1/2013 - SUSANA AND GEOFF’S TRIP TO JORDAN, ISRAEL, AND THE WEST BANK
We
were drawn to these lands for may reasons — including history, topography and
current events and we also wanted to know how the regional conflict is
experienced on a day-to-day basis. The research we did before traveling made me
realize that the conflict was already embedded in the two checkpoints of the
partition plan of 1947, which had created geographically fragmented states. It
is a conflict that continues to be driven by extreme ideological positions and
contradictory factors, such as very real security issues for Israel vs. the
Israeli settlements encroaching on Palestinian territories, heavily subsidized
and protected by the Israeli army. And Israel’s relations with its immediate
neighbors, historically and currently, are also essential to the regional
story, so we took advantage of this trip to also visit Jordan.
JORDAN
I did
not want the experience of crossing the Israel/Jordan checkpoint at the
Allenby/King Hussein Bridge to contaminate the beginning of our trip. The
reported minimum of three hours it takes to clear security in a militarized and
chaotic environment (after a 3-4 hour taxi drive from Tel Aviv) was more than I
wanted to endure after our 5-hour flight from Madrid. So we killed some time at
the airport and took the direct 50-minute flight to Amman’s Queen Alia airport.
But we skipped Amman, choosing instead to sleep in Madaba, where we could start
our journey with a view of the 6th century mosaic map on the floor of St.
George’s church. The work of unknown Greek Orthodox monks, it is the oldest
known geographical depiction of biblical territories, from Lebanon to the Nile
delta and from the Mediterranean to the Arabic desert. The central and
best-preserved part of the mosaic is “HAGIA POLIS IERUSALEM” — “Holy City
Jerusalem” — whose Damascus Gate was the point used to measure distances to all
cities in the map. Outside, the hustle of the dusty provincial town center was
amplified by the visual clutter of campaign posters strung across commercial
streets for candidates to the Parliament’s 140 seats (only 10% of which are
reserved for women).
Having
little confidence in public transportation, which was scarce and, we were told,
unreliable, we hired a taxi to take us to Petra via the King’s Highway. This
ancient road, now paved but still meandering, winds through the desert and up
to the ridge of the eroded red landscape of Wadi Mujib, as magnificent as the
Grand Canyon, before reaching Kerac. This is one of the most impressive of a
series of crusaders’ castles whose ruins crown the mountains throughout the
region, ghostly reminders of the constancy of wars. When we arrived in Petra in
mid-afternoon the sunlight was quickly fading, coloring the hills a dull, dusty
red.
Petra: Treasury. 3 Jan. 2013 |
On the
steep climb to the High Place of Sacrifice (460 feet above the ground!) we encountered
little souvenir tables staffed by Bedouin women and children, who clamber up
the cliff every day. On the way down, Hanan besieged me in perfect, nuanced
English learned as a child from the tourists, to please be her first client
that day, so I obliged with the purchase of a small forged-iron horse and a
donkey made in her village with the same tools and formal ideas as in ancient
figurines. Later, we would have to hire the actual beasts to see the rest of
the site when our legs could no longer support us. We were grateful for the
paucity of tourists in winter, because the silence and immensity of the desert
were exquisite and not to be disturbed, an experience that was even more
heightened in Wadi Rum the following day.
Wadi Rum, 4 Jan. 2013 |
YALLAH!
“Let’s go!” he would happily scream while dropping sideways without holding the
wheel to emphasize that there were no roads or traffic rules to guide our
itinerary. Yet, the visitor’s experience is structured by highlights – such as
a huge tree growing in the sand, a hidden spring, an exceedingly strange rock
formation, or glyphs encoding information for ancient caravans -- each with a
name, sometimes inspired by T. E. Lawrence’s writings or David Lean’s movie
about him. While Geoff climbed the “Red Sand Dune”, I sat down and watched the
red sand paint the side of a rock cliff. This slow and almost imperceptible
activity so utterly transformed the cliff that I renounced all climbing
opportunities for the rewards of contemplation.
Wadi Rum
is the kind of place that could be called sublime, where awe, fear and an
irresistible surrender of reason to sight, touch and smell, combine to stir up
something deep inside. When we returned to Rum Village at sundown we learned
that all the houses were inside sub-tribal family compounds, marked by waist-
or shoulder-high mud walls. The exception was Mohammed Hammad’s house, ornate
and decorated like no other and in its own plot, a rebellious sign of
individualistic modernity, where our host is never long separated from his
computer and Wi-Fi connection. Regrettably, we didn’t spend that night alone in
the desert because we had to leave before dawn to catch our plane back to
Israel. On this return trip we took the aptly named Desert Highway, straighter
and faster than the King’s Highway, making part of the trip through a red sand
storm.
JERUSALEM
AND TEL AVIV
We
arrived in Ben Gurion Airport in the morning on Shabbat, when public transportation closes down. But we did find a sherut (shared cab) to take us to
Jerusalem. It was raining lightly, an anticipation of the impending storm that
would leave that city and all major highways leading to it paralyzed two days
after our arrival. We stayed in a grand old guesthouse in the old city’s
Armenian quarter, near the Jaffa Gate and the turbaned stele marking the tombs
of Suleyman’s architects, whom he had executed because they had left the grave
of King David (a prophet of Islam) outside the city walls. The old city is a
labyrinth of streets with entrances to courtyards surrounded by dwellings, with
the exception of the colonnaded Roman Cardo
and the Jewish quarter. All synagogues and one third of the quarter were
destroyed when Jordan occupied the city after the 1948 war. It was rebuilt,
when Israel took control of the city after the Six-Day War (1967), to include
the big plaza in front of the Western Wall and to create public open spaces and
modern apartment buildings clad with the same stone as the old.
