Israel and West Bank Wall

Similar Posts

0 Comments

  1. Thanks for sharing your trip details to Israel & Palestine. I’m from Egypt and i was brought up in Kuwait where most of my class mates were Palestinians. i can not say i have a lot of feelings for them cause they blame us Egyptians on the loss of their lands. They think it is Egypt’s duty to get this land back to them????
    Israelis are not angles either.
    i loved the comment mentioned by both,the former israeli soldier and the palestinian guide, in your story “its complicated”. indeed it is!
    The problem is not religious At All. I’m a muslim with a good understanding of the values of my religion. Islam does not preach killing of Jews, well islam doesn’t but some muslims do. BIG difference.
    in fact islam doesn’t preach any type of killing except for defence, but some muslims do not look at this way.
    anyway, its complicated….

  2. I visited Palestine in the summer and stopped just outside Hebron. Hebron is the most distressing of situations. I came back thinking that there was no hope.
    What is happening in Gaza is horrific and can not be justified by any means. Thank you for highlighting the story as you have such a big following..I am trying to get there, writing what I saw and experienced.
    http://shakingtheshadowsfromtheolivetrees.wordpress.com/

  3. I was able to visit Ramallah when I went to Israel, and like you had, I got an interesting take on both sides of the story. My host in Ramallah was a Swiss guy who worked with the Red Cross in Palestine, and due to things he experienced decided to work with a non-profit there after. He told us the whole Israel/Palestine colflict from the Palestinian point of view (which I’d never heard before). But what was most interesting to me, was that all of my young Israeli hosts were very much like the one you talked to. They just want the Palestinians to be able to live their lives, and they want to live their Israeli ones. But if they’re attacked, they’re going to fight back.
    What’s sad is that by the time they grow up and are able to take the leadership positions, I think they don’t hold these views anymore (on both sides of the wall) as they now have too much baggage to feel they can move past it to peace.

  4. just a quick comment based on the fact that i’m Egyptian. so i’m a citizen of the middle east and i would like to share with you a thought. To the majority of people in the middle east, regardless of their religion, we look at it from a different perspective. the perspective simply is, this land belongs to the Palestinians. The state of Israel was declared in 1948, so what was there in this land before 1948??? Its too late to get into discussions of where should the state of israel go cause it is a fact of life that all people have to deal with. But young and old palestinians look at it this way. one of my school friends is from Gaza. he is now a physician in Dubai having a great life. in a discussion few months ago he said Dubai is temporarily i will go back to Gaza. i was surprised, Why would you do that? his answer was clear and blunt, he said “its my country, its where i belong with my kids and family”. Just a thought.

  5. It seems like the phrase “It’s complicated” could be the first step in uniting the Israelis and Palestinians. Their shared distaste for in-depth discussions on problems and solutions is the base on which, Inshallah, a two state Israel/Palestine can be formed… Also, Adam, I just found this bitchin’ Palestinian restaurant with the best hummus I’ve found since we left Jerusalem all those months ago…

  6. As a former military officer in the Philippine Army, I can see some similarities here with the Moslem situation in our southern frontier. It, too, is complicated. There is that vicious cycle of violence that makes finger-pointing so easy. However, we continue to be hopeful here that a peace agreement will soon pave the way to silencing the guns finally. We cannot afford to be cynical now. We have to take whatever small victories there are for our quest for peace.
    I did some write-ups on the ongoing peace talks in our southern border. I hope that we can all help push all the peace initiatives around the world.
    “I Dream of Peace”: http://cbholganzablog.wordpress.com/2012/12/12/i-dream-of-peace-2/
    “Volunteering for Peace in Mindanao”: http://cbholganzablog.wordpress.com/2012/11/30/volunteering-for-peace-in-mindanao/

Join the Conversation