et and I don't want our soldiers to be killed. I want what's good for us." "The Palestinians are a mur- derous people, an uncultured peo- ple," added Motti Balelti, a salesman from Bnei Brak. "I'm against the peace process because it's dangerous; we're giving guns to terrorists, and in the end they're going to want Tel Aviv and Haifa. "But there's a good side to it, too — we're getting rid of Gaza "I'd rather live apart from the Palestinians. Who needs them? They're like a stone around our necks." Mot Balelti and Jericho. It'll save bloodshed; we'll have fewer victims. I prefer to give away the territories. I'd rather live apart from the Pales- tinians. Who needs them? They're like a stone around our necks." The idea of breaking down the walls between Israel and the Arabs, of eventually having open borders and tourism so that the two peoples could get to know each other, doesn't hold much at- traction. Israelis are not mad to visit Damascus or Amman. For the most part, they see Arabs as a people beneath them. "The Palestinians have vio- lence in their blood. And they've never ruled, they've always been ruled over," said Rami Shapiro, a retired businessman in Haifa. "We have plenty of Israeli Arabs right here inside the Green Line, and we're not exactly hos- pitable to them," said Jenny Haspel, a clerk from Holon. If Israelis are looking to widen their horizons, they go to the more advanced countries in Western Europe and North America. The Arab world is seen as a step down from Israel, so why reach out to it? With the exception of a few pockets here and there, Jews and Arabs live segregated lives with- in Israel's borders. There's no rea- son to think that Israelis are interested in integrating with Arabs beyond those borders. "I think we'll have trade with the Arabs, but friends we'll nev- er be," said Ms. Haspel. "rm for the peace process because a peo- ple without a country will never stop fighting. Maybe if we give them something we'll have qui- et. As for the Cairo ceremony, it didn't fill me with emotion, but it did give me an expectation. I would like to turn on the radio one morning and instead of hear- ing that this one was stabbed and that one was killed, I'd like to hear that the biggest news of the day was the weather." I have another cousin who's not as vehemently anti-Arab as Maya, but who also doesn't have a good word to say about them. On the weekend after the Cairo festivities, she showed me around her little town outside of Haifa, explaining how before the 1948 War of Independence, local Arabs used to kill Jews in the area, and the Jews would kill the Arabs in revenge, until the war ended and a Jewish town replaced the Arab village that had been there be- fore. My cousin can't stand peaceniks, and she's skeptical as can be about the Gaza-Jericho ac- cord. Still, she's ready to give it a chance. "Something has to change," she said. "We can't go on this way." LI Observers In Hebron Jerusalem (JTA) — A full con- tingent of international observers arrived in the West Bank town of Hebron this week, but on their first day of monitoring duties they found themselves caught in clash- es between Palestinian protest- ers and Israeli soldiers. The unarmed 114-member ob- server force, recruited from Nor- way, Denmark and Italy, arrived in Hebron in a convoy led by the Israel Defense Force. They were accompanied by a busload of members of the foreign news me- dia. Shortly after the observers ar- rived, Palestinians protesting the presence of Jewish settlers in He- bron and nearby Kiryat Arba be- gan throwing stones at Israeli soldiers. The soldiers responded by fir- ing tear gas into the crowd. The observers, caught in the confrontation, soon found them- selves choking on the tear gas. "I guess we'll have to get used to carrying onions around with us," an Italian member of the ob- server force later said on Israel Radio, referring to a means to counter the effects of the gas. The presence of observers, known officially as the Tempo- rary International Presence in Hebron, was agreed to by Israel and the Palestine Liberation Or- ganization in late March follow- ing the Feb. 25 slaying of at least 29 Palestinians at a Hebron mosque by an Israeli settler. The agreement on the pres- ence of an international team of observers had paved the way for the resumption of Israeli-PLO ne- gotiations, which the Palestini- ans had suspended immediately after the Hebron massacre. It was 1944. You had just graduated fran Central High. The world was your oyster. Too bad you couldn't eat shellfish. 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