SlideShare a Scribd company logo
chapter 5




the challenge
                                                                                                   Learn About
                                                                                                   the Israeli-
                                                                                                   Palestinian
                                                                                                   Conflict
                                                                                                   With an
                                                                                                   Arab-Israeli
                                                                                                   Muslim
                                                                                                   Woman




     “As dawn broke this morning and a new day began, new life came into the
         world. Babies were born in Jerusalem. Babies were born in Amman.
                            But this morning is different.
  “The peace that was born today gives us all the hope that the children born today
          will never know war between us, and their Mothers will know no
                          sorrow: Shalom, Salaam, Peace.”
             —Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, Signing the Peace Treaty with Jordan, October 26, 1994
05 fbs reader ch5
Chapter 5: The Challenge                    77


the many faces book                                 Search




                             Jameela Issa
                                                       	Friends	Subscribed                      Message

      Worked at Tsomet Sefarrim (The Book Corner)
      Studies at Tel Aviv University
      Lives in Ramla, Israel
      Married to Youssef Issa



         Jameela Issa Posted on Al-Nakba Day            Recent Activity
         2012
         2 hours ago                                         Jameela liked Al-Nakba Day 2012.
  Like • Comment

  Write a comment. . .
                                                             Jameela and Robbie Green are now friends.

                                                             Jameela shared a photo album: Our New
         Jameela Issa Was tagged in a photo                  Apartment
         album: Tel Aviv University Department
         of Literature                                       Jameela liked Orjuwan Lounge, Ramallah,
         1 week ago                                          West Bank (Palestinian Territories).
  Like • Comment

  Write a comment. . .




         Jameela Issa Updated relationship
         status: Married
         2 years ago
  Like • Comment

  Write a comment. . .



         Jameela Issa Studying for Bagrut (SAT)—
         Sooooo hard!
         3 years ago
  Like • Comment

  Write a comment. . .
Like • Comment • Share


     5 people like this


         Jameela Issa Here is the village I grew up in. Sakhnin—it’s a very special place to me.


         Robbie Green Very cool. What was it like growing up there?


         Jameela Issa After the war in 1948, only half the Arabs still lived here. My family made it through,
         but we still miss our friends and family who left and never came back.

         Aaron Katz Hold on a second. In 1948, Israel’s Independence was recognized by the UN on a tiny
         sliver of land. The Arab states rejected a partition plan that would have created a Jewish State and
         a Palestinian State, and 22 Arab nations declared war and attacked Israel.

         Robbie Green So do you feel Israeli, Jameela?


         Jameela Issa Well, this is my land…


         Omri Hazan But you have to admit, your family lives better, much better, than Arabs in any other
         Arab country.

         Aaron Katz Right: You vote, you are free to run our own affairs, free to worship as you please. You
         don’t even need to serve in the military here; community-based national service is even optional.




78      Chapter 5: The Challenge
Chapter 5: The Challenge                     79

Like • Comment • Share


     5 people like this

         Tali Levy All true, but our society still discriminates in some ways. Over the years services and
         benefits to the Arab sector in Israel have improved, but as a Jewish Israeli I for one won’t stop until
         all citizens in my country are treated 100% equally.

         Jameela Issa In my neighborhood we have to fight just to make sure the electrical
         company comes to fix any problems, and I know that when I am done with the university, I will
         have a much harder time finding a job. And how can we ignore what is going on with our family
         in Gaza and the West Bank?

         Omri Hazan That’s the fault of the Palestinian Leaders. We are the ones who’ve tried for peace
         before. Look at the Oslo Agreement in 1995 and the Camp David Accords in 2000. After genuine
         offers, we were met with the 2nd Intifada that saw two years of suicide bombings inside our
         country kill around 1,000 innocent Israelis. And let’s not even talk about the thousands of rockets
         from Gaza we’ve faced since unilaterally pulling our army and citizens out of that land in 2005
         as a move toward peace.

         Jameela Issa Yet my family and I suffer. Blame them all you want, but you have all the power.



         Tali Levy Many of us are working to help. . .but a solution sometimes seems far away.
Like • Comment • Share


     10 people like this


         Jameela Issa My typical day on campus


         Robbie Green I’m very impressed.


