Home > Olives & Thorns > Archives > 2008 > May > 19 > Entry

Escaping from Israel — or finding it — in Tel Aviv?

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The American president was wrapping up a three-day visit, a U.S. congressional delegation had just arrived, rockets continued to fall in southern Israel and a just-completed international conference in Jerusalem had been debating the future of Jewish civilization.

In Tel Aviv, thousands of residents were touring historic homes and “architecturally significant” buildings in the second annual Houses From Within Tour.

From neighborhood to neighborhood they strolled, beneath a gentle sun, amidst sidewalk cafes bustling on the Jewish Sabbath, discovering anew the urban spaces of Israel’s metropolis.

It was downright normal. For a moment, I felt as if I was seven time zones away.

Among more than 120 sites: the modest 1930s apartment of Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion; the Heichal Yeyuda Synagogue that resembles a giant sea shell; the just-restored 1924 home of Israel’s national poet, Hayyim Nahman Bialik; and the Square Building, a recently-completed 42-floor hotel and office tower.

Outside 46 HaCarmel St., close to 100 people queued up to see Jerome Mandel’s restored three-floor 1928 apartment. Like much of Tel Aviv’s early construction, it was designed in the modernist Bauhaus style.

It had fallen into disrepair before Mandel and his wife bought it a few years ago. Its most distinctive features: large picture windows, 12-foot high ceilings and original, multi-colored floor tiles.

HaCarmel Street is home to a colorful, but loud, outdoor market, which over the years made the area less desirable. “Doesn’t the noise outside bother you?” the Tel Avivians wanted to know. “I get up at 6 and the buzz starts about 15 minutes later,” he explains. “It’s not as noisy as the sound of an ambulance, or the sound a bus or the sound of a car.”

In fact, Jerome insisted he quite enjoyed walking down his steps into the shuk — the Hebrew word for market — and buying three tomatoes.

An hour later, I returned to Jerusalem, to the real world — or was it? — to interview a visiting U.S. congressman.

Permalink | Comments (8) | Post your comment |

Comments

By чaтЪлaнбaзник

June 1, 2009 9:49 AM | Link to this

Ну и после такого, как говорится, хотелось бы заслушать начальника транспортного цеха ;)

By Леонид

June 10, 2009 2:40 PM | Link to this

Интересный пост, спасибо вам. Меня интересует вопрос - будет ли продолжение? :)

By BиpyC

June 23, 2009 10:38 AM | Link to this

Автор, а у вас никто записи не тырит? А то у меня заколебали уже - копируют и копируют. И самое главное, что ссылку на мой блог никто не удосужится поставить.

By Рубен Павленко

June 27, 2009 11:41 PM | Link to this

Да, по-настоящему в этом что-то такое есть. А раньше я ведь был довольно наивен :) Ну что ж - времена изменились :)

By afferiaPlulge

August 1, 2009 6:34 PM | Link to this

dsfgsdfg dfssdfgf fdsgsdfgsd

By ofigennoe.ru

October 13, 2009 2:08 AM | Link to this

Amazing article, lots of intersting things to digest. Very informative

By ofigennoe.ru

October 13, 2009 2:08 AM | Link to this

Can you still say “Put it where the sun don’t shine ” on a nude beach?

By ofigennoe.ru

October 13, 2009 2:52 AM | Link to this

Thank you very much for that superb article

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