Jazeera.

“Many people do not feel safe to provide care but they’re still doing essential care and looking after their patients and their community … it’s just horrendous.”

Peng said that a lack of food, water and housing has led to conditions of overcrowding and displacement, which in turn has led to the spread of infectious diseases.

“We are seeing so much communicable disease, such as respiratory infections and gastrointestinal disease, including a major outbreak of Hepatitis A,” he said, adding that these are preventable diseases that can be vaccinated against.

Norway to continue funding UNRWA: UN ambassador

Noway’s UN ambassador says the UN agency for Palestinian refugees is the “main lifeline” for Palestinians in Gaza “who find themselves in a humanitarian catastrophe”.

“Norway has decided to continue its funding. The needs of millions of people cannot be set aside because of the alleged participation of a small number of UNRWA-staff in the 7 October attacks,” Merete Fjeld Brattested said in a statement posted on the website of Norway’s UN mission.

“Norway urges other donors to reflect on the wider consequences of suspending funding to UNRWA in this time of extreme humanitarian distress.”

UNRWA suffered funding cuts after several of its staff were accused by Israel of involvement in the October 7 Hamas attack.

The UN and Palestinian officials have  called for continued funding for the agency’s “crucial work” since the announcement in January.

Another Israeli attack on aid seekers in Gaza City

An Al Jazeera live shot, featuring correspondent Ismail al-Ghoul, showed the moment when Israeli forces opened fire on a crowd of starving Palestinians attempting to access aid trucks.

Within the last hour, al-Ghoul and his crew were stationed at the Kuwaiti roundabout in Gaza City, when three aid trucks arrived to meet a crowd of thousands who had been waiting all day for humanitarian aid.

Just yesterday, the Kuwaiti roundabout saw an attack by Israeli forces that killed and injured dozens of aid seekers, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

As soon as the trucks arrived, the live shot shows, Israeli soldiers stationed nearby opened fire on the crowd, injuring some of them.

Some people at the roundabout told Al Jazeera that they had been waiting since 8am (It is now 12:45am the next day) and that only a small fraction of those present were able to get an aid box, which included water, flour and a few other supplies.

These attacks are becoming a near-daily occurrence as Palestinians in northern Gaza continue to suffer from a lack of food and water.

US VP Harris meets Gantz, calls on Hamas to accept truce deal

Kamala Harris in her meeting with Israeli War Cabinet member Benny Gantz has reiterated her support for Israel’s right to defend itself, a  readout from the White House says.

“She reiterated US support for Israel’s right to defend itself in the face of ongoing Hamas terrorist threats, and underscored our unwavering commitment to Israel’s security.”

The vice president also expressed “deep concern” about the deteriorating humanitarian conditions in Gaza, while urging Hamas to accept the latest six-week ceasefire proposal, which would allow a “surge of humanitarian assistance throughout Gaza”.

Harris’s comments come as President Biden is facing mounting pressure from voters over his support for Israel ahead of November’s presidential election.

Democrats are increasingly concerned that Biden’s stance on the war could cost him votes, especially in Michigan, one of a handful of battleground states likely to decide the outcome of the election.

Vessel steers away from Yemen after taking damage in attack

The cargo vessel that was reportedly targeted earlier today has extinguished a fire on board and is clear of the area near Yemen, according to UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO).

US-led coalition forces had responded after the vessel was attacked some 91 nautical miles (168km) southeast of Yemen’s Aden and the crew are reportedly unharmed.

The Houthis in Yemen said they targeted the MSC Sky in the Arabian Sea and identified it as an “Israeli ship”.

UKMTO had said an explosion had occurred near the vessel and another damaging the vessel, appearing to allude to two Houthi antiship missiles launched at the ship.

UKMTO Daily Summary 1600UTC 03 Mar 24 to 1600UTC 04 Mar 24 https://t.co/tOa68P17Ig #MaritimeSecurity #MarSec pic.twitter.com/W76C3rsjqN — United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) (@UK_MTO) March 4, 2024

Hezbollah claims new attack on Israeli forces

Hezbollah has claimed a new attack on Israeli forces, saying it targeted “a movement of Israeli enemy vehicles”.

This is the seventh attack the Lebanese armed group claimed on Monday, with other attacks claiming to target Israeli-occupied Kfarchouba and other sites with missiles, rockets and other weapons.

Earlier in the day, it had also released a short video which showed multiple attacks on Israeli positions during the past week, including with rockets.

Pro-Palestinian Jewish group wants to see end of US funding for Israel

Jewish Voice for Peace is determined to see a ceasefire in Gaza and an end to US funding for Israel.

Watch our video to learn more:

UN says Gaza sexual violence does not ‘legitimise’ more violence

UN official Pramila Patten’s press conference on the body’s report on sexual violence also discussed captives previously and currently held in Gaza and emphasised a need for an immediate ceasefire in the besieged enclave.

She said her team “found clear and convincing information that sexual violence, including rape and sexualised torture” has been committed against captives released from Gaza and that there are “reasonable grounds to believe that such violence may still be ongoing against those still held in captivity”.

“This finding does not in any way legitimise further violence but actually reinforces the need for an urgent ceasefire, as continuing this war will not serve to protect hostages from the risk of further sexual violence. On the contrary, for the sake of hostages, a ceasefire should be a priority.”

She “called” on Hamas to release all captives unconditionally and “encouraged” the government of Israel to work more closely with her office.

UN report finds sexual violence on October 7 and in West Bank

An anticipated report by the UN has found that instances of sexual violence were committed during the October 7 attacks inside Israel as well as against Palestinians in the West Bank.

Pramila Patten, the special representative on sexual violence in conflict, discussed with reporters the results of a mission to Israel and the occupied West Bank between January 29 to February 14, the parameters of which were pre-approved by Tel Aviv.

She said there were “reasonable grounds to believe conflict-related sexual violence, including rape and gang rape, occurred during the October 7 attacks in at least three locations”, including at the Nova music festival.

