Nir > Stock photo of stained glass window in the church at Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion Monastery, founded by the Jewish convert brothers Theodore and Alfonse Retisbon of France, as an orphanage. Alfonse himself lived in the monastery and is buried in its garden. Nuns from the order of Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion, Sisters of Our Lady of Zion, now occupy the site. Shot August 2007.
Nir > Sigd Celebration, Jerusalem, December 2005
Nir > Stock photo of the windmill in the neighborhood of Yamin Moshe in Jerusalem. Named after the British Jewish philanthropist, Sir Moses Moshe Montefiorie, who established the first Jewish neighborhood outside the walls of the Old City in Jerusalem in the 19th century. Shot August 2006.
Nir > "Mother and Child"
Awarded Photo of The Day on Kodak (www.kodak.com)
and displayed in Times Square N.Y. on February 8, 2006

This photo available for licsensingHERE
Nir > "Mother and Child"
Awarded Photo of The Day on Kodak (www.kodak.com) and displayed in Times Square N.Y. on February 8, 2006
Nir > Sigd Celebration, Jerusalem, December 2005
Nir > Mother & Child, Jerusalem, December 2005
Nir > Sigd Celebration, Jerusalem, December 2005
Nir > Sigd Celebration, Jerusalem, December 2005
Stock photo of stained glass window in the church at Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion Monastery, founded by the Jewish convert brothers Theodore and Alfonse Retisbon of France, as an orphanage. Alfonse himself lived in the monastery and is buried in its garden. Nuns from the order of Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion, Sisters of Our Lady of Zion, now occupy the site. Shot August 2007.
Nir > Stock photo of stained glass window in the church at Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion Monastery, founded by the Jewish convert brothers Theodore and Alfonse Retisbon of France, as an orphanage. Alfonse himself lived in the monastery and is buried in its garden. Nuns from the order of Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion, Sisters of Our Lady of Zion, now occupy the site. Shot August 2007.
Stock photo of stained glass window in the church at Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion Monastery, founded by the Jewish convert brothers Theodore and Alfonse Retisbon of France, as an orphanage. Alfonse himself lived in the monastery and is buried in its garden. Nuns from the order of Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion, Sisters of Our Lady of Zion, now occupy the site. Shot August 2007.
See photo in gallery

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