{"id":172,"date":"2018-11-06T05:00:20","date_gmt":"2018-11-06T04:00:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/?p=172"},"modified":"2020-11-29T20:34:26","modified_gmt":"2020-11-29T19:34:26","slug":"eng-palaestina-november-2018","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/?p=172","title":{"rendered":"(ENG) Pal\u00e4stina &#8211; November 2018"},"content":{"rendered":"<!--themify-builder:block-->","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":76,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[16],"tags":[15,50,49,44,48,42,43,41],"class_list":["post-172","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-16","tag-15","tag-englisch","tag-english","tag-filastin","tag-november","tag-palaestina","tag-palaestina-2","tag-palestine","has-post-title","has-post-date","has-post-category","has-post-tag","has-post-comment","has-post-author",""],"builder_content":"<p>Palestine in November 2018<br \/>6.11.2018<br \/>Arrival via Zurich. Have to get up at 3.30. I (Joseph) hate such flight timings. But the departure gate in<br \/>Zurich is worth it: A dozen orthodox Jewish men have taken up one corner, are dressed in full religious<br \/>service gear, and are praying loudly. When they are done, a Christian pilgrims' group from NYC, mostly<br \/>African American women, all clad in identical orange T-Shirts, start singing gospels, swaying and dancing<br \/>to the rhythm. What a show!<br \/>At Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, no questions asked and we are through in a jiffy. What a difference to<br \/>the old days, when Israeli security could not rely on our internet activities, social networks, mobile<br \/>phones, etc. to trace our every move and had to cross-interrogate us before were allowed to enter the<br \/>country. Now, they know everything about you before you even board a plane. We take a bus to the<br \/>Central Bus Station in West Jerusalem (the Palestinian driver is very talkative and happy to be able to<br \/>speak Arabic to someone); from there, we take the tram along Jaffa Road which has maintained its flair<br \/>from the British Mandate period, all the way to Damascus Gate by the Old City, then transfer to the<br \/>Palestinian bus to Ramallah. We arrive at Ramallah bus station in the middle of the city and right next to<br \/>our accommodation, the \"Area D\" Hostel on the 5th floor of a rather shabby building above Ramallah's<br \/>vegetable market and in the commercial centre of Ramallah. The other guests are all very young,<br \/>Germans and Swiss, including 3 volunteers who work there. The next few days, there are US-Americans,<br \/>an Indian, a Japanese, an Englishwoman, a US-American with Ukrainian roots...an elderly gentleman<br \/>from Argentina and various young men of different, mostly western, origin. The Argentinian does not<br \/>speak a word of English or Arabic (he says) and also wants to find a job as volunteer. We wonder<br \/>whether he has been parked here by the Mossad to eavesdrop on people here incognito.<br \/>My dear cousin Mazen calls and suggests to spend the evening together. He picks us up, we buy fish in<br \/>Souk al Samak, a brightly lit and very clean fish shop, then some kebab meat from the butchery, then<br \/>pick up his buddy Jad and drive a few km outside Ramallah to Ain Arik to a restaurant where we are the<br \/>only guests. We are cooked the delicacies we have brought with us and also fine appetizers to dip with<br \/>bread. A big feast for three, and we feel like we've been here for days. The return trip is adventurous. It<br \/>is pitch dark outside, the car's head lights don't help much. But Mazen says the car will find its way<br \/>alone, and miraculously we arrive at the hostel safely.<br \/>7.11.18<br \/>The main reason for this trip was to extend the passport for our friend Rana Sarsour. She is Palestinian<br \/>from Gaza and can either renew her passport at the Permanent Mission in Berlin, which would take<br \/>months during which she would be stranded without passport, or she would have to travel to Ramallah<br \/>herself, which is impossible for Gaza residents. The third possibility is to officially authorize someone else <br \/>to do it. So, we offered to take care of the matter, happy to have a reason to go back to Palestine. Our<br \/>last trip was my father-in-law's farewell to his home country in 2014.<br \/>We are sent around a bit, but surprisingly, everything works smoothly and in the afternoon by 4 pm our<br \/>mission is accomplished. Mazen picks us up at the Ministry of Interior , and we drive to Um Mazen, his<br \/>mother. She has cooked, although she is really not well at all: mutton feet with vegetable and waraq<br \/>einab (stuffed grape leaves). By now we feel as if we have been here for weeks. Mazen takes us to the<br \/>hostel for a break but would like to see us again later. We decide to meet at his place in the El Tireh<br \/>district and go there on foot, a walk of about 4 km. Shortly before his house, at Nelson Mandela Square<br \/>with a statue of the same as a gift to Palestine from South Africa, we are a bit lost and ask a young man<br \/>loitering about for the way. He asks, who it is we are looking for. Our answer: Mazen Rantisi. He: Ah, the<br \/>doctor! Yes, of course he knows, calls him and shows us the way. Mazen seems to know everyone and<br \/>everyone knows him... we experienced the same thing numerous times on our short trip. He seems to<br \/>have treated at least half of Ramallah at least once in his small one-man practice.<\/p> <p><\/p> <p>8.11.2018<br \/>In our hostel, we found a book with hiking routes in Palestine, written by a Dutch Stefan Szepesi<br \/>\"Walking Palestine\". We pick a nice close-by hike, take a shared taxi (vans with 6 passenger seats) to<br \/>Aboud, a Christian town behind Birzeit, and walk along Wadi Laimoon (Lemon Valley), from Aboud to<br \/>Beit Reema, a neighboring village. For the first mile or so, we are accompanied by a happy and noisy<br \/>group of school kids out on a field trip. We walk through typical Palestinian landscape: almond and olive<br \/>groves planted on ancient terraces in rusty red earth. Rita goes into the bushes and accidentally scares<br \/>off an approx. 2m long and 6 - 7cm thick, dark brown snake. We ask our youngest, Faris, to find out what<br \/>it was. Most likely a Palestinian Viper (Of course, our next-door neighbors call it an Israeli viper!). The<br \/>only thing that is fairly certain is that it was poisonous. At the roadside there is a huge dead wild boar!