The monastery of the Franciscan missionaries serving the Holy Land was abruptly shut down in 1968 after the outbreak of war between Israel and Palestine.
For centuries, the monastery of the Franciscan missionaries serving the Holy Land, located at Qasr el Yahud, near the spot of the Jordan river where Jesus was baptized, stood as one of the world’s most important Christian pilgrimage sites. Indeed, the first Franciscan pilgrimage to the site was recorded in 1641 and pilgrims have flocked to the area every year since then.
But the outbreak of war between Israel and Jordan in 1967 quickly turned the area outside the monastery in a combat zone ridden with mines—the local minefield covered an estimated 55 hectares of land—and led to the sudden abandonment of the monastery in January of 1968.