White Rocks Formation
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Rosh Hanikra is in the northwestern corner of Israel,
on the border of Israel and Lebanon.
The white chalk cliffs offer a spectacular
panoramic view of Haifa Bay, the hills of the Galilee and the Mediterranean Sea.
The
book of Joshua (13:6) mentions "Misraphot
Mayim" south of Rosh Hanikra, as the border of the Israelite tribes
during the 14 -13 centuries BCE. Jewish sages referred to the cliff as
"The Ladder of Tire." The Muslim conquerors renamed the area A-Nawakir (the grottoes). The present name,
Rosh Hanikra, is a hebraicized version of the Arabic Ras-A-Nakura.
In ancient times, Rosh Hanikra was along the trade route
between the northern civilizations in Lebanon and Syria and the southern
ones in Palestine, Egypt and North Africa. The place was then known as
"the Ladders of Tyre." It has been the gateway in and out of
Palestine since ancient times. In 333 Alexander the Great entered the
Land of Israel through Rosh Hanikra, and is believed to have led his Greek
army through a tunnel his forces dug in these cliffs.
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The
British army invaded Lebanon from this direction during the two world wars
as did Israeli forces in the late 70's and
early 80s. During World War II, the British dug a tunnel for the
railway running between Haifa and Beirut to facilitate the movement of
supplies from Egypt to the north. When the British withdrew in 1948,
Israeli forces took over Rosh Hanikra and the Palmach blew up the railway bridges in the grottoes to prevent the Lebanese army
from invading from that direction when the War
of Independence began. During the Lebanon
War, you could watch lines of Israeli tanks along the border preparing
to cross and jeeps with UN peacekeepers observing the movements.
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The
grottoes of Rosh Hanikra were formed by the sea chipping awaw portions
of the soft chalk rock over thousands of years. In 1968, a tunnel was
dug from the shore to the natural grottoes. The tunnel was constructed
slightly above the sea surface. It is 400 meters long and took two years
to complete. A cable car leads to the shoreline where visitors can explore
the grottoes. It is possible, though not advised, to swim in the grottoes,
which are inhabited by bats, loggerhead sea turtles, sea birds and other
wildlife. The place is a part of the Achziv Natural Reserve.
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