The country remains vastly united. Sure, there may have been mass demonstrations last year that seemed to be tearing the country apart over a more than controversial judicial review by the Netanyahu government. All that has ended. I don't doubt people are still irritated with the prime minister and I saw obscene graffiti stating just that. But when Israel as a nation is attacked its body politic comes together. How would you feel if a nation roughly the size of southern Ontario was most viciously assaulted for no provocation? And when the attackers vowed to do the same over and over again? Hostage kidnapped posters were everywhere, the one visual departure from what otherwise seems a very normal going-about-business country. Scratch the surface and talk with anyone and you know people are outraged and want to fight back. Israel didn't start this, just as it didn't the Yom Kippur War (1973), Six Day War (1967) and War of Independence (1948). Not to mention innumerable terrorist attacks, with one clock estimating that
the shortest time Israel has not been attacked by a missile is 56 minutes. We visited Sderot, a city south of Tel Aviv that has long been a target of Hamas missiles, often made from UN donated water pipe. We watched a video of Hamas terrorists where, on an otherwise quiet Saturday morning, begin shooting people on the street outside the police station, the site of a vicious Oct. 7 battle. We dined with soldiers who had come to Israel from around the world, from Uruguay, Brooklyn and Manhattan, all of whom made Aliyah and are now proud Israeli citizens. Gun-toting soldiers (some off duty) has long been a feature of Israeli society the sight of which has more poignancy now. You have to even smile when you see attractive young women, applying makeup and seemingly without a care in the world, toting an M4 or M16 rifle across their backs. There is no question Israel is a Jewish state, with Orthodox Jews most visible but numerous men also wearing yarmulkes. So many israeli women wear religious turbans (Mitpachat), a fascinating and exotic garment which you will see in no other country at least in this abundance. But, as probably the vast majority of outsiders are unaware, this is a multi-ethnic state. A fifth of the population is Arab - and Muslim. Road signs are in three languages - Hebrew, Arabic and then English. And eschew any talk that this is a "white" country. It’s as racially diverse as Canada or the US, with people of all shades including Blacks and Asians. And don’t believe the rhetoric that this is a "settler" country. Jews have been here for 3000 years. The country is traditional but more than contemporary. Walking back from a kosher Italian restaurant in the Machane Yehuda Market we passed open air rave parties with rock bands. Hard to find something like that even in Detroit. On my last night, taking the new and efficient train from Jerusalem to Ben Gurion airport, I met a vibrant younger woman originally from Chicago and in part as American as apple pie. She has lived in numerous countries and now resides in Haifa in Israel's north. She's going home to the States in a week. But she says that when she travels, she isn’t out of the country a day before she misses it. This uniquely multidimensional land - religious and ecumenical, traditional and contemporary with an undefinable life force shot through it - are the reasons why.
(Photos of Jerusalem light rain line and a coffee bar in Jerusalem's chic yet traditional German Colony district.)
- Ron Stang, a frequent traveller, Windsor Ontario Canada
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