<br \/>We get lost a bit, unintentionally walk a few additional miles along a village road together with many<br \/>students on their way home from school until we finally take a taxi to Birzeit, have tea and malfoof<br \/>(minced meat and rice wrapped in cabbage leaves) in a pretty courtyard belonging to a university guest<br \/>house, then cross the large university campus and eventually take the bus with 50 students back to<br \/>Ramallah. Before we meet Mazen at the Riyad, a nicely decorated garden restaurant down in old<br \/>Ramallah, Rita's favorite part of the city, we spend a little time at the guest house, chat away with our<br \/>young fellow guests who are very interested in the political situation, want to understand the conflict<br \/>from this side of the fence, and ask loads of questions. Cannot resist having a shawirma on the way.<br \/>9.11.2018<br \/>Today, we are planning to hike along beautiful Wadi Qelt to the famous St. George Monastery. We<br \/>debate what to wear. Jericho lies 400 meters below sea level and it should always be a lot warmer than<br \/>Ramallah which lies 600m above sea level. We have a quick cup of tea in the kitchen, and when I go back<br \/>to our room to collect my stuff, there is a guy snoring away in our bed! I figure, I got the wrong room and<br \/>walk out again. But no, this is definitely our room. I chase out the guy who seems to be rather beside<br \/>himself. It turns out to be Steven, the American volunteer and political journalist (or another potential <br \/>agent practicing for the real stuff? Mazen is convinced!) who speaks Arabic well and wants to record<br \/>interviews and prepare articles in Palestine for a year and sell them to various media. Actually a very nice<br \/>guy. A little later, Rita goes into the room to take another piece of clothing out of her suitcase; it is<br \/>soaking wet... including content. I think, our buddy Steven was looking for the toilet and ended up in our<br \/>room! We get the other two volunteers, Hannah and Megan, and they're horrified. We throw everything<br \/>into the washing machine, don't make a big thing out of it, and set off. We will get him in the evening<br \/>when he is sober.<br \/>We take the shared taxi to Jericho. The stop for the Jericho taxis is on Radio Street, right in front of Rita's<br \/>grandfather's house, where she used to live when she was living here during her high school years. the<br \/>house is no longer there - instead there is a concrete parking lot. Someday, they will build a high rise<br \/>there, like everywhere along Radio Street. We share the van with another couple of passengers, among<br \/>them a Japanese woman who, as it turns out later, also stays at the Area D Hostel. The road winds<br \/>through the olive hills East of Ramallah, then drops down through barren land towards the Dead Sea,<br \/>passing beduin dwellings along the way. Just before the final stop in Jericho, we drive past the Mount of<br \/>Temptation where Jesus allegedly was tempted by the devil and fasted for 40 days. Up there, built into<br \/>the steep rock wall, there is a Greek Orthodox monastery where hermit monks have been living an<br \/>isolated life immersed into prayer for decades - except a businessman from Palestine built a cable car<br \/>with small gondolas up there! Wonder who he bribed!<br \/>Arriving in Jericho, we set off in the heat. A taxi takes us to the trail head some way up the wadi. Along<br \/>the first bit, heavy bulldozers are stabilizing the river banks with massive stone blocks. After that, it is<br \/>quite dirty because the people living in the houses above the wadi, like everywhere in the world, don't<br \/>know where to put their garbage and simply throw it down into the gorge. It is depressing - garbage<br \/>everywhere! The same as in Sri Lanka, the Philippines, the Maldives, Morocco,... Only in Germany, we do<br \/>things differently: here the garbage is properly sorted and packed and then exported to countries that<br \/>throw it onto large dumps where children search it for useful items and poison themselves.<br \/>Later on, we hike through the narrow wadi - in some places not more than 2 meters in width and<br \/>reminiscent of our wadi tours in the UAE and Oman. On the steep rocky walls above us, we see small<br \/>mammals, like marmots. We meet a group of Koreans and their guide tells us they're rock rabbits. Never<br \/>heard of them. They look like big brown guinea pigs. (Wikipedia later tells us what they are.) Also, time<br \/>and again, we see cells of hermit monks built into the steep walls. We cannot tell whether any monks<br \/>still live there and we wonder how they get there, as we do not see any ladders, steps, or trails. Later, we<br \/>meet a German woman hiking all alone. We run into her again at the hostel in the evening. After about<br \/>two hours, we arrive at the monastery, but there is no easy way out of the steep gorge to the top.<br \/>Finally, we climb up the rocks into the courtyard of a small chapel, from where a path leads to the<br \/>monastery - but in between there is a wall and the small gate is closed. We climb over the wall secured<br \/>with barbed wire - a bit tricky.<br \/>The monastery is closed. The monks want to be left alone. Two construction workers building a new<br \/>annex apologize that they are not permitted to let us enter and retreat to the monastery for lunch. We<br \/>sit down in front of the monastery in the shade on a slab of stone and have a snack of cookies and<br \/>oranges. While we are sitting there, dark clouds move towards us from the mountains above. We debate <br \/>what to do. Actually, we wanted to walk further up the upper edge of the Wadi towards the spring. Or<br \/>had we better go back to Jericho, hoping that the clouds will stay above the mountains? Finally, we<br \/>decide to walk back to Jericho on a path about 20 m above the wadi floor. On the way, we meet the<br \/>Japanese woman... she continues to the monastery. Within minutes, there is thunder and lightning and it<br \/>becomes darker and darker around us. Rita sees a cave and wants to hide in there until the<br \/>thunderstorm passes. But I still do not believe, it will rain here and convince her to keep going. Big<br \/>mistake. Suddenly it is raining cats and dogs and it is too late to run back to the cave. We squeeze against<br \/>the rocky wall which helps a little, but in the end, we are soaking wet anyway. My wallet, our longsleeved shirts inside our little backpack are also soaked. What worries me more though, is that from<br \/>above us muddy creeks are turning into waterfalls washing over our track. They could very well cause a<br \/>mud slide and bury us underneath them, or they might wash away the path. Down on the wadi floor,<br \/>little rivulets are slowly changing into rivers and rolling forward like a lava wave, gathering momentum as<br \/>it rolls along. In some places where the wadi is narrow it can become quite dangerous down there. As we<br \/>walk along the upper wadi trail we spot a hiker down below us on the wadi floor walking towards the<br \/>water . We warn him screaming loudly and waving our arms. It takes a long time until he understands<br \/>and then climbs up the wadi wall on the other side of the valley. Looks like he wants to stay up there and<br \/>watch the drama unfold below him. He cannot really go anywhere from where he is. He is taking pictures<br \/>with no worry in the world. But at least he is high above the wadi floor now. When we arrive in Jericho,<br \/>the rain has almost stopped, but we are still soaking wet. We wait a full hour for the shared taxi to fill up.