2006-03-15-Jerusalem |
||||
|
||||
|
jewishsightseeing.com, March 14, 2006 |
By Ira Sharkansky
JERUSALEM—I have lived in
Jerusalem for more than 30 years. My wife and two of my children
were born here. So I allow myself to claim roots in the city.
Along with this, I will take the liberty of commenting on what
others write about it.
What prompts this column? A dull spot in national
politics. The Israeli parties are trying to clobber one another
with an eye to the election two weeks away, but have not managed
to express anything new since the campaign began. Our neighbors
are wrestling with the results of their election. Hamas winners
and Fatah losers are wondering how to position themselves after
this most recent major event in Palestinian history. If they
choose wrong, they may find themselves written out of history.
They seem to recognize this, so not much is happening on their
front while they talk and ponder.
In the midst of this political hiatus I received
from a friend yet another collection of writings about Jerusalem.
The writers and those quoted are world class intellectuals, among
the people who seem required to express themselves about
Jerusalem. No doubt the city has a presence in the world. If there
was a measure of words written per thousand residents Jerusalem
would come out in first place. Googling the names of Jerusalem
along with other national capitals shows Jerusalem with more
citations, or not too many fewer citations than other capitals
with many times its own modest population, and at the centers of
countries with many times the size and power of Israel.
One reads about awe, and glory, the weight of
faith, expectation, politics, competition between large worlds of
Christianity and Islam, and the small world of Judaism; and
violence associated with that competition. For some, it is all a
reason to come and experience the city. I can sit at home and
entertain friends from my childhood and professional experiences
in several countries. The stream of visitors is impressive and
enjoyable, and likely to be greater than if I had settled
elsewhere.
Some cannot tolerate the pressures they perceive in
Jerusalem. The packet of writings recently received included a line
from the poet Yehuda Amichai, "the air over Jerusalem is
saturated with prayers and dreams....It's hard to breathe."
The Jerusalem-born writer A.B. Yehoshua confesses: "I feel
really relieved every time I leave the place." Walter Laqueur
wrote a piece that he called "Dying for Jerusalem" in
which he emphasized a city torn between Jews of ancient and
modern, ultra-Orthodox and secular, and even more painfully between
the Arab East and Jewish West. Several of my friends have
moved out of Jerusalem claiming the oppression of the
ultra-Orthodox. They find themselves still working in Jerusalem,
and having to commute from their suburb 5 or so miles away, amidst
the morning and evening creep of many others who work here but
live outside the city, either on account of lower prices for
housing, or a lesser feeling of being oppressed by the problems of
Jerusalem.
Often the centrality of Jerusalem is painfully
inconvenient. Traffic jams are world class when the heads of major
countries come to express themselves on the Middle East and make
their visits at holy sites and the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial.
Less awesome are the problems caused by leaders of middle- and
small-scale powers like the Czech Republic, Lithuania, Georgia,
and one or another Central American country. Some visits make no
greater impression than causing speculation about what are those
national flags being put on the lamp posts by municipal workers.
Yet another feature of Jerusalem's status, not
entirely positive, is the pressure from religious and other
communities throughout the world to develop their own space in the
city. The late 19th century witnessed a major wave of church and
hospice building by European and American Christians. The Jews
have been building since 1948. The Hebrew University is one sign
of this, with facilities indicated as the contribution of families
and communities from Uruguay in the southwest to Melbourne in the
southeast, and lots of Americans and Europeans between those
points. In most fields, it is Israel's best university.
Competing fund raising for Hadassah and Shaare Zedek hospitals
assure Jerusalemites access to better medical care than residents
of most other Israeli cities. Financial realities are that donors
help, but Israeli taxpayers provide more than 80 percent of the
outlays at the university and hospitals.
Yad Vashem continues to grow and develop, partly
against the specter of competing Holocaust memorials in Los
Angeles, Washington, and elsewhere. Yet another site that will
mention the Holocaust eventually is the Museum of Tolerance, being
developed by the Simon Wiesenthal industry in the center of town.
So far this has done nothing more than close what had been the
major parking lot in town. The place is fenced off, and involved
in legal challenges focused on a Muslim cemetery that the museum
developers would like to move elsewhere. It is likely that the
site will remain in a limbo for years while the battles continue,
all the while there will remain lost a couple of hundred parking
spots for those wanting to drive into the center of town.
The possibility or threat of peace is likely to
produce yet another wave of religious communities wanting to
establish a presence in the city of peace. The Mormons are waiting
to reactivate their student center on the Mount of Olives. Korean
Christians have accumulated money to purchase land for their own
center. Already some 25 to 30 thousand religious pilgrims come to
the city annually from that country. I doubt that North American
Evangelists are far behind in their concern for real estate.
Most impressive is the backlog of religious tourism
from one billion Muslims who have stayed away from a Jerusalem
ruled by the Jews. Palestinians and Jordanians have been competing
to refurbish the Noble Sanctuary/Temple Mount, and have raised the
prospect of 5 million Muslim tourists annually once peace comes to
Al Quds.
All of the above reflects the world status and
historical residues found in the air and on the ground of
Jerusalem. For most of those who live here, however, the city is
like any other. It is where we have our work and our families, do
our shopping, argue with neighbors who disturb us, leave town for
a weekend in the countryside, and do everything else that
residents of Toledo, Frankfurt, York, Adelaide, or Sudbury do
in and around their cities.
Our neighborhood is not unusual in having four
synagogues, financed partly by overseas patrons. They all boast
enough attendance to support daily prayers, but I suspect that a
majority of neighborhood residents do not visit any of them on a
regular basis. I have no doubt that most Jerusalem residents are
aware of the implications of their city, but prefer to minimize
their concern for the great issues. Israelis generally do not want
to struggle. They fight when they have to, but want normalcy. They
are tired of more than five years of intafada, and hope that a majority
of Palestinians are also tired of it.
There may be a lesson here in the poll results
associated with the coming election. Labor and Likud have
retreated to their ideological extremes, and seem to be suffering
as a result. The leader in the polls is the new centrist party,
Kadima, which proposes pragmatic adjustments to reality instead of
historic postures about social justice or land. Two weeks before
the election, polls are showing 20 percent undecided. So far a
lack of excitement suggests that there will not be a rush to the
left or right. Religious nationalists are upset about the
disengagement from Gaza, but are having trouble gaining traction
with the broad center of the electorate.
To be sure, the city is, as ever, delicate. For
Jerusalem someone coined the word "crusade." Security
forces claim to have foiled several attempts at terrorist bombings
in recent days. If a bus or cafe blows up, especially with Hamas
fingerprints on the weapon, the results can be significant. So
far, however, the atmosphere in Palestine as well as Israel seems
to express a fatigue with great efforts, and an acceptance of
calm. The intafada may be over. Here and there will be individuals
or groups enraged enough to do something violent, but they will
have trouble gaining support in the locales of greater power.
Seven hundred thousand Jerusalemites, west and east, Jewish and
Muslim (and the few Christians who remain), will find enough to
keep themselves busy with work, family, and all the personal
problems and aspirations of city dwellers in less dramatic
settings. Most of us recognize that there will be no great and
last victories in Jerusalem. We prefer life without emotion
or heroics. Better parking places than another museum concerned
with the Holocaust.
Sharkansky is an emeritus member of the political science department at Hebrew University in Jerusalem |
— |