"The Jerusalem Syndrome", a theater play by
Joshua Sobol, deals with the fanaticism that led to the destruction of the Jewish
Second Temple. In
The X-Files (Season 3, Episode 11, "Revelations,") released in 1995), the perpetrator is depicted as having "Jerusalem Syndrome" after a visit to the city. He returns to the US and begins to hunt down people with signs of
stigmata. In Robert Stone's 1998 novel
Damascus Gate, several characters are said to be afflicted with Jerusalem Syndrome. The 2001 song "Jerusalem" was composed by James Raymond on the topic of the Jerusalem Syndrome. It appears on the 2001 record
Just Like Gravity, by CPR (David Crosby, Jeff Pevar, James Raymond). A 2006 film by
Victor Braun titled "Jerusalem syndrome" tells the story of a Christian pilgrim with the syndrome. In
The Simpsons 2010 episode "
The Greatest Story Ever D'ohed",
Homer develops Jerusalem syndrome while visiting
Israel with his family as part of a tour group from Springfield. The illness and its effects on him become a central element of the episode's plot. Eventually, most members of the tour group are overcome with Jerusalem syndrome, each one proclaiming that he/she is the messiah. In the 2014
ABC series
Black Box, the episode "Jerusalem" (Season 1, Episode 5) features a character diagnosed with Jerusalem syndrome after he becomes suddenly and compulsively religious during a trip to Israel. The 2015 movie
Jeruzalem features a character that is suspected to have the Jerusalem syndrome. "Jerusalem", the twelfth story in
Neil Gaiman's 2015 collection,
Trigger Warning, centres around a British woman who comes down with the syndrome on holiday. She believes God is speaking to her and eventually flees her home to return to Jerusalem. The catalog of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art's 2016 show about an earlier era of the city's history used the syndrome as the "organizing
metaphor" for the first paragraph of the introduction, per a review. In 2023 the
York Theatre Company produced "The Jerusalem Syndrome," a musical comedy written by Kyle Rosen, Laurence Holzman and Felicia Needleman, and directed by
Don Stephenson. The 14-person cast included
Farah Alvin and
Lenny Wolpe. ==See also==