Gary Baumg arten Life goes on as usual almost for Israel's Jews and Arabs GARY BAUMGARTEN Special to The Jewish News erusalem — If you only had the evening news as a basis for judging Israel, you'd think it was completely unsafe to travel here. But, yes, it is still perfectly safe to walk the streets of Jerusalem at three in the morning (though, perhaps not so safe within the walls of the old city, despite the seemingly omnipresent IDF soldiers). It's not that the camera bringing us ugly images of soldiers clashing with Paletinian demonstrators lies. It's just that it wears blinders and lacks perspective. It's Friday night in Jerusalem at the King David Hotel, where an at- tempt is made to keep Shabbat. Guests have to be satisfied with eating tuna fish sandwiches prepared before sundown. But at the Bonanza Bar in Tel Aviv, they're serving up Bonanza Burgers swimming in special sauces and topped, if you like, with bacon. A combo is loudly play- ing off-colored Israeli songs (it seems new Hebrew words are invented in 'Tel Aviv everyday). Couples are entwin- ed on the dance floor and, occasional- ly, a table top is cleared to make way for women customers who want to dance on a higher level. In Tel Aviv, people appear particularly unaffected by the West Bank and Gaza violence. "You can't care all of the time:' ex- plains Shaul Evron, a columnist for Hadashot, one of eight daily newspapers in Israel. "In America, you had the war in Vietnam. But in New York, the lights were on and bars were crowded. It's the same here. In Tel Aviv, life never dies. Even when there are wars, life goes on?" It's not that the people of Tel Aviv are necessarily unaware of the kill- ings in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza. It's just that they aren't preoccupied by it. Heidi Blas-Barzily, who grew up in Farmington Hills, now makes her home with her Israeli-born husband and son in an apartment on Moshe Dayan Boulevard. "I feel sorry for the people I see on TV and the poor soldiers who are real- 1611 Tourists at Jerusalem's Damascus Gate: Many visitors say they feel safe in Israel, but tourism has dropped sharply. In The 11 rising's Shadow ly in a bad situation;' she says. "They don't really know if they should shoot (when attacked with rocks) or stop to think about who they're shooting at. But here in the city, other than what I see on the TV, I don't really feel any of that scare at all." Ze'ev Chafets, an Israeli author and Pontiac native, says the people of Tel Aviv were more interested in the exploits of the national Maccabee basketball team during the recent European finals than they were the "the troubles!" The fact of the matter is, the bulk of the Israeli population is less direct- ly affected by the violence itself than it is by the economic repercussions of the strife. There are two contributing factors. One, Arabs who refuse to work, or who keep their shops open for only three hours each day; and, two, the call up of extra army reserves for patrol duty. Winston Doull and a few of his friends take some time to sit around his sculpted glass store, part of a row of artisan shops almost directly across the street from the Jaffa Gate to the old city. They are talking about the Palestinian question and arguing politics. Five years ago, when I last visited Doull, our conversations were completed in episodes, interrupted by a constant flow of tourists entering the shop. But these days, the door is open but few people enter. "There's all this talk about tourism being down because the Americans are afraid to come to Israel," he says. "But it's not just the Americans. Israelis are just as bad. People in lel Aviv are choosing places other than Jerusalem to go on vaca- tion?' Concerns about the manpower shortage caused by the army call-up resulted in a hastily organized Volunteers for Israel program. Southfield businessman Steve Corlin was one of thousands of Jews who answered the call, and spent their own money to come to Israel and work on kibbutzim and elsewhere. Corlin was assigned to a naval base at Haifa. "We volunteered our time to pro- vide services that the personnel at the kibbutzim or the army people don't have the time to do because they are so short-handed here?' Most of the volunteers were sent to kibbutzim to work in the fields. Corlin, however, did everything from cleaning ships and guns and weeding on the base to cooking in the mess halls. He says, at first the soldiers couldn't understand why the Americans paid their way to Israel to engage in unpaid manual labor. "All the bunkhouses were unheated. Most of them had broken windows. Toilet paper was in short supply. So they wondered why we paid to come here and work for free. I think they felt sorry for us?' So why did he do it? "It's very easy to stay in the States and sit back and send my check and say I've done my part," he explains. "But it's very different to come here and actually work and see, not only where your money is going, but also what needs to be done here?' Corlin concedes there were cer- tain perks. "They put on some special tours and we got to see things one would not nofmally get a chance to see. One day we were even invited to some of- ficer's homes on a settlement on the West Bank?' Yehuda Berman, a Detroit Cen- tral High School and Wayne State University graduate lives in one of those West Bank settlements, Efrat, halfway between Bethlehem and Hebron. The Palestinians who toil the Arab-owned farms surrounding Efrat live in villages instead of on the farms themselves, so, says Berman, there's a feeling that they aren't really all that close. So far, there have been no problems at Efrat. But a drive along the highway past the Dahaisha refugee camp is an open invitation to the Palestinians to throw rocks. Berman, like so many other West Bankers, believes the Bi- ble gives the Jews claim to the land. But even so, he says he'd give up his house and land and move out if it would bring a real peace. The only problem with that offer is that Ber- man doesn't trust the Arabs. "Possibly if we thought that the Arabs would give up on war, if we thought this was going to be a real peace, I'd be willing to give up my home," he says. "However, from what