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. . . perhaps others in the Agora are much better qualified than I am to make comment.
Thanks for the call, Grant.
Living in Tel Aviv, I see very little more than what other Agorans see on their televisions. I see no army, no violence, no destruction, no pained faces. I eat, sleep, work and enjoy leisure hours at home or out. I go to restaurants, to the supermarket, to the filling station. I visit friends, shop, read, talk on the telephone and post on the Agora. Other than occasionally voicing a general malaise about the situation among friends, my life has changed not a wit since the intifida began two years ago.
That said, there are certain things I don’t do.
I own a flat in a small condominium building, and last year the owners agreed to spruce up the stairwell. But out of fear they refused to have an Arab contractor do the work. (The job eventually went to a Romanian whose work visa had expired but who had elected to stay on and make some more money before heading back to Bucharest.)
I keep away from the center of Jerusalem, because it’s been the focus of a number of attacks. But so does everyone else, so meeting there for a cup of coffee is a non-starter anyway.
Several years ago, I visited an ancient monastery in a magnificent valley just outside Bethlehem. I’ve also visited Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula and Aqaba, Jordan’s Red Sea port city. Not today. Hebron has been on my visit list for years, but I don’t intend to head there anytime soon.
Do I keep an eye out for suspicious objects? Always have. Ditto for suspicious-looking people. Can terror strike anytime or anywhere? Yes. Is there anything I can do about it? No. What are the odds of me being directly involved in a terror incident? Almost none. So why should my life change in any way?
Even the likelihood of a U.S.-led war on Iraq doesn’t change the equation much. I have an army-issued mask and accompanying atropine self-injector. I’ve made a note to stock up on bottled water. I’ve seen to it that the building’s ground-floor shelter is clean and in good repair. I’ve read up on how Israel might be affected by such a war. And again, without doing a formal calculation, I have reckoned the odds of a Scud missile landing on my head are little greater than those of a meteorite landing on the head. So because there’s very little I can do to change whatever might happen, my life hasn’t changed either.
If there is one way that life really is different here, it’s that almost everybody knows somebody, however distantly, who’s been killed in army service or in a terror attack. And that includes me.
So, perhaps getting accustomed is indeed the most appropriate expression.