Your last chance to get tickets to Top Gear Live
From either shore Israeli and Jordanian mayors climbed down overgrown banks to waiting canoes. Soldiers forbade them from crossing so they rowed to midstream for a unique meeting yesterday to discuss the decline of the once-great biblical waterway.
Diminished, green and polluted this is the modern River Jordan, in which Jesus was baptised and whose waters, the Book of Joshua records, “overfloweth all his banks all the time of harvest”.
Now the Jordan has lost more than 90 per cent of the 1.3 billion cubic metres (1.7 billion cu yds) that used to flow through it each year from the Sea of Galilee to the Dead Sea, 100km (62 miles) further south.
Worse, environmentalists fear, a new dam being built by Jordan and Syria on its main tributary, the Yarmouk, will cut a further 20 million cubic metres of the Lower Jordan’s fresh water, drying up its flow altogether.
“Sadly the Jordan River is little more than a sewage channel now,” Gidon Bromberg, Israeli director of Friends of the Earth Middle East, said. He added that the new dam would deprive the river of the “critical mass” of fresh water that maintains the present flow.
“Half the world would love to travel down the banks of the Jordan in the footsteps of Jesus, but they can’t do it because the waters are so polluted it is a health hazard,” he said.
“Not only have governments taken away the waters predominantly for agriculture, they have declared the whole area a closed military zone so the general public is not even aware of the scale of the problem.”
The main problem is water scarcity in a region where all countries are desperate to supply growing populations.
Israel initiated use of the river in the late 1950s, when its National Water Carrier began draining off hundreds of millions of cubic metres from the Sea of Galilee.
Neighbouring Jordan and Syria have also built dams and now there is just a tiny stream, boosted by sewage and agricultural waste from Palestinian and Jordanian villages, and Israel’s Jewish settlements.
As the mayors watch, environmentalists take depth soundings in mid-stream. The 1.5 metres recorded is less than half the river’s depth a century ago, when the nearby bridges’foundation stones were not clearly visible as they are today.
Like the river all three bridges — the original Roman arch, the Ottoman railway bridge of 1905, linking Damascus and Haifa, and the British road bridge of 1925 — are the victims of politics and war, destroyed in fighting between Jewish and Arab forces in 1948.
Sitting beneath them in a canoe, Mahmoud Abu Jaber, the Mayor of Ma’ad, said that raw sewage and agricultural pollutants have fish and crops on his Jordanian side.
“This is a holy river which is most sacred to our Christian brethren,” he said. “We urge everyone, on both sides, to act to purify and clean it. The Jordanian Government is aware of the problems within its limitations and capabilities, but it can’t do the job by itself.”
His Israeli counterpart, Dov Litvinoff, the Mayor of Tamar regional council, which is responsible for the Dead Sea, has little hope that governments will change the policies of decades which have left the Dead Sea 25 metres below its historic level, and shrinking by 1-1.2 metres a year.
“It is very frustrating. Even if they don’t try to bring back the old level, at least restoring part of it would bring two things back to life, the Jordan River and the Dead Sea,” he says.
Israeli officials, however, maintain that the Lower Jordan is not in danger of halting its flow.
“It is an absurd claim,”said Dr Doron Markel, of the Israeli Water Authority, said. “There is no increase in the diversion of the water. It is a question of priorities and Israel has decided to use the Sea of Galilee as its main source of drinking water.”
Explore your passion for food with the delights of Thai, Indian & Chinese cooking
In our new series, Tony Hawks takes a dry, wry look at modern life - junk mail, interminable meetings and snooty sales assistants
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
2007
£30,000
2006
£14,337
2008
£39,937
Great car insurance deals online
c.£75,000
GlosFirstmeansbusiness
Gloucestershire
£32,795 - £41,545
Universitry of Southampton
Southampton
£
£32,795 - £41,545
Universitry of Southampton
Southampton
Competitive Package
Npower
West Midlands
1 & 2 Bed apartments
From £249,995
Great Investment, River Views
Great Dubai Investment Opportunities
from £89,950
low-cost ownership homes in London
Las Vegas SALE!
£POA
With Ramblers Worldwide Holidays!
£POA
List your property with two leading travel websites
£POA
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Globrix Property Search - search houses for sale and rooms and property to rent in the UK. Milkround Job Search - for graduate careers in the UK. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.