He thought: In his own time the boy can read what Wenzel of Trier wrote and it would be difficult Yet never once does he mention Jesus Christ, the greatest Jew of his age, nor does he refer to Nazareth, although he writes ex- tensively of cities not more than nine miles away. Along the ridge of Mount Carmel stood an ugly, corrugated-iron building served by a cantor, a small fastidious man with a handsome silver beard, who. For there is also the matter of God's will, and Wenzel here can tell you that it is shameful to have the holy places of our Lord in infidel hands.
e burned, you are in the eyes of that Church a heretic, and they believe they have a duty to burn you. The Arabs can't. This did not mean that he lived permanently in Tverya, en- gaged only in legalistic discussion. Shunem rmellift A ia, '0 R D A N rl*q .
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