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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll,

Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

Opinion

Hope comes from working together

'The little gestures, the one-on-one humanity, the people helping people, might be what we need bring the monster that it is the Israel-Arab conflict to its knees.'

August 7, 2019 17:07
Jerusalem: glimmers of hope?
3 min read

They say that hospitals and auto-repair shops are the great equalisers of Israeli society, where you’ll find Israelis of all stripes working side by side, as a team with common goals. Having spent the past few days with my dad in a Jerusalem hospital (and having taken my car too often to the shop), I can confirm this is true.

In the ER, to one side of us, two nurses tried to coax an elderly woman into taking her medication: one spoke Arabic, the other Hebrew. To the other side, a man screamed (very colourfully) in Spanish at the woman trying to help him move.

The team of doctors who came by to check on us included men, women, Jews and Arabs. Nurses, Liat and Mahmood, provided excellent care. The patients, too, represented a wide variety of Israeli residents, Strictly Orthodox, Ethiopian, native Israelis and us, Anglo olim.

It is hard to understand, then, why outside these walls Israeli society is much more divided along demographic lines.