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New Book by Hebron Resident Highlights Personal History

This article originally appeared in JNS news as:



 


(February 15, 2022 / )


 


Hebron has developed a negative image in the mainstream media, and Tzipi
Schlissel has experienced it first-hand. As a long-time resident, she has encountered a
diverse mix of reporters, tourists and activists, from across the political spectrum.
Such experiences make up her book, recently released in English under the title: “Hebron
Breaks The Silence: Personal, Historic and Political Documentation.”


 


The title recalls Israeli NGO Breaking the Silence, which leads tours through
the Jewish neighborhoods of the city. Schlissel has encountered these tour groups on
many occasions, and in the book describes her encounters with hostile anti-Israel
activists but also the meaningful conversations that have sometimes resulted. She has
witnessed radical changes in people’s views once they get a broader view of the city’s
reality.


 


Deep family roots


 


Schlissel’s roots in the ancient city are deep. Her grandmother Sarah
Tzipporah Segal, for whom she is named, survived the 1929 Hebron massacre due to an
older Arab man from the surrounding hills, named Abu Shaker Amro. Amro prevented the mob
from entering the house where the family was hiding, and was struck in the leg with an
ax by his fellow Arabs.


 


Schlissel’s father, Rabbi Shlomo Raanan, was murdered in Hebron by an Islamic
terrorist in 1998. Rabbi Raanan was a grandson of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, the first
Ashkenazi chief rabbi of mandatory Palestine, and had looked forward to retirement with
his wife in the historic city. Schlissel and her husband moved to the city to be closer
to her mother in the wake of the attack.


 


She told JNS she was inspired to write the book by Dr. Miriam Magen, who she
describes as a mentor.


 


“She was fascinated by my personal experiences and told me that most people
did not know about the issues, and that it was important that I share them,” she
said.


 


Magen bought her a notebook and begged her to keep a journal, which she
did.


 


“Thus began my writing journey of several years,” said Schlissel. “I find
this a fascinating city and described both difficult and annoying events as well as
happy and exciting ones. I wrote of special encounters, some of them surrealistic
incidents that can only happen in Hebron. What’s happening here is important for the
world and perhaps that’s why there is so much international involvement in this
city.”


 


Meeting real Hebron Jews


 


The book shifts from dramatic incidents ripped from recent headlines to the
rich history of the old Yishuv days in the pre-state era. Along the way the reader meets
such interesting characters as a pro-Israel Muslim who wanted to see “Israeli apartheid”
with his own eyes. When he is mistaken as a Jew by local Arabs, he retaliates with some
choice words in Arabic, much to their surprise.


 


Then there is Ryan Bellerose, a Métis from Alberta, Canada, who compares his
struggle for recognition of his own indigenous heritage to that of Hebron’s Jewish
community. He is one of the many characters in the book who end up in Schlissel’s
kitchen, enjoying her cooking and soaking up her stories. Another is a pro-Palestinian
German tourist who experienced first-hand what Schlissel calls manipulative tactics by
anti-Israel tour guides.


The historical record


 


In the book, Schlissel refutes many popular misconceptions about Hebron. She
reveals some interesting details about the purchase of property in the city dating back
to the Ottoman days. Land deeds such as the one signed by Rabbi Haim Yeshua Bajayo in
the 1800s have been used to prove Jewish ownership of property in modern courts, for
example.


She also describes research into land ownership in Judea and Samaria. For
example, the investigation of claims that the Al-Arroub refugee camp was built on
Jewish-owned land. Schlissel’s research indicates that most of the refugee camps built
by UNRWA, the United Nations agency tasked with housing Arabs displaced in the 1948-1949
War of Independence, were purposely built on land owned by private Jewish individuals or
the Jewish National Fund.


Schlissel has worked extensively with the Beit Hadassah visitor’s center
leading tour groups and helping categorize the vast history of the city’s Jewish
community. In this capacity she has met survivors of the 1929 massacre and their family
members, including some who knew her grandmother.


 


Simultaneously, Schlissel paints a picture of a thriving modern community of
residents who pride themselves on walking the same streets as their ancestors. Normal
life goes on in Hebron, including interactions between Jews and Arabs—Israeli settlers
and Palestinian Authority residents.


 


A thriving modern Jewish
community


 


One chapter is dedicated to the annual Shabbat in Hebron, in which thousands
of visitors come to read the portion of the Torah which describes Abraham’s purchase of
Me’arat Hamachpela, the Cave of the Patriarchs.


 


The towering tomb erected over the cave is often described as a site of
conflict in the news, but Schlissel adds another dimension, mentioning the spiritual
seekers who travel to pray at the site. Schlissel divulges information about the
division of the cave between Muslim and Jewish sides, and the attitudes of the
locals.


 


Arabs and Jews interacting in daily life is not as newsworthy as shooting
incidents, such as the one involving IDF soldier Elor Azaria. Schlissel describes the
shooting first-hand, and gives insight into the feelings of the local
community.


 


Meeting left-wing protesters


 


In one somewhat humorous anecdote, Schlissel describes the time a group of
left-wing protesters came to the city to install a makeshift movie theater for P.A.
residents. American columnist Peter Beinart and the All That’s Left group
attempted to clear a plot of land, only to have the police called on them by a local
Arab man for trespassing on his property. Schlissel also recounts animated conversation
with her Arab neighbors, who at times are less than enamored of the anti-Israel
activists claiming to represent them.


 


The thriving commercial center of Hebron can be seen from Schlissel’s home.
The book includes photos of the massive shopping malls in the P.A. side of Hebron, which
she describes as an affluent, business oriented city with a religiously conservative
Muslim population.


 


The book includes photos, maps and documents both of historic Hebron and of
recent times.


 


Originally released in Hebrew in 2017, the English version was published at
the end of 2021, edited by Gil Zohar, a veteran reporter for The Jerusalem Post, the
author of several books on Israeli history and a licensed tour guide.


 


It is available on Amazon.com.


 


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HEBRON CONTACT INFORMATION

 

United States contact info:



http://www.hebronfund.org


http://en.hebron.org.il/

1760 Ocean Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11230

718-677-6886

info@hebronfund.org

Facebook * YouTube * Instagram * TikTok * Twitter



Israeli contact info:

http://hebron.org.il/

02-996-5333

office@hebron.com

Facebook * YouTube * Instagram

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