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‘We all love him’

Gilad Shalit joins Arab and Jewish ‘Cyclists for Peace’

 
 
 
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Former captive soldier Gilad Shalit, leads the Cycling for Peace run from his home in Israel’s north to Acre. ISRAEL21c

Five years ago, the inaugural Cycling for Peace group bike ride that was launched by the municipality of Acre (Acco) was dedicated to then-captive soldier Gilad Shalit. This year, organizers were excited to have Shalit leading the pack of about 500 cyclists on a 36-kilometer ride from the Shalit home to the multicultural seaside town of Acre, in northern Israel.

About 150 Arab-Israeli citizens joined the May 4 ride — the biggest turnout to date — showing that at least the wheels of peaceful intentions are rolling in some Arab and Jewish communities.

While Jews and Arabs live in relative harmony in such mixed cities as Yaffo (Jaffa) next to Tel Aviv, and Acre in the north, there are few opportunities to engage in face-to-face recreation and camaraderie. The two populations interact in the marketplace, but beyond that they tend to stick to their own sides of town.

“It is very emotional,” recalls Lydia Hatuel-Czuckerman, the director of sports activities for the city. “Jews and Arabs are participating together each year for peace and tolerance. And accepting one another and living together as two nations. This is the idea behind this kind of event,” she says.

It was her idea to see if Shalit could come along. “We dedicated the ride in the past to Gilad Shalit with lots of hopes and wishes for his return,” she says. “This year, it was natural to ask him to join us.”

Shalit rode at the front of the group with the leaders, and when the riders pulled into predetermined stops, they were met with cheers from the local communities.

Ranging from the age of two — a young girl towed by her dad — up to age 60, the Arab cyclists accepted the idea of riding with Gilad “very beautifully,” says Hatuel-Czuckerman. The complicated reality for Arabs in Israel often translates into divided loyalties, so it’s not to be taken for granted that Arab Israelis would join the ride in such numbers.

Starting at Shalit’s hometown of Mitzpe Hila, and continuing through Nes Ammim and Regba to pick up additional riders before reaching the final destination of Lily Sharon Park in Acre, the ride started at 9:00 in the morning and lasted until about 1:30 in the afternoon.

At the starting point, Shalit was the undisputed star of the show, Hatuel-Czuckerman reports. Cycling for Peace was the first opportunity for the crowds of people who had followed his story to actually see him since his release in a prisoner swap last October.

“We all love him and wanted to take pictures with him,” she says. “He was very nice. He was very polite and understanding and patient with everybody, and when he came to Nes Ammim, there were about 200 who waited there and greeted him with clapping hands.”

Shalit, although he was in very frail condition when he was released by Hamas in the Gaza Strip after five years of captivity, did very well on Cycling for Peace. “He rode with us all the way, was among the first in the group, and he is in really good shape,” says Hatuel-Czuckerman.

When the peace riders rolled into Acre, they were met with refreshments, prizes, a cycling show, and live music.

“Last year’s race called for Gilad’s release, so this year we’re proud to hold an event with his participation,” Acre Mayor Shimon Lankry said.

Hatuel-Czuckerman, who also runs the Israel Or Association for Fencing, sees much peacemaking potential in sports. “I think it is the best way to make peace because in sports there is a common interest to all the people,” she says.

“And when you are on teams — this could be on bicycles, on the track, fencing, or when playing basketball, and you can see this especially in Acre — you can find Jews and Arabs participating together. They are training together, behaving like family to one another and respecting each other. It’s beautiful,” she says.

“Athletes can be friends. When you see them not playing together, they are usually ordered not to, like between Israel and Iran. If you ask the athletes directly, I am sure they would be willing to participate.”

ISRAEL21c

 
 

Obama to Israelis: “Ah-tem lo lah-vahd” (You are not alone)

The text of President Barack Obama's address to the Israeli public

Shalom. It is an honor to be here with you in Jerusalem, and I am so grateful for the welcome that I have received from the people of Israel. I bring with me the support of the American people, and the friendship that binds us together.

Over the last two days, I have reaffirmed the bonds between our countries with Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Peres. I have borne witness to the ancient history of the Jewish people at the Shrine of the Book, and I have seen Israel’s shining future in your scientists and entrepreneurs. This is a nation of museums and patents, timeless holy sites and ground-breaking innovation. Only in Israel could you see the Dead Sea Scrolls and the place where the technology on board the Mars Rover originated. But what I’ve looked forward to the most is the ability to speak directly to you, the Israeli people – especially so many young people – about the history that brought us here today, and the future that you will make in the years to come.

 

A chant encounter with God

How a Paramus teen grew into a rabbi in search of heaven’s gate

“I think I remember you. You were the weird one.”

That, according to Rabbi Shefa Gold, was what one of the first people to “teach me that Judaism could be a path with passion, because he had such passion” said when she encountered him again at a conference years later.

If weird means intense, unusual, inner-directed to a fault (in a way that no doubt could be called willful by detractors), God-intoxicated, and supremely self-confident, then there is no doubt her teacher was right.

 

Changing the world, one country at a time

Some life journeys are, well, more interesting than others.

Take, for example, Teaneck’s Arielle Sandor, who went to Princeton, majored in Chinese history, and then moved to Nakuru, Kenya, to launch a tech startup.

Profiled in Forbes magazine (as well as in other publications) as a leading college-student entrepreneur, Sandor has brought her company, Duma — the Swahili word for cheetah — to Africa. The venture, co-founded with Princeton student Christine Blauvelt, is designed to make job searching easier and faster.

 

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Obama: 1967 borders with swaps should serve as basis for negotiations

WASHINGTON – President Obama said the future state of Palestine should be based on the pre-1967 border with mutually agreed land swaps with Israel.

In his address Thursday afternoon on U.S. policy in the Middle East, Obama told an audience at the State Department that the borders of a “sovereign, nonmilitarized” Palestinian state “should be based on 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps.”

Negotiations should focus first on territory and security, and then the difficult issues of the status of Jerusalem and what to do about the rights of Palestinian refugees can be broached, Obama said.

 
 
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