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Living in Israel (standard:adventure, 1841 words) | |||
Author: giborim | Added: Apr 17 2003 | Views/Reads: 3419/2227 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
My trip through the forbidden side of the arab quarter in Israel. | |||
That indistinguishable smell. I inhaled real deep so I could try and discern the spices, but every time I tried, I just coughed and coughed. It was the kind of strong smell you could taste, like smelling curry for the first time. A strong smell that I could almost taste but had no memory to connect the smell to. I didn't know why this side of the road had such a pungent odor. "What is that smell?" I whispered to Randy, who obviously was not as concerned with the smell as with the danger that we had been warned about. He shook off my question without even looking my way. I felt as though I was in a movie. The cobblestone, thousands of years old, under my feet was uneven and not maintained. I stuck close to Randy, not wanting to be all alone on the "wrong side of town". Our teachers had warned us that it wouldn't be safe for us to go to the Arab market. “For thousands of years millions had fought and died for this city and two more post adolescents would faze no one.” Dov lectured to us. The stern warning we had been given by our teachers not to walk to the Arab sector in the old city of Jerusalem did nothing to dissuade us. Even with the fighting in Israel, my parents had let me go. I was a senior in high school and I had heard of school in the holy land. The land seemed to hold some dangerous mystery for me. There are only a few times where I really felt in danger. I the most danger I ever saw was when I was walking in the Arab quarter with Randy. Randy was a strong guy. The kind of guy you knew would go into the armed forces even before he told you (he ended up going to the marines). Randy's fearlessness was contagious. Turning down the proposal to wander into the forbidden quarter seemed impossible. The feeling of protection he radiated was intoxicating. If I had to choose Randy or twenty secret service agents I would have chosen Randy. My parents would kill me if they knew; now I realize they would have every right to. Two high school kids walking around with big Jewish stars on their necks and screaming tourists, American tourists none the less. Being the young hot-blooded teens we were we proceeded through the Arab quarter. Immediately when we entered I noticed a man probably a decade older than we were leaning against the wall looking disbelief that we would enter his alleyway. I gathered from the faces surrounding me that this was the general consensus. Randy had a big silver Jewish star that he proudly wore around his neck and I also had a Jewish star, smaller but visible around my neck. The seven-year-old boy we encountered was the first person to stop us. He immediately jumped in front of our path taking us both by surprise. We looked down at the boy with dark black hair and dark olive skin. It struck me how generically Arab he looked. He seemed right out of the postcard, which turned out to be ironic because he promptly muttered something and began showing us postcards. After the initial shock I realized that this little boy was trying to sell us postcards. We tried to walk past him, but he kept on following and muttering in what I at first assumed was Arabic, but then realized was Hebrew, something about the postcards. Randy stopped and told the boy we weren't interested in English, the only language either of us felt comfortable speaking. And then the seven year old, displaying his third language in two minutes, said sternly, “Two dollars”. Randy tried again to tell him we didn't want any but the little boy, whose name was im sure some generic Arabic name, kept on persisting. I studied the boy and noticed he had what seemed like a scar on his cheek from what I could only imagine. He was also wearing tattered shorts and a T-shirt that said something in Arabic and appeared to be one of those t-shirts you buy when you visit a new city, a total tourist trap T-shirt. Expecting to see one of those save the children men turning the corner any moment I felt guilty and gave the kid two bucks for some postcards. The postcards, which I knew I never wanted, are still located in a drawer in my desk. Randy seemed very disappointed that I had given in to such a little boy. “I felt bad.” I whispered, “It was only two dollars”. As we progressed down the hallway I realized it seemed so dark due to the closeness of the awnings in front of the stores. Each store, and I use the term loosely, consisted of a hallway that was the indoor part and an overhang that stretched just far enough to touch the overhang of the store across the walkway blocking out any hope of sunlight or fresh Click here to read the rest of this story (92 more lines)
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