Wadi al-Yabis It is usually identified with Wadi al-Yabis, a stream in western
Jordan, which flows into the
Jordan River at a spot opposite of
Beit She'an and slightly south of it. Travellers have described it as one of the wildest ravines of the
Fertile Crescent, and peculiarly fitted to afford a secure asylum to the persecuted. During the summer, the stream is very dry.
Olive trees grow on its banks, and it is home to an array of wildlife including
gazelle,
hyrax, and
egret. According to the 1994
Peace treaty between Israel and Jordan,
Israel can maintain its use of the Jordan River waters between the
Yarmouk and Wadi al-Yabis.
Wadi Kelt Some identify the stream Chorath with
Wadi Qelt at the
Monastery of Saint George of Choziba. If 1 Kings 17:3 is to be translated "Wadi Chorath, which is
east of the Jordan", this identification would be in contradiction to the Bible, since Wadi Qelt is west of it. The
King James version states
Elijah should "turn eastward" (from
Samaria); therefore, the brook could be anywhere east of Samaria (now
Sebastia,
West Bank), on either side of the River Jordan. Some translations (i.e. the Orthodox Jewish Bible: allow such an interpretation, by stating that Chorath is merely "near the Yarden" (Yarden being the Hebrew name of the River Jordan).
Wadi Fusail Conder and Kitchener noted, while writing of
Qaryut, that "[this place, being at the head of
Wady Fusail, seems to have given rise to the mediaeval identification of that valley as the
Brook Cherith (mentioned by
Marino Sanuto in 1321)." Sanuto commented that the stream extended into
Phasaelis, which was named after Prince
Phasael, the brother of King
Herod. This identification would again contradict the more common translation of 1 Kings 17:3 (see comment above at "Wadi Kelt"), since Wadi Fusail with both modern Qaryut and ancient Phasaelis lie west, not east of the Jordan. ==Other uses of the name==