One car passed rather quickly after our breakdown but did not stop. I opened the hood of the car in the universal signal that we were having trouble and Frs. Carl and Steve wandered down around the next curve to see what was beyond. Just as they disappeared around the curve, a truck with three men in it passed and stopped to see if they could help. I was able to communicate with them that the problem was with the clutch. As they were examining the problem, a 2nd truck with Frs. Carl and Steve and another man drove up. We consulted (as much as we could) and determined that the car could be driven in a single gear – the engine had to be turned off and the gear chosen and then the engine started. So we decided that the best thing to do would be to drive the car back up the hill in 2nd gear and the men who were headed in that direction would follow us and show us to a mechanic. That plan worked liked a charm. About 45 minutes later, we are at a shop and the mechanic had determined that the problem was not something that could be repaired in his town and that the car would need to go to a shop in Amman. At that point, one of the young men who had accompanied us to the shop sort of took charge. He asked me for the rental contract and called the company in Amman to explain, in Arabic, what our situation was. There were a number of options floated, but ultimately, it was decided that we would leave the car at that garage, take a taxi the remaining way to Amman, and the rental car company would take us to the border. Within minutes, a taxi was there and all our gear was transferred and we were on our way. Once again, we had been the subject of remarkable hospitality. The young men who aided us were certainly no more than 25. But they were young men who put the best foot of their country and culture forward. When we offered to pay them for their troubles, they were offended. It had simply been their pleasure to help and they made it clear that it was what was required of good hospitality. The rest of the afternoon in Jordan, although an hour behind schedule, was uneventful.
It was funny that when we got to the King Hussein Bridge Border Station and had cleared Jordanian Customs and were told to report to the bus that would take us across the bridge, we arrived to find the bus’ engine compartment open and the driver and another man working on replacing some parts. We laughed at our trip filled with mechanical problems.
Once on the Israeli side of the border, all the frustration we had experienced with car trouble came rushing back as we negotiated the car-wreck that is Israeli border control. It took nearly three hours to get back into Israel – and that was on a day when there were not that many people at the border crossing. It started out okay – we were shuttled in the direction of lines for non-Arabs that were much shorter. But eventually, we were in the same lines as the Arabs and there was not attempt to make it any easier for anybody.
I understand that it is easier to cross into Israel at the border stations to the south or the north where you are actually simply crossing into Israel out of either Jordan or Egypt. The reason the Allenby Bridge is more difficult is because you are actually not simply crossing into Israel, you are crossing into Israeli Occupied Palestine - I am not sure that the unwelcoming attitude that I encountered there was really directed at me, I simply got mixed up in the crossfire (so to speak). Like so much else I have encountered in Palestine, it seems the Israelis have gone out of their way to make things as unpleasant as possible for Palestinians who have the right to pass back and forth across the border to visit family or to travel further abroad. Of course this is all done for the sake of security, but anyone with a little bit of common sense could make the process a lot more efficient. (e.g., my passport was checked by four different officials between the time I got off the bus on the Israeli side and the time I was able to actually leave the border check station. Because ten or twelve lines were reduced to a single line this process took more than 2 hours and two of the four people who checked my passport did nothing but hold me up. They did not stamp my passport and they asked me the same questions that I had already been asked by two previous people.) I am more convinced than ever that the ridiculousness I experienced at the border is just one more example of how Israel tried to make things difficult and uncomfortable for the Palestinians.
Back in Jerusalem, we made our plans for our final days. Here is the plan – we would have our last class on Tuesday. Then on Wednesday, we would rent a car and head up to Nablus to see Jacob’s Well and Mt. Gerazim. Then we would have a final dinner out in Jerusalem and take Fr. Gregory to the Airport for his late night flight to the US. We would keep the car overnight, then use it to go up to Mt. Scopus to take sunrise pictures and to go to the Mosque of the Ascension before turning it in. We then decided to find out if it would be possible to rent a car in Jerusalem on Wednesday and turn it in at Ben Gurion Airport on Thursday night. The cost of the car rental for a day would be about the same as the cost of the taxi to the airport.