<br \/>Meanwhile, the Japanese girl also gets back and is just as wet as we are. We cause a bit of an upheaval<br \/>while waiting: the taxi stand is in front of a row of shops and, as usual, there is garbage everywhere. Rita<br \/>asks the drivers standing around doing nothing why this is so. One of the taxi drivers points at the shops<br \/>behind us and says it is the shopkeepers throwing garbage there. But one of the shop owners does not<br \/>like that at all, gets really upset because a) he says, it is the passengers who leave their rubbish there<br \/>and, b) the taxis shouldn't be there anyway blocking the parking spaces in front of his shop. The drivers<br \/>say, they have a right to be there, but the shop owner says, only two cabs are supposed to be there, not<br \/>three as is the case now. It becomes rather loud and messy. In Germany, they would have probably been<br \/>hitting each other by now. The shop owner then films the three vehicles, the drivers, and the rubbish and<br \/>threatens to call the police. And indeed, a policeman does turn up, also gets involved in the endless<br \/>discussion, finally has enough, picks up the rubbish and takes it to the nearby bin. The discussion<br \/>continues. Rita tells me to congratulate the policeman for his good deed, which I do. Finally the<br \/>argument is resolved with everyone embracing and kissing each other on the cheek. Great show!<br \/>Eventually, the cab is full and we head back to Ramallah. The wind blows through all the cracks and we<br \/>almost freeze in our wet clothes.<br \/>At the hostel, Steven, our drunkard who has no memory of his trip to our room is waiting for us. But we<br \/>want to take a hot shower first. Joseph keeps him hanging on for a while, and after our shower and this<br \/>and that, we listen to his apologies. He mumbles something about sleep-walking sometimes. So, he<br \/>wasn't drunk?. Well, ... I suppose, I was drunk, too. I leave it at that, but Joseph tells him that he wants to<br \/>talk to him in private later. He gives him a fatherly talk and lets him go. We do not say anything to the<br \/>hostel manager, Ihab, who is the same age as most of his guests. <br \/>We eat another Shawirma in the city and go to bed quite soon. We are totally wiped out and really<br \/>looking forward to the warmth of our bed.<br \/>10.11.18<br \/>Today, we move to the Lavender Boutique Hotel in Masyoun, a rather nice part of Ramallah. We are a bit<br \/>divided about leaving the Area D, because we really enjoyed our discussions with the other guests. We<br \/>are almost ready to leave when we have this endless chat with two young ladies, one Indian and the<br \/>Ukrainian American. They both study conflict management in their respective home countries, are<br \/>spending a year at Tel Aviv University, and want to come to the occupied territories as often as possible<br \/>on weekends to see both sides of the conflict. They soak up everything we say. Actually, it would be<br \/>quite exciting as a job if we came back for a longer stretch: political awareness training for the guests at<br \/>the Area D. But for now, Rita needs something a bit prettier. We're going through plenty of adventure<br \/>anyway. The Lavender, a serene and small hotel with a cozy garden, is a normal residential villa which<br \/>the family extended and renovated, and converted into a hotel instead of tearing it down or selling it.<br \/>Very recommendable!<br \/>In the early afternoon, we are supposed to meet Sakher Khatib and his wife Yasna for lunch. They are<br \/>friends of Rita's father, Sami, and go back a long way together. Sakher has a German mother and Yasna is<br \/>from Serbia. They know Rita from when she was a toddler and the parents were university students in<br \/>Eastern Germany in the 1960's.<br \/>We spend the morning strolling around Ramallah, go to Rita's school, former Friends Girls School - this<br \/>time not only for sentimental reasons (that, too, of course). Rita had contacted the school some time ago<br \/>because they have a volunteer program which she wanted to inquire about for a longer stay some time<br \/>next year. The Office Manager turns out to be Rita's former class mate, Samia Rafidi. They recognize<br \/>each other instantly! Samia would be happy to have Rita come and help. How nice of her. Rita finds her<br \/>graduation photo on the wall in front of the auditorium - black and white and blurred but at least it is<br \/>there! Continue our stroll through the old streets of Ramallah and happen to pass the German Mission<br \/>office (they cannot open an embassy or even consulate here, I am sure, because Israel would regard that<br \/>as a recognition of the State of Palestine). We ask whether a Mr. Schaal is still here at the mission. He is<br \/>the son of an old friend of mine and was working here some time ago. The consul tells us he isn't there<br \/>anymore and tells us that he was at the embassy in Tel Aviv for three years but then asked to be<br \/>transferred to Ramallah, because he wanted to see the Palestinian side. He says, in Tel Aviv people have<br \/>no clue of life here, they live in a party bubble and completely ignore the Palestinians.<br \/>In Old Ramallah, we find an olive press and spend some time there. It is no longer mechanical but<br \/>electric and imported from Italy. Many people bring their olives in gunny sacks and the hustle and bustle<br \/>over the engine noise is really quite similar to when we take our apples and pears to the cider press in<br \/>Germany. Opposite, there is a textile shop called \"Rantis\", like the village of origin of Rita's family. Later<br \/>in the evening, we go inside and the three old grandpas sitting there know Rita's grandfather. When<br \/>they hear that Rita is Fayek Amer's (or Abu Rabah's) granddaughter, they look quite excited and happy. It<br \/>is then that I understand why Rita has such a longing for Palestine: This is where her family is known. It <br \/>happened to us time and again, not only on this journey, but on every journey here. You meet someone,<br \/>you make the connection to the village and the family name, and the other side knows grandpa or uncle<br \/>or whoever. I guess this is what makes you feel at home.