She added that her team did not interview any survivors of sexual violence during the attacks and: “In Kibbutz Be’eri … Some allegations of sexual violence, previously reported and highly publicised in the media, were determined by us to be unfounded”.

In the West Bank, her team found “cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment of Palestinians, men and women in detention” along with “disproportionate physical and sexual violence, including sexual harassment and threats of rape during house raids, including at night, and at checkpoints.”

UNRWA chief warns of serious consequences if agency goes unfunded

The head of the UN Palestinian refugee agency, UNRWA, has warned that “without additional funding, we will be in uncharted territory with serious implications for global peace and security.”

“We are functioning hand to mouth,” Philippe Lazzarini told the 193-member UN General Assembly.

The US, the largest donor to UNRWA, and other countries paused funding after Israel accused 12 UNRWA staff of taking part in the October 7 attacks.

UNRWA says Israel authorities tortured detained staff

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) has said that Israeli authorities tortured some of its staff members during detention and interrogation.

“Some of our staff have conveyed to UNRWA teams that they were forced to confessions under torture and ill-treatment” while being asked about the October 7 attack on Israel, the agency said in a statement to AFP.

Several killed in Israeli attack on southern Gaza

Our colleagues at Al Jazeera Arabic are reporting multiple deaths following an Israeli bombing that hit a house near the European Hospital, east of Khan Younis.

Israeli forces injure Palestinian teen near Hebron

The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) says that a 16-year-old has been shot in his lower body in Fawwar refugee camp in the southern occupied West Bank.

Palestinian media showed footage of the transfer of the boy’s evacuation to hospital by the PRCS.

US in support of UN probe into killing of aid seekers

US Department of State spokesman Matthew Miller says the US is in support of the UN’s investigation into an attack on Palestinians waiting for aid distribution in Gaza City that killed over 100 and left more than 700 injured, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

Elsewhere in the US government,  the White House said a temporary ceasefire in Gaza was essential to reaching a deal that would free Israeli captives in Gaza, and called on Hamas to accept the terms currently on the table, as talks to secure a truce were under way in Cairo.

US Muslim groups denounce planned event to sell occupied Palestinian land

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the US’s largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organisation, along with American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), have called for a federal probe into a planned “real estate” event at a synagogue in Teaneck, New Jersey, the US.

The event, reportedly organised by “My Home in Israel Real Estate,” a group based in the occupied West Bank, is set to occur on March 10.

In a statement, CAIR’s Dina Sayedahmed said: “Houses of worship should be sacred spaces, and it is deeply concerning to see anyone use a house of worship to allegedly flout international law by selling off stolen land.”

In a statement, AMP’s Chairperson Wassim Kanaan said the groups are mobilising their communities to protest the planned event.

“We are watching Israel commit genocide in Gaza and pillage Palestinians’ homes in the West Bank and Jerusalem. These are both stark violations of international law,” the statement said.

Israeli military attacks southern Lebanon, confirms interception over Israel

The Israeli military has released footage that it says shows an attack by its warplanes on “several military buildings” belonging to Hezbollah in southern Lebanon.

It also said a “suspicious aerial target” crossed into Israel from Lebanese territory and was intercepted by air defences.

This comes hours after alarms sounded in Upper Galilee near the Lebanese border with reports indicating a possible drone intrusion. The Israeli military said rocket fire alarms sounded after the interceptor was launched.

The Israeli military also reported interceptions of incoming fire from the Mount Dov area and said it targeted the launch sites in southern Lebanon with shelling.

Watch: Aid packages airdropped on Gaza

A Palestinian activist has shared footage of humanitarian aid being dropped in the northern Gaza Strip.

The video, verified by Al Jazeera’s fact-checking unit Sanad, shows residents running to reach the spots where the aid was being parachuted, in order to secure essential supplies amid Israel’s siege on the coastal enclave.

The person who posted the video, Jannat Noufer, called this airdrop “the daily event of humiliation in northern Gaza”, as starving Palestinians are forced to chase packages of supplies that are inadequate to their needs, while Israel continues to block aid from coming in.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by ganna (@gannat.nofal)

Translation: People are running behind an umbrella of hunger, the daily episode of air humiliation in northern Gaza.

Attacks on Palestinians rise after sanctions imposed on Israeli settlers: PA official

Ayman Nobani

Reporting from Nablus, occupied West Bank

Amir Daoud from the Palestinian Authority’s commission on the separation wall and settlements says settler attacks have risen despite American, British and French sanctions.

“In February, settlers carried out 129 attacks in the occupied West Bank with 38 attacks concentrated in the Nablus governorate, 37 in Hebron and 17 in the Ramallah area,” Daoud told Al Jazeera.

“Last month also witnessed a significant and dangerous escalation in confiscation and theft of citizens’ property, cattle and agricultural equipment as well as vehicles, money, gold and mobile phones,” he added.

Attacks, Daoud said, escalated after the sanctions were imposed in what he calls “a clear challenge to the world and a message that sanctions will not deter settlers”.

Israel releases alleged audio files of UNRWA employees amid row

The Israeli military has released short audio files that it alleges are recordings of two employees of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) who are accused of participating in the October 7 attack.

It claims both worked as teachers in UNRWA schools, were inside Israel and took young women as hostages back to the Gaza Strip.

In January, Israel alleged that a dozen of the agency’s employees were involved in the October 7 attacks on southern Israel. This recording, released over a month later, is some of the first evidence it has presented to the public.

Israeli officials have said they wish to dismantle the UN agency , which they claim is heavily infiltrated by Hamas.

Western allies of Israel, including the US, have cut funding to UNRWA – the main organisation delivering aid to Palestinians – at a time when millions in the besieged enclave are in dire need of humanitarian relief.

Israel has also been heavily hampering the flow of humanitarian aid to Gaza despite international criticism and condemnation.

Employee of US embassy in Israel dies

US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller has confirmed media reports of the death of a “direct hire” employee of the embassy but did not offer many details.

“I can confirm the death of a direct hire of the US embassy employee in Jerusalem,” Miller said during a news briefing.

