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The West Bank is Prozac for the soul

October 29, 2015 12:47
Quiet: A typical  residential street in the Jewish settlement of Efrat in Gush Etzion on the  West Bank

By

Angela Epstein,

Angela Epstein

3 min read

I'm sitting on a sun-blushed patio, sipping a mug of hot camomile tea and gazing out at mile upon mile of rolling, sun-scorched hills. The herby scent of fresh mountain air fills the lungs and does much to soothe the soul.

In short, I feel like I've arrived in paradise. Especially since the only sound to ripple the silence is soft, sibilant bird-song.

So, have I paid hundreds of pounds to pitch up at one of those faraway spas, much beloved of freebie-grabbing celebrities in glossy magazines? Er, not quite. Though judging by the way this place makes me feel, it's clearly having the same effect.

Yet, ironically, this heavenly half-term destination has become a byword for violence, hostility and fear. There's more chance of a turkey asking for an invitation to Bernard Matthews's Christmas party than spotting sun-loving luvvies here.