So I know it has been FOREVER since I last wrote, and for
that I apologize. I apologize to myself 20-30 years down the line when the
details of my life here have started to fade, and I apologize to those of you
who have followed me thus far on my journey. I’ll start off with a political
bit that I’ve been itching to write for a while and then go into my visa run
trip to Egypt two weekends ago and other such interesting tidbits from my two
months of silence.
Caught up in work and personal decisions, I have largely
ignored my political motivations, thoughts and frustrations lately. However,
the news has been buzzing lately with contradictions and controversies that I
can no longer put off writing about.
Firstly, a bit about Land Day: March 30 marked the
anniversary of the 1976 strikes and protests in Palestine and Israel that
resulted in the death of 6 unarmed Palestinians/Arabs and the injury of many
others. The protests were a response to the appropriation of a large amount of
Palestinian-owned land for settlements and other purposes. This included land
owned by Palestinian refugees that had fled, AS WELL AS Palestinians who had
become actual citizens of Israel. Previous to this event, protests from Arab citizens
of Israeli had been sporadic and limited due to the poverty, isolation and
discrimination that they found in their new situation after the 1948 take-over.
Additionally, they were under strict military rule and did not have the right
to assemble. These are people that stayed in Israel, did not flee to the
Palestinian territory, and were given citizenship in Israel (Sound familiar
US?).
Every year Palestinians in Palestine and around the
world—along with others that see injustice in the blatant theft of land by a
country with a stronger military and powerful set of allies—gather to
commemorate the lives lost that day, as well as to protest the injustice still
rampant in the ongoing conflict over land and the right for a people to call
their nation their own. This happened this past year, and people from all over
the world protested. I’m happy to say I have a friend Patrick in Australia who
took a passionate lead in organizing a demonstration there. And of course there
were protests here, at the immense wall that Israel has built to separate the
two worlds. Peaceful demonstrations were met with violence as usual, nothing surprising
to report.
In addition to this taking of land from its own citizens, Israeli
continues to steal (this is not an exaggeration) land from Palestinians’
territory in the West Bank. Settlements are indeed illegal according to
International law, and Israel has been informed of this. Yet, settlements continue to be ordered and
built. I read just yesterday of an order to remove well over 1,000 olive trees
in the territories. It was not clear what the motivation of this order was—settlements
or pure cruelty, as these trees signify a livelihood and way of life for their
Palestinian owners. Its actions such as these that cannot be ignored.
The Netanyahu administration’s
blatant disregard for human rights is actually appalling. Case and point :
" Israel has cut working relations with
the UN Human Rights Council, officials say, after it decided to investigate
Jewish settlements in the West Bank.” This was the headline of an article I posted on my facebook about a
month ago. I suggest reading the article, as it shows just how blatant a
disregard for human rights law Israel has (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-17510668).
Ok enough politics. The weekend
before last I set off for my second visa run to Egypt. I left Nablus Wednesday
afternoon at 2:30pm and had to be back Sunday night in order to teach on
Monday. As buses run infrequently, I decided to take a shared taxi to Jericho
and hitchhike my way down the Dead Sea to the border and beyond. Not long after
being dropped off by the main road to the Dead Sea, I found myself standing in
the middle of a dust storm. Small rocks and was felt like enough dirt to bury
the empire state building was hurled at me by relentless high speed winds. Standing
pathetically at the side of the road near a tied up camel and watching cars
pass by in the midst of all this was proving an ineffective tactic in getting
someone to stop.
Luckily, as seems to be the usual
case, a friendly Palestinian across the street waved me into the lawn and
garden set up. The three Palestinian workers gestured me to join them in their eclectic
employee area for some food and drinks to wait out the storm. They asked me
what I was doing, the usual, and made lighthearted comments about the storm in
Arabic. I waited a solid 45 minutes to an hour before venturing across the street
once again. After a little while I was picked up by an Israeli family man on
his way home to the Ein Geddi Kibbutz. He was incredibly friendly and
open-minded about everything. I enjoyed
chatting with him as he drove me down to Ein Geddi. The next person to pick me
up was an older Israeli man who did not speak any English. It was a relatively
silent ride which took the pressure off for random chatter trying to avoid
politics. He tried talking to me in Hebrew, and from what little I did get he
was telling me he would go a different route to take me a little further and
drop me off under some lights, as it had started to get into the evening. It
was very kind of him and he insisted I take some chocolate wafers with me as a
parting gift. The next car to pick me up was another Israeli man, probably in
his late 20’s, who also didn’t speak any English. I think he tried to play
music I would know as he shuffled through his iphone. He dropped me off about
150-200 kilometers north of the Eilat, the city that borders Egypt.