         Jameela Issa While most people only see me as an Arab and a Muslim woman and think they know
         what that means, I live a life that surprises them.

         Aaron Katz Do you—or any women—pray 5 times a day?


         Jameela Issa I am Muslim and very proud of my faith but consider myself to be non-religious. I am
         studying to get my degree in computer engineering, but I don’t want to stay here in Tel Aviv.


         Tali Levy I can’t believe it! Where else would you want to live?


         Jameela Issa I would like to live back in Sakhnin or maybe in Haifa. I am an Israeli—and I am also a
         Palestinian.

         Solomon Barihun Well, the North is amazing.


         Robbie Green Coming to Israel was the best idea ever!




80       Chapter 5: The Challenge
Chapter 5: The Challenge                        81



        The Different Faces—and Faiths—of Israel


M
                uslim Arabs are almost 1 million      The Druze, 117,000 Arabic-speakers, living in 22
                strong in Israel. Most of them are    villages in northern Israel, constitute a separate
                Sunni and reside mainly in small      cultural, social and religious community. While
                towns and villages. Over half of      the Druze religion is not accessible to outsiders,
them live in the country’s northern regions.          one known aspect of its philosophy is the concept
                                                      of taqiyya, which calls for complete loyalty by its
Bedouin Arabs, also Muslim (estimated at some         adherents to the government of the country in
170,000), belong to some 30 tribes. A majority        which they reside.
of Bedouin are scattered over a wide area in the
South. Formerly nomadic shepherds, the Bedou-         The Circassians, comprising some 3,000 people
in are currently in transition from a tribal social   concentrated in two northern villages, are Sunni
framework to a permanently settled society and        Muslims, although they share neither the Arab
are gradually entering Israel’s labor force.          origin nor the cultural background of the larger
                                                      Islamic community. While maintaining a distinct
Christian Arabs, 117,000 in number, live mainly       ethnic identity, they participate in Israel’s economic
in urban areas, including Nazareth, Shfar’am and      and national affairs without assimilating either
Haifa. Although many denominations are nomi-          into Jewish society or into the Muslim community.
nally represented, the majority are affiliated with
the Greek Catholic, Greek Orthodox and Roman
Catholic churches.
Like • Comment • Share


     10 people like this


         Jameela Issa This is how it looked in the beginning.


         Tali Levy I’m usually the one sharing these types of maps. J


         Jameela Issa Well, all the wars have been tough for us but in different ways.



         Omri Hazan I’ve never heard an Israeli-Arab say that.


         Jameela Issa My family suffered in the ’50s—1967 for sure, in the Six Day War. At the time,
         nobody knew what would happen, then all of a sudden Israel completely controlled Gaza, Jerusa-
         lem, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights.

         Omri Hazan Are you kidding me?!? In ’67 our tiny nation was ganged up on by all our Arab
         “neighbors” who jumped at the same time to push us into the sea. What exactly were we supposed
         to do? It’s a miracle our tiny, powerful army was able to fight back and give us room to breathe in
         only 6 days! You just don’t understand . . .

         Jameela Issa In 1973 there was also very bad fighting up where my family lives during the Yom
         Kippur War, and even as recent as 2006, so many Israelis view us as part of the enemy, but our
         villages were also getting hit by rockets from Lebanon.

         Tali Levy More proof that this whole conflict needs to be solved.




82      Chapter 5: The Challenge
Chapter 5: The Challenge               83



                              The 1967 War



I
      n May 1967, Egyptian President Gamel Abdel Nasser closed the Straits of Tiran, ef-
      fectively strangling Israel at the most important sea access to commerce with other
      nations. Egypt, Syria and Jordan, with the support of Iraq and other Arab nations,
      agreed to attack Israel and destroy it. Israel watched massive armies gather on the
southern, eastern and northern borders with desperate alarm. After appealing to each of
these nations to desist and enter into peaceful negotiations, and after unsuccessfully ap-
pealing to America and the world community for assistance, Israel mobilized its forces
in June, launched peremptory attacks on each of its hostile neighbors and, in six short
days, achieved a stunning victory.
4
check in,
 check it
   out




84   Chapter 5: The Challenge
Chapter 5: The Challenge                    85




Like • Comment • Share


     36 people like this


         Robbie Green To the best Israeli friends in the world! What a great shot I got to end my filming!