“It’s an incident that is under investigation,” he continued, saying this is a step that is always taken when an employee dies and there is no indication of foul play.

Miller confirmed that the person is an American citizen but would not say what job he or she did for the embassy.

We will bring you more updates on this matter as soon as they become available.

Israel says UN trying to keep quiet on report about Hamas attacks

Israel’s foreign minister says he has recalled the country’s UN ambassador for consultations over alleged attempts by the organisation to keep quiet a report on what he describes as “mass rapes” committed by Hamas.

“I ordered our ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, to return to Israel for immediate consultations regarding the attempt to keep quiet the serious UN report on the mass rapes committed by Hamas and its helpers on October 7,” Foreign Minister Israel Katz said in a statement.

“Despite the authority granted to him, the UN secretary general did not order the convening of the security council in light of the findings, in order to declare Hamas a terrorist organization and impose sanctions on its supporters,” Katz said.

A look at the history of US vetos on Israel resolutions at the UN

As the UN General Assembly meets to discuss the most recent US veto of a Security Council resolution that would have called for a ceasefire in Gaza, take a look at its history of using its veto power, which belongs to only four other countries (China, France, Russia and the UK), to protect Israel.

INTERACTIVE - US veto power UNSC to protect Israel-updated

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Amman Adventure: A 2-Day Cultural Itinerary

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February 7, 2024 · 2 min read

Amman 2 Days Itinerary

Embark on a 2-day journey through the heart of Amman, a city brimming with history and culture. Your adventure begins at the Roman Amphitheater, an architectural marvel that transports you back to the grandeur of ancient civilizations. Spend an hour immersed in its theatrical past before ascending to the Amman Citadel. Here, allocate two hours to wander through the historic site that offers panoramic views of the city and a glimpse into its storied history. As the sun begins to set, stroll down Rainbow St., a characteristic neighborhood known for its vibrant atmosphere, where you can spend the evening exploring for two hours. On your second day, dive into the bustling life of Al Balad – Downtown Amman. Spend two hours meandering through the market's alleys, absorbing the local flavors and crafts. Next, the King Abdullah Mosque awaits, offering an hour of spiritual reflection within its magnificent structure. Continue your cultural exploration at The Boulevard, where historic buildings and characteristic neighborhoods provide a picturesque backdrop for an hour's walk. As the day progresses, ascend Mount Nebo, a site of religious significance and breathtaking views, for another hour. Your final stop is The Archaeological Site of Jerash, where two hours will allow you to step back in time amidst ancient ruins and historic grandeur. This 2-day itinerary promises a blend of awe-inspiring sights and immersive experiences in the enchanting city of Amman.

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  • Day 1: Ancient Wonders and Colorful Streets of Amman

Roman Amphitheater

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Begin your Amman adventure with a step back in time at the Roman Amphitheater. Nestled in the heart of the city on Al-Hashemi St., this grand structure is a testament to the city's ancient past. Spend an hour marveling at the well-preserved tiers of seating, once capable of holding thousands of spectators. Imagine the roar of the crowd and the spectacles that took place in this architectural marvel that has withstood the test of time.

Attraction Info

  • Al-Hashemi St., Amman, Jordan
  • Suggested tour duration: 1-2 hour
  • Open on Fri-Sat,8:00am-10:00pm;Open on Mon-Thu, Sun,8:00am-8:00pm

Recommended Nearby Restaurants

Bourj Al Hamam

Amman Citadel

After soaking in the historic atmosphere of the Roman Amphitheater, make your way to the Amman Citadel. Perched on a hill, this historic site offers a panoramic view of the city and a glimpse into the civilizations that shaped it. With a two-hour visit, explore the ruins of the Temple of Hercules, the Umayyad Palace, and the Byzantine church. The Citadel is not just a journey through Jordan's history, but a chance to walk through the pages of human civilization.

  • K. Ali Ben Al-Hussein St. 146, Amman, Jordan
  • Suggested tour duration: 2-3 hour
  • Open from 8:00am-7:00pm

Rainbow St.

Conclude your first day with a leisurely stroll down Rainbow St., a vibrant artery in the heart of Amman. This characteristic neighborhood is a melting pot of culture, cuisine, and commerce. Spend a couple of hours wandering through its colorful alleys, sampling local delicacies, and perhaps picking up unique souvenirs. Rainbow St. is the perfect place to experience the city's modern pulse against the backdrop of its ancient soul.

  • Amman, Jordan

Where to Stay Tonight

Antika amman hotel, nomads hotel, antica old apartment al-lwebdeh, arabesque hotel.

  • Day 2: Amman's Ancient Wonders and Bustling Bazaars

Al Balad – Downtown Amman

Kickstart your second day in Amman with a vibrant stroll through Al Balad – Downtown Amman. Immerse yourself in the local culture as you navigate through the bustling market streets. With a two-hour exploration window, you'll have ample time to soak in the lively atmosphere, haggle with friendly vendors, and discover hidden gems in the heart of the city.

Blue Fig

King Abdullah Mosque

Next, a serene visit to the King Abdullah Mosque awaits. Spend an hour marveling at the stunning architecture and spiritual ambiance of this grand mosque. As a non-Muslim visitor, you'll find this experience both enlightening and respectful, offering a glimpse into the religious practices and artistic heritage of Jordan.

  • XW67+F4H, Amman, Jordan
  • Open from 3:20am-10:00pm

The Boulevard

Continue your cultural journey at The Boulevard, where historic buildings and characteristic neighborhoods paint a picture of Amman's rich history. In this hour-long visit, wander through the elegant avenues, admire the contemporary design, and feel the pulse of the city in this modern yet historical setting.

  • Boulevard, Jamal Al Juqah, Amman, Jordan
  • Open from 10:00am-0:00am

Ascend to spiritual heights with a visit to Mount Nebo, an hour's journey into the past. This significant site, with its ancient church and panoramic viewing platform, offers breathtaking views and a profound sense of history. Stand where Moses is believed to have seen the Promised Land, and let the historical and spiritual significance wash over you.

