It offers views of the promenade and Tel Aviv. Old cannons are installed here. Istria says that Napoleon Bonaparte, in order to lighten his ships and get away from the English frigates, ordered to flood the ship’s guns and hastily leave Jaffa, leaving injured soldiers with typhoid fever in his monasteries. Upon arrival in Paris, the emperor said his famous phrase: "What would you do with France without me?" Here you can meet different tourists, even Muslims from India from Punjab. Translated with Google Translate
One of the most interesting pages in the history of Tel Aviv and Jaffa is the relationship of cities throughout the twentieth century. Jaffa has been a large port city for centuries, and Tel Aviv was only conceived in 1909. The first railway in Palestine was built between Jaffa and Jerusalem when Tel Aviv was not yet there. The Manshia quarter - at the junction of Jaffa and Tel Aviv - ceased to exist during the war for the Independence of Israel. Jaffa became part of the booming Tel Aviv, but retained its identity. All these stories will be told by the route from Mitham aTahan - the old railway station, across the Manshia embankment to ancient Jaffa to the top of the hill of Abrashi Park, where today the most beautiful and most famous view of Tel Aviv and Jaffa opens. Translated with Google Translate