         Omri Hazan L’chayim!


         Jameela Issa Cheers   A


         Solomon Barihun Letenachin!!! (That’s Amharic, the Ethiopian dialect, for Cheers)


         Robbie Green Funny thing is, other than a little bit at the end with Jameela, Omri, and Tali—one
         thing everyone usually talks about—the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict—barely came up. Any other last
         thoughts on the future? Any chance for peace?

         Tali Levy I grew up in a left-wing youth movement, and I was in the square rallying for peace the
         day Rabin was shot. There is no other way than peace. We didn’t come to this land to conquer and
         destroy but to show the world the path to peace. I believe there needs to be two states—an Israeli
         one and a Palestinian one, living side by side in peace.

         Aaron Katz Of course I want peace, but it’s complicated. The land that everyone seems to want to
         give to the Palestinians for their own country is the West Bank of the Jordan River, but to me that’s
         Judea and Samaria, where Abraham and Sarah were buried, where Jacob walked and. . . It’s not an
         easy question. And Jerusalem? Forget it. . .
Like • Comment • Share


     36 people like this


         Omri Hazan In the army, I serve in the territories. I don’t like serving there, walking around other
         peoples’ communities with my gun—driving in tanks. But I also know what the reality is. One time
         a young guy drove up to our checkpoint with an older guy in the back claiming the older guy was
         having a heart attack and needed to rush to a hospital in Israel, which we normally allow. A quick
         search of the vehicle, and we found 5 loaded automatic rifles and some other explosives. I don’t
         know. I hope there is a solution. I’m just not sure the other side really wants true peace.

         Jameela Issa I see the big picture. People want to live in dignity, with pride and respect, in their
         own land. Some Palestinians are beginning to realize they can never return to their grandfather’s
         home in places like Jaffa and Sahknin. Now they want a respectable seat at the table of nations, to
         have a land in the West Bank and Gaza that they can call their own, like all their other nations.


         Solomon Barihun It’s so complicated. I hope, but I’m not sure. I just sing: Od Yavoh Shalom
         Aleynu, Od Yavoh Salaam Aleynu. . .May God bring us, may we bring for ourselves, Israelis and
         Palestinians, Jews and Arabs, peace unto each other and unto our children.

         Omri Hazan Like Israel!!!!


         Aaron Katz Amen.


         Robbie Green A-MEN!




86      Chapter 5: The Challenge
Chapter 5: The Challenge                      87



                             THE CHALLENGE

1.	 “Celebration or catastrophe”? Two people in a very tiny land held two completely different views
    of the same event (the founding of the State of Israel). In your own community, describe a similar
    situation.

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________


2.	 If you are a “typical” Jewish Israeli citizen in Israel, what might you view as the top challenge
    facing your country? If you are a “typical” Israeli-Arab, what might you view as the top challenge
    facing your country?

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________


3.	 After reading “The Culture” chapter, you watched the video “Distant Friends.” In the scene on the
    beach, the characters disagree with each other—sometimes vehemently—but part just as friendly
    as when they arrive. How do you think this dynamic—talking about tough stuff without shutting
    down or screaming—is possible?

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________

	 ________________________________________________________________________________
05 fbs reader ch5

More Related Content

PDF
02 fbs reader ch2
PDF
03 fbs reader ch3
PDF
01 fbs reader ch1
PDF
04 fbs reader ch4
PDF
Fb student reader promopdf
PPS
070826 David Relief For A Dads Grief 2 Samuel 18 Dale Wells
PDF
Puzzle Treks
PDF
Musa A.S chapter 1 to 3
02 fbs reader ch2
03 fbs reader ch3
01 fbs reader ch1
04 fbs reader ch4
Fb student reader promopdf
070826 David Relief For A Dads Grief 2 Samuel 18 Dale Wells
Puzzle Treks
Musa A.S chapter 1 to 3