<br \/>We meet Sakher, his wife Yasna, and their son Noor with his two children at Segafredo Cafe. However, it<br \/>is quite busy and noisy and Uncle Sakher is rather uncomfortable with his hearing aid. We are, too, and<br \/>when Noor decides to take his kids home, the four of us move to a very good Palestinian restaurant,<br \/>\"Darna\", which means \"Our House\" and is right next to the German Mission office and Friends School<br \/>where we had spent the morning.<br \/>I am especially happy because I have been complaining to Rita that we hadn't really had any proper<br \/>Palestinian meal. It is really delicious. After a very enjoyable meal with these very old friends of Rita's<br \/>family, we say good-bye to Sakher and Yasna. Of course, they would never ever allow us to pay! I feel<br \/>really bad. Amu Sakher invites us to come to Nablus and spend a day in the Old City there and have lunch<br \/>with them. We will keep in touch.<br \/>11.11.2018<br \/>Today is Rita's birthday. We want to go to Bethlehem ( Arabic and Hebrew: Bait =house, lahem in Arabic<br \/>=meat, in Hebrew = bread; so depending on what you prefer, the name of the town is House of Meat or<br \/>House of Bread). Because of the Israeli wall and the check-points and the fact that Palestinian vehicles<br \/>are not allowed into Jerusalem, the shared taxi has to take a long detour around Jerusalem, so that the<br \/>drive from Ramallah north of Jerusalem to Bethlehem south of Jerusalem takes almost two hours, rather<br \/>than 45 minutes like in the old days. We almost drove down to the Dead Sea and back up again. It is<br \/>rather horrible! Jerusalem is accessible only to West Bank residents above the age of 50 or with special<br \/>permission.<br \/>We walk through the old city, into the Church of the Nativity, the alleged birthplace of Jesus. The queue<br \/>for the little chapel underneath the altar (This is where He was lying in the hay, allegedly!) is endless,<br \/>and since we have seen it before and are not religious either, we skip it. I would like to take Rita to the<br \/>beautiful Qasr Jacar for birthday coffee and cake, a former merchant's palace that was converted into a<br \/>hotel and where I once spent the night on a business trip. Behind the old building, which only serves as<br \/>lobby and restaurant now, a modern hotel with two wings was built. Before the Second Intifada, it was<br \/>an Intercontinental, but ever since the wall was built, tourists have been coming to Bethlehem in Israeli<br \/>coaches for a few hours only, visiting the most important religious places and leaving again.<br \/>Unfortunately, the Intercontinental withdrew and there is also no cake.<br \/>The road in front of Qasr Jacar was once on the main north-south traffic axis, connecting Bethlehem to<br \/>Jerusalem in the north. Now the wall runs through the middle of this main road and cuts off Bethlehem<br \/>from Jerusalem. It is in no way inferior to the Berlin Wall - except that it is higher: here, too, there is a<br \/>watch tower every few hundred meters; here, too, the Wall runs practically through people's front yards<br \/>and separates families; here, too, electronics and motion detectors secure the wall; here, too, it is ugly <br \/>and depressing. The only difference is that it also takes another 15 - 20% of the Palestinian land over to<br \/>the Israeli side, for it not built along the borders of 1967 when Israel occupied the West Bank, but<br \/>We walk along the wall, look at the graffiti and paintings of the British artist Banksy who \"decorated\" the<br \/>wall here and opened the \"Walled in Hotel\", which looks directly onto the wall and the inside of which is<br \/>completely decorated with his art.<br \/>(https:\/\/www.google.com\/search?q=banksy+wall+israel&amp;safe=strict&amp;client=firefoxb&amp;source=lnms&amp;tbm=isch&amp;sa=X&amp;ved=0ahUKEwiF46eCvdveAhUCjCwKHX7ApwQ_AUIDigB&amp;biw=1366&amp;bih=654)<br \/>There are two shops here who sell various items related to the wall. Many Palestinians are very critical of<br \/>making a business out of the wall. On the other hand, every tourist walking along and taking pictures<br \/>serves as a multiplier who reports about these things at home. There are a few visitors with us along the<br \/>wall, taking photos.<br \/>We decide to cross the border, the gate in the wall, on foot and go back to Ramallah via Jerusalem. We<br \/>walk through a long caged passage like those used for cattle to be slaughtered, then pass through a<br \/>revolving iron gate and a metal detector into a small room at the other end of which there is another<br \/>revolving iron gate. On the left side of the room, there is a cubicle protected by bullet proof glass with<br \/>soldiers inside, and on the right side an x-ray machine for all luggage. As I pass through the metal<br \/>detector an alarm sounds. I take off my belt and put it on the luggage scanner. The metal detector beeps<br \/>again. So, I take off my glasses. It still beeps. The two very young female soldiers get rather nervous at<br \/>this point and wave me through. I miss my belt and go back through the metal detector looking for it.<br \/>There is a bit of tension in the air now. More and more people coming from the Bethlehem side on their<br \/>way to Jerusalem enter the small security room between the revolving doors. Then I see my belt trapped<br \/>in the conveyor belt. I want it back, but the two young chicks do not dare leave their cubbyhole for fear it<br \/>might be a trap. Speakers sound and the security room is locked down. No one can get out, no one can<br \/>get in. I call for the two young soldiers to come out and free my belt from the scanner but they shout<br \/>instructions to switch off the scanner over loudspeakers in Hebrew. A young Palestinian who could have<br \/>left the security area before it was locked, stayed and helped turn the thing off. Finally, I get my belt<br \/>back... but the scanner machine won't start again. The young man presses all the buttons, I make a lot of<br \/>noise....with my German passport I can afford to .... the chicks scream incomprehensible stuff through<br \/>the speakers. Finally, another woman soldier, armed to her teeth, enters...also a young chick in a<br \/>bulletproof vest and with an uzi machine gun dangling from her neck in front of her belly, the barrel<br \/>pointed at all of us. I yell at her, \"Put your gun down!