Out plans went well right up to the car rental. We had tried to go to Nablus and Mt. Gerazim earlier in the trip but had approached it from the north on our way home from Meggido. The lines on the map all connected where we were with the thriving town of Nablus, but security walls and border crossings are not marked on Israeli maps. After trying numerous approaches and being turned away at border crossings, we had simply given up. We knew however that the way was opened from Jerusalem to Nablus and made our plans to go that way. I was particularly excited about visiting Jacob’s Well – it is one of those Biblical places whose location we are absolutely sure and it has always excited my imagination a little. The problem with the car rental was our plan to pick it up in Jerusalem and drop it off at the airport – a plan we had come to like very much. If, however, you are going to do that, you have to rent from an international company like Hertz, Avis, or Budget. No problem. Except when I went to pick the car up I found out that there was a problem. The larger car companies consider the Palestinian Territories another country and their insurance will not cover your travel within them. We had canceled our reservation with the Palestinian rental car company and there was no turning back at this point.
Foiled again by the reality of a partitioned West Bank. At that moment, I was so happy to be going home and not having to deal with this any more. There is no consistency or sense to the idea that Palestine is a “separate country.” The problem is that for more than 60 years nobody, Arab or Israeli, has taken the responsibility for the hard work of creating that “separate country.” Into that vacuum step all kinds of crazy non-solutions. When it suits Israel, Palestine is a “separate country.” Otherwise, “This is our God-giving country.” I have had to show my passport more in the last seven weeks than in the rest of my life combined. And at any moment, my fate and ability to travel was at the whim of a loaded-gun wielding teenage IDF member. Generally that did not cause me any problem; it was simply inconvenient. But it was a constant, in-your-face reminder of the reality I was living in. I remember the bus ride returning from my second visit to Bethlehem – everybody had to get off the bus and show their passport at the border check-point. No problem for me – but we were all held up as they did some sort of deeper check on the credentials of two Palestinian teenagers. I do not begrudge Israel its security, and God knows that there are Jews who wished that all Palestinians were dead and there are Palestinians that wished that all Jews were dead. As I have said before, there is blood on everybody’s hands. And this was yet another reminder that there seems to be no will, nationally or internationally to resolve the differences that keeps this entire country ghetto-ized.
Glad I got that off my chest. Ok – we had to rework our plans. That was okay, there were a number of sites on the south and West side of Jerusalem that we wanted to see. We would simply go to them instead of Nablus and Mt. Gerazim. We headed south to the village of Abu Ghosh at which there is a beautiful Olivetan Monastery with a Crusader-era Church. It is well preserved and stands on ground that has been important in antiquity, the Byzantine-era, the Middle Ages, the Muslim era, and even in the modern era. Abu Ghosh is down the hill from Qiryat Yearim, the village which marks the border between the tribal lands of Benjamin and Judah.
One of Abu-Ghosh’s distinctions is that during medieval times, it was remembered as the
From Modi’in, we headed back toward Jerusalem and made a stop at Rama at the tomb of the
After lunch, we went to the quaint little village of Ein Kerem, in Jerusalem’s southwestern
On Thursday morning, our last in Jerusalem, Frs. Steve, Carl, and I left St. Stephens at 5 am and drove up to the Campus of Hebrew U on top of Mt. Scopus to watch the sun rise over the Jordan Valley. It was a cold, windy, cloudy morning, so we were not sure what we would be able to see. The pictures speak for themselves. We then made our way around the Mt. of Olives to catch the sun coming up over that site. Not quite as spectacular, but beautiful nonetheless. How often do you get to catch two sun-rises in one day?
After a quick breakfast in Jerusalem, we headed up the Mt. of Olives to see two sites that we had missed because of mid-day closures on previous trips – 1st we went to the Church of Dominus Flevit, which commemorates the Lord’s weeping over the unbelieving Jerusalem in Luke 19:41-42. We had not been able to get into the Church on a previous visit and wanted to see the view of the Old City through the Eucharistic-themed window behind the main altar.
From there, we headed to the top of the Mt. of
Olives to the Chapel of the Lord’s Ascension. The Chapel is (since the end of the 12th Century) actually a Mosque. It is a small building contained with what remains of an octagonal Crusader-era Church building. Within the small building is a stone from which Jesus is said to have ascended. (Muslims believe in the ascension of Jesus and hold this as a sacred site.) Christian
pilgrims are welcome and each year the Church is allowed to celebrate a Mass for the Feast Day on Ascension Thursday at this site. We had intentionally avoided this site on our Mt. of Olives retreat day because we were more focused on Jesus’ triumphal entry that day. Besides, there is something quite wonderful that the last site we saw in Jerusalem was Jesus’ last site in Jerusalem.