I was immediately picked up by the happiest
truck driver on the planet. His name was Moshe and he spoke just enough English
to communicate with awkward pauses and slips of Hebrew, which I of course did
not understand at all. He was all smiles as he chatted and drove down the road.
He was younger than your typical truck driver—my guess early thirties—delivering
milk to hotels in Eilat. He called his friend who met us in Eilat. Moshe
dropped off the truck and him and his friends took me all the way to the Taba
border crossing, which is a few kilometers outside of Eilat. I felt bad as I
only know how to say a simple “thank you” in Hebrew, which I said like five
times repeatedly as I waved goodbye.
I had two options: keep on
trucking through the border and take my chances on the Egyptian side, or try to
crash a camping group on the beach outside the border. It was 10pm and I was
feeling a pull to go on through. I walked through with ease, as only a few
people were crossing at this time. Walking out onto Egyptian soil in the border
town I remember from last time filled me with an immense feeling of freedom,
and slight apprehension as I now had no place to stay and no idea how I was
going to get a ride with little money and little traffic. I didn’t feel scared
though, as I was filled with what I believe to be divine peace. A taxi driver
spat out some high prices for me, and I just said I would walk. He looked at me
like I was insane, and rightly so. After a minute contemplating how serious I
was about this, he drove off. I kept walking towards to checkpoint that let out
of town. I chatted with the guys at the checkpoint as they took a unnecessary amount
of time to look at my stamp. They were nice though, and amused by my
determination to keep pressing on by myself at night. (Side note: had I not
felt at peace with the situation I would have most definitely figured something
else out, but like I said, something just told me to keep walking).
Then a small shuttle pulled up.
The guy opened the door and inquired about my intentions with the same curiosity
all the others had. These are the moments when speaking a conversational amount
of Arabic comes in super handy. He told me he was going to Nuweiba to pick up
people at a resort or hotel to bring them to the border. As he had no passengers
with him, he offered to take me a far as Nuewiba for free. It was incredibly
nice of him to do this, and I was sincerely grateful. He suggested I find a
cheap place to spend the night in Nuweiba as it would be hard to find cars
going to Dahab this late, and it wasn’t exactly a wise idea to wander around
further this late at night (by the time we arrived in Nuweiba is was most
likely past midnight). I again felt a pull to stay in Nuweiba so I did. I
walked down the road to the camps from the main road and inquired where I could
find the cheapest lodging. They directed me to “soft beach.” I think I was one
of 3 people staying there besides those that worked there. The toilet had to be
flushed with water and the room was really basic, but I could not have been
more pleased. The man that ran it was A Sudanese man who had been living in
Egypt for a long time and spoke incredible English. I chatted with him and some
other guys at the fire for a while. I woke up and had a coffee and was greeted
by my first Bedouin girl of the trip. The Bedouin girls roam the beach fronts
selling homemade bracelets and jewelry. I chatted with her for a while a bought
a bracelet for one of my Palestinian friends who had helped me cut my hair. Lodging
for the night plus the coffee cost be a total of 20 Egyptian pounds, which is
about 3 dollars and fifty cents. I could not have been happier with the
situation. I offered the owner some of my spices I had brought as a gift to the
person I was couchsurfing with in Dahab and he in turn kindly offered to take
me to the best place to find cars going to Dahab.
The first person to stop was a
taxi driver who offered to take me down the road further for free when he
realized I was serious about not spending money on a taxi for the hour long
trip to Dahab. He was literally the only person who turned out not to be nice, but
he just let me out 10 minutes down the road and that was that. I wasn’t
bothered by his misunderstanding of my profession as I’m quite used to that by
now and know how to insist in Arabic that I am merely an English teacher. Done
and done. The next car to stop was a couple of Bedoiun men. The owner of the
place in Nuweiba had advised me to only ride with Bedouins, as they are
friendly and trustworthy. It was only later that I remembered that whole
kidnapping thing that happened a few months ago—although to be fair, its always
a small group that misrepresents the majority in the media. When they offered
to take me to Dahab I verified that they were not a taxi, and their reponse was
“No! We’re Bedouins!!!” It made me smile.
