Part II: Pooneh (corn). South Africa, with a little bit of Lesotho and Swaziland

Always use the word ‘Africa’ or ‘Darkness’ or ‘Safari’ in your title. Also useful are words such as ‘Guerrillas,’ ‘Timeless,’ ‘Primordial’ and ‘Tribal.’
Treat Africa as if it were one country. It is hot and dusty with rolling grasslands and big red sunsets and huge herds of animals and tall, thin people who are starving. Don’t get bogged down with precise descriptions. Africa is big: fifty-four countries, 900 million people who are too busy starving and dying and warring and emigrating to read your book.
Establish early on that your liberalism is impeccable, and mention near the beginning how much you love Africa, how you fell in love with the place and can’t live without her. Africa is to be pitied, worshipped or dominated.
Taboo subjects: ordinary domestic scenes, love between Africans (unless a death is involved), references to African writers or intellectuals, mention of school-going children who are not suffering from yaws or Ebola fever or female genital mutilation.
Always end your book with Nelson Mandela saying something about rainbows or renaissances. Because you care.

—From “How to Write About Africa,” Kenyan author Binyavanga Wainaina

Overview

South Africa—some of its many other names are Afrika Borwa in Sotho & Tswana, iNingizimu Afrika in Zulu, uMzantsi Afrika in Xhosa, and Suid Afrika in Afrikaans.

The rest of the world has probably heard a bit more about South Africa than about other African countries, with the anti-apartheid struggle reaching worldwide awareness in the 1980s and Nelson Mandela being inducted into the pantheon of non-violent resistance. More recently, Trevor Noah has helped put South Africa more on the map in pop culture. I’ll do my best here to give some background as to what’s the deal with this country. As with my intro to Palestine and Israel, this in no way is meant to be a complete perfect picture of South Africa’s many identities, history, and current events. I’m writing most of this post-trip from my notes I took from all the people I met and talked to, from museums, and from various sources online and in print that I came across before, during, and after the trip (Britannica online is my go-to source). Again, I’ll try to refrain from including too many specific names and dates, just giving an overall narrative. It’s a lot, but it really helps with understanding the context of the places I saw, and the many complex identities of the people I met. If you’re South African and happen to be reading this, and I seriously misrepresent something about the history or current events, please do reach out so I can correct it.

The people

All African countries south of the Sahara are much more diverse than most outsiders realize, and South Africa is no exception. With a population of almost 60 million, South Africa has 11 official languages, though several more are spoken besides those, including the tongues of the various immigrant groups from other parts of Africa. The most common indigenous African languages are Xhosa and Zulu, as they are the largest ethnicities. White people of Dutch descent as well as “coloured” Africans (the official term there for mixed race people of various backgrounds) in the western Cape areas speak Afrikaans, a Dutch-related language. Whites of British heritage of course speak English, which also still serves as a default language for everyone else across the country. South Africa is also home to the largest Indian population outside of India in the world, forced laborers brought in during British colonialism; most of them speak English, being several generations removed from India. Complicating things even further, some of the coloureds in the west I mentioned also have some Indian descent, brought over by the early Dutch colonists as slaves from the East Indies, along with people from Malaysia, Indonesia, and the east coast of Africa.

It’s a lot to take in. Rewind just twenty-five years, most of the people just mentioned didn’t have any rights or representation under the apartheid system in South Africa. And the roots of that go back another 350 years, to when the Dutch first started colonizing the place, after the Portuguese were the first Europeans to encounter it. And before that, humans had of course lived in the land for thousands of years, as with anywhere else, though we’ve probably been in the area that is today South Africa a bit longer than we’ve been in other places. You know the whole “all humans started in Africa” thing? Some of the caves where the oldest hominin (homo sapien and earlier humans) remains are found are in South Africa, in the Cradle of Humankind near Johannesburg.

Most of the first known ethnic groups and cultures in southern Africa several thousand years ago were Khoe-San peoples, until Bantu peoples migrated in from the north. The San peoples were (some still are) mostly hunter-gatherers, while the Khoe herded their own domesticated livestock. Khoe-San peoples are one of the earliest groups that branched off from early humans that have still maintained a distinct ethnicity, and language(s), while human groups in many other parts of the world have since mixed with each other more over the millennia.

Some Bantu societies were built around smaller tribes, while others were larger and more centralized, and over the centuries various kingdoms formed and broke apart. One of the more prominent ones was the kingdom of Mapungubwe in the northeast, around 900 years ago. Prior to the arrival of Europeans in the 17th century, the main ethnicities in the region were the Xhosa in the south, Tswana in the north, Zulu in the east, and Basotho & Pedi groups across the central and northeastern areas. As with humans all over the world throughout history, these different cultures interacted with each other sometimes peacefully, sometimes violently. I think it’s important to at least give the names of some of these groups and their history because so often, sub-Saharan Africa  has its pre-colonial history reduced to just footnotes about nameless tribes leading primitive pastoral lives, painted as either squabbling savages or romanticized as pacifist proto-hippies, when in reality they were (and are) so much more.

The colonizers

From there we’ll jump to the 1650s, when the Dutch started the Cape Town colony, strategically located on the route to India (the Portuguese had been the first Europeans to sail through 150 years before). They gradually expanded their influence across the western cape further inland, bringing in slaves from around the Indian Ocean and brutally subjugating the Khoisan and other indigenous Africans they encountered, resisted as they did. Over the years the Dutch grew a very strong identity as the Boers, believing it was their God-given destiny to rule over and prosper in South Africa (sound familiar?).

In the 1800s the British gained control over the Dutch African colonies out of the mess around Napoleon back in Europe, and continued to colonize the region further. The British did abolish slavery (to the annoyance of the Boers), but started to bring in forced laborers from their own colonies in India. Tensions over minerals like gold and political control rose between the British and the Boers throughout the century, leading to the two Boer Wars in 1880 and 1900, in which the British cracked down on their fellow white Europeans using concentration camps. The other big series of events in this century was instability in the east, partially brought on by refugees fleeing from Portuguese slavers in Mozambique, which led to the Zulus under King Shaka becoming more expansionist, forming a kingdom that displaced other groups and lead to the formation of independent countries Lesotho and Swaziland. The British, with aid from some of the Boers, continued to conquer the rest of the land as part of the European Scramble for Africa, fighting several wars with the Xhosa over the years in the southeast, and facing fierce resistance from the Zulus.  By the 1900s, Britain had defeated the Boers, the Xhosa, the Zulus, and the remaining African peoples. Over the course of the 20th century, the Boers would come to identify more as “Afrikaners.”

Apartheid

Up until this point, there had been no clear standard laws across the land discriminating against non-white peoples (indigenous Africans, coloureds, Indians); racist laws varied between the different British and Boer/Afrikaner colonies and cities. Though tensions continued between the British and Afrikaners, the new white South African government was united in passing more country-wide laws on racial segregation. These laws provided the foundation for the National Party’s white supremacist apartheid system, officially started in 1948.

Brutal white leaders like Hendrik Verwoerd tried very much to portray it as a benevolent “good-neighborliness,” that it was for the better of all the racial groups to have their own separate areas and lives. It certainly rhymed with the “separate but equal” idea over in Jim Crow America, and of course it was anything but that. Non-white people could not vote, mixed marriages were outlawed, schools and facilities were segregated, and they could only live and move in restricted areas while working as laborers during the day in white areas. The regime forcibly relocated hundreds of thousands of non-whites out of their homes into these new designated areas, bantustans, from the 1950s into the 1970s.

Resistance

Non-violent action against segregation had been carried out by various groups since the earlier pre-apartheid laws, especially from the Indian population led by a younger Mahatma Gandhi, but with the rise of apartheid, anti-apartheid movements soon formed across the country in the 1950s, with the ANC (African National Congress), trade unions, and other groups leading the charge. Many white citizens joined the protest movements as well. Resistance was at first non-violent, but the South African state became more of a total police state. With the 1960 massacre of unarmed protesters in Sharpeville by troops, more of the anti-apartheid groups turned to armed struggle, mostly sabotaging government and military buildings but also killing soldiers and police officers, as well as some civilians. Things were further complicated as South Africa became a Cold War battle, with the United States supporting the capitalist apartheid regime and the Soviet Union supporting the more socialist anti-apartheid groups (each country in it for their own selfish reasons of power). Within a few years most anti-apartheid leaders were arrested, including Nelson Mandela, while others escaped, went into exile, and continued organizing resistance from abroad.

In 1976 the movement reignited with the mass student-led Soweto Uprising. Strikes and nonviolent protests by victims of apartheid intensified in the 80s, along with some violent attacks from militant groups, as the government army and police became ever more brutal. The international community and the UN began to isolate the South African government; civil society groups around the world boycotted the country and any institutions connected to apartheid, and governments began trade and arms sanctions (the US government was one of the last ones to enact embargos). It was clear that while the South African military was too strong for the movement to defeat, the government could not fully crush resistance, both at home and abroad; over the course of years-long negotiations between leaders from each side, prisoners like Mandela were released, and militants lay down their arms. The dismantling of apartheid began in the 1990s under president F.W. de Klerk, leading to the first election in which everyone could vote in 1994, with Mandela winning the presidency, after 46 years of apartheid and more than a few hundred years of white supremacist rule.

Present and future

Many things have changed for the better in the rainbow nation since the 1990s. South Africans from any background can now vote and move freely, choose where they work, marry who they want. But many things have not changed, or they’ve even gotten worse. Decades of systemic oppression tend to leave strong legacies. Some black and coloured Africans have been able to get better jobs and earn more, but most wealth and especially land is still owned by whites; poverty and inequality are rampant, leading to one of the biggest crime rates in the world. It is no secret that the ANC has become corrupt, and many South Africans are very disillusioned with their political leaders. There is still tension between different black ethnic groups, as well as xenophobia against the many immigrants who have come from other parts of Africa for better opportunity, especially Zimbabweans. The government did very little to address the early AIDS crisis too, though it has done more in recent years.

You may be saying, “damn, Ben, you’re coming down hard on these people, you think you could do better if you were in charge of South Africa?”, but again, I’m editing this after my trip—this is just a taste of the grievances the South African people themselves have, from all backgrounds. Still, holding true to my principles I set out with back in October, I will try to not just focus on apartheid and these big issues while I am there and writing about it. There is still the beautiful mountains and wildlife and coasts to explore, the less tragic parts of the history, the culture, the language, and of course farming, the crops and the animals and the land. Now that I’ve shed some light on the tough stuff, let’s get to it—next stop, South Africa.

Note: I will be mentioning people’s race in most encounters I have throughout South Africa. It is not always so pressingly relevant to do this for countries outside of South Africa, though race, ethnicity, and nationality do play a huge role in most places around the world. But in South Africa especially race, and the divisions between (and within) races, are a major fact of its social fabric. Pretending otherwise, that we should be “colorblind” to race, is no less counterproductive here than in the US or elsewhere. I think it is very relevant in showing where the country and its people are at, where they’ve been, and where they’re going—how people from different backgrounds interact with each other, what kinds of jobs and stations in life they tend to occupy.

As far as more specific ethnicity goes, which is also very relevant as there are tensions between different ethnic groups within the country, as an outsider I unfortunately won’t be able to tell in most cases whether a black person is Sotho or Zulu, or if they’re an immigrant from someplace else entirely—though it is safe to assume that most black people in Lesotho are Sotho, most around Durban are Zulu, etc. Yet around Cape Town I won’t be able to always tell if a black person is coloured or full Xhosa. I also won’t be able to always tell which white people are Afrikaner, British descent, or other. If I don’t mention race, it can be presumed the person is black African, though if I am in a hostel it can be presumed most people are white travelers from Europe, North America, or Australia.

Photos from the farm, Bethlehem, around Israel, and around Petra & Jordan

I pulled all these off the internet due to the aforementioned South African phone incident, shoutout to Google Image for that. I was able to find plenty of good Petra shots, but finding good pics of some of the other stuff I saw was a bit harder, and some of them are stock photos with watermarks, but for the most part I’m pretty pleased with what I was able to get. Enjoy!

November 27th to December 22nd: Swords into Plowshares

Marhaba, Mar Saba. Tuesday 11/27—Tent of Nations, Bethlehem, and Mar Saba Monastery

On my day off I go on an adventure to the Mar Saba Monastery in the mountains towards the Jordan Valley to the east. There are many such monasteries carved into desert cliffsides throughout the region. Mid-morning, I make a sloppy peanut butter & jam inside some pita for later and head up through the main farm. I say hi to Meladeh and Daher on the way–Daher reminds me to not get ripped off by a taxi driver, and Meladeh gives me some spinach pastries for the road. Now I’m a veteran at taking the sheruts–I get one to pull over for me within 5 minutes like a champ. The driver’s not going directly to Bab-z-Qaq, but he drops me off near where a bunch of taxis hang out. The first one I meet asks a higher price than what Daher told me, the next one is satisfactory. His name is Amin, and he agrees to wait for an hour while I’m there, after calling to presumably check with his boss what the rate should be. We take off towards the monastery east into the desert hills. It’s not that far. With some traffic coming out of Bethlehem and speed bumps every couple hundred meters (placed for good reason) on the winding roads, it takes about a half hour. Amin doesn’t speak too much English, but we talk a bit, bonding over bashing Trump as we pass his mural on the Wall. The desert hills are beautiful as always, and in the distance I see the mountains of Jordan across the valley again. Many Palestinians and Bedouin walk along the side of the road, sometimes with donkeys and horses, causing Amin some annoyance. When kids see that there’s a white foreigner in the car as we pass, they grin and wave. He pauses every now and then at forks to double-check with locals that he’s going the right way. Soon I see the tops of the monastery’s towers appear further down.

