| Friday
– Flew El Al business class upper deck 747. 9:30 flying time. Arrival one
hour late due to extra security in New York for passengers arriving from
Toronto (they had to check in again). Food and entertainment could use
upgrading; the video selections were limited for half the flight to rap
videos a la MTV – frankly, I was hoping for Israeli or Jewish cultural
choices. But if you think I was bored, the flight marshal across from me
kept “reading” the same newspaper for the entire flight! Nevertheless,
El Al moves people around in a humane way; service was certainly pleasant
despite the stereotype and I was able to check in less than an hour before
the flight. I think their security perimeter at JFK is too wide and there
are still too many opportunities for a good terrorist team to penetrate
it.
Taxi to Sheraton Hotel didn’t grab me; just $20
to get to Tel Aviv which was less than I thought – wow, I am in shock.
Sheraton gave me a Club floor at $145 and I took Towers privileges for
an extra $60 per night. Room was small but had a good view. Hotel is 7%
full. Muscovic visited. Friday night dinner with Gil was reasonable at
$32 but scaled down from the usual spread. The Tower is useful for entertaining
guests and Adi joined us after dinner for late night conversation. [Notes
of conversations are in a separate document.] Traffic jams along the beachfront
even at 2am.
Saturday – Tversky visit. Lunch, reading. Walk
around the city in late afternoon with much nostalgia on every block. Sitting
in the middle of Rabin Square I see a little sign in lights that
says Chag Sameach (Happy Holiday) with a small blue star. Be it ever so
humble, there’s no place like home. Gil takes me to dance party for 500
at an outdoor club on the beach near the electrical power plant. Tel-Avivis
know how to party; Lior is attacking all the girls and is a Wild &
Crazy Guy! I am a bit too security conscious; they are not.
Sunday – Arkia security excellent for the short
flight to Kiryat Shmona $35 each way. Sde Dov airport in Tel Aviv is 10
minute taxi ride from the hotel. Airplane makes a 3 minute stop along the
way to literally stop at the end of the runway to let off passengers and
then take off again! I wish the Americans could learn to turn flights around
this way. The airport is a hut. Mohammed meets me and we drive to Safed
courthouse to meet Bernard and the 3 of us go to lunch. Then with Bernard
to court, drive around the North (he drives nuts but was a professional
driver in the UK) and see his businesses and family, a kibbutz and various
sites until my early evening flight back to Tel Aviv. Despite being within
close proximity to the borders of Syria and Lebanon, it is quiet here now
and the town is rebuilding. The Lounge fed me dinner both nights so I am
getting my money’s worth from this upgrade. The major hotels all seem to
have dial-up Internet access but the debit cards are reasonable at $10
per hour. (The Dan Hotel Tel Aviv wanted $2 per minute but I complained
to the manager and they backed off real fast. In Damascus they wanted $1
per minute which is the most I ever saw but then again their Internet never
worked anyway so the price was hypothetical in any event.) Late night visit
with David Livingstone (I presume) at the Azrieli Tower and to visit the
poshy gym inside. This tower is the Israeli World Trade Center target equivalent.
Monday – Morning leisure; read by pool. Drive to
Jerusalem by private taxi, to be safe. Cost about $50. King David Hotel
suite is “Achla” (regional slang for Cool). Full 2 room suite with no corners
cut. Attentive staff, beautiful view and a charm throughout the hotel with
detail throughout. Met Josh and then walked to Café Rondo. Moshe
is playing cards; his workers say he is angrier these days because there
is no business. Walked city center to look around and have snacks just
as town is closing before the holiday. Soldiers guard the Sbarros. Atara’s
café closed. Hilton lost its name because it cut too many corners
and its arcade is almost completely empty. Prayers and holiday celebrations
at the Great Synagogue, sat with Moshe and viewed the family plaques. Met
Frances Karam in the lobby of the hotel; I got his current number from
the YMCA. Dinner with the Ottesoser’s in the hotel’s Sukkah that you’d
think was the coffee shop with all the art and the high roof. Then walked
to Varda to see the cousins and a bunch of family.
Tuesday – Splendid breakfast. Walked
to the Western Wall for prayers. Not one soldier guarding the walk via
the Armenian and Jewish Quarters but it felt safe anyway. The soldiers
are all diverted to a group of 50 people parading through the Arab Market
dancing toward the Wall and to a synagogue in the Moslem Quarter. At the
Wall it is hot; most people have left by the time I have arrived. I see
Ze’ev Schwartz and the Galbuts from Florida. Meeting with Oded at the hotel.
Lavish buffet lunch (these meals are $75 apiece so they ought to be!),
weak on entrees but heavy on exotic cold foods including an Asian sushi
chef all dressed up. Sat with Matthew Zuckerman; read in the hotel’s lawn
which is the only such green place at a hotel in Jerusalem. Late dinner
in the evening with Josh’s cousins who have returned from a military attache
stint in Sri Lanka. Hakafot Shniyot (Holiday Dancing) at the Liberty Bell
Garden; we all join hands and sing songs. Return to hotel to watch the
historical program about the hotel on its closed circuit channel.
