The title 2


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page 10  The following are the main results of two parallel searches made to help the speculation around the two names: the hill Opel and Opal Whiteley.

The Hebrew word "Opel"

The root of the Hebrew word 'ōpel means "hill" and in the Bible it refers to a fortified hill, just south of the Temple area, on which a tower stands. It is often translated "citadel" or "tower". Nowadays the word is conventionally spelt "Ophel" but in some old transliterations it's "Opel", such as this 2009 biblical interpretation of a spiritual journey that may recall "Chapter 24".  … 7 mountains that surround Jerusalem. The 1st mountain that we will consider is Moriah. … place of God's presence. … The 5th mountain is Mount Opel. The word opel in Hebrew means "a hill, to build a wall, to keep." … The 6th mountain is Zion. … "to show the way, to be white and to be pure." The 7th mountain is Ghareb (Calvary). … It is through Ghareb that we are given access to Moriah, the presence of God. — Douglas A. Wheeler Syd's song "Opel" is probably about a search for a retreat such as the Hebrew hill/tower, but a plausible reference is lacking: only some book on eccentric Anglo-Israelite theories and the novel "The Citadel" (about the ethics of a doctor) were possible references, and the Rolling Stones' song "Citadel" hadn't yet been released. A book of poems needs to be introduced here: …

And mine were the gold and the jewels, bright,


 * Which were reared by a kingly hand,

As the joy and the pride of a people’s might,


 * In the Temple of Judah’s land.

— Mark F. Bigney, The Forest Pilgrims, and Other Poems