Kursi National Park Kursi is the Arabic name for the ruin on the eastern shores of the Sea of Galilee. During the mishnaic and talmudic periods this was a Jewish fishing village. The remains of Kursi were discovered accidentally after the 1976 Six Day War, when a road was paved along the eastern bank of the Sea of Galilee.The name Kursi, however, may be the original one, derived, from the shape of the broad valley that runs from here eastward, till it is abruptly cut off (as the seat of a chair by its back) by the steep slope of the Golan Heights. Viewed from above, the formation appears like a chair: kursa or kursi in Semitic tongues. Excavations revealed the remnants of the largest Byzantine-period monastery in Israel (123 by 145 meters). The monastery and the church inside it were built in the middle of the fifth century C.E. and were apparently damaged during the Persian invasion (614 C.E.). The church was repaired but abandoned in the eighth century and never again used for prayer. In the church, archeologists found a mosaic floor with pictures of animals (chickens, geese, doves, cormorants, and fish), parts of which were vandalized, and pictures of plants such as citrons, dates, pomegranates, and grapes. The mosaic floor in the baptism room has a Greek inscr The basilica stood a bit off center. It has been partly restored, using basalt as in the original. We enter the atrium. (Were it not for Nun on his bicycle, the modern road would have cut through it.) It includes two holes leading down to a long cistern, about 18 feet deep. Rainwater flowing from the roofed porticoes ran into this cistern. We can peek into the auxiliary wings to the north and south. The northern contains an olive press. The southern has a small chapel, beneath which a crypt contained thirty male skeletons, laid out in stone enclosures. Through the main gate we enter the nave, which was separated from the two side aisles by limestone columns. Ahead is the single apse, on whose curved bench sat the clergy. Even in partial reconstruction, the church still makes a majestic impression. iption.According to the New Testament, Jesus healed a man possessed by demons in Kursi. Mark relates that when Jesus disembarked from his boat, a "man with an evil spirit came from the tombs to meet him." A herd of swine was grazing in the area and Jesus cast the demonic spirits from the man to the swine. The swine then ran into the Sea of Galilee and drowned (Mark 5: 1-20 and with slight variations, Matthew 8:28-33 and Luke 8:26-39). Although the evangelistic stories do not mention the precise place where this miracle took place, Christian tradition has always held that it was Kursi. In 1980, a small chapel was discovered with its apse built in a cave. Christian tradition ties this cave with the place the possessed man revealed himself to Jesus and where Jesus cleansed him with the help of the swine. Mosaics once covered the church's entire floor, but now we seem them mainly in the side aisles.