MIFTAH
Friday, 26 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The UN-marked car sent by UNRWA arrived punctually at the Jerusalem Hotel. The driver, Hassan, moved the ubiquitous cell phone away from his mouth for a moment as he whispered, "Germana?" before finishing his conversation. I nodded. He put his cell phone away, and we shook hands. He then led me to a white, small, four-door Punto, and we were off a few minutes before 11:00 am. In silence we left Jerusalem behind us as we took the road to Jericho. I tried to ignore the settlements looming on top of every hill, with their bright red roofs and their uniform, monotonous structures, as if put together by a child playing with building blocks.

Neither Hassan nor I was in a talkative mood, but eventually we discovered that he had known my brother-in-law, who had worked for UNRWA for a number of years. "He was a good man!" Hassan said. I agreed. And again I felt lucky to have married into the Nijim family way back in 1966. In another world. When the 1967 War broke out, it turned the West Bank upside down, sending a river of blood under the bridge.

The caffelatte-colored hills became gradually more bare, punctuated only by a few Bedouin tents, a few shacks, some sheep and goats, and a few camels. Narrow, dry wadis cut deep into the hills, where some stubborn vegetation insisted on growing.

Hassan pointed out the sign that told us we were now below sea level, and soon an incongruous sign appeared, advertising, "Zimmers"

We drove past the Jericho Baptismal site and the Allenby Bridge, past the No'omi settlement alongside the Jordan River, a river whose water comes to no more than a trickle. Arab villages and Israeli settlements alternated. Both people tending the soil with utmost care, intent on making the earth produce food for their survival. Cousins, bound together by a deadly feud.

We passed the Adam bridge, and finally arrived at Bet She'an checkpoint, where a few dozen soldiers stood around without showing much interest in the light traffic. "This is going to be easy!" I thought, remembering the warnings from friends who had expressed concerns for my safety.

We drove on, past the foreboding Shatta prison, moving quickly toward Afula, where the next checkpoint awaited us. The green Gilboa hills looked serenely on, a stark contrast to the caffelatte hills of Jericho.

Whereas the third passage to Jordan, the Sheikh Hussein Bridge (which we never saw), has a reputation for being lenient, the Afula checkpoint does not. "You cannot go in. No tourist allowed into Jenin." the handsome young teenager in uniform said to me. I insisted. "Don't get angry! These are my orders." he said. Then he asked if I had a UN identification card. I did not. He shook his head and leaned back a little as if to put some distance between us. "You can't go in!" Hassan repeated sadly. I leaned my head toward the driver's window and caught the eye of the soldier. "Please call your commanding officer." I said, and to my surprise, he overcame his reluctance and placed the call. We waited. A fiftiesh-looking man emerged from a tent across the street and slowly walked toward us. The commanding officer in person! He exchanged a few words with the young soldier, and then without as much as a look at me or my passport, he waived us on. Hassan and I drove a few meters off before grinning at each other.

At the third checkpoint, about a kilometer away, the scene repeated itself. "No, you can't pass. You don't have a UN identification card. No tourist allowed." Hassan talked to him in Hebrew suggesting he call the Afula checkpoint, where we were given clearance to proceed. About a dozen tanks parked on both sides of the street seemed to stare at each other, ready to spring into their nefarious work. In the meantime, the driver from Jenin called informing me that he was waiting for me at the other side of the checkpoint. From where we waited, I could see his car parked behind the cement blocks. We waived.

Only a few minutes later the soldier handed me back my passport, smiled and said, "Have a good day!" He then gave Hassan permission to drive me to the waiting car. Hassan drove slowly and stopped the car but left the engine running. My overnight bag was quickly moved from one trunk to the other; there was a quick handshaking and then Hassan turned his car around for the return trip to Jerusalem. He would not come back to pick me up on Sunday. I would return home by bus with a group of American who were to join me. It was like being in a scene from an old spy movie.

My new driver and his friend warmly welcomed me to Jenin. "We are honored that you should be here! Our house is your house. Always. You are welcome anytime!"

 
 
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