Every faith has its sacred horizon.
CredoCard gives you a window to hold up to yours.
A believing Jew with a lifelong dream: that every person of faith — Christian, Muslim, Jewish, or any path of sincere belief — should be able to hold their sacred site in their hands.
CredoCard is a physical window. A cutout in the shape of your tradition's most sacred symbol — the cross, the Star of David, the crescent and dome — through which you look at the holy place itself, framing it in faith.
The Kinneret card looks through a cross toward the Messiah's sites.
The Jerusalem card looks through a Star of David toward the Kotel.
The Mecca card looks through a circle toward the Kaaba's circumambulation.
Same shore. Same sky. Different windows. One humanity.
Walk the Way of Sorrows through the winding streets of the Old City. Hold the card at each Station of the Cross — the same path Jesus walked on his final journey.
A star-shaped cutout through which you view the Nativity Grotto — the manger where it all began. Follow the Shepherds' Path as you hold the card toward the Church of the Nativity.
A cross-shaped window looking toward Capernaum, the Mount of Beatitudes, Tabgha. The lake where Jesus walked on water, the shore where he called his disciples.
A Star of David cutout through which you see the Western Wall — the last remnant of the Holy Temple, the most sacred site in Judaism. The Spiritual Center of the Jewish people for 3,000 years.
The harp-shaped lake named in the Hebrew Bible. The shores of the Galilee where Jewish civilization flourished after the destruction of the Temple. Tiberias, Magdala, the Talmudic academies.
A circular cutout through which you see the Tawaf — the circumambulation of the Kaaba. The direction of prayer for 1.8 billion Muslims. Hold the card toward the Grand Mosque and feel the pull of Qibla.
Ar-Rawdah ash-Sharifah — the Blessed Garden between the Prophet's pulpit and his chamber. The second holiest site in Islam. A wooden card framing the Green Dome of Al-Masjid an-Nabawi.
The Dome of the Rock — Islam's third holiest site and the First Qibla. A card that frames the golden dome on the Temple Mount, where the Prophet Muhammad began his Night Journey.
The same view. The same light. The same sacred shore.
Chalcolithic communities settle the shores of Yam Kinneret — the Harp Sea — named for its shape. The name appears in the Hebrew Bible in Numbers 34:11.
Jesus of Nazareth makes the Kinneret's northern shore his base. He calls fishermen as disciples, walks on water, feeds thousands, and delivers the Sermon on the Mount overlooking the lake.
After the Roman destruction of Jerusalem, Tiberias and the Galilee become the heart of Jewish learning. The Jerusalem Talmud is compiled here. Tiberias becomes home to the Sanhedrin.
The Umayyad Caliphate brings the Galilee into the Islamic world. Tiberias flourishes as a trading city. The region becomes home to Christians, Jews, and Muslims living alongside one another.
From Byzantine churches to Crusader chapels to modern pilgrimage centers — believers from every tradition have walked these shores for 2,000 years. The Kinneret is sacred to all three Abrahamic faiths.
A father's vision becomes a physical object: a card for every faith, a window for every sacred horizon. One humanity, looking through different shapes at the same ancient sky.
יהודי מאמין · אוהב שלום · חולם גדול
He was a believing Jew who walked in faith, and believed with all his heart in the equality of all religions — that every sincere path of faith leads toward the same light.
The CredoCard was his vision.
A simple, physical bridge between faiths — held in the hand, raised toward the horizon — looking through your tradition's sacred symbol at the world that God created for all of us.
יהי זכרו ברוך
May his memory be a blessing