Wednesday – Ronen at the bank. Azulay’s art shop
for decorative wine bottle corks.Yirmiyahu for embroideries. Visited several
art galleries – I will ultimately take 2 lithographs as paintings are beyond
my means. Scouted out office space at the Hilton, just in case. Israel
Museum to see China treasures exhibition and search for paintings by Daniel
Moritz Oppenheim (didn’t find any). Itzik Shanan at hotel. Transfer to
Eldan Hotel across the street for $89 per night; very good value in a new
hotel. Dinner at the King David’s La Regence grill room; filet of beef
and chocolate mousse. All excellent; the dining room is closing tonight
for lack of traffic. Sad.
Thursday – Gilead at the hotel for breakfast. Taxi
to airport. I leave my bag at the baggage check room just below the parking
lot. 1pm flight to Amman. Royal Jordanian has just 4 on this big Airbus
320 (but the plane was full coming into Israel with Israelis returning
from holidays in Asia). We are all upgraded. 30 minute flight is fine.
I am still OK arriving at airports an hour before flight time. Amman airport
is being upgraded; duty free shops have been redone and security is tight
and professional. Mustafa meets me; Amman seems quiet and safe but Mustafa
notes, “When the sh.. hits the fan, the King crushes dissent.” We go to
his house and stand on his rooftop to talk, just as we did the year before
on the roof of the Tel Aviv Carlton hotel. A lovely lunch at a very nice
restaurant – I have never had a bad meal here. Visit to Hanna’s house.
Early check in at the city center terminal. Coffee at the Blue Fig, a trendy
place near the American Embassy in Abdoum. Quick ride back to airport and
a full flight back arriving at 8:30pm. Transfer to Dan Hotel – $200 per
night on the business floor. 130 people in the hotel; nice room recently
renovated and the hotel is also one of Tel Aviv’s best. I also like the
location which is very central; the Hilton and Intercontinental are on
the periphery. Dinner at Yotveta; I love their juices and everything I’ve
ever tried there. Moshe Weinstein meets me at 11 and we sit at the Intercontinental.
Quite a long day, eh?
Friday – 10am train to Haifa. It is a beautiful
ride. I sit in the back; this train is filled with soldiers and makes an
inviting target. My taxi says he has been waiting since 4am in front of
the hotel for a customer and was first on line. Shmuel meets me with home-baked
bread and sandwiches. We visit his office and the Bahai Gardens, walk along
the seafront promenade by the Meridien Hotel. David Levy meets us; we visit
his apartment and then to the Druze village of Ussfiyah for lunch. Drive
via the Carmel Mountains to Tel Aviv. The drive through Ussfiyah and the
Carmel looks like Lebanon on the way to Damascus. Missed Guy Harpaz; he’s
in divorce and today his wife is moving out of his flat. Later we visit
David’s brother’s flat and Sheinkin area. Allenby Street is quite busy
on Friday nights with many nightclubs catering to East Europeans.
Saturday – Ayal joins for lunch. I enjoy a bit
of walking and a beautiful sunset over the Mediterranean Sea. I am always
overdressed as I walk the boardwalk in Tel Aviv but I travel with 3 days
clothing and pack long sleeve shirts and slacks; it reminds me that I don’t
really fit in here. Tel Aviv is more casual and the weather is just perfect
in between seasons. The Israelis are not exactly great dressers; the Arabs
I know dress much more sharply. Gil and Adi come again and we talk; then
to cousin Sarah for an hour of Jewish music sing-a-long and open house
at her house which she stages monthly as part of a tradition started by
her late husband Yudi. Barak meets me with his Mercedes and Ze’ev his driver.
Visit his restaurant at Rothschild & Allenby with great French bakery
and then his nightclub with 4 floors hosting 1,500 per night. Lots of security
and watch dogs.
Sunday – A bit of traffic to the airport so we
divert though Jaffa. Checked in 45 minutes before the 10am flight but I’m
paying $900 extra each way for business class so I can do this! Flight
is 11:30 to Newark. This 777 has more amenities but the upper deck on a
747 is more peaceful. I am not at all looking forward to being back in
New York!
Highlights from Dialogues in Israel and Jordan
– October 2001
Arie (lawyer) – Go offense. Can’t deal with the
Palestinians. They want 100%. Even if they make peace, it will be a truce
and after a few years they will invent an excuse and get out of it. Keep
the status quo in place for a long time.
Gil (regular kinda guy) – no ideas. Just keep on
fighting as there is no alternative.
Adi (economist; Iraqi family background) – Try
compromise. If it doesn’t work, wipe ‘em out. Give them hope. Israel can’t
do anything inside Iraq or Afghanistan.
