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A Rock and a Hard Place: What is it like to live In Jerusalem?

Jerusalemites of three faiths share their life stories and thoughts on the city’s past, present and future.

Scroll for Part I

“There’s never been an Arab state here with the capital of Jerusalem,” says Daniel Luria. “There’s never been a Palestinian state here. This talk about Palestine, Palestine … I’ve never heard of anything more absurd.”

Luria is the executive director of Ateret Cohanim, a settler organisation working to create a Jewish majority in the city of Jerusalem. Raised in Australia, Luria says Israel is his only home, in spite of only having moved there 25 years ago. He is one of more than 850,000 people residing in Jerusalem.

After a peaceful period under Ottoman rule, where Islam, Christianity and Judaism coexisted in relative harmony, the decline of the empire and consequent victory of the British in Palestine during World War I set the stage for the eventual takeover of the city.

During the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Jewish forces captured West Jerusalem as the eastern half became part of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. Almost two decades later, the 1967 Six-Day War would see the Jewish state claim rights to the Golan Heights, the Sinai Peninsula, the West Bank, and all of Jerusalem.

Since then, Israel has established over 200 illegal Israeli settlements on Palestinian land with about 600,000 settlers in the occupied West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem.

In this two-part film, Al Jazeera’s Awad Joumaa follows a cast of characters – Jewish, Christian and Muslim – that call Jerusalem home. A Muslim scholar; a Christian Palestinian researcher; a former Israeli soldier and former Zionist turned professor; a self-described Zionist settler; a peace activist; an actress and her artist son; and a father, whose son is under home detention, fighting to hold on to his house in the Old City. These are some of the key characters, sharing their stories and thoughts on the city’s past, present and future.

This is the story of Jerusalem as told through its own people.

A Rock and a Hard Place: What is it like to live in Jerusalem? (Part I)


Omar: ‘What’s kept Jerusalem from developing is the Israeli occupation’

Omar Harami stands in a 'ghost town' in occupied East Jerusalem, where Israeli walls and borders have created empty neighbourhoods that once thrived [Al Jazeera]
Omar Harami stands in a ‘ghost town’ in occupied East Jerusalem, where Israeli walls and borders have created empty neighbourhoods that once thrived [Al Jazeera]

 “When it comes to East Jerusalem, four out of 10 houses is under demolishing threat or already had demolition orders and being processed,” says Omar Harami. “Israel knows if you destroy houses you destroy families and when you destroy families you destroy communities.”

Harami works for the Christian Liberation Theology Centre Sabeel, a civil rights-based organisation working for a peaceful resolution to occupation in Jerusalem. He sees Israel’s occupation of Jerusalem as systematic, and the destruction of its original Palestinian communities as a means to further cement Zionist presence.

Laura: ‘There have been grave injustices and I think what we can do is try to correct them’

Laura Wharton in her Meretz office; Meretz is a left-leaning Israeli political party [Al Jazeera]
Laura Wharton in her Meretz office; Meretz is a left-leaning Israeli political party [Al Jazeera]

“Just about every possible public service you can think of is under-budgeted and lacking in East Jerusalem,” says Laura Wharton. Wharton served in the Israeli army in the 1980s but believes there must be a better way to organise and run the city, where everyone is treated equally. She is a member of left-leaning Israeli political party Meretz.

“The only thing they get a lot of is parking fines and housing demolition orders. Those are the only things they get,” she says.

Mahdi: ‘They arrested me the first time when I was 11’

Mahdi Abu A'asab on the roof of his family home, nestled among Israeli settlers in Jerusalem, with the Al-Aqsa Mosque in the distance [Al Jazeera]
Mahdi Abu A’asab on the roof of his family home, nestled among Israeli settlers in Jerusalem, with the Al-Aqsa Mosque in the distance [Al Jazeera]

Mahdi Abu A’asab has spent more time waiting for verdicts in Israeli courts than outside playing with his friends in the last few years of his teenage life. The fact that his family is also on edge because of the constant threat of detention makes things all the more stressful for the 15-year-old.