  • Open 24 hours

The Archaeological Site of Jerash

Conclude your day with a two-hour exploration of The Archaeological Site of Jerash. Step back in time as you walk through the ancient town, one of the best-preserved Roman provincial towns in the world. The historic site, with its colonnaded streets, temples, and theatres, will leave you in awe of the civilizations that once thrived here.

  • Open on Thu-Sun,8:00am-7:00pm;Open on Mon-Wed,8:00am-6:30pm

Jerash Rest House

Hadrian's Gate Hotel

Dibeen eco farm house, apartment ground floor, the blue house "gerasa", top things to do in amman-2024.

Amman Citadel

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Desperation and death surround an aid delivery in northern Gaza

JERUSALEM — It was hunger that drove Ibrahim al-Rifi from his house in Gaza City at 2 in the morning Thursday. It had been months since he could find bread for his wife and daughters in war-ravaged northern Gaza. Flour sold for close to $1,000 a bag, and even the animal feed many had turned to was running out. Some people are eating grass, the United Nations has said.

Rifi and two cousins set out in the darkness on rumors that aid trucks were on the way. As for thousands of others, hunger overcame their fear of the obvious dangers from Israeli troops and desperate crowds.

Hours later, after one of the most horrific episodes in a war that has produced so many, Rifi returned with hands empty but bloody. Both cousins were injured and Rifi had had to cower amid the dead in an early morning melee that erupted when the rare aid convoy passed an Israeli military checkpoint and entered Gaza City.

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

Video captures gunshots and tracer fire

Path of aid trucks

People run and duck for cover, lifeless bodies lie on road

Mediterranean Sea

al-Rashid street

Israeli military outpost

Satellite © Planet Labs 2024

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

Israeli armored vehicles

Video captures Israeli gunshots and tracer fire

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

More than 100 people were killed and 700 injured, according to Palestinian officials, after thousands of civilians swarmed the trucks and Israeli troops opened fire. Much remains unclear, however, with contradictory claims from Israelis and Palestinians about what prompted a stampede around the trucks, the role of Israeli gunfire, and how many people were shot as distinct from being injured by the crush of people.

On Friday, France, Italy and Germany called for an independent investigation into what happened, following earlier criticism by French President Emmanuel Macron of the actions of Israeli soldiers. President Biden said Friday that the United States would launch an airdrop campaign to deliver aid to Gaza.

Thursday morning’s deadly event — unfolding as the enclave passed the milestone of 30,000 killed in the war — seemed to fulfill growing warnings that ongoing combat and spiraling deprivation are forcing Gazans into a state of utter chaos.

“I went to bring them food and I returned laden with death and blood,” Rifi said.

This account of the tragedy is based on 12 interviews with eyewitnesses, physicians, aid workers and Israeli military and U.N. officials. In addition, analysis of dozens of videos, including an edited video released by the Israel Defense Forces, reveals that crowds ran and ducked while lifeless bodies lay in the road near two Israeli armored vehicles.

A U.N. team carrying medicine, vaccines and fuel on Friday was able to reach al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, where it witnessed “a large number of gunshot wounds” among about 200 patients who had been injured during the arrival of the humanitarian convoy on Thursday, said Stéphane Dujarric, spokesman for U.N. Secretary General António Guterres.

Hospital staffers told the U.N. team they had initially admitted more than 700 injured in the Thursday incident, with all but the 200 or so now released, and had received “the bodies of more than 70 killed,” Dujarric said. “I’m not aware that our team examined the bodies of those killed. My understanding, from what [U.N. staff] saw” among those “receiving treatment, is that there was a large number of gunshot wounds,” he said.

The Associated Press reported that the head of another Gaza City hospital, al-Awda, said that 176 wounded were brought there, 142 of whom had suffered gunshot wounds.

Chaotic and dangerous handouts

Sometime early Thursday, Israeli officials said, a convoy of 38 flatbed trucks crossed Wadi Gaza, the creek bed that marks the unofficial dividing line between north and south Gaza.

In the south, where more than a million refugees are crowded into makeshift camps, at least some food trucks cross almost daily from Egypt and southern Israel. Very few have been allowed to travel on to the north, where about 300,000 Gazans are estimated to be living amid the fallen concrete and bent rebar of shattered buildings.

Israel strictly controls access to the north and has so far refused to regularly open more entry points. The United Nations said the last major aid delivery to the north was on Jan. 23. A convoy making an attempt on Feb. 5 came under fire despite coordinating with the Israeli military, Philippe Lazzarini, head of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, UNRWA, told reporters Thursday.

“When you do a deconfliction, and despite the deconfliction, you are still shot at, you think twice before going the next time,” Lazzarini said.

The lack of aid is creating starvation conditions in the north, according to small U.N. scouting teams that have managed to enter the area in recent weeks. Residents living amid the rubble say they have scoured every inch of the area for food.

“Without mercy, we have begun to feed on the grass of the ground,” Yousri al-Ghoul, 43, told The Washington Post in a phone interview Thursday.

He was among a swelling crowd of Gazans that began gathering late Wednesday on Gaza City’s al-Rashid Street. They had read reports on Telegram or heard by word of mouth that a convoy was heading for the Nabulsi traffic circle on the street. But no one knew when exactly it was due to arrive or seemed able to say who was sending the aid.

U.N. officials said the trucks were not theirs. The IDF coordinates the movement of humanitarian and commercial goods throughout Gaza, but it has declined to say who paid for the convoy, what goods it was carrying or who contracted the truck drivers. It remains unclear what security agents may have been accompanying the convoy.

Thursday’s was the fourth overnight convoy to travel north in recent days, the military said. The pre-dawn timing was meant to avoid attracting dangerous crowds, according to a person familiar with the deliveries who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter.

As word spread that another convoy was coming, more and more Gazans came out from where they were sheltering.

Aid groups have warned that handouts are becoming more chaotic and dangerous throughout the Gaza Strip . An off-target coastal airdrop of food parcels by the Jordanian air force last week caused dozens of civilians to plunge into the sea in pursuit. Numerous convoys have been looted. As order collapses, U.S. officials have reportedly warned Israel that Gaza is becoming “Mogadishu.”