Avi (lawyer) – We tried compromising. We could
wipe them out in 2 weeks and we should.
Mohammed (lawyer with strong Sharia knowledge)
– Give them a state so they will concentrate on nation-building instead
of jihad. The US should show its evidence to convince the world and work
harder to convince Moslems that the US doesn’t hate Islam and the Arabs.
Stop trying to humiliate the Arabs. Even Westernized Arabs are still Arabs;
they can live without the cars and jeans and live in tents and eat shit
if they have to, and they will if they feel they must in order to maintain
their dignity.
Bernard (lawyer / entrepreneur and very Europeanized
Israeli) – I don’t watch TV so that nothing happens. The reality is too
depressing. Wants compromise.
David Livingstone (doctor) – wipe them out.
Gabi (taxi driver) – put things back to where they
were in the 1980's with the various mayors running the show in each of
the villages and throw out Arafat and the Tunis crowd. Do this until new
opportunities appear.
Moshe Yeffet’s Arab employees – This is all a business;
money and power corrupts Jewish and Arab leaders and gives incentives to
continue the state of war.
Frances Karam (Christian Arab from YMCA) – This
is all a big waste. Christian Arabs being squeezed. The Pope got Sharon
to promise to save the Christians if Arafat’s people try to wipe them out.
Frances’s Arab doctor sent him to an Israeli doctor last year to get an
operation that saved his life.
Meir (cousin / student) – Give them everything
they want. It can’t go on like this.
Varda/ Zvi (cousins – top economist and archeologist
– lifelong liberals and nation builders) – The Arabs are impossible and
show they don’t want peace. No choice but to keep fighting. The new finance
minister is Dr. Ignoramus – he boasts he took my class which is true –
he registered for it but never showed up! [To lose these votes reflects
how the consensus has truly shifted.]
Oded (political scientist with strong interest
in economics and salt of the earth type) – Arabs are losing everything.
Sharon waits for his moment. Maybe all of Arafat’s guys will go back to
Tunis. Over the long term there will be more war; the Israelis at the top
are benefitting. The Arabs are losing this war of attrition and particularly
the better educated people and young people with futures are emigrating.
Arab students won’t go to the US to study; they and their countries will
be the big losers for it. Big victory for bin Laden.
Josh’s cousins – They want everything. Compromise
won’t work. If we compromise, the risk will be higher after they screw
us.
Ronen (banker) – Economy is bad. There is no policy.
No ideas. We wanted compromise but the Arabs don’t.
Itzik (New Israel Fund official; liberal organization)
– still wants compromise. Afraid though that Arafat is not a partner. Islamic
side still agitates without anyone toning it down on their side. Very focused
on settlements as an obstacle to peace. Worried US will blame Israel for
its problems.
Gilead (business consultant) – Barak offered as
much as he could; peace is a dead issue for the time being.
Mustafa (Jerusalemite resident of Israel and Saudi
Arabia; citizen of Jordan) – Hopes for a deal. Arab Islamists need to tone
down the rhetoric; US needs better propaganda effort to show Moslems that
it is not a nation of infidels that is anti-Islam. Enjoys Herzliya living
the best; says that if he speaks in English in Israel, Israelis think he
is Jewish.
Hanna (wise man living in Amman) – Give the Palestinians
hope to choose life and something worth losing.
Moshe (business consultant) – Just keep fighting.
Can’t do anything with them.
Jonathan (economist) – Good thing we are at war
now – it is inevitable. Can’t deal with them.
Shmuel (hospital director; bioterrorism expert)
– Keep fighting. Make minor technical gains to make the situation better
on the ground (ie: take strategic areas to prevent shootings at neighborhoods;
set up ambushes on dangerous roads to deter roadside terrorism). Continue
the liquidations. Government ministers who are in charge are indecisive
and even negligently nonresponsive as to plans for response to bioterrorism.
At least in Israel there is some coordination among agencies – the US has
150 people around the country all reinventing the wheel. Several scientific
cooperation committees with Palestinians fell victim to politics, both
Israeli and Palestinians were at fault. He is exhausted attempting to try
to cooperate with Palestinians and is disappointed that other Arabs are
afraid to deal with him – all these information exchanges are always held
hostage to politics and it is stupid to do this with regard to science
and culture.
Yochi (cousin; computers) – No ideas. Over long
haul, things will get better.
Ze’ev (high-tech inventor) – Wipe them out.
David (somewhat radical liberal activist; high
tech) – Give it all back. We have to learn to live together and do justice
with the Palestinians. The US must impose a solution.
Eliran (computers) – Can’t deal with them now.
Ayal (sales and marketing) – Can’t deal with them
now; unfortunate situation.
Barak (lawyer / entrepreneur) – Arafat is an idiot;
Israelis are also not innovative. Let’s see what the USA does. |