\" which she does. She can't get this thing to work<br \/>either. Finally, they open another security room and tell us to move there. I start telling the soldiers that<br \/>there should be someone giving people instructions what to place on the belt, etc. The soldier behind in<br \/>her little cubicle yells, she knows but she cannot come out.... and so on, and so on. They have strict<br \/>instructions not to leave their cubicle, probably ever since the knife attacks last year. Anyway, it was<br \/>quite a mess... The other Palestinians remained surprisingly calm. But they know that they will lose out if<br \/>they start a fight - at best they will be delayed endlessly, at worst they will be shot. They've learned to<br \/>turn into stones and not let anything get to them. If you have to go through it every day, you have to.<br \/>Otherwise, you get sick or go crazy.<br \/>Beyond the checkpoint, we take a bus to Jerusalem, stroll around the old city, eat a bad and overpriced<br \/>shawirma, I try a couple of shofars, which are available here in all shapes and sizes...I would love to buy<br \/>one.<br \/>Rita feels at home. We take the bus from Damascus Gate to Ramallah. Oh dear! The bus driver took<br \/>more than four hours for his last trip through the checkpoint to Ramallah and back (16 km one way!). He<br \/>is fed up and will only drive up to the check point towards Ramallah. Again, we have to go through the<br \/>check point on foot, but going into the West Bank is much easier than the other way around. No security<br \/>check here. Behind the checkpoint everyone has to see how to get from there to Ramallah. That, too, is<br \/>the reality of Palestine. These poor people who commute daily between Jerusalem and Ramallah! It is<br \/>hard to imagine how they cope. I read later that areas between Jerusalem and Ramallah, called Sheikh<br \/>Jarrah, Bait Hanina, and Shu'fat, belong to Area C and are thus under Israeli rule. So, the Israeli<br \/>government should use the taxes (which the Palestinians pay to Israel) for infrastructure works, waste<br \/>disposal, etc. But Israel does not do anything here and will not allow the Palestinian Authority, or even<br \/>the local municipality to do anything here, so that the whole area is a huge anarchic mess.<br \/>A German lady who works for the GIZ, a German development agency, and was on the bus from<br \/>Jerusalem with us is also trying to return to Ramallah. She spent a few days in Tel Aviv and is annoyed<br \/>because the driver would not take us all the way to Ramallah. We share a cab with her after the<br \/>checkpoint to take us home. She is one of many working for development agencies. Ramallah seems to<br \/>be teeming with them!<br \/>12.11. 2018<br \/>We stay in Ramallah today and want to try and get as close as possible to one of the settlements<br \/>bordering Ramallah. On the way there, we see an Afro-Palestinian from Jericho, who shared the cab to<br \/>Jericho with us a few days ago. What a coincidence running into him here. This happened time and<br \/>again. Just goes to show how small Ramallah is really. The other day in Birzeit, there was this German<br \/>family sitting next to us in the cafe. We ran into the guy a few days later in a liquor shop in Ramallah,<br \/>when we bought a few cans of beer. He's with the GIZ, too.<br \/>Our man from Jericho has African roots dating back to centuries ago when African slaves settled there.<br \/>He is toothless, looks rather rugged, but is very self-confident and tells us quite seriously that he would<br \/>love to marry a German woman and move to Germany with her, and couldn't we please arrange this for<br \/>him. Shortly before the road ascends towards the settlement we meet two adolescent boys, about 17<br \/>years old, on their way home from school. One of them dreams of studying in Germany. As we move on,<br \/>the boys warn us that there are soldiers up there and that they might shoot if you get too close. But<br \/>there are Palestinian houses right up to the settlement gate and we figure, it cannot be that dangerous<br \/>and keep walking.<br \/>Then we see the barbed wire fence, a reinforced iron barrier, a large sliding gate about 5 to 6 m wide,<br \/>and a guard in a watchtower. We slowly walk towards the gate with our arms held away from the body.<br \/>A soldier comes out, of course in full armour, and asks where we were going. We want to visit the <br \/>settlement, I say. He says, this is no entrance, we would have to go to the main entrance, on the other<br \/>side of the settlement, about 10 km by road. We: But there is a gate here. He: This will only be opened if<br \/>the soldiers have to go out. We: Why do the soldiers have to come out, this is the land of the<br \/>Palestinians. He: If the children throw stones at us, they would have to protect their village. Rita: But this<br \/>is not a village. This is an illegal settlement. If there wasn't a settlement here, people wouldn't have to<br \/>rebel. He says, if this is the way we see it, then there is no sense in talking to us. Well, that's how it went<br \/>back and forth. He claims they never fire live ammunition. Actually, the guy wasn't so bad, he didn't have<br \/>to talk to us at all. He's a reservist, is drafted for a month each year to serve wherever they place him. In<br \/>his civilian life, he's a water engineer or something. In front of the gate, there are hundreds of spent tear<br \/>gas grenades, about 5 cm in diameter and 15 cm in length, and as many shells of presumably illumination<br \/>cartridges and then many more spent 5 or 6 mm caliber cartridges. I don't think it was 7.62 mm. This is<br \/>definitely live ammunition! Some cartridges were still complete. We picked up one of each type. But we<br \/>know, we cannot take them - not through the check points and definitely not through airport security.<br \/>What do we tell airport security from where we got these grenades and what we are planning to do with<br \/>them?!? As we say goodbye to the soldier and walk back to the first house about 50 m from the<br \/>settlement gate, the Palestinian owner happens to be driving up in her car. The next unlikely encounter<br \/>on this day: The lady, named Ikram, Rita's age, knows practically all of Rita's classmates at Friends. They<br \/>have some acquaintances in common, etc etc. The lady's aunt calls. She lives two houses away and<br \/>worries when she sees us going into the garden with Ikram. She shows us heaps of bullet shells she<br \/>recently collected in her garden and says the soldiers often come into her garden and on her roof to<br \/>monitor the surroundings. The boys from the neighborhood come and throw stones towards the<br \/>settlement, the soldiers shoot back. During these battles, her windows were shattered so often that she<br \/>has put metal grills on all of them. She tells us, sometimes the soldiers come and call obscenities down<br \/>the hill to provoke the boys. When they react by throwing stones, the soldiers shoot.