+countries++photographic galleries++fiction++australia links++about UNCLONED WORLD
 categories

» Australia
» Belgium
» China
» Denmark
» Egypt
» Germany
» Hong Kong
» Iceland
» India
» Israel
» Japan
» Korea
» Malaysia
» Nepal
» Singapore
» Spain
» Turkey
» United Kingdom
» Vietnam

Maps

Interactive photographic map of the entire world!

Interactive photographic map of the entire world!

Photo Albums

The sights and other aspects of Korea
Korean Sights -- The Sights of Korea The World of Flowers
The World of Flowers The Temples of Asia
The Temples of Asia Faces of Asia
FaceOff -- The Faces of Asia Great Cities of the World
Great Cities of the World Viking Horns
Vikings Horns -- The Warriors of Iceland BlurStream -- Human Movement
BlurStream -- Human Movement Singapore -- January 2003
Singapore -- January 2003






AL ARAB YOUTH HOSTEL :: JERUSALEM ISRAEL :: 29.4 S 149.8 E
The Al-Arab Youth Hostel in the Old City of Jerusalem gets a lot of bad press for its rather basic creature comforts and amenities. To be frank, this place is pretty spartan, and more than one traveller has called it a "dive", a place to be avoided at all cost. If you do a Web search on the term "Al-Arab Youth Hostel Jerusalem", you will find statements from travellers who have stayed there such as: "Having lost my passport, I was forced to doss down for the night at the shitty Al Arab Youth Hostel by the Damascus Gate, and was thoroughly repulsed by its scuzzyness." This was the opinion of more than one person who was forced to stay at the hostel, and didn't enjoy it. However, while the Al-Arab Youth Hostel in Jerusalem can seem scuzzy to some people who stay there -- the dirty rough blankets on the bleak cot-like beds in its windy dormitories must be enough to give some people panic attacks -- this is an amazing hostel with a hearty atmosphere which is 100 per cent Arab. For all its aesthetic crudeness, there is something fascinating in the Al-Arab's basicness -- it has a kind of authentic Holy Land, Baby Jesus-in-the-manger kind of appeal. The building seems literally hundreds of years old, and that is a real thrill for the more adventurous backpacker. As one visitor has described it: "It is run down but full of atmosphere." This is the real Jerusalem, near the Damascus Gate in the bustling Arab Market, and you can hear the sounds of the streets wafting up when you wake in the morning -- the braying crowds and the donkey carts, the calls of the falafel vendors, the confrontations between Palestinians and young Israeli Army conscripts. It has to be set in the one of the most exotic locations in the world, with the holy sites of three major world religions literally "up the road", some of them (like the gold-roofed mosque, the Dome of the Rock) visible from the upper dormitories. Jerusalem is packed with narrow alleys, steps, twists and turns, markets, suicide bombers, would-be prophets, and tourists in search of the plethora of religious sites and sights. Al-Arab Youth Hostel on Khan el-Zeit St is in the thick of it, not far from the Holy Jewish Wailing Wall, and surrounded by attractive shops and restaurants. For this and other reasons the hostel is to be recommended -- it has location, it has character, and it has something else, something they don't usually talk about in the tourist guide books -- it has politics.

Perhaps the most compelling attraction for visitors to the Al-Arab Youth Hostel is its educational agenda. The staff at Al-Arab make no apologies about their commitment to the Palestinian Intifada and their resistance against Israeli rule. The walls of the youth hostel are adorned with the portraits of martyrs -- Palestinians either imprisoned or killed by the Israeli Occupation. Staff regularly show anti-Jewish, anti-American propaganda which would put even Michael Moore to shame. If you can take it all with a grain of salt, this is will give you an invaluable advantage in trying to understand this most volatile region of the world. This place will give you the Palestinian side of the Israeli/Palestinian dispute. The hostel staff also organise tours of the Occupied West Bank and Gaza, taking in refugee camps of displaced Palestinians, universities with bullet holes in the walls, and some truly magical old mosques and churches. Al-Arab Youth Hostel is a cheerful place, despite the rather bleak decor -- and the even bleaker politics being discussed over small Turkish glasses of tea and the games of Arabian checkers being played in the common room. Going to this hostel makes you feel like you have gone a thousands years back in time, and that is an experience that money can't buy. Even if the occasional suicide bomber explodes herself on the streets outside the Old City, disturbing your morning sleep.

How to get there: Al-Arab Hostel is located on Khan el-Zeit Street in the Arab Market. If you enter the famous Damascus Gate from the New City, take the steps down until you reach a fork. One road heads left, towards the Muslim Quarter and the Wailing Wall, the holiest site in the world for the Jewish Faith. The road forking off to the right is Khan el-Zeit St, and that is the one you want to follow. Walk a couple of hundred yards and you will see Al-Arab Youth Hostel on your left. Be prepared: Khan el-Zeit St can be pretty crowded, especially after Muslim prayer time, and this walk can take some time. Outside the Al-Arab premises, a sign proclaims: "Internet Cafe". Walk up some small stairs, cut like a passage-way through rock up to the first floor reception.

As of last count, a dorm bed costs 20 shekels, and there are usually 7 bunk beds to each one.




 

Aswan - Cairo - Istanbul - Kiama - Jerusalem - Siwa Oasis - Tripoli


AN UNCLONABLE ADVENTURER: You could make a movie about the mysterious escaped convict assigned to Benjamin Singleton, George "The Barber" Clarke, famous for his strange double life with the natives of north-east NSW. Clarke fled to the area in 1826, and began living with the Kamilaroi peoples, who it seems may have regarded him as one of their own returned from the dead. He acquired two Aboriginal wives, underwent body initiation rites and generally adopted the language, dress and customs of the group. Clarke lived a little to the north-east of the present townsite of Boggabri, building a bark hut by the Namoi which Allan Cunningham encountered during a voyage of exploration in 1827. Large stocks of cattle were taken to the Liverpool Plains for pasturage from 1827 and Clarke turned to cattle rustling, establishing some stockyards. When times were hard he surrendered to Singleton, but again fled with the Aborigines while leading Singleton on an expedition into the new country. He then returned to bushranging, was captured in 1831, escaped, was recaptured, escaped again and was finally recaptured, after which he was marched 210 km to Sydney and transported to Norfolk Island. He was hung in Tasmania for further offences in 1835.

To my mind Clarke embodied what Australia COULD have been -- whites and blacks living together in harmony, learning from each other, instead of exterminating each other.