Israel trivia: The facts about Israel’s biblical heartland
Trivia games—still enormously popular today—first came into vogue on college campuses in the 1960s. Later, TV game shows like Jeopardy! caught on, followed by the Trivial Pursuit game that was officially released in 1981. Numerous trivia apps now generate hours of enjoyment.
The United States leads the trivia world of facts, with 1.3 billion downloads in 2022 alone. One of the best things about playing trivia is that doing so can help increase our knowledge, our team building, and our memory. That is why many corporations, like Spotify, Nike, and Amazon, use trivia applications.
As Israel advocates, we can have fun while utilizing Israel-focused trivia facts to increase our knowledge and oppose the unabating torrent of lies against Israel. Here are a few sample questions, before we explore historical facts about the world’s biblical heartland.
The answers for these trivia questions appear at the end of my column. Enjoy challenging yourself first!
What are the two geographic names of the biblical heartland?
What is the name of the walk in Jerusalem that takes visitors through the 14 stations of the cross?
What year did the Romans destroy the Second Temple?
How many ancient synagogues have archeologists discovered in Israel’s Golan Heights?
What is the name of Israel’s legislative body?
What is the Hebrew name for the Western Wall?
What does the acronym IDF describe?
What year did the Israeli government order 8,000 Jewish citizens to leave Gaza, turning it completely over to Palestinians?
How many Arabs are Israeli citizens?
After which war did Israel reunify its capital, Jerusalem?
What year was the U.S. Embassy returned to its capital?
What is the term for Jewish people immigrating to Israel?
Who is referred to as the Father of Zionism?
Who is credited with re-establishing ancient Hebrew into Israel’s modern language?
Who is the current prime minister of Israel?
Whether or not you scored well, persistence will reward your knowledge. Prayers plus facts are needed now more than ever for the biblical heartland, Judea and Samaria, located in Israel since ancient times.
The Islamic Regime and its proxies remain intent on wiping Israel and her people off the map. That is why the Israel Defense Forces have expanded protection for Judea and Samaria—due to enclaves of Hamas terrorists in the Palestinian-occupied cities and villages. These terrorists use cars, knives, guns, IEDs, and highly sophisticated weapons they have smuggled into the heartland to murder Jews and anyone else in the way.
An article in August 2024 from the Jewish News Syndicate reported that since January, more than 3,000 terror attacks in Judea and Samaria have killed 14 people and wounded 155 others. The IDF has changed the status of Judea and Samaria, now classifying it a “combat zone”—and Israel’s most critical front after the Gaza Strip.
The world calls the biblical heartland the West Bank. A quick trivia question: “Why and when did the name West Bank originate?” Answer: About 75 years ago, the name given to describe land on the west side of the Jordan River.
Facts about the biblical heartland have a far more significant value than the dictionary meaning of the word trivia, which is “unimportant facts or details that are considered interesting rather than serious or useful.” Based on the spoken word of God penned by ancient Jewish scribes, the Old and New Testaments are one book—and proclaim Judea and Samaria as the bedrock of Judaism and for our Christian faith. Israel’s capital, Jerusalem, is in Judea.
Looking at a map of Israel, we see that the heartland is still loaded with names from the Bible. Add your own trivia list of facts to several I have included here.
God told Abraham, the first Jew, to pitch his tent in Hebron, near the tree of Mamre, around 1,800 B.C. In Judea, Hebron is considered the oldest Jewish community in the world!
Judea and Samaria correspond to the ancient Northern and Southern Kingdoms. Judea lies south of Jerusalem, and Samaria to the north.
The Old Testament foretold the Bethlehem field in Judea as the birthplace of Jesus. The New Testament confirmed it.
Shiloh, in Samaria, was the religious and military capital of Israel for 369 years in the 12th and 11th centuries B.C. It was the location of the Tabernacle housing the Ark of the Covenant. In Shiloh today, walking in the ancient steps of Hannah, Elkana, Eli, Samuel, and King David is an archaeological and holy experience connecting the 3,500-year Jewish history to their ancestral homeland.
The memorable New Testament story of Jesus and the woman at the well with her joyful encounter with the Messiah happened in Samaria.
In the 1967 Six-Day War when Israel was attacked, the Jews triumphed and won their ancient heartland from Jordanian occupation (1950-1967). Upwards of 500,000 religious and secular Jews now live throughout Judea and Samaria. Click here to explore many more facts both ancient and modern.
Although most call Judea and Samaria the “West Bank” it does not change the fact that this is the biblical heartland. Threats from the terrorists of the Islamic Regime and its ungodly understudies will not triumph over the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob! “The land I gave to Abraham and Isaac I also give to you [Jacob], and I will give this land to your descendants after you” (Genesis 35:12). Israel’s Independence Day, May 14, 1948, certified God’s ancient promises.
This is the Holy Land where Jesus will return, rule, and reign forever!
Enjoy another Israeli game! Trivia: Are You Smarter Than DBG? Who was DBG? Israel’s first Prime Minister, David Ben Gurion! He originated the “Bible Quiz” Chidon HaTanach, a worldwide competition for all ages. The final quiz is annually televised in Jerusalem on Israel’s Independence Day, Yom Ha’atzmaut.
Trivia Answers:
Judea and Samaria
Via Dolorosa
A.D. 70
Thirty
Knesset
Kotel
Israel Defense Forces
2005
Approximately two million
Six-Day War, 1967
2018 by President Donald Trump
Aliyah
Theodore Herzl
Ben Yehuda
Benjamin Netanyahu
This article originally appeared here and is reposted with permission.
A speaker and consultant, Arlene Bridges Samuels authors the weekly feature column for The Christian Broadcasting Network/Israel on their Facebook and Blog since 2020. Previously she pioneered Christian outreach for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Retiring after nine years, she worked part-time for International Christian Embassy Jerusalem USA as Outreach Director for their project, American Christian Leaders for Israel (ACLI) Arlene is an author at The Blogs-Times of Israel, often traveling to Israel since 1990. By invitation she attends the Israel Government Press Office (GPO) Christian Media Summits as a recognized member of Christian media worldwide. Read more of her articles at CBN Israel blog. Arlene and her husband Paul Samuels have coauthored a book, Mental Health Meltdown, illuminating the voices of bipolar and other mental illnesses. On Amazon