My traveling companion and I then got the impression the security people were playing the waiting game with us. Indeed it took a while until they continued their inquiry into the threat we could possibly pose. While half sitting on the table full of my luggage, I thought of a story a Palestinian man living in the West Bank told us.
Halfway through the museum a Monopoly game can be found on display. It almost felt like a mocking joke, since the theme of this particular version was Ghetto life, almost as if it forbode the Disney and Game of Thrones editions we now know today. However, Julia explained that rather than mockery it was made to endure the dreadful situation a bit more light-hearted. Pretty much like Guido tried to do in the movie La vita è bella. And it worked. I could feel or at least imagine how such a small thing as a game could help you through the darkest of days.
And she is right. One’s own grief and fear does not in itself legitimise your oppression of someone else. Also, you should not pick a side solely based on ‘Israeli’ or ‘Palestinian’, but recognise all the suffering. In this shared experience, peoples might come together.
Over in Jerusalem our Ir Amim tour guide explained that such zealots are becoming stronger through “making their presence felt”. “Jews invented barbecue you know”, she said, ridiculing her own ethnicity, “to show how devoted they are, they recently sacrificed a goat at the Temple Mount, as proscribed in the Torah”.
Amazing, truly, that one is able to believe this: the mental power it must take. And perhaps it is real, who knows. I must admit there is a certain beauty to such devotion, about as beautiful as the colourful images in the church depicting many a biblical scene. Yet I could not help but cynically wonder how this place of prayer would fare against an IDF demolition order.
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