<br \/>The house was built by her parents and she grew up in it. When she was young, the settlement was just a<br \/>small army post where soldiers used to come for a month or so and leave again. In 1981, the first five<br \/>Israeli families settled there. Now it houses almost 2000 settlers and has expanded over the years by<br \/>illegal land-grabbing. Ikram is not about to leave her house, because she knows, the settlers would grab<br \/>her piece of land immediately.<br \/>She takes us back to town in her car. She has her own small graphic design company just below the old<br \/>Hotel Odeh, where Rita ate chocolate cake with her classmates under ancient pine trees that are still<br \/>there.<br \/>We eat kunafa, the Nablus speciality at Damascus Sweets for the third time, another one of the regularly<br \/>frequented cafes from Rita's school days. Then we meet Mazen at his mother's house. She is not well<br \/>and does not come out of the bedroom at all. We're sitting in the living room having tea, hoping that the<br \/>murmur of our voices might have a soothing effect on her. At some point, a neighbor comes along and<br \/>we can slowly leave with Mazen while she is left to look after Um Mazen. Mazen decides to arrange for<br \/>another fish dinner in Ain Arik, calls Jad and two other buddies, orders the fish in advance and informs<br \/>Ain Arik that we are coming.<br \/>Early this morning we heard that an Israeli special forces unit had entered Gaza with a civilian car with<br \/>Palestinian license plate in order to execute a Hamas fighter. Apparently their plot was discovered and<br \/>the car was attacked by Hamas. The air force came to their rescue and killed six Palestinians. One Israeli<br \/>also lost his life and one or two were injured. Potential for another war and the ongoing topic of the day.<br \/>When all of us are at the restaurant Mazen's friends switch on the TV and while we are eating and<br \/>drinking, talking about politics and what have you, we are watching live as events unfold in Gaza.<br \/>Apparently, 400 rockets were fired from Gaza to Ashkelon in southern Israel during the day in response<br \/>to the Israelis' attempted murder. Houses are hit, a bus shot on fire. Mazen's friends are happy.<br \/>Somehow, it seems good for the Palestinian hurt self-esteem to finally reach some targets. All of a<br \/>sudden, the reporting television station announces that it has received a telephone warning to leave the<br \/>building as it will be bombed by Israel. This is a common procedure when Israel bombs Gaza. If the Israeli<br \/>army wants to avoid civilian casualties, but wants to cause maximum damage to the infrastructure, Israel<br \/>sends a warning in the form of a light grenade, and five minutes later they send bombs. Thus, people<br \/>have time to leave the respective building but cannot take anything with them. The TV station continues<br \/>broadcasting for another couple of minutes and suddenly there is nothing but a still picture! We are<br \/>watching it happen. The Palestinian buddies are both excited and shocked. We're stunned. Despite this,<br \/>we are having a lively discussion about the eternal subject of Palestine and Israel and various other<br \/>topics.<br \/>One of them was an activist when he was young, spent 10 years in Israeli prison from 1970 till 1980 from<br \/>age 20 till 30. He lost two or three fingers trying to trigger a bomb. Today, he is the West Bank<br \/>representative of Schwarzkopf, his hair, eyelashes and eyebrows colored pitch-black. His friends call him<br \/>\"the teenager\". He was in prison with one of the Bader Meinhof members, Thomas Reuter. He talks<br \/>about solitary confinement, how he coped and what he did in order not to go completely mad. Solitary<br \/>confinement meant that no one talked to him, not even the guards, and that reading and writing was<br \/>forbidden. He says, interrogations were accompanied by beatings, humiliation and verbal abuse, but that<br \/>things got better after he was sentenced and transferred to \"normal\" prison. The International Red Cross<br \/>would come regularly, but would only address such questions as food, sleep, and other general issues.<br \/>Questions regarding torture, etc., were not asked.<br \/>If the day hadn't been so long and there wasn't so much whiskey - again, Jonny Walker Gold Label and<br \/>Carmel red wine, the evening could have gone on forever. We say our goodbyes and promise to meet<br \/>again by March 2019 at the latest. What an evening!<br \/>13.11.2018<br \/>Today at breakfast, we meet two guests at the Lavender who are not from an NGO or development<br \/>agency for a change: They are from an American software company called Harri which employs over 100<br \/>people here. Rita is very pleased. <br \/>Today is our last day. Amu Sakher had offered to provide us with a friend as tourist guide if we wanted to<br \/>come to Nablus. But we decide for Jerusalem and tell him that we will not come to Nablus. I think, it<br \/>would be too much for him and his wife if we went there.<br \/>Again, we take the shared taxi to the checkpoint of Kalandia, a refugee camp from 1948, beyond which<br \/>East Jerusalem begins. We walk cross the check point on foot. Long queues. What might it look like early<br \/>in the morning when commuters have to go over there? We are told, people start queuing at 4 am, so<br \/>they make it to their jobs on time. There is a special queue for so-called emergencies, i.e. people who are<br \/>sick and on their way to hospital, etc. A man who apparently collects tin cans and sells them to a dealer<br \/>in Jerusalem for a living, tells us that two days ago a pregnant woman allegedly died here because her<br \/>waters broke and no ambulance came. We have to pass through several revolving gates and the<br \/>soldiers will only allow through a certain number of people at a time. We...or I...always seem to attract<br \/>trouble in these situations. When it is our turn, the soldiers accidentally let seven people pass through<br \/>instead of three to four people. We are told via clattering loudspeaker to go back through the gate<br \/>(these loudspeakers remind us of secret agent movies about North Korea). I do not understand or<br \/>pretend not to. The situation becomes rather unpleasant again (not sure, for whom it is worse: us or<br \/>them.) The soldiers behind their bulletproof glass panes look rather panicked. If you have to endure this<br \/>every day on your way to work, it becomes rather clear why people here often suffer from depression.