Amin parks and I get out. I can’t see the whole structure from the side yet. I walk around a path above the valley, and descended steep steps down to a stream and a bridge. There are a couple Bedouin tents and shacks around the site, some with herds of sheep and goats. A man with his donkey laden with cargo casually passes by me on the steps. After the little bridge there are steps going up the other side, and I make the climb to get a spectacular view of the whole structure, towers and walls clinging to the cliffside like lichen on a tree trunk. I sit and admire it for a few minutes, eating my PB&J. I then climb back up the other side and approach the entrance to get a look inside. There are some workers milling around, making some deliveries from cars and pickup trucks. A couple of the monks converse with them just inside the entrance. They look like Rasputin, with their black robes, big black beards, and tall hats. One of them talks to me a bit. He goes by Theoctitus, after one of the main disciples of the original Saint Sabbas (Mar Saba), probably a self-chosen name. The monastery was founded over 1,500 years ago, and is Eastern Orthodox; Theoctitus himself is from Greece, where he first began the process of becoming a monk. The remains of Mar Saba are still there, though I unfortunately can’t get in to see them. He tells me that most of the monastery is only open to visitors in the morning now. They used to let visitors in more in the afternoon, but then they had less time for their praying and studying. Theoctitus shrugs his shoulders and arms, in a “what-are-you-gonna-do” kind of way. I am able to look down into a courtyard though from our balcony. One monk paces around drumming a large block of wood–Theoctitus tells me that’s usually a call to prayer. Another monk waters plants and feeds and pets a cat. That one struck me in particular–even monks like their cute animals. I thank Theoctitus for his time, and let him get back to God. The brief glimpse I have into the monks’ life makes their experience more real. Plenty of people live in isolated rural areas around the world, but these guys really do choose to live so secluded and devoted their whole lives, in addition to foregoing so many pleasures, all for faith. That’s dedication.

I walk around a bit more and get back to Amin and the taxi. On the way back he sees me taking pictures of the hills and offers to stop, though I tell him he can keep going. He also offers to make a stop for coffee once we’re in Bethlehem. I try to tip him at the end, though he waves it away. I still have a couple hours before sunset, and go up towards the old city to check out the small Bethlehem Museum I heard about. It’s in an old Palestinian family’s house dating from the early Rivera (Ribera); the family now lives in Chile. They have a lot of artifacts showing Palestinian life going back to the 19th century, showing how life changed in the 20th century with gradual westernization, especially during the British period after World War I. The gift shop sells many crafts through Sunbula, the fair trade group we met with based in Jerusalem on the delegation, where I pick up a purse for my mom’s birthday. I swiftly head into a sherut headed towards al-Khalil. This driver is even more confused about me getting off at Kilo 17, but another guy who speaks more English in the cab helps us sort it out. I walk past the settlement and Nahallin again and and greet Daher and Rachel from France, who I only got to briefly meet the day before. Rachel is cool–as I get to know her over dinner, she tells me about some of her traveling. She’s spending the better part of a year with her own project going around to different places where there’s been recent or ongoing conflict and persecution, learning about how people nonviolently resist, and how people from different sides come together in reconciliation after conflicts.

The brothers reunited. Wednesday 11/28 to Saturday 12/8—Tent of Nations

The last couple weeks go fast. I do more work with Rachel during the couple days she stays, a lot of planting fava and other beans, and she leaves Thursday afternoon, though she comes back for a brief visit the last week to interview Daoud more about the Tent of Nations, and his overall experience living under occupation. I get to know Daoud more too. He was just in the DC area meeting with people and organizations who help support the farm’s mission with publicity and funds, including Eyewitness Palestine. We prune a lot of trees over the next week. I had known that pruning was a thing before, but I hadn’t realized just how vital a process it is. He tells me how it’s extremely important so that the tree can breathe and not be weighed down by extra branches, and so that the rest of it can grow. That way the wind can blow through it and not push against the mass of all the leaves and branches. “It’s like giving the tree a haircut,” I observe. Daoud chuckles at that way of putting it. He mostly works on almond and olive trees (each olive tree only has to really get pruned every few years, but the almond tree must be every season, as they grow much faster). I’m amazed how much he has to shave off them–at some points almost half of the tree that was there before is on the ground once he’s through with it. It’s a more precise art, one he’s practiced since his father taught him, and even still he isn’t always 100 percent sure of which move is the exact right one to make. I don’t do much of the pruning myself–I mostly help collect the cut pieces off the ground. Vicky eats the leaves off the olive branches, and what’s left gets used for firewood. I then turn the soil around the liberated trees so their roots can get better rain and air flow.

I also clean a couple of the caves, mostly just heavy-duty sweeping, including the Chapel Cave, which has some Christian objects from when their father, Bishara, was a preacher. I help out Meladeh a couple times in the kitchen preparing lunch for groups of visitors, mostly by helping chop up veggies, as her arm and shoulder is feeling its 80 years of us. I also join the assembly lines of her, Daoud, and me scrubbing and rinsing the dozens of dishes and silverware sets from guests. Meladeh’s English is limited, though her favorite phrase is “eat, eat.” Sometimes when we don’t understand each other we look at each other blankly for a couple seconds, then start laughing. She is a refugee from Jaffa, born there in the late 1930s, and of course hasn’t been able to go back since 1948; I, with no direct ancestors from the land (at least since the Romans kicked out the Jews 2,000 years ago), could get Israeli citizenship and move there in a heartbeat if I wanted to.

The last week some pine tree saplings arrive in a truck. Daher and I unload them, and the driver then helps us toss a bunch of junk and scrap metal into the back of the now-empty truck. The next day I begin to dig holes and plant the pine trees by the boundary with a neighboring farm down near my cave, a meter apart. I’m a little surprised that they’re pine trees, as I know they’re not native to the religion and can be bad for the soiI; the JNF is infamous for planting them in forests, often on the ruins of Palestinian villages from the Nakba. I had one such tree planted in my name when I had my bar mitzvah at 13. Daoud affirms this, but adds that farmers still strategically put them in some places. In this case, as they grow bigger they’ll help shield many of the crops in the valley from gusts of wind and the debris and dust that come with them. I still get to do plenty of work with Daher too. We repair the wood frame of a new small greenhouse together too, stringing up recycled plastic bottles as the walls, where he plans on planting tomatoes. We create a couple different makeshift dens for the three dogs so they’re separated around the farm and don’t fight each other over their food. Daher also has me start taking Vicky out from her enclosure and tying her to trees during the day so she can have more space  and graze. She snaps and me a couple times when I take her back in, but we make peace by the time my last day comes around, and Daher has me ride her back to her haunt.

The pigeon coop also has to be renovated. For the most part they’ve been either sleeping outside or in a cave for Vicky while she sleeps outside, but as winter approaches Vicky will need that cave for herself and the pigeons will need a more permanent place. Daher and I set about cleaning it, patching up the fences and sheet metal roof, and adding buckets for them to nest in on and off for a couple days. Once it’s ready, Daoud and I close up Vicky’s cave at night and go in to catch the pigeons to bring them to their new home. Daoud dons heavy gloves and catches the pigeons as they flutter around, pinning them against the wall without hurting them too bad, then dropping them in the big sack I’m holding. Soon I’ve got almost a dozen pigeons flapping about in the bag. We haul them over and let them loose in their coop. I ask Daoud too what the pigeons are for on the farm, and he elaborates on what Daher said when I first arrived–they’re really just a symbol of peace. The Nassers put in all this effort, despite how desperate their situation is at the top of this hill, in time and resources feeding the birds, building them a home, cleaning up after them. The pigeons don’t give any eggs or profit (very occasionally they eat some); Daoud says they just like seeing the birds fly freely around them, here in the midst of all the settlements and walls. And here I was just thinking of them as flapping, feathery, feces-dropping pests when I was a 4-year-old kid living in Brooklyn.

I get to talk more with Daoud as we work that last week. He says that he doesn’t want all Jews to leave Palestine–besides the several generations now born within Israel, there are thousands of kids who have been born and grown up in the surrounding settlements as well. Gush Etzion is practically a city. Echoing many other Palestinians I met in the delegation a month ago, he and his family just want to not live under military rule, to not have their land and their life’s work on it threatened. It would be easier to leave, as so many others have, including some of his own friends and siblings and their kids, and the Nassers especially would get a tempting sum of money for it not even for leaving Palestine–just for moving off the into Bethlehem farm. But Daoud says he feels how those who have left, while he doesn’t blame them, have definitely lost something of their identity in giving up, especially if they were working the land. He doesn’t even believe that they will necessarily win in the end, that the Israelis might finally move in for the kill and take the rest of their land in Area C by force, but that they still have to keep working. He says that working the land is an outlet for the daily negative feelings that manifest every day.

The last few days there are some pretty heavy storms, to the pleasure of all of us, with wild winds around the hilltops. When we know the rains are coming, I sweep the paths leading into the cisterns beforehand so that the drains don’t get clogged with leaves and dirt. I’ve never seen Daher so happy, and he’s always happy. We both watch a downpour from the kitchen shouting “Alhamdu’allah,” “Mashe’allah” (Arabic phrases for “thank God,” regardless if you’re Muslim, Christian, or even Jewish for that matter). After the storms have subsided, we spend much of Friday and Saturday going around and collecting the water from the cisterns for the wells; the cisterns themselves do not hold much of the water. We use a pump and hoses to such the water out of the cisterns into a giant tank attached to the tractor which Daher drives around while I ride on top the tank, and we empty then tank into the well. After one last day’s hard work on Saturday, we start to say goodbye, but I’ll be joining them in church in Bethlehem tomorrow on my way out. Daher gives me some wine and dried herbs to take. I head back down to my cave once more to pack up and clean with that Arabic radio cranked up. It turns out there’s a group of 5 volunteers coming a couple days after I leave to hold the fort down in winter for a full 2 months; I’ll just miss them. But overall I’ve enjoyed my little Thoreau-like existence in this cave on this holy hillside, my hobbit-hole, with some company here and there.

Slouching from Bethlehem: the familiar and the unfamiliar. Sunday 12/9–Tent of Nations, Bethlehem, Jerusalem, and Tel Aviv

I wake up early to finish tidying the place for the next volunteers. I feed the two little chickens and take a look around my garden one last time, pleased to see nature doing its work with the green onions shooting up from the ground, then head up with my full backpack and an armful of empty pots. I then hurriedly feed the rest of the animals, in my nice clothes for church, and water the greenhouse lettuce. Of course Sumoud the noisy cat shows up once more right as I finish up, so I feed him and leave my keys in the kitchen. A couple of the dogs, including the faithful Labras, follow me to the gate, and we bid each other goodbye. I make my way over the roadblock and to the highway to catch a sherut; of course it takes a half hour before an empty one comes by. The Lutheran church is halfway up the old city hill towards Manger Square. I sneak in the back and grab a seat with the Nassers. The main hall isn’t that big, though still charming. A man accompanies some of the prayers and songs with a guitar. While most of the mass is in Arabic, the pastor speaks alternatively in English for foreigners in between. Daoud tells me that while most Palestinian Christians are one of the eastern sects, Lutheranism established its presence with German missionaries in the 19th century. There is also a guest from India, a Christian minister, who gives a short talk about the discrimination facing Christians there, many of whom are of the Dalit class (the untouchable caste), in addition to other minorities under the Hindu nationalist government in his country.

Afterwards there is a little Christmas community market in the building. Daher insists on getting me some snacks over my protests that I’ll buy them. I get to meet some more of their family–some brothers and sisters, nieces and nephews, and Daoud’s wife Jihan, who does work teaching computer literacy to women in the community around Nahallin. We all thank each other with a back-and-forth of shukrans. It is emotional, but I know that I’ll be back one day. Daher walks with me in the direction of Manger Square before he splits into a side street for some Christmas shopping. I stop by Manger Square one last time. Bethlehem is in full X-Mas mode now–not many snowmen and reindeer, but the giant tree is fully decked out. I then use WiFi to get directions through Jerusalem and Tel Aviv to my cousin Gerry and back down to Bab-z-Qaq one more time, slouching under my backpack, past the sheruts and the chorus of “al-Khalil! al-Khalil?” and hop on the bus bound for Damascus Gate in Jerusalem. I get out when the bus stops at the Tunnels checkpoint, not sure exactly what my status is as a tourist–it turns out that only Arabs have to get out to present their ID to the soldiers, foreigners can just stay on the bus.  I quickly buy some knafeh from a genial older Palestinian man in the Old City–still great, though definitely not as good as the ambrosia in Nablus.

After a half hour of wandering around trying to make sense of the winding streets’ names, I find the right one and find myself walking through the more modern streets of western Jerusalem. I pass the towering offices of the JNF and Jerusalem Post. Back to the Israeli side. I had a lot of feelings running through my heart and mind from that time through the whole next week of visiting my Israeli family. I will not share all of it publicly here. I made a point of not talking about politics and human rights with most of my family, as I really didn’t know them that well and was seeing some of them for the first time in over ten years, and was being hosted by them; I did not see it as being worth it, except a little bit with my cousin Gerry who is comparatively liberal when it comes to the state’s treatment of Palestinians. I do not feel any sort of unproductive guilt at travelling freely within Israel after my time in the West Bank and on the farm; my fellow delegates and I had flown in to Israel on our first day, and we’d entered again to meet Ruchama, see Jaffa, and meet with the Bedouins of al-Araqib. I just feel the same general outrage at constant injustice of Israel keeping one group of people caged by settlements and laws and military zones and walls, while others like me travel freely as we please.