We spent the rest of the day packing and each of us made one last rip into the Old City. Each of us wanted one last time at the Holy Sepulcher. In the evening met to celebrate one more Mass in Jerusalem, offering our thanks to God for all the blessings of this time. Then, we loaded up the rental car, said our goodbyes and thank-yous to our new friends at St. Etienne and made our way to the airport near Tel Aviv.
We had similar flight times and were warned to check in at least three hours before our flight. It is still amazing to me that the security interview to get OUT of Jerusalem is as rigorous as the interview to get in. The large amount of incense in my bag (and its resemblance to rock cocaine) was somewhat troubling to the IDF. My keffiyas (Arab headwear) was a cause for concern even thought there were also kippas (Jewish headwear) in the same bag and I assured them they were simply souvenirs and not political statements. They asked a lot of questions, to which the answer (in any civilized, free society) is “none of your business.” But my desire to leave Tel Aviv constrained my tongue. And I played their games so I could go home. I did ask for an explanation two different times of why they wanted me to remove something, and both times was told, “we don’t have to explain ourselves” – 19 y.o. with M-16s sure can be bullies. This was on my list of things I would not miss at all.
My return trip to Tucson, scheduled to last 24 hours, turned into a 34 hour ordeal of missed connections and an extra day in the birthplace of our democracy. I guess I needed the extra dose of freedom, having just escaped totalitarianism. One highlight of my extended layover in Philadelphia was the two (yes, two) orders of bacon I had for breakfast in the airport. The waitress was somewhat amused at my order – 2 orders of bacon and a large coffee. She looked quizzical. “I don’t have to explain myself…” It was soooo tempting, but I told her – I have been pork deprived for a couple of months and I love bacon.
I am planning two more posts on this blog. One will be some theological reflections and the other will be my farewell to Jerusalem.
From there, we headed to the top of the Mt. of
We spent the rest of the day packing and each of us made one last rip into the Old City. Each of us wanted one last time at the Holy Sepulcher. In the evening met to celebrate one more Mass in Jerusalem, offering our thanks to God for all the blessings of this time. Then, we loaded up the rental car, said our goodbyes and thank-yous to our new friends at St. Etienne and made our way to the airport near Tel Aviv.
We had similar flight times and were warned to check in at least three hours before our flight. It is still amazing to me that the security interview to get OUT of Jerusalem is as rigorous as the interview to get in. The large amount of incense in my bag (and its resemblance to rock cocaine) was somewhat troubling to the IDF. My keffiyas (Arab headwear) was a cause for concern even thought there were also kippas (Jewish headwear) in the same bag and I assured them they were simply souvenirs and not political statements. They asked a lot of questions, to which the answer (in any civilized, free society) is “none of your business.” But my desire to leave Tel Aviv constrained my tongue. And I played their games so I could go home. I did ask for an explanation two different times of why they wanted me to remove something, and both times was told, “we don’t have to explain ourselves” – 19 y.o. with M-16s sure can be bullies. This was on my list of things I would not miss at all.
My return trip to Tucson, scheduled to last 24 hours, turned into a 34 hour ordeal of missed connections and an extra day in the birthplace of our democracy. I guess I needed the extra dose of freedom, having just escaped totalitarianism. One highlight of my extended layover in Philadelphia was the two (yes, two) orders of bacon I had for breakfast in the airport. The waitress was somewhat amused at my order – 2 orders of bacon and a large coffee. She looked quizzical. “I don’t have to explain myself…” It was soooo tempting, but I told her – I have been pork deprived for a couple of months and I love bacon.
I am planning two more posts on this blog. One will be some theological reflections and the other will be my farewell to Jerusalem.
There are a lot more pictures of all the sites mentioned in this post at my picasa site: http://picasaweb.google.com/frbart.
Fr. Bart, what an incredible experience! Thank you so much for all your postings. It felt like we were traveling with you. It is amazing to hear the kindness you experienced in Jordan, the difficulties and realities in Israel, and especially your visits to all the sites and experiences you had. So many thing stood out to us in your postings. Thank you!
ReplyDelete--Tomas
It is really interesting to read your reflections on the modern reality in this region. I hope to hear more and also about the history and Biblical sites - I only realize how little I know of these places! (Have to hit the books, or wikipedia).
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to your presentations at Newman.
What was the name of that first car rental company again? Sorry... had to ask. -Olga
Thank you for these reflections, I enjoyed each one. Can't wait to hear more about your experiences through your homilies. It makes me sad that this is the last posting I'll get to read.
ReplyDelete