Behind the wheel with a witness to Israel's history
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| Along the Israel-Jordan border
It鈥檚 7:15 a.m. on Shabbat (Saturday) and most of Jerusalem is asleep, but in 15 minutes our tour guide has already whisked us through the 1800s, the 20th-century breakup of the Ottoman Empire, Israel鈥檚 conquest of East Jerusalem and the West Bank (the 1948 creation of Israel goes without saying), and into present-day troubles such as the impoverished nomads who live on either side of the highway heading down to the Dead Sea and Jordan beyond.
鈥淭hese are Bedouins, and nobody has a clue what to do with them,鈥 Prof. Meron Medzini says, waving a hand toward the shacks and the little boys and donkeys that orbit them in search of a bit of toasted grass.
Professor Medzini, a friendly chap who has every right to have retired a decade or two ago, still teaches political science at Hebrew University 鈥 鈥淎t least I get up in the morning and I know what I鈥檓 going to do,鈥 he says. Despite finals coming up, he is spending his weekend driving me and my boss around Israel鈥檚 borders with Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. The field trip extraordinaire includes not only an eye-opening look at the geography of Israel鈥檚 security, but also a聽dizzying tour of聽modern Israeli history.
Medzini is no stranger to such tours. Well before I was born, he introduced the Monitor鈥檚 legendary editor, Erwin Canham, to Israel鈥檚 founding father, David Ben-Gurion. In the course of his storied career, he worked side by side with the country鈥檚 first (and so far only) female prime minister, Golda Meir 鈥 a childhood friend of his mother鈥檚 鈥 and Levi Eshkol, the leader who presided over the 1967 war with Israel鈥檚 Arab neighbors, which drastically changed the landscape both politically and demographically as Israel鈥檚 settlement enterprise began sprouting throughout the West Bank.
And this is one of the most fascinating parts of the tour, indeed of working in Israel today: that it is still possible to meet people who participated in the founding of the state and its聽formative early聽years, or worked closely with those who did. In an American context, it would perhaps be akin to meeting George Washington鈥檚 friend, or Thomas Jefferson鈥檚 aide.聽
Medzini knew Golda Meir best, later writing a biography of her ("Golda: A political biography").聽
As we drive聽along聽the border with Jordan, lined with barbed wire, mines, sensors, and daily Israeli patrols looking for footprints 鈥撀燼 fence put in place shortly after the 1967 war and kept in place even after the 1994 peace with Jordan 鈥 Medzini recounts Meir鈥檚 rocky shuttle diplomacy with Jordan鈥檚 King Abdullah.
We pull off the road to see a hydroelectric dam on the Yarmuk River, where the two met 鈥渂y accident.鈥 Abdullah developed a 鈥渉eadache鈥 after lunch, Medzini recalls, and had to retire to the bungalow of the stationmaster. Golda was there.
But Abdullah disliked the fact that Israel had tapped a woman to deal with him and their diplomacy was perhaps not as fruitful as either side had hoped.
Her secret visits with Abdullah鈥檚 successor, King Hussein, had a warmer tenor.
鈥淕olda met Hussein seven or eight times,鈥 recalls Medzin.
The press would ask Hussein, 鈥淒id you see Golda?鈥
And he would coyly respond, 鈥淵es, on television.鈥
During the 1973 war, Hussein informed Golda that Jordan had to take some 鈥渢oken鈥 action, says Medzini.聽
鈥淗ope you don鈥檛 mind,鈥 Hussein聽essentially said.聽鈥淲e鈥檝e sent a brigade to the Golan.鈥
鈥淪o we were shooting at them in the Golan and trading with them 100 miles away,鈥 says Medzini, chuckling.
There are definitely more somber parts of the tour as well, though, such as a stop at the Nahariya hydroelectric dam on the Israel-Jordan border where in 1997, three years after the two countries made peace, a Jordanian soldier inexplicably opened fire on a high school field trip and killed seven teenage girls.
Hussein personally visited each of the seven families and asked forgiveness, says Medzini.
In a land where the phrase "an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth" was coined, Hussein's gesture seems like a noble answer to the criticism of 海角大神s such as former US Sen. Warren Austin (R) of Vermont, who famously said that Jews and Muslims should reconcile their differences in a 海角大神 spirit.