What was once familiar to me, Israel, has now become unfamiliar, and what was once unfamiliar, Palestine, has now become familiar. It feels almost like I am seeing Israel for the first time. Most of the times I came before I was younger than 10 years old, and the last time I was 16, and was presented with a very packaged, sanitized version of the land and society. I still have those memories, but accessing them is like trying to play a videotape on a DVD player. Or if I did have a VHS player for the tape I would be watching the memories, but with distorted sound and quality, and subtitles in a language I didn’t understand except for maybe a couple words. The myth of Israel and Zionism that I grew up with from when I could first remember my summer vacations, the flags and maps in my synagogue, has already been dead for me for some time, since about 2013. All it took was genuinely listening to and seeing enough accounts of Palestinians’ experience with that state, with that ideology, hard as it was at first. But I am far from being the first to be disillusioned with the myth–there was Ruchama Marton, a soldier in Egypt back in 1956, who then witnessed oppression and neglect in the late 1980s. There were the kids who eagerly enlisted upon coming of age, only to find themselves ordered to clear a family out of their house before demolition, to bulldoze their groves of trees, or to keep a woman going into labor at a checkpoint, who then came together in groups like Breaking the Silence. There were the Israelis like Inbar and Khaled who refused to serve from the start because of this, and were outcast and even jailed. And there were the Yemenite Jews marginalized by the Ashkenazi-dominated society in the 1950s after getting off the plane seeking the promise of opportunity, their women forcibly sterilized.

And for thousands–millions–more, there never was a myth in the first place. There was no myth for the family from Lifta. There was no myth for the farmer’s wife from Jericho who couldn’t access her water from the sources her family had used for generations. There was no myth for the Gazan fisherman who was shot when he sailed too far from the shore. There was no myth for the farmer from al-Walaja who had his land seized and cut off by a wall and now crosses the border every morning to work in construction in an Israeli city. There was no myth for Sheikh Aziz of al-Araqib. There was no myth for the shopkeeper in Hebron who lost all his customers behind layers of checkpoints and closed streets.  There was no myth for the Yasin family of Asira Shamaliya. There was no myth for Murad and the people of Dheisheh refugee camp. There was no myth for Iyad Burnat, who watched his trees uprooted over the years, separating him from friends, family, and markets. There was no myth for Ahed Tamimi, her family, and the people of Nabi Saleh. There was no myth for the Nasser family, for Meladeh when she fled Jaffa, for Bishara the preacher.

I am just visiting the grave of the myth now, of an -ism I grew up with. Of course “no country is perfect,” the apologists tell us. Yes, I have now seen enough, that the state of Israel is no better or worse than the others born through conquest, and raised on a diet of exclusion and exploitation. Look around from your mounted tomb, Theodor Herzl–is this not what you wanted, for us to be “like all the other nations?” I of course have no illusion that he cares what I think, or that Netanyahu or even liberal heroes Benny Gantz and Yair Lapid care.

I get on a bus at the main Jerusalem station. A few green-clad soldiers in transit are among the passengers. The bus pulls into Tel Aviv early evening. Jaffa is just to the south. From the bus stop it’s just a 20 minutes’ walk to Gerry’s–he’s waiting outside and we hug. I haven’t seen him since he visited the US around when I started college. Gerry is my dad’s first cousin–my second once removed, born in Israel to my dad’s uncle, who had moved from the US.  I made it for the last night of Hanukkah–we say the prayers over the candles, and I graciously accept a jelly doughnut and some dinner from him and Iris, his girlfriend. We catch up briefly before they head out to a meet some friends. I take one of the best showers I’ve had in a while before getting to sleep.

Family reunion. Monday 12/10 to Saturday 12/15–Tel Aviv, Yeruham, Bnei Netzarim

Th next morning I go to visit my grandparents’ graves. Before heading to work Gerry gives me advice on finding my way to and around the cemetery, printing a very helpful map. I get to the suburb of Holon by bus early afternoon and find my way to the block of graves just fine, but finding which grave is actually theirs proves more difficult. I search for a while before going to ask a guy at the desk in the cemetery’s main building–he shows me that the map lists their row and which number they are. I go back and still can’t figure out which one after almost an hour, searching for the Hebrew letters for  “Seligman” (my grandma’s maiden name) and “Berman.” I take a break for lunch at a pizza spot outside the cemetery around the corner and return, nourished and determined. I  remember hearing the receptionist say “Zeligman…” and look at the sheet again. It does say Zelig in Hebrew, not Selig–I’ve been looking for the Hebrew letter for “S,” when I should have been looking for the “Z” letter. I finally find the graves for the Zelig family. There’s Meir Zelig, my great-grandfather, my grandmother Lillian Seligman’s father, and his wife Miriam. They were buried in the US where they lived and died, but their family later moved their remains here. There are some other Zeligmans/Seligmans, including Harold and Hascal, my grandma’s brothers. And of course there’s the grave for Libby (Seligman) Berman and David Berman, my grandpa. They too were born in the states, and moved here around 1970. I’d seen my grandpa’s grave before when I was a kid, but I hadn’t seen my grandma’s before. I take some time there and put stones on their graves.

I hop back on the bus to Gerry’s, where I make some WhatsApp calls to my aunt Adele and my cousin Matan, her son, to make plans for the rest of the week (I will be using pseudonyms for my cousins’ names, due to personal/privacy reasons related to all the political stuff on here). Gerry comes back, and he takes me for a walk around some of Tel Aviv and we catch up more, and I have dinner with him and Iris. Tuesday, Gerry drops me off at a bus that will take me to Yeruham, a town in the northern desert where my my cousin Matan lives. I thank Gerry once more, and take the couple hours’ ride to Yeruham. The bus passes Beersheba, and many Bedouin camps pop up a little way’s off the highway. Somewhere nearby is al-Araqib. Matan meets me on the street by the bus stop, and we embrace. We haven’t seen each other since my parents and I came for his older sister’s wedding, when I was just 9 or 10. His house is around the corner, and I get to meet his wife Vered and their 2-year-old-daughter. They have their own small art studio for things like pottery and mosaics, where Vered runs some classes in addition to working in an elementary school, and Matan does all sorts of work around town through the local community center–woodworking and projects like community gardens, and he also tutors college students in Beersheba. My cousin Rivka and her husband Alon also join us from their nearby village for a quick visit, along with their four young kids. Over the next couple days Matan and I bond, and I get to see some of his work as he shows me around the town, as well some of the desert hills through which he impressively drives stick. I also get to try my hand at the pottery wheels in their studio. We also stop by a nearby ruins site where some believe Ishmael sent Hagar away in the Bible; Yeruham rises very abruptly in the middle of the desert hills, having only been built starting in the 1950s. It has since grown to about 10,000 people. It would be charming if it weren’t for the fact that the Bedouin villages in the surrounding areas routinely get denied access to basic services and have their buildings demolished.

Aunt Adele, my dad’s sister, joins us on Thursday. She moved to Israel around the same time my grandparents did. We last saw each other at my bar mitzvah. We catch up, and I help Matan and Vered get dinner ready before we’re joined at night by Rivka and Alon, along with my cousin Leah and her husband Assaf. It really is great being with my aunt and all three of my cousins together for the first time in years. Aunt Adele and I ride back with Leah and Assaf to their village about an hour west, and I say goodbye to Rivka, and thank Matan and Vered for their hospitality. It’s dark when we arrive, so Friday morning I wake up and get to see more of where I’ve arrived. Leah and her family live in Bnei Netzarim, a small moshav community, similar to a kibbutz. Only about 600 people live in the whole place. Most of the surrounding area is farmland, and we’re just a few miles from the border with Egypt. It would be charming if it weren’t for the fact that the people of the Gaza Strip are in an open-air prison just less than 10 miles north.

I also get to know my cousin’s four kids, of whom Daniel, 12, is the oldest, soon to have his bar mitzvah. We get close over the next two days even though he doesn’t know much English yet, playing a lot of chess and backgammon. Backgammon involves more chance, but he gives me a good challenge in chess; another few years and he’ll be formidable. The Sabbath arrives  Friday night, and it’s quite a relief to turn off my phone for the next day through sunset on Saturday (all my family here is Orthodox). We eat well and respectfully talk more about the differences between Orthodox and Reform Judaism. I go with Assaf and Daniel to the town’s synagogue Friday night, Saturday morning, and Saturday evening (Leah usually is busy with the younger kids). For the most part the services and prayers are like what I’ve experienced with the other couple Orthodox congregations I’ve been to in the US, except of course the rabbi and service leaders speak Hebrew in between prayers instead of English. Assaf is very helpful in pointing out which page we’re on in the prayer book, as the Orthodox move through the program much more rapidly than Reform do. In the afternoon I go to the park with my family, and work up a sweat playing soccer with Daniel and the others. I can’t help but think to myself throughout the day of rest that while it’s Palestinians who are the main victims of the state of Israel, one of Zionism’s many other sins is that this smart, compassionate, innocent boy could, in six years, be drafted into the IDF and ordered to arrest a child at gunpoint in the middle of the night, shoot tear gas at protestors, or to demolish a family’s home.

A quick disclaimer is in order that my juxtaposing the comfort of Yeruham and B’nei Netzarim with the nearby suffering of Bedouins and Palestinians is not meant as a personal slight against my family that was born here–it is another dig at the Israeli system overall which I feel necessary to mention as part of my experience. We all have a nice last dinner together after havdalah (the end of Shabbat ritual), Daniel and I squeeze in one more game of chess, and I go pack up before calling it an early night. I’m able to hitch a ride the next morning at 6:30 with Assaf and a friend of his who drives to Beersheba for work. The whole house is up with the kids getting ready for school, so I get to say thank you to Leah and goodbye to everyone else once more before throwing my backpack in the car and jumping in.

The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan welcomes you. Sunday 12/16 and Monday 12/17–Moshav, Eilat, Aqaba

I thank Assaf’s friend, and say goodbye to Assaf at Beersheba as he heads to work and I get on a bus that’ll take me down to Eilat. It’s a beautiful 3-hour ride through the desert mountains and valleys of the Naqab desert. Soon enough the buildings of Eilat and the Red Sea appear. Aqaba is literally just a mile away over the Jordanian border. I grab some lunch and plan my crossing. It will just be a quick taxi ride to the border, then I have to grab another one once I’m across. I couldn’t find cheap hostels with availability last night, so I set up a Couchsurfing account online for the first time, which I had heard about from budget traveler guru Matt Kepnes. It really sounds too good to be true–people open up their homes and let travelers sleep on their couch or even an extra bed for free. The idea is that you pay it forward by hosting other couchsurfers yourself. You can also see reviews for the hosts or surfers left by others on the website to make sure they’re legit and not sketchy. I’ll be staying with Mahmuod and Anas in Aqaba–they have over 50 glowing reviews on the site. I finally get around to dropping off a bunch of postcards for some family and friends at the post office (they probably won’t get them at this point until after I’m back in the US, oh well) and take a cab to the border.

Being white and having a somewhat Jewish last name on my passport, I have little trouble leaving through the Israeli side. The woman behind the window doesn’t ask me too many questions, just the basics about what I was doing in the country–I obviously just tell her I was sightseeing & visiting family, not that I met with enemies of the state Omar Barghouti, Ruchama Marton, and the Tamimi family, or worked on a Palestinian farm. I have to pay an exit fee (as is the case entering and exiting through many countries’ borders), and I withdraw some cash in Jordanian dinars to pay for their visa. While the shekels (used by Palestinians as well) are worth less than a third of a dollar, these bad boys are worth 1.5 US dollars. I pass some duty-free shops and under the shiny arch thanking me for visiting Israel. It’s then a few hundred feet between some fences to the Jordanian border. Jordan and Israel signed a peace treaty in the 1980s, and since then the Jordanian and Israeli militaries have closely cooperated with each other around the West Bank’s borders.

I approach the arch welcoming me to Jordan. A couple of the letters on the signs are falling off, or have peeling paint, and the flaccid flags are dirty and tattered. When I try walking around the duty-free shop, I’m turned away and told by a guard that I have to go through the shop. It’s mostly a lot of booze and cigars. The shopkeeper is disappointed a I walk through and don’t buy anything–who needs all those handles when I’ve got some Tent of Nations wine? I start going through security, putting my backpack on the belt through the scanner, but the full-body metal detector isn’t working. A uniformed guy casually looks through my bag and asks me what I have besides clothes–books, a camera. He tells me he has a drone with a camera on it back home. “Oh,” I reply shortly. He wants me to pull out the books and I fish around for them for a couple minutes, and when I can’t get them out he asks if they’re in any language besides English, to which I say no, and he just lets me go on. I don’t really see any next steps after, so I keep walking and am stopped by a guard chatting with others; I had almost gone through without getting my passport checked, even though I didn’t see any place for it. The guard tells me to go back to window 10. There’s a little office, but no one at the desk–until I look into a dark side room and see a couple beds where one guy is chilling on his phone. He directs me to window 13 across the road. Window 13 is shut. I go to an office further back, Window 8, and the guy there tells me to go to Window 13. Some other people entering join me in going back to Window 13–the door is now open, and the man behind it in civilian clothes opens the window and processes us. He’s got earbuds from his phone in one of his ears. He stamps my passport and fills out a sheet for my entry, and then I go back to the exit where the guard lets me through after seeing I’ve been stamped. I didn’t have to pay anything, though–did I just cross into the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan for free? As I find out later, Aqaba is part of an economic free trade zone, and you don’t have to pay for an entry fee when entering the border there–you do have to pay though at all other crossings. Sweet deal.