What's hot (20)

PPS
Prophet Yusuf (a.s.)
PPT
Apr 13 19 David And Saul
PPT
A transformed heart
PPTX
Breaking the Spirit of Offense
PDF
Yusuf a.s. full
PPTX
2 samuel 2 victory on god's side
PPTX
1 kings 18a elijah returns
PDF
Notes for general ability syllabus ppsc nts css
KEY
Hebrew Leaders
PDF
The Myth Of Palestine - Jvt - Mar Apr 2006
PDF
Puzzle Shorts
PPTX
Ltp changingthewaywesee feb-13-2016
DOC
LION OF JUDAH
PPTX
DOC
2nd kings
PPTX
4 choosing to be courageous
PDF
The Children's Bible
KEY
The Four Great Hebrew Leaders
PDF
Terrible Apartheid
Prophet Yusuf (a.s.)
Apr 13 19 David And Saul
A transformed heart
Breaking the Spirit of Offense
Yusuf a.s. full
2 samuel 2 victory on god's side
1 kings 18a elijah returns
Notes for general ability syllabus ppsc nts css
Hebrew Leaders
The Myth Of Palestine - Jvt - Mar Apr 2006
Puzzle Shorts
Ltp changingthewaywesee feb-13-2016
LION OF JUDAH
2nd kings
4 choosing to be courageous
The Children's Bible
The Four Great Hebrew Leaders
Terrible Apartheid
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPTX
Basics of Silverlight 1
PDF
приказ до ко № 5 558
PDF
Clinical materials for medicine II
PPT
Sit, stay, good art
PDF
Art and Action for Flow Towards Results
PPSX
Just for fun!
PPTX
καθεδρικός ναός στη φλωρεντία
ODP
David
PPT
1 технология вариат начало
PPT
Bawse legacy 2.3
PPTX
Final Evaluation.5
PDF
безденежных проблема двс
PPTX
Skype lesson 1 power point
PPTX
Evaluation
PPTX
What is social media
PDF
Africa, The Next Frontier article by C. Wynne-Potts
PPT
Sit, stay, good art
PPTX
Rus session 3 presentation v1_final_mk
PDF
Public interest litigation and co participative judicial enforcement of publi...
PPTX
2013 Cornell's Plant Breeding and Genetic Seminar Series
Basics of Silverlight 1
приказ до ко № 5 558
Clinical materials for medicine II
Sit, stay, good art
Art and Action for Flow Towards Results
Just for fun!
καθεδρικός ναός στη φλωρεντία
David
1 технология вариат начало
Bawse legacy 2.3
Final Evaluation.5
безденежных проблема двс
Skype lesson 1 power point
Evaluation
What is social media
Africa, The Next Frontier article by C. Wynne-Potts
Sit, stay, good art
Rus session 3 presentation v1_final_mk
Public interest litigation and co participative judicial enforcement of publi...
2013 Cornell's Plant Breeding and Genetic Seminar Series
Ad

Similar to 05 fbs reader ch5 (20)

PPTX
Israel and gaza powerpoint
DOCX
ISRAEL PAPER
PDF
Israel 101
PPTX
The state of israel and its land
PPT
The israeli conflict2
PPT
Global Citizenship Moodle
PPT
What does a "Jewish State" really mean?
PPT
Arab israeli conflict
PPT
Arab israeli conflict
PDF
The Many Faces of Israel
KEY
Israel
PPT
Israel 101
PDF
My lecture eight on arab israel conflict-part I
PPT
arab-israeli_conflict- its background.ppt
PPTX
PDF
Wofi adult 1_-_independence
PPTX
Moshe Feiglin's Manhigut Yehudit: What is Really Going On In Israel
PPT
Israel Overview
PPT
Arab israeli conflict
PPTX
Israel - Whose land is it anyway?
Israel and gaza powerpoint
ISRAEL PAPER
Israel 101
The state of israel and its land
The israeli conflict2
Global Citizenship Moodle
What does a "Jewish State" really mean?
Arab israeli conflict
Arab israeli conflict
The Many Faces of Israel
Israel
Israel 101
My lecture eight on arab israel conflict-part I
arab-israeli_conflict- its background.ppt
Wofi adult 1_-_independence
Moshe Feiglin's Manhigut Yehudit: What is Really Going On In Israel
Israel Overview
Arab israeli conflict
Israel - Whose land is it anyway?