<br \/>They have no rights here whatsoever!<br \/>We finally manage to get through and take a bus to Damascus Gate bus station, opposite of which is the<br \/>so-called Garden Tomb where, according to some historic analysis and believed by many Protestants,<br \/>Jesus was crucified and buried. The garden is maintained by volunteers from all over the world. There<br \/>are groups of ardently praying and singing pilgrims everywhere. It is quite a little oasis in the middle of<br \/>the hustle and bustle of East Jerusalem.<br \/>We enter the Old City through Damascus Gate and take a walk on the city wall - quite an interesting<br \/>perspective of the Old City. We go to the Dome of the Rock, but are not allowed in, because it is not<br \/>enough that Rita is a Muslim. She would be allowed in alone, but I wouldn't. On the way around the<br \/>Dome of the Rock area, we observe four young soldiers, two women and two men, stopping three boys<br \/>who are hardly younger than the soldiers themselves. They take their ID's, make them stand with their<br \/>legs apart, face against the wall, arms held up high over their heads against the wall. The two woman<br \/>soldiers face the passers-by, while the two men pull down the boys' jackets in a rough manner, lock their<br \/>legs between their own knees, and pat them down. We stop to watch and ask the female soldier what<br \/>the boys have done to deserve this treatment. Rita asks if they are criminals, whether they robbed<br \/>someone; she replies, that this is what they are checking. I ask if I could take a picture. Of course not.<br \/>Meanwhile some other passers-by stop and watch and it becomes quite a scene. Rita explains to a<br \/>German tourist couple what is happening. More soldiers turn up. One of them comes and asks me to<br \/>move on - apparently, there is something about me that they do not like. We refuse to budge an inch. A<br \/>Palestinian woman comes along and explains that the boys are part of a group of families who came to<br \/>Jerusalem for the day to pray at the Dome of the Rock. She tries to speak to the soldiers and asks them<br \/>to let the boys go, explaining that they belonged to her group. But the soldiers send her back harshly.<br \/>After I am told the third or fourth time to move on, I take one step back, but we both tell them we have<br \/>a right to be there and they cannot send us away. Finally, they let go of the boys and we walk on with <br \/>them and their group leader. She tells us they are from Jenin, have a one-day permit to come to<br \/>Jerusalem to visit the sacred places and pray. The boys have never been to Jerusalem before (!)....and<br \/>experience oppression and humiliation in their own country. This is bound to lead to frustration, anger<br \/>and hatred. Everyone can see this quite clearly, except apparently the Israelis.<br \/>We leave the Old City and walk along the city wall in the direction of the Wailing Wall, the Jewish most<br \/>sacred site. On the way there, on the left below us is Qidron Valley, on the other side of the valley, the<br \/>Garden of Gethsemane, the Russian Orthodox Church with its golden shining onion towers, the huge<br \/>Jewish cemetery where a lot of Jewish celebrities are buried, then Silwad, a Palestinian suburb of<br \/>Jerusalem, from which the Israelis would so much like to expel the inhabitants in order to annex it. There<br \/>is a huge excavation in the middle of Silwad: the City of David, ruins that are supposed to be Jerusalem<br \/>at the time of King David. Silwad is rotten and neglected, like all Arab districts of Jerusalem because the<br \/>Israeli city administration leaves them to rot, excludes them from garbage collection, does not renew<br \/>infrastructure, does not give building permits for the renovation of houses. They're trying to get people<br \/>out, a form of ethnic cleansing.<br \/>We enter the Old City again through the next gate, pass the Wailing Wall, which is completely ruined by<br \/>security structures set up all around it, go up some stairs into the Jewish quarter. Here the stone slabs of<br \/>the paths are clean; there are lockable garbage containers and proper signs leading tourists and<br \/>strangers to the major sites, and the houses are renovated. I run into a 50 year old Jew who speaks<br \/>American English. He's very jovial, and we chat a little. He asks me how I am, and I tell him quite honestly<br \/>that I am not feeling very happy because we just spent several days in the West Bank and the conditions<br \/>there shocked me. He understands: \"Oh yes, I live there in a settlement near Bethlehem.\" When I ask<br \/>him why he lives in a settlement in the West Bank which is Palestinian land, he says \"It is our holy land\".<br \/>God gave it to them, and he is convinced that the Israeli wars, especially the Yom Kippur war, were won<br \/>because God wanted them to win and helped them. I ask him: \"Are you sure it was God that helped you<br \/>and not the Americans with their reconnaissance technology?\" After a long discussion, I recommend the<br \/>book by Yuval Harari, an Israeli, about the development of mankind. I doubt, he even considers looking<br \/>into the book. Rita stays far away. She does not want to listen to the guy's holy land crap. She watches a<br \/>couple of Jewish boys playing soccer in the square. We head back towards Damascus gate, stop at the<br \/>Furun Green Door, a baker where people used to bring their prepared meals to be cooked in the wood<br \/>stove until the Israelis forbade him to do so because of the alleged smoke pollution. Now the customers<br \/>do not come anymore because having it done in a gas stove is just like cooking at home. We eat the<br \/>legendary pita bread baked in the oven with egg, tomato paste and melted cheese, drink tea, while the<br \/>baker tells us his story, which unfortunately leaves us no time to buy a shofar. I don't think Rita's so<br \/>unhappy about that. When we came to Jerusalem the other day, I saw the beautiful shofars they sell<br \/>here and would love to buy one. But Rita is boycotting my wish.<br \/>Returning to Ramallah is the same as two days ago: The bus again only takes us up to the checkpoint in<br \/>Kalandia. We cross the check point on foot with all the other commuters, have no desire to sit in the taxi<br \/>in the traffic jam and start walking past the traffic jam towards Ramallah. When the traffic clears, we flag<br \/>a cab to take us home.