There’s a sign listing average taxi prices for getting to the city, to the valley of Wadi Rum, to the airport, and to Petra. I immediately see why they have this–I’m accosted by a man with a small fleet of taxis and drivers, offering me a ride to the city for 15 instead of the average 11. I simply tell him I’ll pay 11, and he yields with little further resistance. By no means are most Arabs you meet just guys trying to swindle and scam you, as some stereotypes would have you believe–as I find soon enough meeting my incredibly generous hosts that night. A man from a nearby coffee stand starts approaching me–“My friend, come, you must have some coffee, you are tired–” but I’m already getting into my taxi. My driver is a Muhammed. He doesn’t speak much English, so I show him the WhatsApp message in Arabic that Mahmuod sent me with his address in Arabic. We zip down the highway flanked by palm trees, and after driving through some side streets are there in 10 minutes, a little past 4 PM as the sun begins to set.

Mahmuod and Anas live towards the top of  a charming unassuming stone apartment building across from an Islamic school. Mahmuod is a few years younger than me and he actually works at a nearby farm. Anas is a few years older, originally from Amman, and does engineering. They really have something magical going on here–they’ve had over a hundred guests come through since they started hosting in August, when Anas started to have more time after finishing school (he has his graduation book for around for people to sign, and points out with amusement how Arabs have signed it starting from the right-hand side of the book, while people who speak European languages have signed it starting from the left-hand side). On some nights they have as many as a dozen people staying on extra mattresses, the couch, and even in a couple bunk beds they’ve got. That first night I meet a couple in their 30s from Romania, a Slovenian family with some amazingly behaved kids, and Gottfried, a very well-traveled older German man. We all talk about our travel experiences, especially the most recent ones around the Middle East. When we get to the topic of crossing the border into the state of Israel from Jordan, the Romanian guy mentions how the official questioned him about his relationship to Israel. “What do you mean, like a sexual relationship?” he had riskily retorted. Fortunately he still had gotten in, despite his manners. It seems that many travelers coming through here use Aqaba as a stopping point on their ways to and from Petra to the north and the desert valley of Wadi Musa to the east.

Anas shows some of us around the nearest main street, Palestine Street, and its many markets. It’s a good spot, further away from the more touristy parts of town. It’s also nice to hear the call to prayer from the minarets again. We grab some food, including a giant bag of pita bread from the local baker, and all go back to cook up some food together, and I make some of that stovetop popcorn I perfected in my cave on the farm for everyone. I also share the Tent of Nations wine Daher gave me. Mahmuod and Anas are okay with guests having alcohol in their Muslim household, but they do ask us to cut off the bottoms of some plastic cups and use those as glasses, so we don’t get any alcohol in the cups they use themselves. Anas also brings out some fantastic apple shisha for people to smoke, but he and Mahmuod also use a separate mouthpiece on the hookah, since the rest of us have alcohol on our lips from the wine. It’s a pretty good system.

The next morning the Romanians and Slovenians depart, and an Italian guy named Roberto arrives. Gottfried and I realize that we’re both planning to go to Petra, and we begin to make plans to go tomorrow.  He already went briefly a couple days ago on the way down from Amman, but wants to go back to explore more. He stays at the apartment with his tablet to do some planning for his travels after Jordan, so I get ready to explore Aqaba by myself. Gottfried lends me his swim shorts so I can take a dip in the Red Sea. Rob also wants to go into the city, so I wait for him as takes a shower and grooms his already immaculately landscaped mustache and goatee in the mirror. We walk together, and I consult a map I downloaded showing most of the city’s historical attractions about a forty minute walk down by the water. I entertain myself listening to Rob complain very expressively about some of the hostels he was staying in up in Amman, shamelessly fulfilling some the image of Italians and their hand gestures. At some point he says he’s trying to get to the city center, while I’m going down by the water, so I look at the map and point him in the direction of what I think is the city center. I walk a little further and get to the coast, where I soon realize that this is the city center, even though it’s on the water—I accidentally sent my Italian friend in the wrong direction. Hopefully he’ll find his way.

I walk through the ruins of Ayla, the ancient predecessor to Aqaba. It was the first Muslim city in the region, with building starting almost 1,400 years ago. The archaeological site is squeezed right between some fancy hotels. I continue down where the main shops and restaurants are by the beach and grab a solid shawarma wrap and munch on it while taking in the sight of the Red Sea. Some stray cats lurk a few feet away. Eilat is visible just a mile away across the water. The area is pretty relaxed and not extremely touristy, though some boats pass by blasting American pop and house music.  I then head a bit further down to what I most want to see—the fort that Lawrence of Arabia and Auda Abu Tayi captured by surprise from the Ottoman Turks a hundred years ago in World War I. The flag of the Arab revolt still flies high above it. I unfortunately can’t get in as they’re doing renovations on it, but it’s not actually all that big, and I can see into some of the courtyard from the hill just above the fort. I head back to the beach and hang out in the relieving warm water of the Red Sea. Here there are more tourists swimming, a lot of them older Europeans, and more modestly dressed Jordanians with their families. I make a quick stop at the grand Sharif Hussein bin Ali Mosque, dedicated to the first leader of modern Jordan, before heading back to Anas and Mahmuod’s in the evening.

Rob eventually found his way to the city center after I misdirected him; he accepts my apology. A few more new guests have arrived—a couple from near Buenos Aires who I get to practice some Spanish with, and a couple from Germany, Mert and Judith. I get to show Mert and Judith around the markets this time—I’ve become a local in my 24 hours here. We bring back more food, and help Anas cook up a great dinner with some type of Arabic meatballs and a spinach sauce in rice, and we arrange it all on a big platter and eat from it with the pita, and smoke some more shisha. Gottfried and I plan to leave tomorrow afternoon for Petra. I thank Anas and Mahmuod for everything one more time, as they’ll be out before I wake up. Thankfully I fall asleep pretty easily; Rob is quite a snorer.

Motasem. Tuesday 12/18—Aqaba and Wadi Musa (Petra)

The next day I get some breakfast together and pack up my scattered belongings. I was thinking of taking one of the small buses that goes to Petra, but Gottfried says that we’ll hitchhike. He’s done it before in several countries (including across the US back in the ‘70s), and he’s done it in Jordan too. He says that it’s safe here as long as you’re with someone else, and oftentimes you’ll find other travelers with rented cars. He seems to know what he’s doing, so I go along with him for the ride. We say goodbye to the Hotel Anas & Mahmuod, and grab some falafel at a little nearby spot for lunch. Mid-afternoon, the young eager American and the elder silver-haired German march up Palestine Street towards the highway. Every few minutes a taxi driver sees us with backpacks and stops to offer us a ride. One guy follows us slowly along the sidewalk, calling to us through the window that we can’t just walk to Petra. We get increasingly aggressive in turning them away. We get a little lost finding the right highway, which Gottfried found on Google Maps, and I ask a man to confirm which way it is, and he gives us some lefts and rights to follow. He offers to take us travelers to his home for tea and to meet his family, though we tell him we’ve got to be on our way. He’s Palestinian, from Nablus originally, and he recommends I get some knafeh at Habibeh’s when I get to Amman. We thank him again and continue.

The highway soon appears, and the glorious mountains rise behind it. There aren’t many buildings this far out of the city, just a hospital and a college campus further down. We walk across to the northbound lanes, park ourselves on the side, and stick out our thumbs. We wave away at least twenty taxis that pull up in the next half hour. A couple regular cars pull up and ask us where they can take us—when we say Petra, they say that they don’t think this is a direct highway; they would have to drop us off at a town to the east of Petra. We thank them and continue to wait for someone who’s on their way through Petra directly. A couple taxi drivers tell us that we won’t get there without them, and we assume they’re just trying to make some money. One very committed taxi driver with pretty good English pulls up and argues with us on and off for almost ten minutes, insisting that this isn’t the right road. He goes silent for a little bit, then starts up again. At one point a couple police officers decide to pull up and randomly check our passports. Satisfied, they leave. The steadfast driver stays. Eventually we pull out Gottfried’s tablet and look at the map of the highway we’re on again, near the hospital and college. I start swiping up with my hand to see where it leads…and of course the locals are right, and we’re wrong: this highway goes through a town further east of Petra, but the highway that does go directly to Petra is almost an hour’s walk away, further on the outskirts of Aqaba. We apologize to the driver for our stubbornness. He tells us he can drive us back into the city to see if one of the minibuses hasn’t left yet (they only depart when they fill up, not on a fixed schedule), even though it’s later in the afternoon. We give him a few dinars and he drives us to the small bus station.

He checks with one of the guys who works at the station—the last minibus has already left. I can’t go to Petra tomorrow, as I wouldn’t have time to actually see it before going to Amman’ I have to get there tonight. Gottfried would probably have just stayed in Aqaba one more night before trying again tomorrow morning, but he feels bad about me having to pay for the taxi now by myself, as he had mixed up which highway we should be hitchhiking from. The driver offers us a reasonable price, 40 dinars in total. Knowing that the taxis charge 5 or 10 dinar for just getting around places within Aqaba alone, he’s right, the 1.75 hour journey should probably be more like 60 or 70 dinar. And so Herr Gottfried and I do what backpackers are never supposed to do—we take a long distance private taxi, instead of a bus or train. I get in the front seat, Gottfried gets in the back, and we’re off as the sun begins to set. The drivers tells us that his boss wanted him to charge us 50, but he said no. I get to having a real conversation with one of these Arab taxi drivers for the first time. His name is Motasem, I’d say he’s about 30. He’s originally from a small city northeast of Amman, and hopes to return there one day. He also of course hopes to be able to make a pilgrimage to Mecca with his family; he hasn’t been able to yet.  He’s recently married and has a baby son, and shows us his picture. We go through a little police checkpoint a little ways out of the city, where they check his license and registration. He offers me a cigarette; I accept one and we roll the windows down. Motasem worked in a hotel before he started driving cabs, but he quit when his boss wanted him to do personal errands for him; he told his boss he was there to serve the guests, not the boss. A true embodiment of sumoud. He also talks about some of his trysts with hotel guests (“This is before married,” he makes sure to clarify when talking about each affair), including one with a Russian dentist who offered to pay for him to move back there with her. “It would have been too cold,” says Motasem. We also talk a bit about Arabic music, like Fairouz and Umm Kulthum. Most of the stuff he’s playing on the radio is Iraqi.

We roll in to Wadi Musa, the town next to the site of Petra, and Motasem asks a couple people for directions to our hostel, the Rafiki. Gottfried and I get out and thank him once more. While I still will try to use taxis only when necessary, it was nice getting to know one of the drivers as a human just trying to make a living. We check in and go split a very satisfying pizza down the street. It’s colder here than in Aqaba, more like when I was around Bethlehem last week. We eat it back at the hostel and share more travel stories, though Gottfried of course has way more. He’s worked as a guide for week-long hiking and camping trips around parts of Europe and East Asia for much of his life. After dinner I take a little walk to the entrance of the Petra site where there’s a bar carved into the side of a cliff. It’s neat but a bit gimmicky with multicolored lighting, and there’s a woman with some accompaniment just singing pop songs in English, like “My Heart will Go On.” Back at the hostel Gottfried and I plan to wake up earlier in the morning to beat some of the crowds at Petra, and we get to bed in our separate rooms.

The Red City. Wednesday 12/19—Wadi Musa (Petra), Amman

We have a light breakfast before heading out, and I pack a bagged lunch. I leave my main backpack behind the reception desk so I can pick it up late afternoon before going to Amman. We make the walk down some steep hills to the site’s entrance. Now we can actually look around and see the hills and valleys of Wadi Musa. We get our tickets, and I use the desk’s phone to book a bus to Amman later. Gottfried and I walk past some sandy rock monoliths before getting to al-Siq, the main canyon that leads to the ancient city. There are a lot of Bedouin Arabs with horses, donkeys, and camels giving tourists rides to the canyon. They’re even more aggressive than the taxi drivers, though no less human I’m sure than Motasem. “Heeeyyy, Indiana Jones!” one of them greets me when he sees me with my cowboy hat on, making a pistol with his fingers. I smile but politely decline paying for a ride (part of The Last Crusade was apparently filmed in Petra, fun fact).

Gottfried and I walk through al-Siq, a passage with towering rock walls smoothed by water over the years. We can see the remains of the city’s rainwater harvesting system of stone gutters along the walls, and reconstructed stone dams to control nearby rivers. Most of the time there are a lot of other tourists stomping around, but a couple times we find ourselves alone between the cliffs, and take in the silence. While there are not horses and camels allowed to give rides on this path, there are some small donkey-drawn carriages ferrying older and less able tourists. What the pictures don’t show you are the guys who shuffle around scooping up the donkeys’ dung off the ground. Eventually the stone floor of al-Siq turns to sand, and we approach the breathtaking view of the canyon opening into the famous Treasury, al-Khazneh, probably the most famous sight in the city, with its windows and pillars carved right into the face of a giant cliff. It’s probably one of the most surreal things I’ve ever seen, right up there with Mar Saba monastery was, but hey, it doesn’t have to be a competition. The site only continues to impress as we keep walking. We pass a bunch of cavernous tombs of wealthy Nabateans carved into more cliffs, and many more smaller caves pockmarking another cliff face, some of the stone more red than brown in the sun.