More from Daniel Gold (20)

PDF
Woodland Hills Elementary School - The PATTER - September 2017
PPTX
Watercycle
PDF
Story of Self 2
PDF
Story of Self
PDF
Smart Goals 1
PDF
Smart Goals 2
PDF
Pitching Prep
PDF
Power Mapping 2
PDF
Full Value Contract
PDF
Participant Agenda
PDF
Action Plan
PDF
Power Mapping 1
PPTX
Israel Advocacy and Education - by Daniel Gold
PPTX
Branding powepoint
PDF
06 fbs reader app
PDF
00 fbs reader fm
PDF
JQ International GLBT Haggadah
PDF
The HLDP Annual Student Award Ceremony Program 2012
PDF
Green israel pub quiz leaders guide
PDF
Israel pub quiz leaders guide
Woodland Hills Elementary School - The PATTER - September 2017
Watercycle
Story of Self 2
Story of Self
Smart Goals 1
Smart Goals 2
Pitching Prep
Power Mapping 2
Full Value Contract
Participant Agenda
Action Plan
Power Mapping 1
Israel Advocacy and Education - by Daniel Gold
Branding powepoint
06 fbs reader app
00 fbs reader fm
JQ International GLBT Haggadah
The HLDP Annual Student Award Ceremony Program 2012
Green israel pub quiz leaders guide
Israel pub quiz leaders guide

