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From Beirut to Jerusalem
Prelude: From Minneapolis to Beirut
In June 1979, my wife, Ann, and I boarded a red-and-white
Middle East Airlines 707 in Geneva for the four-hour
flight to Beirut. It was the start of the nearly ten-year
journey through the Middle East that is the subject
of this book. It began, as it ended, with a bang.
When we got in line to walk through the metal detector
at our boarding gate, we found ourselves standing
behind three broad-shouldered, mustachioed Lebanese
men. As each stepped through the metal detector, it
would erupt with a buzz and a flashing red light,
like a pinball machine about to tilt. The Swiss police
immediately swooped in to inspect our fellow passengers,
who turned out not to be hijackers bearing guns and
knives, although they were carrying plenty of metal;
they were an Armenian family of jewelers bringing
bricks of gold back to Beirut. Each of the boys in
the family had a specially fitted money belt containing
six gold bars strapped around his stomach, and one
of them also had a shoe box filled with the precious
metal. They sat next to Ann and me in the back of
the plane and spent part of the flight tossing the
gold bricks back and forth for fun.
When our MEA plane finally touched down at Beirut
International Airport, and I beheld the arrival terminal's
broken windows, bullet scars, and roaming armed guards,
my knees began to buckle from fear. I realized immediately
that although I had spent years preparing for this
moment -- becoming a foreign correspondent in the
Middle East -- nothing had really prepared me for
the road which lay ahead.
In Minneapolis, Minnesota, where I was born and raised,
I had never sat next to people who tossed gold bricks
to each other in the economy section on Northwest
Airlines. My family was, I suppose, a rather typical
middle-class American Jewish family. My father sold
ball bearings and my mother was a homemaker and part-time
bookkeeper. I was sent to Hebrew school five days
a week as a young boy, but after I had my bar mitzvah
at age thirteen, the synagogue interested me little;
I was a three-day-a-year Jew -- twice on the New Year
(Rosh Hashanah) and once on the day of Atonement (Yom
Kippur). In 1968, my oldest sister, Shelley, spent
her junior year abroad at Tel Aviv University; it
was the year after Israel's dramatic victory in the
Six-Day War -- a time when Israel was very much the
"in" place for young American Jews. Over
the Christmas break of 1968 my parents took me to
Israel to visit my sister.
The trip that would change my life. I was only fifteen
years old at the time and just waking up to the world.
The flight to Jerusalem marked the first time I had
traveled beyond the border of Wisconsin and the first
time I had ridden on an airplane. I don't know if
it was just the shock of the new, or a fascination
waiting to be discovered, but something about Israel
and the Middle East grabbed me in both heart and mind.
I was totally taken with the place, its peoples and
its conflicts. Since that moment, I have never really
been interested in anything else. Indeed, from the
first day I walked through the walled Old City of
Jerusalem, inhaled its spices, and lost myself in
the multicolored river of humanity that flowed through
its maze of alleyways, I felt at home. Surely, in
some previous incarnation, I must have been a bazaar
merchant, a Frankish soldier perhaps, a pasha, or
at least a medieval Jewish chronicler. It may have
been my first trip abroad, but in 1968 I knew than
and there that I was really more Middle East than
Minnesota.
When I returned home, I began to read everything
I could get my hands on about Israel. That same year,
Israel's Jewish Agency sent a shaliach, a sort
of roving ambassador and recruiter, to Minneapolis
for the first time. I became one of his most active
devotees -- organizing everything from Israeli fairs
to demonstrations. He arranged for me to spend all
three summers of high school living on Kibbutz Hahotrim,
an Israeli collective farm on the coast just south
of Haifa. For my independent study project in my senior
year of high school, in 1971, I did a slide show on
how Israel won the Six-Day War. For my high-school
psychology class, my friend Ken Greer and I did a
slide show on kibbutz life, which ended with a stirring
rendition of "Jerusalem of Gold" and a rapid-fire
montage of strong-eyed, idealistic-looking Israelis
of all ages. In fact, high school for me, I am now
embarrassed to say was one big celebration of Israel's
victory in the Six-Day War. In the period of a year,
I went from being a nebbish whose dream was to one
day become a professional golfer to being an Israel
expert-in-training.
I was insufferable. When the Syrians arrested thirteen
Jews in Damascus, I wore a button for weeks that said
Free the Damascus 13, which most of my high-school
classmates thought referred to an underground offshoot
of the Chicago 7. I recall my mother saying to me
gently, "Is that really necessary?" when
I put the button on one Sunday morning to wear to
our country-club brunch. I became so knowledgeable
about the military geography of the Middle East that
when my high-school geography class had a teaching
intern from the University of Minnesota for a month,
he got so tired of my correcting him that he asked
me to give the talk about the Golan Heights and the
Sinai Peninsula while he sat at my desk. In 1968,
the first story I wrote as a journalist for my high-school
newspaper was about a lecture given at the University
of Minnesota by a then-obscure Israeli general
who had played an important role in the 1967 war.
His name was Ariel Sharon.
During the summer that I spent in Israel after high-school
graduation, I got to know some Israeli Arabs from
Nazareth, and our chance encounter inspired me to
buy an Arabic phrase book and to begin reading about
the Arab world in general. From my first day in college,
I started taking courses in Arabic language and literature.
In 1972, my sophomore year, I spent two weeks in Cairo
on my way to Jerusalem for a semester abroad at the
Hebrew University. Cairo was crowded, filthy, exotic,
impossible -- and I loved it. I loved the pita bread
one could buy hot out of the oven, I loved the easy
way Egyptians smiles, I loved the mosques and minarets
that gave Cairo's skyline its distinctive profile,
and I even loved my caddy at the Gezira Sporting Club,
who offered to sell me both golf balls and hashish,
and was ready to bet any amount of money that I could
not break 40 my first time around the course. (had
two racehorses not strolled across the ninth fairway
in the middle of my drive, I might have won the bet.)
In the summer of 1974, between my junior and senior
years of college, I returned to Egypt for a semester
of Arabic-language courses at the American University
in Cairo. When I came back to Brandies, where I was
studying for my B.A., I gave a slide lecture about
Egypt. An Israeli graduate student in the audience
hackled me the entire time asking, "What is a
Jew doing going to Egypt?" and "How dare
you like these people?" Worse, he got me extremely
flustered and turned my talk into a catastrophe I
would never forget. But I learned two important lessons
from the encounter. First, when it comes to discussing
the Middle East, people go temporarily insane, so
if you are planning to talk to an audience of more
than two, you'd better have mastered the subject.
Second, a Jew who wants to make a career working in
or studying about the Middle East will always be a
lonely man: he will never be fully accepted or trusted
by the Arabs, and he will never be fully accepted
or trusted by the Jews.
Copyright
© 1990 Thomas L. Friedman