At least two Israeli armored vehicles were present on al-Rashid Street as aid trucks drove by, according to The Post’s analysis of visuals and numerous witness accounts. More Israeli troops were positioned at a military outpost 400 yards to the south .

It was cold and still dark an hour and a half before sunrise as the trucks approached, Rifi said.

The head of the convoy passed the checkpoint about 4:40 a.m., IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said late Thursday. The military was deployed to keep Rashid Street, a coastal north-south route, open as a humanitarian corridor, he said.

As the trucks arrived, still under the cover of darkness, an Israeli drone filmed the scene from above using a thermal camera. The video, published by the IDF, shows hundreds of people streaming toward the trucks as they move slowly north along al-Rashid Street.

Israelis described the scene as an attack on the trucks, beginning about 4:45, resulting eventually in what the officials said was limited Israeli fire and civilians being crushed by the vehicles and one another.

“A mob ambushed the aid trucks, bringing the convoy to a halt,” Hagari said. But multiple witnesses said the real panic didn’t start until Israeli soldiers and tanks began firing, hitting civilians and sparking a stampede. Contrary to Israeli statements, Palestinians say the bulk of deaths and injuries were due to Israeli fire and not the stampede.

“There were tens of thousands of people scrambling to get food, and suddenly, without any warning, the Israeli tanks started firing,” said Rifi, who had been trying with his cousins to get at the parcels.

They ran, he said, as people nearby fell. At one point, Rifi hid among the bodies, he said, before taking shelter in an abandoned house. The firing continued for about 30 minutes, he said. He saw one of his cousins crawling to safety, his leg bloody. He would learn that both cousins had been hit.

“They opened fire on us randomly,” he said. “This coincided with the firing of a large number of artillery shells, and shrapnel flew everywhere.”

The footage shared by the IDF was edited, making it hard to determine the sequence of events. But at one point, numerous bodies can be seen lying on al-Rashid Street alongside two Israeli military vehicles, as the trucks continue slowly northward.

At the same location, while bodies are still visible on the road, the drone camera abruptly pans and zooms in to show people running away, some ducking and hiding behind walls.

Video filmed by Al Jazeera, at an unknown time, shows people scrambling over a berm to get away from gunfire as red tracer rounds light up the sky. The Post geolocated the footage to the intersection of al-Rashid and Aoun al-Shawa streets, about 700 yards from where drone footage showed lifeless bodies on the road.

The first tracer rounds were aimed at or near ground level, based on their trajectory seen in the beginning of the video. Later rounds appear to be shot higher. The Post could not verify if anyone was hit or harmed by these shots. When tracer ammunition is used, the base of the fired projectile ignites, leaving an intense, bright trail of light along the flight path. The ammunition is commonly used to illuminate the trajectory of gunfire to improve the accuracy of targeting.

Ghoul said he hid at the first sound of gunfire. He could still hear shots two hours later when he made his way toward the Shati refugee camp west of the city, where his family is sheltering. He got home with little to show for his harrowing night.

“What arrived were some canned goods for which people paid in blood today,” he said.

Israeli officials disputed the accounts of heavy Israeli firing and denied that any tank shells were fired. Hagari described only “a few warning shots in the air” meant as crowd control.

A second, more deadly encounter occurred after the final convoy truck had passed and some of the civilians turned toward a tank and soldiers at the checkpoint, officials acknowledged.

“The soldiers fired warning shots in the air and then fired toward those that posed a threat and didn’t move away,” a military official said. They declined to estimate how many were hit.

Overwhelmed hospitals

By 6:30 a.m., journalists in the area were posting images of bodies, injured people and bloodstained aid packs. Survivors were helping get the wounded out any way they could.

A video posted by Shehab news agency on Telegram and verified by The Post from Kamal Adwan Hospital showed it and other facilities being overwhelmed. Hossam Abu Safia, the hospital’s director, told The Post that 12 bodies and 175 injured had arrived, many of them victims of multiple gunshot wounds.

Mohammad Salha, a physician at al-Awda Hospital, said surgeons had performed three operations, including amputations, under battery-powered lights and had at least 12 to go.

“By the end of this day, the operating room will lose the ability to operate,” he told The Post on Thursday.

Rifi carried his cousins on his own tuk-tuk, or three-wheeled vehicle, making two trips to four hospitals before finding help at al-Awda. They were examined, he said, but are still waiting for treatment.

He will not go back to another aid drop, Rifi said.

“I would rather die of hunger than be shot.”

Harb and Piper reported from London and Baran from San Francisco. Hazem Balousha in Amman, Jordan, Evan Hill in New York, Claire Parker in Cairo, Louisa Loveluck in London, Karen DeYoung and Cate Brown in Washington, and Loveday Morris in Berlin contributed to this report.

Israel-Gaza war

Israel-Gaza war: Gaza health officials said more than 100 people were killed after a crowd converged on an aid convoy in Gaza City on Thursday. Palestinian officials and eyewitnesses blamed the casualties on Israeli gunfire; Israeli officials blamed a stampede near the aid convoy. President Biden said Friday that the United States would launch an airdrop campaign to deliver aid to Gaza .

Middle East conflict: Tensions in the region continue to rise. As Israeli troops aim to take control of the Gaza-Egypt border crossing, officials in Cairo warn that the move would undermine the 1979 peace treaty. Meanwhile, there’s a diplomatic scramble to avert full-scale war between Israel and Lebanon .

U.S. involvement: U.S. airstrikes in Iraq and Syria killed dozens of Iranian-linked militants , according to Iraqi officials. The strikes were the first round of retaliatory action by the Biden administration for an attack in Jordan that killed three U.S. service members .