05 fbs reader ch5

  • 1. chapter 5 the challenge Learn About the Israeli- Palestinian Conflict With an Arab-Israeli Muslim Woman “As dawn broke this morning and a new day began, new life came into the world. Babies were born in Jerusalem. Babies were born in Amman. But this morning is different. “The peace that was born today gives us all the hope that the children born today will never know war between us, and their Mothers will know no sorrow: Shalom, Salaam, Peace.” —Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, Signing the Peace Treaty with Jordan, October 26, 1994
  • 3. Chapter 5: The Challenge 77 the many faces book Search Jameela Issa Friends Subscribed Message Worked at Tsomet Sefarrim (The Book Corner) Studies at Tel Aviv University Lives in Ramla, Israel Married to Youssef Issa Jameela Issa Posted on Al-Nakba Day Recent Activity 2012 2 hours ago Jameela liked Al-Nakba Day 2012. Like • Comment Write a comment. . . Jameela and Robbie Green are now friends. Jameela shared a photo album: Our New Jameela Issa Was tagged in a photo Apartment album: Tel Aviv University Department of Literature Jameela liked Orjuwan Lounge, Ramallah, 1 week ago West Bank (Palestinian Territories). Like • Comment Write a comment. . . Jameela Issa Updated relationship status: Married 2 years ago Like • Comment Write a comment. . . Jameela Issa Studying for Bagrut (SAT)— Sooooo hard! 3 years ago Like • Comment Write a comment. . .
  • 4. Like • Comment • Share 5 people like this Jameela Issa Here is the village I grew up in. Sakhnin—it’s a very special place to me. Robbie Green Very cool. What was it like growing up there? Jameela Issa After the war in 1948, only half the Arabs still lived here. My family made it through, but we still miss our friends and family who left and never came back. Aaron Katz Hold on a second. In 1948, Israel’s Independence was recognized by the UN on a tiny sliver of land. The Arab states rejected a partition plan that would have created a Jewish State and a Palestinian State, and 22 Arab nations declared war and attacked Israel. Robbie Green So do you feel Israeli, Jameela? Jameela Issa Well, this is my land… Omri Hazan But you have to admit, your family lives better, much better, than Arabs in any other Arab country. Aaron Katz Right: You vote, you are free to run our own affairs, free to worship as you please. You don’t even need to serve in the military here; community-based national service is even optional. 78 Chapter 5: The Challenge
  • 5. Chapter 5: The Challenge 79 Like • Comment • Share 5 people like this Tali Levy All true, but our society still discriminates in some ways. Over the years services and benefits to the Arab sector in Israel have improved, but as a Jewish Israeli I for one won’t stop until all citizens in my country are treated 100% equally. Jameela Issa In my neighborhood we have to fight just to make sure the electrical company comes to fix any problems, and I know that when I am done with the university, I will have a much harder time finding a job. And how can we ignore what is going on with our family in Gaza and the West Bank? Omri Hazan That’s the fault of the Palestinian Leaders. We are the ones who’ve tried for peace before. Look at the Oslo Agreement in 1995 and the Camp David Accords in 2000. After genuine offers, we were met with the 2nd Intifada that saw two years of suicide bombings inside our country kill around 1,000 innocent Israelis. And let’s not even talk about the thousands of rockets from Gaza we’ve faced since unilaterally pulling our army and citizens out of that land in 2005 as a move toward peace. Jameela Issa Yet my family and I suffer. Blame them all you want, but you have all the power. Tali Levy Many of us are working to help. . .but a solution sometimes seems far away.
  • 6. Like • Comment • Share 10 people like this Jameela Issa My typical day on campus Robbie Green I’m very impressed. Jameela Issa While most people only see me as an Arab and a Muslim woman and think they know what that means, I live a life that surprises them. Aaron Katz Do you—or any women—pray 5 times a day? Jameela Issa I am Muslim and very proud of my faith but consider myself to be non-religious. I am studying to get my degree in computer engineering, but I don’t want to stay here in Tel Aviv. Tali Levy I can’t believe it! Where else would you want to live? Jameela Issa I would like to live back in Sakhnin or maybe in Haifa. I am an Israeli—and I am also a Palestinian. Solomon Barihun Well, the North is amazing. Robbie Green Coming to Israel was the best idea ever! 80 Chapter 5: The Challenge
  • 7. Chapter 5: The Challenge 81 The Different Faces—and Faiths—of Israel M uslim Arabs are almost 1 million The Druze, 117,000 Arabic-speakers, living in 22 strong in Israel. Most of them are villages in northern Israel, constitute a separate Sunni and reside mainly in small cultural, social and religious community. While towns and villages. Over half of the Druze religion is not accessible to outsiders, them live in the country’s northern regions. one known aspect of its philosophy is the concept of taqiyya, which calls for complete loyalty by its Bedouin Arabs, also Muslim (estimated at some adherents to the government of the country in 170,000), belong to some 30 tribes. A majority which they reside. of Bedouin are scattered over a wide area in the South. Formerly nomadic shepherds, the Bedou- The Circassians, comprising some 3,000 people in are currently in transition from a tribal social concentrated in two northern villages, are Sunni framework to a permanently settled society and Muslims, although they share neither the Arab are gradually entering Israel’s labor force. origin nor the cultural background of the larger Islamic community. While maintaining a distinct Christian Arabs, 117,000 in number, live mainly ethnic identity, they participate in Israel’s economic in urban areas, including Nazareth, Shfar’am and and national affairs without assimilating either Haifa. Although many denominations are nomi- into Jewish society or into the Muslim community. nally represented, the majority are affiliated with the Greek Catholic, Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches.
