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Source:
Picturesque Palestine, vol. 2, p. 65. |
Hot Baths of Tiberias
(Hummam Tubariyeh)
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The hot baths are frequented by Arabs, Syrians, and foreigners; and sometimes
the crowds about them, and along the shore toward the city, present not only a
lively, but, on account of the strange costumes of the people, a variegated
scene. An old man named Haj Ali, whom we employed once as a hunter, an Algerine
by birth, who had visited Mecca-a quiet, reserved, and dignified person-was the
keeper of the bath, and from him we had "the freedom of the place." A serious
drawback to comfort, however, was the fact that visitors bathe in the common
basin, and the water is changed none too often. Some complaints are no doubt
benefited by bathing here, and, with proper care, the springs might be made not
only a comfort or a luxury, but a real blessing to the people of the land. The
baths themselves, and all the buildings about them, were thoroughly repaired by
Ibrahim Pasha in 1832-40; but to-day, although still in use, they are
practically in ruins, "a fine example of the wise Turkish administration."
(Source:
Picturesque Palestine, vol. 2, p. 53.) |