Since Gottfried has already been once before, he wants to explore some of the more out-of-the-way parts of the site, so we agree to go our separate ways as I continue through the main ruins, and I say farewell  to Gottfried the German globetrotter. I keep taking in the city and learn more about it. Petra became a prominent trade city under the Nabatean Arabs a little over 2,000 years ago. The city declined under the Romans and Byzantines as trade became more focused on sea routes, and an earthquake in 363 damaged many structures including the water system. By the Middle Ages, the city was mostly abandoned. While many of the buildings that stood alone are ruined, most of the buildings carved into the cliffs have miraculously stayed intact, many of them again tombs. Some of the other buildings I see are the amphitheater, the ruins of some massive temples dedicated to various pagan gods, and the foundation of a church from the Byzantine period. At one point I stand on one hill in the middle of the main part of the city, and just gaze around at the whole landscape, with the ruined walls and columns of the temples, the old canals and cisterns, the few stubborn trees here and there, the herds of tourists and Bedouins with their animals milling about, the towering tombs carved into the cliffs in the distance, and realize just how small most of the buildings are compared to the even higher brown and red cliffs and mountains rising around them, contrasting with the bright blue sky. I really can’t explain the divine mixture of the human-made and natural beauty of the whole scene any better than that.

I check the time—I’ve got a couple hours left to hike up to Ad Deir, the monastery, before I have to run back to catch the bus to Amman. I cross a wide bridge across one of the old canals and follow the map over some sand to a rock path that starts to climb up into the mountains.  There are more Bedouins pressuring tourists to pay for a camel or donkey ride. There are also clusters of tents all over where they sell souvenirs and refreshments. Some of these enterprising Bedouins are children; the authorities who run the whole attraction have put up several signs telling tourists to not encourage child labor on site. You can also tell that some of the animals are absolutely overworked, and there are signs as well telling visitors to report any instances of animal abuse to park workers at the entrance facility. I’d imagine that traditionally, the Bedouin take great care of their animals, but probably are pressured to overwork them here to make more money. Anyway, the walk twisting through the cliffs up to Ad Deir takes almost an hour, but it offers some great sights along the way, and it’s completely worth it to see the isolated monastery carved into the cliff, surrounded by nothing but mountain peaks and yawning valleys. There’s an assembly of handmade “Best View in the World” signs pointing to some of the peaks just opposite the monastery, and they’re right. I can see more mountains stretching into the distance and disappearing in mist and clouds, as well as some of the Jordan Valley opening down into Palestine just to the west.

After taking in the scene, I go back to the path and gallop back down the mountain, encouraging other hikers that they’re almost there. I run back past the ruined temples and cliff tombs once more, just walking in some of the sandier parts. It’s about 3 PM, and I have to get to the bus at 3:30 before it leaves at 4. I run back through al-Siq and back to the entrance building, where they direct me up a hill to the bus stop. I tell them that I booked a seat in the morning. They didn’t end up with my name, but I’m still able to get a ticket and a seat. I put my sweater and hat on my seat, but I’ve still got the get my backpack from the hostel, and I bolt out and start running in its direction. It’s about 3:40. As I’m jogging up the hill, I realize that I’m just not going to make it up and back in time before the bus leaves at 4. Thankfully the gods of Petra answer my prayers and a driver in a pickup truck stops and offers me a ride for a couple dinars, even though it’s not a taxi. I hop in and tell him I’ll give him five dinars in total if he then gets me back to the bus by 4 after I get my backpack. His name is Ziad. I run up into the Rafiki, grab the backpack from the storage room, run back to the truck, tossing my bag into the back. Ziad then pulls off the most impressive stick-shift driving I’ve ever seen, roaring up and down the roller-coaster hills of Wadi Musa to the bus stop in about 2 minutes. I jump out, grab my backpack, and shout “Shukran, Ziad!” as I run back towards the bus. The ticket guy and driver give me a weird look.

A few minutes later the bus takes off, and I’m treated to a view of the desert sunset over Wadi Musa. A couple hours later we pull into Amman and stop at a pretty busy-looking place in the city. I tell the ticket collector (he came on the ride) that I’m looking for al-Hussein Street, he tells me that it’s near here, so I get out with a couple other people, though most stay on board. I can instantly hear a chorus of “Taxi? Taxi?” as the doors open. I push my way through the gaggle of drivers and connect to a nearby WiFi to find Al-Hussein Street. Turns out it’s still a couple miles further down, I got off too early. I walk to the main street and soon see a couple minibuses like the ones in Bethlehem driving in the direction I’m going in, though these are white not yellow. As we get closer to downtown, I ask one of them about al-Hussein Street, and a woman with pretty good English directs me. I thank them, and confirming her directions with Google Maps I get to the street in less than ten minutes. I eventually find the Farah Hotel, with a poorly lit sign in the darkness on a street under construction next to an empty parking lot. The whole thing looks kinda sketchy, but the hostel is alright once I get inside and check in. With the confusing border crossing into Aqaba, the failed hitchhiking attempt with Gottfried, the last-minute escape from Petra with Ziad, and finding my way through Amman to the hostel, it’s been quite a week, but absolutely worth it. I’m here now, and ready to get on the plane tomorrow night, after getting a quick taste of Amman of course.

Solstice in the sky. Thursday 12/20 to Saturday 12/22—Amman, Istanbul, Boston, Providence, New York, Mahwah

The next day I do some sightseeing around Amman. After getting a bit confused with some of the sign-less streets, I head up to city’s old fortress, the Citadel. It’s atop a giant hill rising in middle of the city, so I get a nice panorama of the whole place. People have lived at the site for over 3,000 years. There’s a ruined Roman temple to Hercules, a Byzantine church, and an Umayyad Arab palace, the last two pretty well-preserved. I also check out the old Roman amphitheater, and see some exhibits they have of traditional tools and dress in Arab and Bedouin culture, including some Palestinian dresses from al-Khalil, Nablus, Haifa, and Jerusalem. On my way back to the hostel through the rain late afternoon I grab some knafeh from Habibeh’s Sweets, the place recommended to me by that guy who gave Gottfried and I directions on our way out of Aqaba. This stuff is just about on par with the knafeh from Nablus. I also stumble across a little place called the Duke’s Diwan, one of the oldest houses left in the city center.  Amidst an Amman undergoing rapid development, the house is now preserved as a small event venue and tea room (diwan) open for anyone who walks in. I’m served some tea heated over a fire stove to enjoy with my knafeh.

I contacted a host on Couchsurfing, Ali, a couple days ago asking about staying tonight, but I then realized that my flight leaves early tomorrow morning, a little past 5 AM, so I told him that it’d just make more sense for me to get to the airport earlier and catch some shuteye there. But Ali insists that I come by his place in the evening for dinner before my trip, and to rest up there before heading to the airport at midnight. Not wanting to refuse his hospitality, I pick up my backpack from the hostel and hop on a bus going up King Hussein Street, and luckily the bus seems to be heading towards the university that Ali lives near. Some of the people near the front invite me to sit down and relax. About 15 minutes later my stop comes up and I make to give the stoic driver half a dinar, but he cracks a smile at me and quickly waves away the money, seeing that I’m a foreigner trying to figure out my way around the city. As I approach Ali’s building through the dark and rain he calls down from his window to check that it’s me and comes to let me in. I also meet Yulin, a Couchsurfing guest who’s actually staying the night. Ali’s made a great chicken stew with rice, exactly what I need for my long night ahead of getting through the airport to my layover in Istanbul, and I give him some knafeh I brought from Habibeh’s. We all hang out for a couple hours, comparing our own travel experiences. Yulin is from China and has been in Europe through a volunteer-travel exchange kind of program. Ali is a pharmacy student, and fills me in a bit on current events in Jordan, telling me about the union-led protests earlier in the year against the government over IMF-backed austerity.

As it approaches 11, Ali gives me advice for getting to the airport shuttle. I thank him again and go down to get a quick taxi ride to the airport shuttle. I’m a couple dinars short on the shuttle fare, but one guy, Osama, sees me in my predicament and helps me out. He lives in Vancouver; I shove some US dollars into his hands that he can maybe use if he ever pops across the border into Washington. We talk on the ride over to the airport; he does social work back in Canada, and was just visiting some family in Jordan. We say goodbye at the airport as we head to different terminals, I get through security, and get to my gate to wait for a couple hours. I put my hat over my eyes and get some light sleep.

I wake up later around 4:30 AM to the sound of some instruments being plucked and tuned. “The hell…?” I say to myself groggily. I sit up and see a troupe of some East Asian musicians, with a small crowd collecting around them expectantly. In a minute, they start to play some absolutely amazing kind of folk music, with occasional time-keeping from a severe-looking woman who must be their kind of conductor. Dozens of people now gather round, and everyone whips out their phones to record it. After the first song, ten other members of the troupe without instruments get into a formation. Then the dancing starts. They leap, twirl, spin, jive, do jigs with their feet, wave their arms through the air all in as perfect synchronization as human beings can achieve, all to the tempo of the lively percussion and string music filling up the terminal like a radiant campfire in a large cavern. We all forget that we’re exhausted in an airport before dawn, forget the rest of whatever is stressing and troubling each of us. I actually start crying from joy a little bit, and show the tears leaking down my face to the players’ conductor after they’re done. She looks at me like I’m nuts, but I don’t care. Physically tired after bouncing around Palestine, Israel, and up through Jordan for the past week, and emotionally tired from all the despair and injustice I saw in Palestine (and I only saw a few weeks of it, while those who are from there have lived through it their whole lives), it’s just nice to be among a bunch of people from different corners of the world in transit brought together in a circle appreciating the same spontaneous wonderful spectacle to our eyes and ears. Unfortunately, the couple videos I got of them were lost in the South African Phone Incident a month later, and I haven’t been able to find anything out about the performers online. But I still have the vivid memory for myself.

The time comes to board; they finish playing and the audience claps one more time. I can see everyone’s face is brighter as we march down the bridge to the plane. I also hear some of the performers speaking to each other in what sounds like some kind of Eastern European-sounding language, like Russian; perhaps they’re from somewhere in northern China, or Siberia, or central Asia. We land in Istanbul again as the sun rises. I have about a six hour layover—unfortunately not enough time to go into the city and squeeze in some sightseeing. I hang out in the airport and occasionally walk among the decadence of the airport’s duty-free shops, shoving free samples of different Turkish delight flavors into my mouth. I then get on the flight back to Boston. I befriend the guy next to me, Nair, who was just visiting his girlfriend in Romania, and we share some glasses of araq across the Atlantic Ocean together. Upon arriving in Boston Friday night, I grab a bus to Providence to stay with my friend Ben; most of my friends in Boston are out of town for the holidays. Ben and I hang out in Providence a bit the next day before I get another bus to New York. I pass a couple pigeons crossing into Port Authority, and think about them differently after my time taking care of the flock on the Nassers’ farm. I take the Shortline back to Mahwah and hike up the hill to my parents’ house. My parents have already gone to sleep, so I do the same and see them the next morning.

Final thoughts

It is worse than I could have imagined. A small part of me had been been hoping that somehow it wasn’t that bad, that I could go back to the easier time of loving Israel, just like I could go back to the simpler time when I loved the United States of America in elementary school and found comfort in reciting the Pledge of Allegiance every morning, before I learned that not everyone benefited from the republic, as I had been fortunate to. That I could go back to the kind of nationalism that took pride in a country that defended the Jewish people across the world after centuries of being persecuted, that kept the Promised Land and its milk and honey safe for us. Nationalism as casually reassuring as the fact of the sun setting every night and rising every morning. As in most situations of systemic injustice, words like “tragedy,” “human rights violations,” “apartheid,” “persecution” fail to sum up what Palestinians’ experience at the hands of the state of Israel and its military every day. I do not need to go back and recount the horrible things my fellow delegates and I learned about.

It is also better than I could have imagined. After seeing how much It was incredible to see the Palestinian farmers, the students, the families, the workers, the artists and craftsmen, the refugees, the researchers working every day to free themselves–with some Israelis alongside them–even as they see things get worse each year, not as passive victims or as terrorists but resisting through existing, not letting themselves be defined by violence. And it was more incredible to see how Palestinians do it with such good spirits and positive attitudes, more than just the kind you get from a self-help book. They all still smile and laugh and dance and sing and cook and love and thank God for what they do still have. Along with thousands of others, the Nassers get up every morning six days a week to work their land, even as the state of Israel tightens the noose around them, and one morning a week they go to praise God and relish their day of rest with their community.

In my month in Palestine I saw more than most foreigners do, but what I witnessed and how I wrote about it here by no means covers everything. Every neighborhood and village have their own experiences, every individual Palestinian in the land and in the diaspora around the world has their own story. I say again, as I did before the trip, that saying the situation is complex doesn’t negate that the constant injustice Palestinians and Bedouins face day in and day out, and acknowledging this constant injustice doesn’t negate that it’s still complex. It is not for me to say if there is “hope” for the land and its peoples or not–I am not from there. There is no one single Palestinian experience and united opinion; no entire society has that. Some of them are more hopeful, with more citizens and voters around the world becoming aware and supporting the boycott to pressure the state of Israel, while some of them do not believe they will win any freedom and access to land back, with the Israeli and other right-wing chauvinist governments becoming closer to each other across the Middle East, western countries, and the rest of the world. But they all still try.