  • 8. Like • Comment • Share 10 people like this Jameela Issa This is how it looked in the beginning. Tali Levy I’m usually the one sharing these types of maps. J Jameela Issa Well, all the wars have been tough for us but in different ways. Omri Hazan I’ve never heard an Israeli-Arab say that. Jameela Issa My family suffered in the ’50s—1967 for sure, in the Six Day War. At the time, nobody knew what would happen, then all of a sudden Israel completely controlled Gaza, Jerusa- lem, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights. Omri Hazan Are you kidding me?!? In ’67 our tiny nation was ganged up on by all our Arab “neighbors” who jumped at the same time to push us into the sea. What exactly were we supposed to do? It’s a miracle our tiny, powerful army was able to fight back and give us room to breathe in only 6 days! You just don’t understand . . . Jameela Issa In 1973 there was also very bad fighting up where my family lives during the Yom Kippur War, and even as recent as 2006, so many Israelis view us as part of the enemy, but our villages were also getting hit by rockets from Lebanon. Tali Levy More proof that this whole conflict needs to be solved. 82 Chapter 5: The Challenge
  • 9. Chapter 5: The Challenge 83 The 1967 War I n May 1967, Egyptian President Gamel Abdel Nasser closed the Straits of Tiran, ef- fectively strangling Israel at the most important sea access to commerce with other nations. Egypt, Syria and Jordan, with the support of Iraq and other Arab nations, agreed to attack Israel and destroy it. Israel watched massive armies gather on the southern, eastern and northern borders with desperate alarm. After appealing to each of these nations to desist and enter into peaceful negotiations, and after unsuccessfully ap- pealing to America and the world community for assistance, Israel mobilized its forces in June, launched peremptory attacks on each of its hostile neighbors and, in six short days, achieved a stunning victory.
  • 10. 4 check in, check it out 84 Chapter 5: The Challenge
  • 11. Chapter 5: The Challenge 85 Like • Comment • Share 36 people like this Robbie Green To the best Israeli friends in the world! What a great shot I got to end my filming! Omri Hazan L’chayim! Jameela Issa Cheers A Solomon Barihun Letenachin!!! (That’s Amharic, the Ethiopian dialect, for Cheers) Robbie Green Funny thing is, other than a little bit at the end with Jameela, Omri, and Tali—one thing everyone usually talks about—the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict—barely came up. Any other last thoughts on the future? Any chance for peace? Tali Levy I grew up in a left-wing youth movement, and I was in the square rallying for peace the day Rabin was shot. There is no other way than peace. We didn’t come to this land to conquer and destroy but to show the world the path to peace. I believe there needs to be two states—an Israeli one and a Palestinian one, living side by side in peace. Aaron Katz Of course I want peace, but it’s complicated. The land that everyone seems to want to give to the Palestinians for their own country is the West Bank of the Jordan River, but to me that’s Judea and Samaria, where Abraham and Sarah were buried, where Jacob walked and. . . It’s not an easy question. And Jerusalem? Forget it. . .
  • 12. Like • Comment • Share 36 people like this Omri Hazan In the army, I serve in the territories. I don’t like serving there, walking around other peoples’ communities with my gun—driving in tanks. But I also know what the reality is. One time a young guy drove up to our checkpoint with an older guy in the back claiming the older guy was having a heart attack and needed to rush to a hospital in Israel, which we normally allow. A quick search of the vehicle, and we found 5 loaded automatic rifles and some other explosives. I don’t know. I hope there is a solution. I’m just not sure the other side really wants true peace. Jameela Issa I see the big picture. People want to live in dignity, with pride and respect, in their own land. Some Palestinians are beginning to realize they can never return to their grandfather’s home in places like Jaffa and Sahknin. Now they want a respectable seat at the table of nations, to have a land in the West Bank and Gaza that they can call their own, like all their other nations. Solomon Barihun It’s so complicated. I hope, but I’m not sure. I just sing: Od Yavoh Shalom Aleynu, Od Yavoh Salaam Aleynu. . .May God bring us, may we bring for ourselves, Israelis and Palestinians, Jews and Arabs, peace unto each other and unto our children. Omri Hazan Like Israel!!!! Aaron Katz Amen. Robbie Green A-MEN! 86 Chapter 5: The Challenge
  • 13. Chapter 5: The Challenge 87 THE CHALLENGE 1. “Celebration or catastrophe”? Two people in a very tiny land held two completely different views of the same event (the founding of the State of Israel). In your own community, describe a similar situation. ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 2. If you are a “typical” Jewish Israeli citizen in Israel, what might you view as the top challenge facing your country? If you are a “typical” Israeli-Arab, what might you view as the top challenge facing your country? ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 3. After reading “The Culture” chapter, you watched the video “Distant Friends.” In the scene on the beach, the characters disagree with each other—sometimes vehemently—but part just as friendly as when they arrive. How do you think this dynamic—talking about tough stuff without shutting down or screaming—is possible? ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________