  • Chaotic aid delivery turns deadly as Israeli, Gazan officials trade blame February 29, 2024 Chaotic aid delivery turns deadly as Israeli, Gazan officials trade blame February 29, 2024
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  • U.S. to launch airdrop campaign over Gaza, Biden says, as humanitarian crisis worsens March 1, 2024 U.S. to launch airdrop campaign over Gaza, Biden says, as humanitarian crisis worsens March 1, 2024

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

Middle East Crisis Parties to Cease-Fire Talks Offer Mixed Signals

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  • Families of hostages held in Gaza starting a march from the site of the Nova music festival in Re'im, Israel, to Jerusalem. Amir Levy/Getty Images
  • Palestinians waiting for fresh bread in Rafah, the southernmost city in Gaza, which is now packed with people displaced by fighting and evacuation orders. Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  • Children pulling a cart filled with water containers in Rafah. Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  • Israel's Iron Dome missile defense system intercepting rockets fired from Lebanon. Jalaa Marey/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  • A memorial at the site of the Nova music festival, where hundreds of Israelis were killed in the Hamas-led Oct. 7 terrorist attacks that set off the war in Gaza. Ronaldo Schemidt/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  • A destroyed car in Rafah. Israel insists that its plan to invade the city will go forward. Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  • Israeli army vehicles moving along the Gaza border. Jack Guez/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Hamas insists it is being flexible in talks, but is prepared to continue the war.

Parties haggling over a possible cease-fire in Gaza offered mixed signals on Wednesday, with Hamas’s political leader saying that the group was ready to keep fighting Israel while the president of Egypt said that a truce could be reached “in the next few days.”

The Hamas leader, Ismail Haniyeh, said in a televised speech that the group was open to the mediated talks with Israel, but that “any flexibility we show in the negotiation process is a commitment to protecting the blood of our people, matched by a readiness to defend them.”

President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of Egypt, which is brokering the talks along with Qatar and the United States, offered a rosier view, saying that, “God willing, in the next few days, we will reach a cease-fire agreement” to bring “real relief” to the people of Gaza. The prediction matched that of President Biden, who said that a deal could come as soon as next week.

In public, however, Hamas and Israel are sticking with their longstanding positions and not signaling any breakthrough. The two sides have not met face to face, instead negotiating through mediators in Doha, Cairo and Paris. Hamas leaders continue to demand that Israel agree to a permanent cease-fire and withdraw all its troops from Gaza, while Israel has insisted that it will continue fighting until Hamas is eliminated, suggesting it is not prepared to agree to a long-term truce.

In a news conference on Wednesday night, Yoav Gallant, Israel’s defense minister, said he was reluctant to comment on Mr. Biden’s remarks that a deal is imminent. “I really hope he’s right,” Mr. Gallant said.

Qatar’s foreign ministry said this week that talks were continuing and it was too early to speculate about a resolution. Mr. Haniyeh did not comment on specific terms of a cease-fire deal that could be under discussion, and it was not clear whether his remarks reflected real reservations or were a negotiating tactic.

The start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, around March 10, has emerged as a target for mediators to hammer out a truce in the war, which started with an Oct. 7 Hamas-led attack on Israel that authorities there say killed at least 1,200 people.

Mr. Haniyeh appeared to raise the stakes for reaching a deal in the coming days, calling on Palestinians in Jerusalem and the Israeli-occupied West Bank to defy Israeli restrictions and march to the Aqsa mosque to pray at the start of Ramadan. That creates the prospect of clashes if Palestinians attempt to approach the mosque, one of the holiest sites in Islam and a longtime flashpoint in relations with Israel.

Israel has restricted access to the Aqsa mosque for West Bank Palestinians, and it has severely limited movement within the West Bank since the start of the war in Gaza. Israeli officials are debating whether to place further restrictions on access to the mosque for some members of the country’s Arab minority, a move that could spark further unrest.

With the war’s death toll in Gaza nearing 30,000, according to health officials in the territory, pressure is building on Israel and the Biden administration, its chief ally, to secure a cease-fire. Israel has offered at least one significant concession , telling Qatari, Egyptian and U.S. mediators in Paris last week that it was ready to release 15 Palestinians jailed on serious terrorism charges in exchange for five female Israeli soldiers being held in Gaza, according to officials.

But a Hamas spokesman, Basem Naim, told The New York Times on Tuesday that the group had yet to formally receive “any new proposals” since the Paris meeting. Mr. Haniyeh met on Monday with the emir of Qatar and accused Israel of dragging its feet in the talks, according to a Hamas statement.

Israeli officials have said the goal is to reach a deal before the start of Ramadan. An Israeli delegation — including professionals from Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency, and its military — traveled to Qatar this week for more discussions, including over such details as the identities of the hostages and prisoners to be exchanged, according to an Israeli official.

An Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak to the press, said the Israeli team was still in Doha on and would return to Israel on Thursday. The official said it was still not clear whether the talks would continue in Egypt next week.

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad , Nada Rashwan and Adam Sella contributed reporting.

— Hwaida Saad and Shashank Bengali

A U.N. aid official warns that Gaza is close to famine.

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At least a quarter of Gaza’s population is “one step away from famine,” a U.N. humanitarian aid official has warned, as aid groups say that people are so hungry they are resorting to eating leaves, donkey feed and food scraps.

One in six children under 2 years old in northern Gaza, where the United Nations says it has not been able to deliver any aid since early this month because of security risks and Israeli restrictions, is suffering from acute malnutrition, the official, Ramesh Rajasingham, told the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday.

His remarks came the same day as the Gaza health ministry said that a total of six children had died from what it described as dehydration and malnutrition, including two infants at Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza. The ministry did not provide further details.

The fighting, damage from the war and Israeli restrictions on essential goods entering Gaza have decimated the territory’s ability to feed itself through farming, livestock and fishing, Mr. Rajasingham said.

Farmers have had to abandon their crops to flee the fighting or because there is not enough water to sustain them; livestock have been killed in the fighting or perished from lack of food and water; fishing, once an important source of food and income for Gazans, is now impossible, he said.

His remarks echoed a new World Bank report that found that Gaza’s total economic output had shriveled by more than 80 percent in the last quarter of 2023, calling it “one of the largest economic shocks ever recorded in recent history.”