As I relayed, Palestinians are specifically asking for solidarity from abroad. All the ones we spoke with said they know they are not the only people in the world undergoing being persecuted and callously neglected, that all their struggles matter. But the leaders of the United States and other countries are handing a lot of weapons, money, and diplomatic support in particular to the governments of Israel as well as Egypt and Jordan, and as voters and taxpayers we can make a difference. We can push organizations, schools, and religious communities we’re a part of to boycott companies that play a part in the crimes of occupying, dividing, and seizing land & resources from Palestinian communities. We can hold politicians more accountable on foreign policy and military aid to the Israeli army. And when able, we can give support to Palestinian activists on the ground like the ones my group met with–see the links that I shared in earlier posts for those organizations.

So thank you to Eyewitness Palestine, to the Friends of Tent of Nations, to the people who donated for my spot on the delegation, to everyone we met with, and of course to the Nasser family for helping make my experience what it was. I tried to strike the right balance between talking about my personal experience as an outsider witnessing without making it all about myself, while still focusing on the people I met and their stories. And congratulations to you if you’ve read or at least skimmed this far–the rest of the adventures I’ll be making over the next year will hopefully be a little less depressing and easier to read about.  I will not be on another type of delegation that comprehensively looks into the mass injustice of a military occupation, but I am sure to still at least encounter some human suffering and strife in passing. Some of it will be more out in the open, some more hidden, but it will be everywhere in some way, and should I see it I’ll include it in my observations, showing the world as it is, warts and all. At the end of the day, aside from all of the shit with Israel it was just great starting this year off in this small but grand part of the Middle East, meeting people and seeing a bit of the long history and culture, and starting to learn about farming with Daher and Daoud. Next stop, South Africa.

Photos from 11/7–11/26

 

November 7th—November 26th: The Rose that Grew from Concrete

This one mercifully covers more time in a shorter space. It has the last two days of the delegation and the first two weeks on the farm. Most tragically, I lost all the rest of the pictures I took from this period in an incident in South Africa at the start of January that I’ll of course write more about when I get to that point. I was able to save a couple pictures from the last two days of the delegation and get some from my friends, and hopefully I’ll soon get some pictures from other volunteers on the farm. A couple pictures from my visit with my family were also saved, and thankfully there are thousands of pictures of Petra and other sites in Jordan online to sample.

State-sponsored gentrification. Wednesday 11/7—Bethlehem, Hebron/al-Khalil, al-Araqib, and Jerusalem

This next day is probably the toughest single day emotionally, even though everything we’ve seen over the past week has been rough. We wake up and have a quick breakfast with Murad’s family and meet his baby before thanking them graciously for their hospitality and heading out to rendezvous at Laylac. The whole group thanks Murad once again before getting on the bus and starting the drive south to Hebron, a little over half an hour. We begin in the center of H2, one of the most militarized parts of the city. The street is nearly empty except for several older Arab men hanging around a barber shop. Most once-flourishing Palestinian shops are completely shuttered with the same faded green metal doors, though there is also an open souvenir shop. Every couple hundred meters some Israeli soldiers are stationed, and a few settlers walk past. Small stickers of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Mendel Schneerson (whose tomb I’ve seen in Brooklyn) dot the walls. Some sort of central community building for the settlers stands in the center square across from the souvenir place, blaring klezmer and Jewish folk music that echoes through the streets. I honestly never thought I would be not happy to hear klezmer playing in my life, but here I am. The place feels like an empty movie set with most of the crew and actors off on lunch break.

Our guide is Izzat, who works with Youth Against Settlements (YAS). He tells us some of the history, that there were Jews living in Hebron for centuries before Zionism, and that even during the 1929 riots many Christians and Muslims protected Jews in their homes, though the British authorities pulled out most Jews during the 1936 Arab uprising. The state of Israel began to build the modern settlements after taking the West Bank in ‘67. Negotiations in the 1990s divided the city into H1 area, Palestinian controlled, and H2, Israeli controlled. We visit the Cave of the Patriarchs, and see the tombs of Abraham, Sara, and Isaac, holy for Muslims, Jews, and Christians alike, and site of the 1994 massacre of 30 Palestinians by Brooklyn-born Baruch Goldstein. The mosque and synagogue were only divided after the attack. Even as most Israeli leaders verbally condemned the massacre, the military tightened restrictions on Palestinians in H2, and settlements continued to grow. Many of the descendants of the Jewish survivors of the 1929 riots have actually called for the settlements to be removed.

Conditions are the hardest for the Palestinians living in the H2 area. In the center of the city just some several hundred Jewish settlers live in the midst of thousands of Palestinians. 70% of the Palestinians are unemployed. Izzat tells us that over half the shops have closed since the ‘90s, and those still open struggle with drastically less business. Merchants and vendors are much more aggressive (they have to be), sometimes following us down whole streets, pleading with us to buy something to support them. This is not some accidental poverty—this is the direct effect of military occupation. In alleys under settlement buildings, we look up and see fences and nets weighed down by trash and stones thrown by the settlers. Sometimes they pour urine and even acid down on the Palestinians, usually with impunity from the soldiers. On one street we see what I’m pretty sure are the remains of a sukkah. Izzat tells us that just a couple weeks ago, soldiers shot a Palestinian accused of having a knife, and let his body lie in the street for an hour as he died, not letting an Arab ambulance through to pick him up.

At one point Charlie and I wander for a few minutes into the stones tunnels of and old bathhouse from Ottoman times. The site curator shows us that one of the entrances was blocked off by Israeli soldiers. We return to the group and soon emerge from one of the remaining Arab market streets in H2 into H1, which has the feel of most of the other Palestinian cities we’ve been to. I see a boy try to squeeze his bike through a revolving iron gate for a couple minutes, then turn around to find another way. Izzat walks us up a big hill to YAS’s building overlooking much of the city. It was occupied by the soldiers for a few years from 2003 to 2006, and they had to fight in the Supreme Court to get the building back. Issa Amro’s brother joins us briefly, though Issa himself is currently away. Over a nice lunch of makloubeh, Izzat tells us more about YAS’s nonviolent approach and how they believe that there’s been enough violence already. He is fine with Jews who want to live here, acknowledging their history, just not as occupiers. Most of people with YAS are volunteers–he works as a blacksmith. The organization works with Breaking the Silence to give people tours of the reality in Hebron, and runs a campaign to reopen Shuhada street. Izzat says other Palestinians used to laugh at YAS’s belief that nonviolence could work against the Israeli army, but they’ve gotten more support over the years as they’ve generated more publicity with their activity. You can support the work Youth Against Settlements does by donating at https://www.hebronfreedomfund.org/donate.

We thank Izzat and the other YAS folks present before walking down to the bus and riding back into Israel over the Green Line to the Bedouin village of al-Araqib, in the northern Negev (Naqab) desert, one of about 45 such unrecognized villages, of the al-Turi tribe. The government has been trying to get the nomadic Bedouins to move into towns for years. Israelis forces regularly come to demolish structures in the villages, even if they are all citizens (20% are in the IDF themselves). We meet with al-Araqib’s Sheik Sayeh Abu Madi’am. Almost 70 years old, about as old as the Israeli state itself, he tells the crisis Bedouins face with a blunt outrage, from living in constant uncertainty for so many years, that reminds me of when Ruchama Marton spoke to us. Marwan from Adalah, the legal support group for Palestinian citizens of Israel, translates for Madi’am (Madi’am knows quite a bit of Hebrew, too). The sheikh doesn’t begin until we’ve all accepted coffee or tea. He tells us the people of al-Araqib are actually only semi-nomadic, as the village’s extensive cemetery (and three stone buildings & water system they used to have) attests; they historically have moved around with their animals for grazing, but always return to the same spot. They also show us large prints of the papers documenting their presence on the land going back to 1905, under the Ottomans.

Still, al-Araqib is not able to connect to electricity and sewage. Israeli authorities–soldiers, commandos, police–have demolished its structures some 130 times now over the past decade. They destroyed olive and Carib trees, confiscated tractors and agricultural equipment, a generator, water tanks, and sheep, camels, and chickens. In some earlier demolitions trucks took away the rubble so pictures couldn’t be taken and distributed internationally. The village has been fined some 2 millions shekels (over 500,000 USD) to pay the bill for the demolitions. The sheikh demonstrates great political and historical awareness. He says how Mizrahi and Sephardi Jews in Israel feel pressure to prove their loyalty to Ashkenazi. He too emphasizes that he has no problems with the Jewish people living anywhere in the land, Gaza or Hebron, just with its leaders. He and some other Bedouin do vote, but there aren’t enough Knesset members with the will to take action against the demolitions. He does not align himself with any specific party.

We return to Jerusalem from al-Araqib as the sun sets, back to the Holy Land Hotel. In December, an Israeli court sentenced Sheikh Madi’am 10 months in prison by Israel for trespassing on state land by remaining in his village. You can donate to Adalah at https://donate.adalah.org/.

Daring to hope. Thursday 11/8–Jerusalem, Nabi Saleh, Bil’in

Thankfully, today ends the delegation on a comparatively uplifting note. Some of us wake up extra early for a visit the Dome of the Rock in the Old City with Said. It’s Thursday, a day for Torah-reading in Judaism, so we hear a crowd of men singing for a boy on his bar mitzvah as we pass on a bridge next to the Western Wall. The building is truly magnificent in the sunrise. Most of the material on the outside is not original, and Said tells us how over the years many different people have contributed to its construction and adornment–the Mameluks, Saladin, Sultan Suleiman, even some Irish and Italian groups recently donated to the maintenance of parts of it, including the golden dome. Prior to the start of the intifada in 2000 over Ariel Sharon’s provocative visit, access was not restricted for Jews. We see a few Jews escorted by soldiers cross the plaza while we’re there. Most interestingly, traditional Talmudic law actually prohibits Jews from walking around the Temple Mount–we might accidentally step on the site of the inner Holiest of Holies from the original temple, which the Torah says is forbidden for non-Levite priests. A sign in English and Hebrew at the entrance says as much.

We have breakfast (I’m delighted to be reunited with my all-you-can-eat halva) and get into the bus for one more foray into the West Bank. Adnan drives us north to the village of Nabi Saleh, site of some of the most publicized demonstrations against the occupation. We enter the house of the Tamimi family, the living embodiment of sumoud. We first meet the father Bassem Tamimi, who has been a leader of the weekly protests in the village since 2009. He starts off by reiterating that he and others don’t just want sympathy and tears (they already shed enough tears themselves from the teargas, he jokes stoically), they want solidarity. Some 60% of their land is in Area C, restricting their access to their water spring. He shows us some footage of protests and Israeli repression in the village, as we obviously won’t just hang around and watch one ourselves in person. Some army trucks launch rapid-fire rounds of tear gas not just as people but into their houses. The soldiers also spray the infamous skunk water into houses. Oftentimes people leave their houses through windows when doors are blocked. Mustafa Tamimi was killed some years back by a direct hit to the head from a tear gas canister fired from a moving van, and Mohamed is currently being treated for his eyes in South Africa; he might lose his eyesight. More villagers have been disabled by kneecap ping the past few years. Bassem emphasizes the role of women in joining the resistance, and we see some of them have their hijabs ripped off by soldiers. The whole family–Bassem, his wife, their children, cousins–has had their house raided and been arrested dozens of times. He tells us that they desire their protests to be nonviolent, but they feel fully justified in throwing stones when the soldiers attack. He too acknowledges the Holocaust and historical suffering of Jews.

As Bassem finishes, his now famous daughter Ahed walks in–of course, it’s her own house. We are also joined by Lana from Addameer, an organization advocating for the rights of Palestinian prisoners, of whom there are 6,000 at any given time. Lana gives us more context on their situation before Ahed begins. Many of them are not given their charges, though it is often for anything as vague as “incitement,” throwing stones, political party affiliation. 12 is the youngest age they can be sentenced under Israeli military law–any younger than that and they can only be held for a number of hours, up to a day. The courts gain money through the trial processes. The military courts regularly try 14 year-olds as adults. The Israeli government officially stopped using “torture” in prisons in 1999, but still allows what they term “moderate physical pressure.”

Lana translates for Ahed as she welcomes us and tells her story. The time of her arrest and incarceration is one of the more personal and detailed accounts we’ve heard, but she believes it important that we hear and tell others, and various news outlets have already reported on it as well. Last year, when she was 16, she slapped and kicked two Israeli soldiers outside her house, and a video of it went viral. They did not arrest her then and there–they waited til the next morning at 3 AM to raid her house. She was quickly taken and not allowed to say goodbye to her family, who did not know when they would see her again. She was first questioned by police in a main room, then further in her cell, which is illegal without cameras. Her interrogation period was extended to 8 days. She was sleep deprived and verbally sexually harassed, and they threatened to kill her family. No lawyer or parent was present even though she was a minor. She says it was better for her than many others because she knew to use her right to not talk, and she demanded that the interrogation room be filmed. During the 8 months she was sentenced, her parents could only visit her 3 times. Before any hearings she was strip searched. Some basic hygiene products, like pads, were unavailable. Her mother was arrested a few days after Ahed’s arrest for incitement due to posting the video of the encounter. Her brother has been sentenced for a year since May, and they have not been able to visit him. Ahed of course appreciates the public support she has received in Palestine and globally for standing up to military occupation of her land, but as she speaks it is clear that she and her family are just ordinary people who would much rather not have to be going through all this every day. She loves soccer and wanted to play on a team when she grew up, but ever since she was first unable to visit her father in prison she has wanted to pursue human rights law to dedicate herself fully to the struggle for freedom.

