Standardized test: A plaque commemorating victims of terrorism Jerusalem has suffered so many terrorist attacks that the city council at some
point seems to have decided to standardize the plaques commemorating
the victims. A number of morose remarks could be made about this, but
I'll make an effort and try to shut up. I remember being here in
2002, when a record number of 60 Palestinians blew themselves up in
various parts of the Holy Land. Riding on city buses in Jerusalem was
like playing Russian roulette. The falafel joint around the corner from
where I lived at the time seemed like the ideal target: no guard,
always crowded, situated in a small shop whose cramped dimensions would maximize the
damage of the acetone peroxide explosives, along with the proverbial
nuts and bolts. A 16-year old Palestinian kid blew himself up there
on a sunny afternoon in July as I was at home, listening to Counting
Crows:
"...So we slide inside of
someone's mouth
and someone's eyes
until
there's a sound of something
intimate exploding..."
People were obviously reluctant to frequent cafes and restaurants during that period, which forced almost every single food venue to post a guard at the entrance. Sidewalk cafes were fenced in, but even then there were occasional smart terrorists that would bring along guns with their bomb belts and shoot the guard before entering and blowing themselves up. Hence the question, "Yesh neshek?" ("Do you have a gun?") was posed to every patron wishing to enjoy a latte in those days. It was one of the first expressions that I learned in Hebrew.
Now, to be fair, the last suicide bombing in Jerusalem was perpetrated on September 22, 2004, but if you are the owner of a cafe, how many bomb-free months do you count before you decide to expand your establishment unto the abutting sidewalk? There might be a secret algorithm here that I am unaware of, not entirely dissimilar to the one that prompted the standardization of commemorative plaques. Or there just comes a day when nothing else could make more sense.
Well, that day might have
arrived already, without fanfare. Sidewalk cafes withoutCafe Betzalel: A peaceful place for now
fences or guards are popping up here and there in the center of town
as a result of this definitive lull in the Second Intifada (or
whatever we choose to call this period of low-frequency warfare).
Last Friday afternoon I enjoyed a live performance by a local band as
I sipped on a cold Goldstar beer at one such place, Café
Betzalel, named after Betzalel ben Uri, the ancient Hebrew building
contractor who won the tender for the construction of the
Tabernacle, way back when. The name means "in the shadow of God,"
aptly capturing the ambiguity of life in Jerusalem: the imminence of
the Divine, and the darkness it sometimes entails.
Just one successful bomb attack will of course destroy not only the chosen target, but every expanding business in town owned by someone who thought that the violence had actually ended. But during the lull we live.
(Photography by Paul Widen)
Links:
[1] http://www.jewcy.com/user/2260/paul_widen