Between 80 to 96 percent of Gaza’s agricultural infrastructure has been damaged or destroyed, the World Bank report said. About 80 percent of the population has lost its jobs, the report said, adding that “every resident of Gaza will live in poverty” in the short term.

That is leaving Gazans largely reliant on aid — which is extremely hard to come by.

U.N. and aid group officials say aid is generally able to reach Rafah, in the southernmost part of Gaza, but little of it has trickled up to northern Gaza, which the fighting and Israeli military restrictions have largely cut off from the rest of the territory since early in the war. One of the two crossings where aid trucks enter Gaza has been closed repeatedly in recent weeks.

The Israeli agency that oversees the Palestinian territories has previously denied that it is blocking aid to Gaza, and Israeli officials have accused Hamas of seizing some supplies.

Aid groups were “facing overwhelming obstacles just to get a bare minimum of supplies into Gaza,” Mr. Rajasingham said. “If nothing is done, we fear widespread famine in Gaza is almost inevitable.”

The U.N. says a famine can be designated if 20 percent of households in an area face an extreme lack of food, if 30 percent of children there are suffering from acute malnutrition and if two adults or four children out of every 10,000 are dying every day from starvation or malnutrition and disease.

A breakdown in law and order has also made distribution difficult, with desperate Gazans seizing food from the trucks and occasionally attacking the drivers . Damaged roads and unexploded ordnance have cut off supply routes. Aid workers have been killed .

Earlier this month, the World Food Program announced it was suspending deliveries of food aid to the north after its trucks came under fire there and were attacked by desperate Gazans.

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad , Aaron Boxerman and Ameera Harouda contributed reporting.

— Vivian Yee reporting from Cairo

one day tour from amman to jerusalem

Maps: Tracking the Attacks in Israel and Gaza

See where Israel has bulldozed vast areas of Gaza, as its invasion continues to advance south.

‘The bag of flour or your life’: Gazans are in a desperate search for food.

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Nutrition bars selling for six times the usual price. Four in five workers unemployed and lacking any income. Food shortages so dire that people are turning to leaves and bird food for sustenance.

Gazans and international relief groups are describing increasingly desperate conditions in the territory, particularly in northern and central areas where the United Nations and relief agencies are struggling to deliver even small amounts of supplies amid Israel’s military offensive.

“Our lives have become very miserable,” said Aseel al-Louh, 23, a university student in Deir al Balah in central Gaza, who said she had lost 11 kilograms, or 24 pounds, since the war began. Her little sisters and brothers were also losing weight, she said in a Facebook message, adding that “everyone here” was.

She is eating one meal a day, usually some bread, hummus or canned beans, she said. Aid was scarce, she added, with World Food Program nutrition bars selling on the black market for six times the prewar price of similar products.

Aseel Ayman, who has been sheltering in northern Gaza, described people’s desperation in a voice note on Tuesday, saying that she had shaken her family awake the night before and rushed to a nearby traffic circle after hearing people shouting that aid was arriving there.

A crowd of about 500 people gathered in anticipation from all around northern Gaza, she said. Her family waited there for two hours, while others slept at the traffic circle in hopes of receiving aid, she said. But it never came.

She had heard that some aid did make it to another part of northern Gaza, near the coastal highway known as Al-Rasheed Street, but she said the presence of Israeli troops made it too dangerous to go there.

“There was intense fear of going to Al-Rasheed Street to get the flour, because it’s either the bag of flour or your life,” Ms. Ayman said.

She said her family’s meals often consisted only of a leafy green called khubeiza. Though a few other products were available in the market, including canned mushrooms, rice and animal feed, they were unaffordably expensive.

Elsewhere in northern Gaza, the Save the Children aid group said last week that people had reported eating bird and animal food and tree leaves.

“The level of hunger we’ve reached is unbearable,” Ms. Ayman said.

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad contributed reporting.

— Vivian Yee ,  Ameera Harouda and Emma Bubola

Families of hostages are marching from the Gaza border area to Jerusalem.

Families of hostages begin four-day march from southern israel, families of israeli hostages began a four-day march near the border with gaza, heading to jerusalem and demanding the release of their relatives..

This is the most important thing, the most important subject to deal with today in Israel. Although there are lots of other challenges, this is the most important challenge. So do it. And this march is one of the awareness that we have to do to make sure that the government is doing what it has to do.

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Dozens of family members of hostages held in Gaza set off Wednesday morning on a four-day march from the Gaza border area to Jerusalem, aiming to step up pressure on Israeli leaders to reach a deal to release the captives .

Starting in Re’im, the site of the rave where hundreds of people were killed and dozens were taken hostage during the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack, demonstrators plan to march about 13 miles a day, after which they will be taken to campsites set up alongside the road. They expect to reach Jerusalem on Saturday and hold a rally there.

Dekel Lifshitz, whose grandfather Oded is being held in Gaza, said in a phone interview that he had joined the march to encourage the government to “make the right decisions, even if they’re hard.”

Mr. Lifshitz’s grandmother, Yocheved, was released from captivity in late October. He said he wanted those still in Gaza to know that “we are doing everything we can to bring everyone home as soon as possible,” adding: “Hold on just a bit longer and you’ll be with us.”

In recent weeks, negotiators have been trying to reach an agreement that would temporarily pause the fighting in Gaza and allow a swap of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners.

On Monday, President Biden said he was hopeful that a deal would be reached within a week, but Israeli and Hamas officials have expressed doubts. About 130 of the 240 hostages taken on Oct. 7 are still in Gaza, and Israeli officials believe that at least 30 are dead.

In mid-November, hostage families set out on a similar march from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, which drew thousands. Days after its conclusion, a hostage deal was announced, and 105 women and children were released from Gaza during a seven-day cease-fire, while 240 Palestinian women and children were released from Israeli prisons.

“Last time I wasn’t able to be a part of the march,” said Sharon Alony Cunio, a former hostage, at the news conference on Wednesday. She was released in November along with her 3-year-old twins, but her husband, David Cunio, is still held captive. “This time I’m here, marching for my husband and for all the remaining hostages,” she said.