We thanked the Tamimi family for having us and for their resilience, and promised to share their story back in the US, as we’ve promised everyone we’ve met. We then went to one more village to the west, Bil’in, right near the Wall. As we drive, we pass too many settlements to take pictures of. The one closest to Bil’in is Modi’in. We park some ways from the Om Suleiman farm and walk past the Wall to the farm. On the way we can see sound grenades, tear gas canisters, and rubber bullets among the foliage on the ground. As we enter the gate, we run into Justin from Pittsburgh again! He’s been making his way through a couple farms since Tent of Nations; he’s returning to the US next week. We meet Iyad Burnat, one of the main leaders of the nonviolent protests featured in the documentary Five Broken Cameras, filmed by his brother Emad, and Muher, one of the main drivers of the farm. We have lunch together, talking over the noise of the constant construction in Modi’in echoing from less than a mile away on the other side of the Wall. Many of its residents have come from New York, not Israel.

Iyad and Muher tells us more about Bil’in’s situation and give us a tour around the farm. Way back in the day the my even had olive trees where Modi’in is now. Israel confiscated 60% of Bil’in’s land in 2004 to build the Wall on. After protests and legal battles, they got the Supreme Court to give back 30% of it. There’s the other routine assortment of obstacles we’ve learned face all farmers in Area C–not getting permits to connect to build, not being allowed to connect to electricity and water and having to buy drinking water. Just last week some settlers damaged 30 of their trees. And on top of occupation problems are environmental problems–the bee population is noticeably declining. They have come up with creative ways to resist through demonstration. They have used cranes to put sheds over the other side of the Wall, set up puppets which the soldiers mistakenly attacked, even painted themselves blue like the Na’vi from Avatar. Iyad says that nonviolence further shows the contrasting face of the military’s violence. Even still, one of his sons is being treated now in Istanbul for hand and chest injuries from soldiers during a protest. Another son is in prison for a year, accused of damaging an Israeli fence and fined 18,000 shekels. They also teach local kids about farming, much like at Tent of Nations. Many of their buildings can be quickly dissembled and packed before soldiers come to demolish them, and they are growing their own bamboo to build more such structures. Iyad believes that the farm will be completely destroyed at some point–they have 44 standing demolition orders, it’s just a matter of time, but it’s still worth fighting instead of running.

And that’s it. We give Iyad and the farm one more goodbye in solidarity, get back to the bus, drive south past Ramallah and back to Jerusalem for our last night together. We thank Said and Adnan one more time and tip them as a group. After dinner and our final debriefing, I quickly do some laundry with the hotel’s water, as I don’t want to use so much water right when I arrive at the Tent of Nations farm again. I then join most of the younger delegates on the rooftop bar overlooking the night-lit Old City one more time for some drinks and shishah (the older folks have called it in since everyone’s got to be up early for the airport).

Shukran, Samer. Friday, 11/9—Jerusalem, Bethlehem (Beit Jala), and Nahallin

I get up 5:30 AM to say goodbye to most of the delegates as they get on the bus for the airport. The sun is starting to rise, but I go to grab another hour or so of sleep. After waking again and having breakfast with some of the remaining delegates, I realize most of my bathroom sink laundry from the night before still hasn’t dried, and the front desk tells me that I won’t be able to find an operating dryer since it’s Friday. I frantically dry most of the shirts with the bathroom’s hairdryer, while I fold the underwear and socks into plastic bags, before running downstairs to check out. Jordan, Ajamu, and Desmera are still there; they’re going to be staying in Bethlehem for another few days. After I grab a bite at a nearby market, we walk to the Damascus Gate together to take the bus to Bethlehem. We pass Hubert and his wife Nancy, also staying through next week, heading back to the hotel, and say our final farewells. The four of us reflect on the delegation once more on the way to Bethlehem. I mention that although Said said something to me about Beit Jala, according to the Tent of Nations website, I have to get off at Bab-iz-Qaq in Bethlehem, and from there take a sherut cab, a kind of mini-bus down the highway towards the farm, near the village of Nahallin and the Neve Daniel settlement. Jordan laughs and says it sounds like I’m saying “Bobby’s cock.”

As soon as I start seeing signs for Beit Jala, which I assume is kind of part of Bethlehem, I grab my backpack, say goodbye to the three of them one last time real quick, and jump out, not wanting to miss Bab-iz-Qaq. I look around for a few seconds and realize I’m most definitely not close to any such major transit hub; I must have got out too early. Turns out that Beit Jala is really its own town next to Bethlehem. I feel like Harry Potter when the Dursleys drop him off at King’s Cross in the first book and he has no idea how to get to Platform Nine-and-Three-Quarters. In the back of my mind I start thinking about finding a hostel for the night if I can’t find a way to the farm in the next 2 hours. I don’t see any big yellow sheruts. I ask a couple of people about them, they say their English isn’t that good–Beit Jala probably doesn’t get that many tourists. I go for it and hail a passing regular taxi, and show him the “60” I’ve written down for the highway, and tell him “Kilo Sabat-ashara” (kilometer 17), near Nahallin. He doesn’t speak much English either but takes me in and calls his daughter who speaks English to translate over the phone between us. We start moving, though he has to call her a couple more times to really get an idea of where he’s going. “Shu ismak?” I ask. His name is Samer. After some 15 minutes, I realize we’re going down a valley into Nahallin–I remember when we came by bus last week we just came south directly from Bethlehem and passed around Nahallin. Realizing neither of us know where this farm is, he pulls over and asks a sherut driver to pull over, who soon realizes exactly which farm I’m going to–“[something something in Arabic] Daoud Nasser?” the other driver asks me. I don’t realize what he’s saying at first, then am relieved to recognize Daoud’s name. The driver must have taken other volunteers there before. He directs Samer through some roads in Nahallin, and I shout “shukran!” as Samer and I run back into the taxi through a drizzle.

Samer drives through the town and starts going up a steep hill on the other side, impressively winding his way through the roads driving stick. He understandably still isn’t quite sure where to turn, and he calmly rolls down his window every couple minutes asking people if they know the way, including a boy on his bike and a couple guys in a mechanic shop. “[something something in Arabic] Daoud Nasser?” As we climb higher, the buildings start to thin, and I can feel us getting closer. Soon, I recognize the dirt road, the view of the valley, some of the fencing around the farm, and then the gate. We’ve made it. I get out and thank Samer profusely, pay and tip him, finishing with a last “Shukran Samer, ma salama” (goodbye, literally “stay safe”). “Welcome in Palestine,” he smiles.

I get into the gate after realizing it’s unlocked, and soon run into Daher Nasser. He’s overjoyed to see me again. He first directs me to the kitchen, where his mother Meladeh gives me tea and some damn good leftovers from lunch. I watch the sun begin to set west toward the Mediterranean, the first of many, and sigh in relief, pleased with not only myself but especially with Samer, his daughter, all the other nameless Palestinians who helped give him directions, and God; the metaphorical Weasleys who have helped me get to Hogwarts. Daher joins me, and we catch up on where my fellow travelers and went over the past week. Daoud is away for two weeks in the US, mostly around the DC area. It starts to rain again. “Ah, you bring the rain!” Daher exclaims. It’s a good omen indeed for a place that only gets rain in the winter. My first task is then to quickly take drying laundry off the lines and bring them to finish drying from the rafters in a cabin. I also briefly meet Midori, a Japanese woman volunteering a bit older than myself. It takes me some time to catch her name, her spoken English isn’t that great–Daher himself isn’t entirely sure how to pronounce it and often just refers to her as “Japanese.” She’s the only other volunteer there, for 2 weeks–the harvest season has just ended and winter is approaching, so they don’t need as many.

As dusk falls, Meladeh gives me some more food in a pot to bring to my home. Daher brings me to his tractor and we load the back with jugs of drinking water. He then nonchalantly tells me to throw my backpack in and hop in the back for the ride, saying that I should sit leaning in the edge. I’m down until I realize just how steep and rock the terrain is. I soon settle with squatting in a corner on the floor of the back, clutching the pot of food between my knees, so I don’t fall out. By the end of the ride I’m completely sitting with my legs spread out on the floor. At one point we’re definitely going down at a 7-degree angle. As I bounce around back there, keeping my mouth slack so I don’t bite my tongue on any bumps, I still grin to myself, looking around at the dark hills and the lights of Nahallin and al-Khader amidst the lights of the settlements.

It’s a little more than a five-minute walk from the center of the farm down to my “cave.” It’s a half-underground hideaway, with stone and cement extending outside. It’s kind of like a hobbit hole. It does a pretty good job of staying cool during the day and warm at night. It can house about ten people on the bunk beds, though I’m the only resident for now. There’s a little bathroom and a kitchen in the main room, with a gas stove, sink, and a minifridge. Water flows from a large tank Daher occasionally fills above the cave with collected rainwater. There’s another tank in the kitchen that we fill with the jugs of drinking water (bought). Electricity comes from a couple solar panels up top that charge batteries during the day. Daher grabs a pickaxe and quickly shows me how to dig the soil around the surrounding trees so it becomes fresh and absorbs water better for when it next rains; I’ll start with that after breakfast tomorrow morning. He also shows me a small chicken coop, where just a couple live, and the food to feed them in the morning. There used to be some rabbits there too, but someone left the fence open and the dogs got in and ate them. Guess I won’t be able to channel my inner Lenny Smalls and tend to them rabbits with the alfalfa. Come to think of it, this whole farm traveling thing I’m doing kind of is like what George and Lenny do in Of Mice and Men, except I’m thankfully not fleeing from the desolation of the Dust Bowl and Great Depression. I also don’t have a Lenny to worry about and look after. Or maybe I’m Lenny, and I need a George to look after me. Anyway, lastly, Daher gives me keys for the cave, its fence, and the gate we passed between here and the center of the farm. He gives me a joyous goodnight, I thank him for everything, and he returns up the hill. I settle in to my new home, unpack, and sleep soundly.

European guests. Saturday 11/10 through 11/13–Tent of Nations Farm, Nahallin

I can take more of a look around the next morning. I’ve got a nice sheltered outdoor area with a table. I feed the two chickens and hang up my wet laundry from the hotel to dry. Most of the trees down here are grapevines, the vineyard. There are some olive, fig, and almond trees, though most of those are further up in the center of the farm. There are some tomato plants as well that Daher told me to pick from as I please to cook with. The valley overlooking the towns of al-Khader and Husan is beautiful, though the hill directly opposite just a few hundred meters away is occupied by the Neve Daniel settlement. While the mostly Muslim towns have minarets, the settlement’s defining feature is a security tower with a painted Israeli flag on it. A couple army jets roar high overhead every other day or so. I can hear the Israeli school children playing outside most days, and wonder how much they know about the threatened farm just a sniper’s shot across the valley from them.

There are outdoor compost toilets around the farm that I use most of the time, but Daher told me if it’s the middle of the night to just use the indoor one in my cave (if it’s yellow let it mellow, if it’s brown flush it down). The compost toilets save water and air nicely in the breeze, and the payloads one deposits in them get reused as fertilizer for the soil. I think to myself that one of the greatest acts of solidarity with farmers living under a military occupation is providing your own manure to nourish the crops. It sounds like a shitty joke (sorry) to be making, but I do completely mean it. I get to work turning the dirt around some of the trees. I get into a pretty relaxing rhythm while working, pausing to stretch my bent back every so often. Daher comes down mid-morning, and is delighted to see my work. “You are farmer now!” he pronounces. That was quick. He gives some constructive feedback for improvement, demonstrating that it’s not as much of a narrow ditch around the base of the trunk, but a wider ring in more of the dirt surrounding the tree, above the roots. He then takes me up to the main farm. We have lunch with Midori. I learn that she’s a Christian, from a northern part of Japan, I forget exactly where.

In the afternoon, Daher introduces me to the animals and shows me the feeding process, to be done first thing in the morning and late afternoon before sunset. There’s a coop of chickens (hens and roosters kept separate most of the time), a bunch of ducks (cuter and less noisy than the chickens, but quite messier due to the trays of water for bathing), a flock of pigeons, and a donkey, Vicky. She sounds like Chewbacca passing a kidney stone whenever she honks out in distress. They all get their water refilled and eat mostly seeds, sometimes kitchen scraps, and Vicky often gets hay and the leaves of branches pruned from olive trees. I ask Daher what feeding the pigeons is for–”Peace!” he answers. I presume that it’s so they don’t try to eat any other crops. There are also a bunch of dogs to feed–three of them are usually kept in an enclosure, though Labras is the chillest dog ever and gets free reign, along with a couple strays who wander around. There also is an extremely extra stray cat who comes around every couple days for food, meowing literally every second he’s not eating or being scratched. I christen him Sumoud. As part of the feeding process, Daher shows me how to turn on the hoses for the greenhouse (7 minutes exactly) for the lettuce recently planted by Midori. Some of the plants in the back I have to water myself though since there’s not enough pressure from the ground hoses to reach them.

