Milestone Developments prepares to launch its inaugural EGP 6bn project in Egypt    Health Ministry on high alert during Easter celebrations    Ismailia governorate receives EGP 6.5bn in public investments    Egypt's Communications Ministry, Xceed partner on AI call centre tool    Egypt warns of Israeli military operation in Rafah    US academic groups decry police force in campus protest crackdowns    AMEDA unveils modernisation steps for African, ME depositories    US Military Official Discusses Gaza Aid Challenges: Why Airdrops Aren't Enough    US Embassy in Cairo announces Egyptian-American musical fusion tour    ExxonMobil's Nigerian asset sale nears approval    Chubb prepares $350M payout for state of Maryland over bridge collapse    Argentina's GDP to contract by 3.3% in '24, grow 2.7% in '25: OECD    Yen surges against dollar on intervention rumours    Egypt, France emphasize ceasefire in Gaza, two-state solution    Microsoft plans to build data centre in Thailand    Japanese Ambassador presents Certificate of Appreciation to renowned Opera singer Reda El-Wakil    Health Minister, Johnson & Johnson explore collaborative opportunities at Qatar Goals 2024    Sweilam highlights Egypt's water needs, cooperation efforts during Baghdad Conference    AstraZeneca injects $50m in Egypt over four years    Egypt, AstraZeneca sign liver cancer MoU    Swiss freeze on Russian assets dwindles to $6.36b in '23    Amir Karara reflects on 'Beit Al-Rifai' success, aspires for future collaborations    Climate change risks 70% of global workforce – ILO    Prime Minister Madbouly reviews cooperation with South Sudan    Egypt retains top spot in CFA's MENA Research Challenge    Egyptian public, private sectors off on Apr 25 marking Sinai Liberation    Debt swaps could unlock $100b for climate action    President Al-Sisi embarks on new term with pledge for prosperity, democratic evolution    Amal Al Ghad Magazine congratulates President Sisi on new office term    Egyptian, Japanese Judo communities celebrate new coach at Tokyo's Embassy in Cairo    Uppingham Cairo and Rafa Nadal Academy Unite to Elevate Sports Education in Egypt with the Introduction of the "Rafa Nadal Tennis Program"    Financial literacy becomes extremely important – EGX official    Euro area annual inflation up to 2.9% – Eurostat    BYD، Brazil's Sigma Lithium JV likely    UNESCO celebrates World Arabic Language Day    Motaz Azaiza mural in Manchester tribute to Palestinian journalists    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



Who's Jerusalem? A tour of the Old City
Published in Daily News Egypt on 22 - 08 - 2007

JERUSALEM/CAIRO: There is certainly more than one way to see Jerusalem, which, since 1967, is either a reunited city or one half under occupation.
On a recent visit to Jerusalem, two tours of the city and its surroundings underlined the disparities in how different people view the city - Jews, Arabs, residents, tourists - and what they choose not to see.
My first night in the Old City was spent on a tour of the Jewish Quarter and the excavated tunnel that runs the full length of the Western Wall, below the stone houses of the Muslim Quarter, along the bedrock of the city.
The tunnel is no stranger to controversy. Riots during the tunnel's opening in 1996 - Yasser Arafat alleged it was all an effort to force a collapse of the Al-Haram Al-Sharif - left 70 Palestinians and 16 Israelis dead.
The tour began with a Zionist sweep of the Old City for a nearly all-Jewish audience, myself and my partner excluded. Framed in an exclusively Jewish narrative, it gave space to "others - Arabs, Muslims, even Romans - only by simplistically accounting for how they have either destroyed, desecrated, built on top of, or occupied a "historically Jewish city.
Like many Israelis, our state-registered Jerusalem tour guide (there is a rigorous application and schooling process) was a transplanted American.
His card promised "Not just a tour, a Spiritual Adventure!
On rooftops that faced the Dome of the Rock, he pointed down to stone air ducts opening to the covered "Muslim market below.
His coverage of the market was meant to highlight the layering of Jerusalem, a city always building on top of something else, a stream he had started at the excavated Cardo, the remains of a Roman thoroughfare.
Instead, a young Jewish couple living in Jerusalem looked down in a mix of awe and fear.
"Have you ever been through it? the husband asked.
"Of course not, a father, visiting from New York, replied. "Why would you?
There on the rooftops, the father would not let his daughter pose for a photo with the Dome of the Rock in the background. She thought the building was beautiful.
The tour extended through the Jewish Quarter, with histories of the First and Second Temples, their destructions, and the apparently uneven demographics of the Old City.
The guide noted that the Muslim Quarter was not a proper one-fourth of the Old City at all - it was in fact much larger than the Jewish, Christian, and the Armenian quarters.
Clearly, he meant to reduce the place to neat but de-historicized fractions - the quarters of Jerusalem should be even, like a pizza - while ignoring a historic Arab population. He said nothing of the Palestinian population in the Old City, and throughout East Jerusalem, who are currently either living under occupation or with effective second-class citizenship as Israeli Arabs.
Later on in the tour of the touristy Western Wall tunnel, a large motorized model of Jerusalem made the Muslim Quarter, built along one of the remaining walls of the Temple Mount (Al-Haram Al-Sharif), descend out of sight, intending to show Jerusalem at the time of the Second Temple.
"Can you do that with the Dome of the Rock? the father from New York quipped.
The hate usually allocated in the Western press for Israel's enemies only - Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran - was sitting next to me and coming from an American Jew who cynically kept referring to Muslims as "our cousins, the unruly relatives.
Days later, a minivan left from a popular East Jerusalem hotel for a Palestinian-led tour of "political Jerusalem. The group was a few Americans and a few Diaspora Palestinians, visiting from Europe and the United States.
We visited newly expanded settlements, completed and under-construction sections of the concrete separation wall, recently demolished Palestinian homes, and the Draconian Kalandia checkpoint, which leads north to Ramallah.
That tour ended on a hill overlooking the Palestinian town of Abu Dis, which sits in a shrinking space between guard towers, walls and checkpoints and the suburban development of Maale Abumim, the largest of Israeli settlement blocs on the occupied West Bank.
The sprawling settlement, opened in 1975 and now home to more than 30,000 families, is farther east from the center of Jerusalem than its neighboring Arab villages, cutting them off from any contiguity with the West Bank.
Settlements and occupation could not have been further from the itinerary of the Western Wall tunnel tour.
Touching the wet bedrock of Biblical Mount Moriah underneath the Old City, we were encouraged to make spiritual connections with the excavations.
Running explicitly through the tour was collective hope for the construction of the Third Temple - a place supposedly for all religions - while conveniently ignoring the third holiest site in Islam that sits on the same real estate.
Both tours represented different visions and different agendas.
The first was a felt need to prove a dogmatic view of Jewish heritage over Jerusalem that has always been threatened and is only recently resurgent.
The second was of interest for getting outside of the Old City to see the political realities of an ever-expanding Jerusalem municipality, with concrete walls and illegal settlements, 40 years after 1967.
The Israeli tour of the Old City was consciously divorced from the Palestinian tour of East Jerusalem, creating the peculiar situation of a tour of Jerusalem's long history that either ignored or tried to nullify decades of recent events in historic Palestine.
I crossed Allenby Bridge into Jordan the afternoon of the East Jerusalem tour, where
I wondered which was worse: the obvious ideological and informative gaps between the two tours, or my assumption that neither tour group would have willingly switched places.
Whether to confront the realities of occupation that are too painfully clear to one side, or to recognize the extremes of orthodoxy and the ideological denials of the other, each group ought to have taken the other's tour.


Clic here to read the story from its source.