— Adam Sella reporting from Tel Aviv

A new aid package brings U.S. assistance to Gaza during the war to $180 million.

The United States will provide $53 million in additional aid to support humanitarian programs that are delivering desperately needed assistance to Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank, officials said on Tuesday.

The new package will bring the total amount of U.S. aid delivered to Gaza during the conflict to $180 million, according to White House officials.

“There’s no question that much more aid is needed to address the critical and urgent needs on the ground,” John F. Kirby, spokesman for the National Security Council, told reporters at a White House press briefing on Tuesday. “That’s why President Biden and the entire team continue to work every day to increase the flow of humanitarian assistance into Gaza, while also prioritizing the safety of civilians and aid workers.”

Mr. Kirby also said that providing more humanitarian aid to Gaza was a critical part of the American push for a temporary cease-fire, which would allow for hostages taken during the Hamas-led attack in Israel on Oct. 7 to be released.

Samantha Power, the administrator of the United States Agency for International Development, announced the new aid package during a trip to the Middle East.

The funding would support organizations, such as the World Food Program, that are helping to combat severe water shortages and the spread of infectious diseases exacerbated by overcrowding at shelters, according to a statement from the agency, known as U.S.A.I.D.

In a video message from outside a W.F.P. warehouse in Amman, Jordan, Ms. Power described “catastrophic levels of food insecurity” in Gaza and “bureaucratic bottlenecks,” adding that aid workers were not able to do their jobs “without being shot at and killed.”

The W.F.P. said last week that it was suspending food deliveries to northern Gaza because it could not operate safely amid gunfire and the “collapse of civil order.” And Israel has blocked considerable aid from reaching the enclave, leaving airdrops with meager supplies one of the few viable methods of delivery.

— Erica L. Green reporting from Washington

U.S. views on Israel are far more divided than a poll cited by Netanyahu suggests.

Responding to recent comments from President Biden that Israel could “lose support from around the world” if it continued on its “incredibly conservative” path, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pointed this week to a U.S. poll showing that an overwhelming majority of the American public backs Israel over Hamas, citing it as evidence of strong support for his country’s war in Gaza.

But Americans’ views of the issue are in fact far more divided, results from industry-leading pollsters show.

In a brief statement defending what he called Israel’s “considerable success,” Mr. Netanyahu cited a poll, conducted by Harvard-CAPS Harris over Feb. 21 and Feb. 22, that asked registered voters in the United States, as part of a series of other questions about Israel, “In this conflict do you support more Israel or more Hamas?”

Some 82 percent of the respondents, the equivalent of more than four out of five U.S. voters, said they supported Israel more than Hamas. “This will help us continue the campaign until total victory,” Mr. Netanyahu said.

But more expansive questions asked by top polling firms since the war began have consistently shown complexity in Americans’ views on Israel and its conduct in Gaza.

When asked whether the United States should “support Israel, support Hamas or not take a position” in the war, just 45 percent of registered voters chose Israel, according to a poll conducted by the Marquette University Law School between Feb. 5 and Feb. 15.

More voters — 48 percent — said the United States should not take a position, and 7 percent said it should support Hamas.

The Marquette University Law School is one of the most respected pollsters in the United States when it comes to questions of accuracy and methodological transparency, and it holds the maximum rating — three stars — given by the analytical website FiveThirtyEight in its pollster ratings .

Harris Insights & Analytics, the organization behind the Harvard-CAPS Harris poll , holds a 1.6-star rating from FiveThirtyEight and a far lower transparency score, which attempts to quantify how transparent a pollster is with how it conducts polls. The methodology of the Harvard-CAPS Harris poll has been questioned by some other polling firms, particularly in light of media attention received by its “dramatic” but sometimes “bizarrely inconsistent” findings on Americans’ views of Israel, Semafor reported in December .

Another well-regarded pollster, AP-NORC, found in late January that half of U.S. adults felt Israel’s military response in Gaza had “gone too far.” Just 31 percent said it had “been about right,” and 15 percent said it had “not gone far enough.”

The very different picture painted by the Harvard-CAPS Harris poll can be attributed, at least in part, to nuances of polling methodology, including the fact that its respondents could only indicate support for either Israel or Hamas.

There is no polling industry consensus on whether such “forced choice” questions are best practice, according to Carl Bialik, the U.S. politics editor at YouGov. Giving respondents the option of a more neutral or mixed answer can give them “an out,” but can also clarify whether they hold a truly middle-ground stance on the subject, are conflicted or don’t know or care enough about it to hold a strong view, he said.

Charles Franklin, the director of the Marquette Law School poll, added that even what may seem to be minor variations in question framing can produce results pointing to “substantively different conclusions.”

He offered an example unrelated to the war: In 2022, Marquette conducted two randomized experiments in which half the respondents of a sample were asked whether they thought that “Supreme Court justices’ decisions” were mainly motivated by politics or by the law. The other half were asked whether they thought that “the Supreme Court” was mainly motivated by politics or by the law.

“I would not have told you ahead of time that that difference in wording would matter much at all,” Mr. Franklin said. But the results indicated — both times, by some 10 percentage points — that people viewed the decisions of the Court, as an institution, to be more politically motivated than those of the justices.

Ultimately, one should look to a variety of questions asked by a variety of pollsters for an accurate understanding of public opinion on a given subject, Mr. Franklin said. While Mr. Netanyahu was mostly accurate in how he cited the finding of the Harvard-CAPS Harris poll, “there are plenty of other polls that show different results, and he omitted those,” Mr. Franklin said.

“Virtually any politician citing a poll does it for their own purposes — does it because it serves their rhetorical needs at the time,” he added.

— Anushka Patil

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  1. JORDANIAN MUSLIM BROTHERS GATHER IN AMMAN GALLAG Ocot

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  3. Arrived in Amman JORDAN

  4. One Day in Jerusalem

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  6. A Journey From Safra Square to Muslim and Christian Quarter

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