Tomorrow’s Sunday, so Daher and his family will be off for church and some R&R. Midori will be in Bethlehem too. I’ll be holding the fort down myself–I’ll feed the animals and do some more digging around trees. And at around 4, there’s a group of volunteers coming from Europe for a couple days, so I’ll be letting them in before Daher gets back in the evening, and Daher says I’ll be leading them while they help work. I’ve already been given quite some responsibility here, but Daher says he trusts me especially since I’m staying a month.

Next morning I start getting to know the animals as I feed them for the first time. The day is pretty uneventful, except the three dogs somehow break loose from their cage and start running all over, ecstatic with their new freedom. Thankfully all the other animals are locked up, so it’s not a huge problem, and I quickly establish dominance and they follow me to the gate. There are six volunteers staying for two days–Yulius, Martze, Janet, Matheus, Alisa, and Ule (Oo-leh) , all from the Netherlands and Germany. I lead them down towards our cave and learn more about them. Most of them are around 20, starting university or work, though Janet is in her 50s. All of them are volunteering for several months at a program in a town near Haifa within Israel that does peacebuilding between Jews and Palestinians there. As they don’t speak much Arabic or Hebrew, they work mostly as housekeepers. The program occasionally has them take some short trips like this one throughout the land to learn more. They’re a pretty merry bunch, and it’s good to have company. I try not to play into stereotypes, but within a few minutes of their arrival as they’re unpacking, I open the fridge and find that a bottle of Jaegermeister has already found its way there.

Daher calls the phone line to the cave that he’s back, so we all go back up so he can meet them. He says I’ll take them up in the morning to feed the animals, and he’ll show us what we’ll be doing during the day. Meladeh gives us all food to take down–a tub of hummus, pita bread, cheese, eggs, leftover pasta and tomato sauce from one of the visitor groups. We all have a feast on our patio outside. We talk more about our lives, our countries, and our experiences, especially the differences in the education systems in the US and Germany, the latter of which does tracking for students in fields early on. Janet is gifted with making solid food from sparse ingredients and also has the genius idea of using the cheese, pita, and tomato sauce to make mini pizzas.

The next morning I introduce them to the animals, even though I haven’t known them for that long myself, and they help bring branches and leaves for Vicky. We’re also delighted to see that Labras has had puppies–she carries a squealing one in her mouth to the other six, all moaning and rolling around in top of each other in a little pit. I guess I will be able to embrace some of my inner Lenny Smalls after all, hopefully I don’t kill any of them by petting them too vigorously. Daher then provides us with shovels and pitchforks and shows us we’ll start by turning the soil all around the greenhouse, for future planting. That takes us til about lunch. We then spend a couple hours further down the valley by the cave in the afternoon digging holes for more fruit trees to be planted. I mark the holes a meter apart with a stick Daher gave me, and the rest of them follow digging the holes deeper. We catch the sunset and have another feast.

The next morning we finish digging in the rows down the valley, and they do a nice job cleaning up before leaving early afternoon. I probably won’t have time to catch them in Haifa off the farm, but I exchange contacts with Yulius and Janet to potentially meet up with them in future travels–Yulius might be in South Africa around the same time I am, and Janet is planning a massive road trip from the US down through South America next year.

Getting into the routine. Wednesday 11/14 through Monday 11/26–Tent of Nations and Bethlehem

I quickly fall into a nice routine in the days after the Europeans depart. I’ve told people that farming is really just intense gardening and having a lot of pets. Even though it’s not too cognitively difficult, it can still get pretty physically tiring. I usually go to sleep at 10, sometimes as early as 9, to wake up by 6 AM, sometimes earlier to watch the sun rise. It really is quite nice going to bed early so often. I make myself some breakfast, usually whipping up some eggs and heating pita with cheese and jam, read, feed the two chickens by the cave, then head up to the main farm to feed the rest of the animals and water the greenhouse. I then start the day’s work–digging, planting, cleaning, helping Daher with an odd job like repairing something, ploughing, or working on his tractor. Later in the first week Daher has me start my own entire garden in a fenced area by my cave. I clear the rocks that have gathered on the ground since the last season, plough some small trenches for planting, and arrange the larger rocks around the perimeter of each planting area. I plant peas, fava beans, and little onions that start shooting up scallions pretty quickly as it rains more over the next couple weeks.

There’s usually a break for tea and a snack around 10 or 11, followed by more work, then lunch is around 1-2 (usually I eat down in my cave, though sometimes it’s at the communal kitchen up in the farm’s center), then I squeeze in a little more work before feeding the animals again a little past 4 before sundown. Mostly it’s just me, Daher, Midori, the animals, and the plants. A few times a week there are visiting groups around noon, and Meladeh comes on those days to make lunch for them. Most of the groups are older Christians from France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Italy, though some are younger and there are a couple groups from the US, and I chat with them all. Daher (and later Daoud when he returns) meets with them to tell them more about the farm’s predicament and give them a tour. I usually back to my cave by 5, carrying more food even though I insist to Meladeh and Daher that I already have enough and can’t fit it into my minifridge. Usually I can use the limited WiFi connection for simple things. I make sure to charge my phone and the backup lamps during the day; sometimes the solar-charged battery runs out in the evening, especially if it was a more cloudy or rainy day. Even still I can use my phones radio to listen to the local stations–as I flip between them I catch Hebrew and Arabic, and some English. There’s also a small library of books people have left behind–the compilations of essays by Noam Chomsky and Ilan Pappe on Palestinians and Zionism, a biography on Arafat, and a poetic memoir by the writer Mourid Barghouti (I Was Born There, I Was Born Here). Lunch and dinner are usually the plentiful leftovers from the salads and delicious large stews & rice Meladeh makes for the guests–a lot of peas, carrots, eggplant, tomatoes, etc. There’s also this great kind of sesame and grape syrup cake she bakes. Living on the farm, I can only really shower twice a week due to the limited water access (I knew this going into it). Thankfully I don’t sweat a disgusting amount since the wind up in the hills keeps things pretty cool even when the sun is hot, and I don’t get too dirty as I’m usually wearing pants and long sleeves. No one else is usually around to smell me anyway. Some of the water from the shower gets collected to be used for watering plants (just like the water from the sinks), and there’s an organic soap to use so chemicals don’t harm them.

I only really take one day off each week. I get to relax enough the days I work, and some days pretty much become days off by default when it rains. On rainy mornings or afternoons I still feed the animals, though if it’s really windy Daher tells me to just stay inside. I pick the leaves of dried herbs like rosemary and sage off their stalks and put them into packets sold at the farm’s shop. I take my first day on Tuesday the 20th and go into Bethlehem, mostly so  I can meet my friend Phantina. Daher this time gives me instructions on taking those sherut shared taxis to and from the city. He tells me they all stop at Bab-iz-Qaq (the Gate of the Arches). It’s also pronounced more like “Bab’z Qaq,” with not much of a vowel before the z, so it’s more like “Bob’s Cock” as opposed to “Bobby’s Cock,” as fellow delegate Jordan had said on the bus from Jerusalem. I walk down the dirt path towards Highway 60, where our bus with the delegation came from the first time a few weeks ago. I climb over the Israeli roadblock still there, walk past the Neve Daniel settlement, and wait at the road on the side going into Bethlehem. I’m waiting there for well over a half hour for one of them to pull over as I wave them down–most are full, coming up from the south Hebron. Just as I’m thinking of giving up, I’m saved.

Although the Wall encircles most of Bethlehem, it has still not been entirely finished, and it is quite easy for Palestinians to pass from Bethlehem to the other side of the Wall’s route to the south, further showing that the Wall does not absolutely stop any Palestinian from attacking Israelis if they want to, as Israel claims. The driver directs me up the hill towards the old city. It is pretty easy to walk to most major sites in the city–it’s not very large, though it’s densely populated in tall apartments especially as we saw in the refugee camps. I make my way back up toward the bustling Manger Square, where our group was in our first stop in Bethlehem at the end of October. They’re already setting up a giant Christmas tree and other lights and decorations. Bethlehem actually has three different Christmas celebrations–the Catholic one on the 25th, and the Eastern Orthodox and Armenian ones with different calendars in January. I grab some kebab for lunch at the Peace Center’s restaurant and hang out in the square for a bit, making use of their WiFi and people-watching.

I haven’t said much about observing the average Palestinian on the street until now, mostly because I’m cautious of generalizing peoples and cultures (and I was squeezing in so much info from the delegation), but there are some patterns especially in fashion I’ve noticed. Many of the older men wear some kind of traditional plain-colored gown, with a cloth headcovering, whether some skullcap or a black/white or red keffiyeh. Most older women wear a full gown with their hijab as well, and even women without hijabs (Christian?) have a traditional gown. Men more in the middle sport more modern Western dress, often a leather jacket, and often a mustache. The young men and women have the most hip modern clothes, with Muslim girls wearing just the hijab wrapped in more stylish ways, and the boys wearing skinny jeans and rocking fades from their hair into immaculately maintained beards. I’ve noticed these patterns especially in the cities, though they appeared in some of the towns and villages we visited on the delegation as well. I also see much of this when I’m in Jordan later (indeed many Arabs in Jordan are Palestinian, either directly refugees from ‘48 or ‘67 or indirectly leaving the poor Palestinian economy under Israel’s occupation), and have been told my various Arabs that the issue of Westernization is prominent across all of the Middle East, as it is throughout much of the world outside North America and Europe, though the specifics of course differ from culture to culture. It’s an interesting phenomenon, especially as so many people criticize the Western politicians and leaders that have historically helped destabilize their countries. I’ve heard that the love affair with a Western culture is most intense in Lebanon, where many people dye their hair blonde and lighter skin is more valued (such internalized racism has grown a lot in the past few hundred years of European colonization & domination around the world).

In the cities most Palestinians speak pretty good English, especially in the touristy parts of Jerusalem and Bethlehem like I’ve already noted, though there is no “p” sound in Arabic–it usually turns into “b,” so they’ll say “beoble” instead of “people,” and they often make fun of themselves for it. One comedian of an Israeli politician recently argued that the Palestinian people don’t exist because they don’t have a “p” sound in their own language (their own name for Palestine is Falisteen). Sometimes they just make a “p” into an “f”–I once heard Daher cleverly refer to a sponge as a “sfonge,” to save himself further embarrassment by trying to say “sbonge.” I mention all of this not to judge fashion trends as good or bad, or to laugh at them–just to pass on my own small observations on cultural differences and similarities. And like I said these are just overall patterns–I still see some younger people in more traditional religious/cultural dress, and some older folks in more Western modern dress (though I didn’t see too many old men with skinny jeans and side-fades on their hair). And I do hear several of them pronounce the “p” sound just fine. Lord knows they all speak English better than I can speak Arabic.

Anyway, back to my day in Bethlehem. After lunch I take a stroll to the nearest Jawwal phone center to get a SIM card that Daher gave me for a small flip phone to work, so he can call me wherever I am on the farm. Street names aren’t always clearly labeled, but by downloading a map from Google before on WiFi, and by asking people for directions just by saying “Jawwal,” I find my way there and get it to work. It’s got very limited minutes, and I find when I get back to the farm that night that it doesn’t get reception by my cave, but at least Daher can contact me more easily now. I call Phantina–she’ll be free for a bit in a couple hours. In the meantime I check out the Church of the Nativity, which I didn’t have the chance to last time I was here. The main doorway in is tiny–the Cruasader’s Door–the European crusaders who captured the city at one point in the medieval ages made it so the enemy couldn’t ride horses through it; you have to squat down. There are people from all over the world inside–the US, the Caribbean, Europe, Japan, the Philippines. The cathedral, stained glass, and mosaics inside are magnificent, even though some of the structure is being renovated.

I meet up with Phantina–she’s from Ramallah but was in Bethlehem for a couple days. We met some four years ago when she and another student came to my college to talk about the experience of education under the occupation–the toured many other campuses across the US with several other Palestinian students. We catch up for just an hour or so before she gets a bus back to Ramallah. Phantina’s been doing some cool stuff since graduating, working in local radio and outreach with children. We walk around and she shows me the Milk Grotto chapel, a lesser-known site for tourists, where Mary is said to have weaned Jesus. It’s a little underground, and there are some nuns chanting. After seeing her off at the bus station, I head back to Bab-z-Qaq as the sun sets, to catch one of the sheruts heading toward Hebron. It takes a while to get one with space–it seems like a pretty busy time for commuters. Everyone waiting at the corner keeps asking “al-Khalil? al-Khalil?” to the drivers (the Arabic name for Hebron). Eventually one pulls up, the driver sticks his head out the window to announce “al-Khalil,” and I clamber in with everyone else. The driver is a bit confused about me getting off at Kilo 17, but I tell him I’m just walking toward Nahallin, and he understands. 10 minutes later he lets me off and I walk back to the farm past Neve Daniel.

That Thursday, Midori returns to Japan, and then I’m the only long-ish term volunteer left. That Sunday the 25th, when Daher is in town, I see literally no other human being all day for the first time in a while, perhaps in my whole life. I can hear others down in Nahallin and over in Neve Daniel, but on the whole farm it’s just me. I’m not a 100% introvert, but it was quite relaxing and nice, just getting to do my own thing and not having to interact with others for once. Monday late afternoon another volunteer arrives for a few days, Rachel from France. We don’t get to know each other much yet, and the next day I have another day off.