They dropped me off at the place I
was staying: a hotel run by a fellow couchsurfer who offers to the ouchsurfers
stay there for free. We ended up having some miscommunications and not getting
along, but that didn’t become problematic until around the time I left, and at
first we seemed destined to be friends. Funny how things work.
Anyway I met up with a Canadian couchsurfer
who had stayed with me in my flat in Nablus, and we had got along really well.
We chilled on the seaside drinking chai tea and catching up. It was SO nice to
not have a care in the world and enjoy her company. She will inshallah (God
willing) be in Cairo teaching when I move there in LESS THAN A MONTH, which is
amazing as we have become quite good friends, and I am so looking forward to
hanging out with her more.
She left the next morning and I
spent the entire day at the beach taking in the sun, gazing at the mountains,
and staring in disbelief at the many shades of blue boasted by the sea. I put
on sunscreen but my skin, which had barely seen the sun in months, was red by
the end of the day regardless. The next morning I did some shopping for shirts
that are lightweight but cover my arms so that I can survive this last month of
Nablusi dress despite the increasing heat. One of Kira’s friend’s friend helped
me to the checkpoint from which I could hitchhike as I had missed the last bus
to the border. They instructed the people at the checkpoint to find me a ride
to the border. I ended up with a group of really fun and nice musicians who had
played in Dahab and were on their way back to Cairo. I really enjoyed talking
to them, especially one who teaches music and theater in Cairo, sharing my
passion for the dramatics and who also had a very interesting perspective on
politics. From where they dropped me off I ended up having to take a taxi,
ironically with the same driver who had taken Lindsey, Amy and I to Dahab the
first time I did a visa run. It was an expense, but I had saved so much that
weekend from hitchhiking (half the time unintentionally) and staying for free.
I spent a long time at the border
being grilled with ridiculous questions about my work and personal life in
Nablus and waiting for who-knows-what to be decided about my liability to the “state”
of Israel (if Palestine does not have the right to statehood, I don't see why Israel should). Apparently which bar or club I go to on my weekend nights potentially
poses a serious security threat. After a few hours I was granted a 2 month
visa, which is all I needed to cover my remaining time teaching here. I was
again stranded at the border at night, and decided to go around the campsites
at the beach to see if there was an extra tent lying around. It seemed like
there were very few people there, although I realized the next day I only
needed to go down further. However, I was quite lucky to run into a few men
with their kids, there to camp for the weekend. They generously offered to let
me stay with their families and even insisted I eat dinner with them. They were
so incredibly nice and hospitable and the 12-yr-old boy ran around collecting
pieces of coral for me after I had shown slight interest in one I had picked
up. Now I have a huge bag full, so if anyone wants some coral, please let me
know.
They took me to the bus station
the next morning, again really nice. Once there I was informed that the first
bus to Jerusalem that was not completely booked was not until 5 pm—it was about
9am in the morning. I sighed and set out walking to the outskirts of the city
to once again stick out my thumb and face constant rejection in the hopes of
being picked up by a friendly face. The first person to pick me up took me
about an hour North after which I was picked up by a first generation in the
region couple (one from London and the other white Zambia) who immediately
lectured me on the dangers of hitchhiking, which was really quite sweet. I appreciated
them taking pity on me and we ended up having a nice conversation. They were
really quiet open-minded about the situation. They took me all the way to
Jerusalem which was literally a God-send. Once in Jerusalem it was easy to
catch a couple buses back to my home in Nablus.
I had an amazing experience that I
would never take back, and while I don’t intend to hitchhike unless its
necessary or 10 times more convenient like it was this past time, I do not at
all regret my decisions thus far. I am thankful for the lessons learned and the
people met who have inevitably touched my life in some way or another.
Naww... thanks for the mention! I'm even more happy to say I have friends like you working in Palestine :)
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