“They kept setting my court appointments at the same time as the house courts to make my father confused,” says Mahdi. “Which court case does he go to? To my court hearing or to the one for our home? They kept putting pressure on him with my cases and they arrested me many times although I did nothing.”

Daniel: ‘There has never been a Palestinian state here’

Daniel Luria standing in front of an old Roman mural, in an ancient corridor in the Old City [Al Jazeera]
Daniel Luria standing in front of an old Roman mural, in an ancient corridor in the Old City [Al Jazeera]

“The only people with connection here with sovereign rights here are the Jewish people. There’s never been an Arab state here with the capital of Jerusalem. So when I hear Arabs today talking about they’ve got a connection for generations, no such thing,” says Daniel Luria. 

Raised in Australia, Luria was raised in a Zionist household and moved to Jerusalem 25 years ago. Although he believes there is “room for everyone [from different faiths] in Jerusalem”, he holds firm in his belief that Israel belongs to the Jewish people and the Jewish people alone.

Mustafa: ‘I have roots in this area, that cannot change’ 

Mustafa Sway stands in the predominantly Palestinian neighbourhood of Silwan [Al Jazeera]
Mustafa Sway stands in the predominantly Palestinian neighbourhood of Silwan [Al Jazeera]

“History unfolds in many ways I’m here and basically we are here; we don’t have any exclusive claims we don’t try to have a monopoly on even the historical narrative,” says Professor Mustafa Sway. “Everyone is welcome but it’s the power structure that maintains the colonial project. That’s basically what we refuse.”

Sway is a professor of Philosophy and Islamic Studies at Jerusalem’s Al Quds University. His eldest son, Mahmoud, lost his ID status in the country when he travelled to the United States to seek work after chronic unemployment within Palestine. He is now only able to visit Palestine, and in particular Jerusalem, as a tourist. 

Meir: ‘We are living in a city that discriminates against 40 percent of the population’

Meir Margalit, once a soldier in the Israeli army, reflects on the state of the city from his Jerusalem home [Al Jazeera]
Meir Margalit, once a soldier in the Israeli army, reflects on the state of the city from his Jerusalem home [Al Jazeera]

“There are days that I couldn’t sleep,” says former Zionist and soldier Meir Margalit. “In particular when the municipality demolished houses. How can I as a Jew, we who suffered from discrimination over centuries, how can we in our country discriminate other people. No, it’s impossible. This is something that doesn’t fit with the Jewish concept that I grew up with.”

Originally from Buenos Aires, Argentina, Margalit spent 20 years serving as a council member on the Jerusalem Municipality, trying to prove a case of discrimination against Palestinians using empirical evidence, such as municipality budgeting. 

Huda: ‘The old Jerusalem railway station today is like a Disney park full of people completely alien to the history of the space’

Actress and tour guide Huda Imam wanders through the streets of Jerusalem [Al Jazeera]
Actress and tour guide Huda Imam wanders through the streets of Jerusalem [Al Jazeera]

“Look at the kitchens inside the restaurants … most of those people will be Palestinians from the West Bank or occupied areas of Jerusalem with very low salaries,” says actress Huda Imam as she wanders the bustling streets of Jerusalem. “They are treated not even like third-class citizens; they are treated like garbage.” 

Imam’s entire family was evicted from West Jerusalem in 1948 when Jewish forces captured the city. Between 60,000 and 80,000 Palestinians were forced out of their homes.

Sahar: ‘Inequality is an inherent part of the city’

Sahar Vardi, an Israeli dissident, in her Jerusalem home [Al Jazeera]
Sahar Vardi, an Israeli dissident, in her Jerusalem home [Al Jazeera]

“Enlistment in Israeli society is the default right. So choosing to step out of that is, is choosing to be different and to define yourself as different and it has different consequences that are beyond prison,” says Sarah Vardi, an Israeli dissident who, against Israeli societal expectations, refused to serve in the army.

“I think for me a lot of it is choosing to be an outsider.”