Old
Jerusalem impressed us as a kind of hospice, where each group of inmates,
wearing exaggerated identity markers, is locked inside its own religious and
existential truth. You see them all over, at all times of day and night, alone
or in groups: Armenian monks in pointy headgear mimicking the shape of Mount
Ararat; Haredi men dressed up for the Shabbat in huge flattened fur hats;
Catholics in tunics dragging full size crosses along the souvenir market that
now occupies the Via Dolorosa; Greek Orthodox priests in tall cylindrical hats
and chest-size silver crosses. You don’t see the Ethiopian monks on the
streets, as they seem to spend most of their time inside the diminutive mud
huts of their monastery built on the public access roof of the Church of the
Holy Sepulcher. Inside the church, a variegated mob engaged in various rituals.
Many believers seemed to be in a kind of orgasmic ecstasy, prostrated over a
stone the length of a human body, frantically rubbing on it the plastic bags
containing their purchases. It is said to be the stone where Mary washed Jesus’
body after it was taken down from the cross.
Armenian monk |
Outside
the old city there is a modern Jerusalem, where a park-like precinct including
the Knesset, the Supreme Court and various administrative buildings, stake
Israel’s claim to Jerusalem as the state’s capital. At the Israel Museum, also
within the precinct, we ran through the fierce rain to enter the subterranean
gallery housing the Dead Sea scrolls found in Qumran, considered the work of
the ascetic Truth searchers known as the Essenes (2nd C BC to 1st
C AD), a model for current-day haredim.
I very much wanted to see Yad Vashem, the matrix of all modern memorials to
crimes against Humanity, but we encountered its forbidding gate locked up due
of the snow storm, the worst in two decades.
In Tel
Aviv we felt relieved to find another side of Israeli society --the democratic,
argumentative, self-doubting, sophisticated, ethnically mixed, outward-looking
one. The people we encountered eschewed certainty, believed in dialogue and
toleration, and were generally critical of their government’s policies regarding
the occupied territories. Tel Aviv is a dynamic and ambitious city where the
“garden city” urban fabric of the central district, proposed by Patrick Geddes
in the late 1920’s became populated by the largest concentration of
Bauhaus-inspired buildings anywhere in the world. Not all are well designed,
and many are in disrepair, but they reminded us, along with the kibbutz
movement, of the optimistic, modern Nation-building during the State of
Israel’s first decades. Within and outside this core, huge new residential and
hotel towers, many on the waterfront, are drastically changing the scale of the
city, threatening to replace much of the old neighborhoods, like Neve Tzdek, or
block public access to the boardwalk.
THE WEST
BANK
“Palestinian authority territory
area A ahead. Entry to Israeli citizens is forbidden. Dangerous to your lives
and is against the Israeli Law.” So read the sign at the crossing point. A law
openly broken by many. The taxi with Israeli plates that had picked us up at
the Jerusalem YMCA left us at the bridge with the huge warning signs. From that
point onwards Yamen would take us to Jericho, Qumran, the Jordan River and the
Dead Sea the first day, and to Camp Aida, Bethlehem and Ramallah the second. On
our way to the 5th and 6th century cliff-hanging Greek
Orthodox monasteries (St. George, Mar Saba) we heard the long litany of big and
small ways in which the Israeli government make the lives of Palestinians
miserable and anxiety-ridden. Restriction of movement between cities; access
forbidden to Jerusalem; being forced to fly from Jordan to go abroad (even if
you are a Canadian, like Yamen’s wife, but married to a Palestinian); being
forced to close down shops that face the separation wall; confiscation of land
or forbidding their use for cultivation if it adjoins a Jewish settlement;
unreliable water supply; searches at checkpoints, and so on. Yamen was proud of
having been Banksy’s contact for the implementation of the Flower Thrower and
the girl registering the Israeli soldier, his well-known murals on the separation
wall. The wall has become, on the Palestinian side, a gallery to display the
work of the world’s best-known street artists as well as those of amateur
graffitists. Another Berlin Wall waiting to fall.
We found
submerged in the Jordan River four of the many Russian tourists we had
encountered, covered only with wet T-shirts acquired at the shop near the place
where Jesus had been allegedly baptized. The young Jordanian and Israeli
soldiers guarding their respective banks could not take their eyes off the
spectacular blonde and the only man, who was using his iPad inside the river
to document his own baptism.
There
seems to be a construction boom going on in Ramallah, perhaps in anticipation
of the city becoming the capital of some future state. We stayed to have dinner
with one of Geoff’s former academic colleagues, an Israeli Palestinian (raised
as a Catholic) married to an American. He is an anthropologist, as critical of
Al Fatah and Hamas as he is of Israel, convinced that those two competing Palestinian
authorities are both in corrupt complicity with the State of Israel to
administer the colonies and manage the conflict.
The
snowfall had also paralyzed traffic in Ramallah. In the morning, young men were
staging a battle with snowballs around the new fountain surrounded by giant
lions (made in China) that marks the town center. Finally a friendly young man
found us a taxi that took us to the Kalandia checkpoint, where we arrived just
in time to switch to an Israeli sherut
to take us back to Jerusalem. Israeli soldiers checked our I.D. inside the bus,
saving us the unpleasantness of crossing the oppressive, jail-like long
corridors on foot.
Banksy: Flower Thrower, on the security wall, Bethlehem |
Either way, it would also help to recognize that the 19th century notion of nation-state with defensible boundaries would make no sense in the 21st. And that other ways exist to define place for an “imagined community”, such as “The Arc”, a proposal by Douglas Suisman that uncannily echoes my own thinking on this subject: http://www.rand.org/pubs/research_briefs/RB9119/index1.html