<br \/>While having her evening cigarette outside in the garden, Rita meets a young woman whom we had<br \/>already seen twice at breakfast, but had not spoken to. She works for the Deutsche Welle Academy and<br \/>teaches \"Mobile Reporting\" at universities in Jordan, Syria and Palestine. Very exciting. When Rita meets<br \/>her by the front door, she is on her way to a Salsa evening at the \"Fuego\", one of the many hip bars in<br \/>Ramallah. To think that not even 100km away in Gaza there is a war looming! By the way, the reading on<br \/>this subject is that the Israelis did not continue to bomb because they were wrong, because they were<br \/>the ones who came into Gaza to assassinate a Hamas fighter - while Netanyahu was attending a peace<br \/>conference in France!<br \/>14.11.2018<br \/>Today is our departure. We say goodbye to Mireille, the owner of the Lavender, a typical Palestinian<br \/>Christian: open-minded, westernized, educated, and wealthy. She had told us that she has a Jerusalem<br \/>ID, so she is officially allowed to live there because she comes from Jerusalem originally and spends most<br \/>of her time in Jerusalem. But many actually live in the West Bank and lie about it, teach their children to<br \/>lie about it. Because if the authorities knew that they are actually living in the West Bank mostly, they<br \/>would lose their residence permit for Jerusalem! All these measures are nothing more than a creeping<br \/>ethnic cleansing of Palestine from the Palestinians.<br \/>We had wanted to meet another uncle of Rita's. He has a Canadian passport and has been living in the<br \/>West Bank as a tourist, doing visa runs every 3 months to extend the tourist visa, because Israeli<br \/>immigration will not give residence permits to Palestinians with Western passports. So, this uncle was<br \/>hiding inside his house basically for the last year or so, because he was always afraid to get caught and<br \/>deported. When Rita contacted him, he told her that they were packing up and leaving. Many<br \/>Palestinians with western passports had to do so before him. More ethnic cleansing.<br \/>Even on this last part of our journey, we do not want to take the easy way. (Mind you: we get to fly out<br \/>of Tel Aviv which is much easier than what most Palestinians have to go through. Palestinians are not<br \/>allowed to use Tel Aviv airport at all, unless they have a Western passport. Gaza residents can only come<br \/>and go via Egypt through Rafah border where they are sometimes held up for days. And West Bank<br \/>residents enter via Jordan through Allenby Bridge across the river Jordan.) We pull our suitcases to the<br \/>bus station and take the bus to Jerusalem. We are quite curious how we will get through the checkpoint<br \/>this time. The bus must somehow return to Jerusalem to pick up passengers again. For a while, this was<br \/>not possible at all. People drove up to the checkpoint in a Palestinian bus, just like we did with the<br \/>shared taxi, then walked through the checkpoint on foot, in order to take another Palestinian vehicle<br \/>beyond the checkpoint, however, one with Israeli number plate. That's how it was when we took the<br \/>shared taxi to Jerusalem.<br \/>A youngish German (late 30s) is on the bus with us. He, too, stayed at the Area D the past few days. He is<br \/>a globetrotter, apparently has money of his own, which he managed to increase successfully. Had<br \/>interests in a shipping company in Hamburg, which he sold, and is now blowing the money on traveling.<br \/>But the way he sounds, there is more and he does not need to worry about the future. He is politically<br \/>very interested, and we have an interesting discussion. At the checkpoint, two soldiers board, a man and <br \/>a woman, and check all the documents, take some of the ID cards and \"entry permits\" to Jerusalem out<br \/>for checking. A woman sitting a few rows in front obviously has an American passport and also an Israeli<br \/>ID card for the West Bank, but no entry permit for Jerusalem. She has to leave the bus and they make<br \/>her walk through the check point. They will probably not let her pass though. The woman directly in<br \/>front of us says that she probably would have been sent off, too, if we hadn't sat directly behind her as<br \/>witnesses. She's had this happen to her several times before. Whenever Westerners were sitting on the<br \/>bus, she can stay; if not, she has to get off and walk through the cattle cages.<br \/>Going to Tel Aviv airport is the same procedure as upon our arrival: We take the tram to the central bus<br \/>station of West Jerusalem, then a bus to the airport. All in all we need 4,5 hours because of the many<br \/>travel restrictions for 30km as the crow flies! When Rita lived with her grandfather at the end of the 70's,<br \/>she took the scheduled taxi directly from Ramallah to the airport in half an hour.<br \/>On the final leg to the airport, we strike up a conversation with an English Jew from Manchester, a very<br \/>young and very religious man who studies at a theological seminary in Jerusalem and would like to<br \/>become a Rabbi. He has 10 brothers and sisters (first book of Moses: Be fruitful and increase in<br \/>number...), would rather not read anything critical, such as Yuval Hariri, because he feels he is too young<br \/>and does not want his faith to be shaken. The use of smart phones and computers, especially the<br \/>Internet, are not encouraged. Another very interesting conversation.<br \/>We get the very last two seats on the flight to Frankfurt - separated and middle seats - but we are<br \/>grateful anyway. All, literally all flights out of Tel Aviv are packed - except El Al. That is because the<br \/>Israelis have no way into or out of the country except through Tel Aviv. Rita's neighbor later says to her<br \/>he refuses to fly with them. They are too rude, he says.<\/p>","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/172","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=172"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/172\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":176,"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/172\/revisions\/176"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/76"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=172"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=172"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rijo-travel.de\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=172"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}